Column: ‘Distanced in body but close in spirit’: this California church embraced remote worship

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Services held via Zoom by Tapestry, a Unitarian Universalist congregation in Lake Forest, were no less sacred than in person, Gustavo Arellano writes.

that stopping them from praying alongside one another does irreparable mental and spiritual harm. But as a believer, I don’t buy the argument. And, yes, I have Scripture to back me up: Matthew 18:20, where Jesus says, “Where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.”Long a force in south Orange County progressive politics, its members have sought to find blessings in this pandemic where others only look for the chaff.

She compared the current state of Tapestry to how the Athenian general Themistocles once described the namesake fabric: “When you unfold it, it reveals all these woven threads, and it becomes beautiful.”Doss “immediately” recognized Tapestry had to deal with the coronavirus. His congregation is multigenerational — mostly boomers and Gen Xers, but with a healthy contingent of families, millennials, and even small children.

“It took months for me to feel like we were providing something meaningful and helpful to people,” said Doss, who has led Tapestry for nearly eight years. “It’s still strange to preach to a computer screen on my desk. In person, I can look across the room and think, ‘Richard sits over there, and Linda there,’ and ground myself in the moment.”But Doss learned quickly. “The larger the room is, the larger you have to play,” he said. “You have to be more emphatic.

They worked on Tapestry’s myriad social justice causes — affordable housing, immigrant rights, homelessness — from home or on the streets. Suzy Staulz, a retired nurse who lives in Laguna Woods, joined Tapestry’s long-standing inmate correspondence program.“It’s been a saving grace for me to be involved,” she said. “Here, it’s not about doing whatever you want all week, then show up to church on Sunday. The coronavirus gets you to think about purpose.

 

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Make a confession to the computer?😁

Would LATimes run a story like this for QAnon? It's hard to see the difference between QAnon and religion.

But we were told it’s not church if people aren’t crammed in together like sardines to worship in-person. Perhaps the variants have served as a wake-up call.

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