VATICAN CITY — Christianity’s most joyous feast day was celebrated worldwide with the faithful spaced apart in pews and singing choruses of “Hallelujah” through face coverings on a second Easter Sunday marked by pandemic precautions.
From vast Roman Catholic cathedrals to Protestant churches, worshippers followed regulations on the coronavirus. In some European countries, citizens lined up on Easter for their turn to receive a COVID-19 vaccine.
In the Lombardy region of Italy, where the pandemic first erupted in the West, a hospital gave a traditional dove-shaped Easter cake symbolizing peace to each person waiting to get vaccinated. Many who came were in their 80s and accompanied by adult children.
A soccer team in Lyon, France, opened its stadium as a vaccination center for the long holiday weekend. Some 9,000 people were expected to receive their shots there over three days as the French government tries to speed up vaccinations amid a fresh outbreak of infections.
Parishioners gather on a beach for an Easter Sunday service at sunrise hosted by Hope Community Church of Manasquan, Sunday, April 4, 2021, in Manasquan, N.J. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
Pope Francis delivers his Urbi et Orbi blessing after celebrating Easter Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica at The Vatican Sunday, April 4, 2021, during the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. (Filippo Monteforte/Pool photo via AP)
A Christian woman prays during an Easter mass at the St. John’s Cathedral, in Peshawar, Pakistan, Sunday, April 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad)
Priests and a nun wearing face masks attend Easter Sunday mass at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where Jesus Christ is believed to be buried, in the Old City of Jerusalem, Sunday, April. 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
In this April 3, 2021 photo, Catholic faithful gather in the Cathedral of St. Paul in St. Paul, Minn., for the beginning of the solemn celebration of the Easter Vigil. The 2.5-hour long Mass started in the pitch-dark historic church with the blessing and lighting of the Paschal candle by the Archbishop, from which the hundreds of faithful present, spaced out and masked to follow coronavirus measures, lit their own small white candles. (AP Photo/Giovanna Dell’Orto)
Park Community Church Pastor Joe Riccardi raises his hands as he prays during an Easter sunrise service on Sunday, April 4, 2021, at North Avenue Beach in Chicago. (AP Photo/Shafkat Anowar)
Pope Francis speaks prior to delivering his Urbi et Orbi blessing after celebrating Easter Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica at The Vatican Sunday, April 4, 2021, during the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. (Filippo Monteforte/Pool photo via AP)
Pope Francis leaves after celebrating Easter Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica at The Vatican Sunday, April 4, 2021, during the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. (Filippo Monteforte/Pool photo via AP)
Apostolic Pentecostals celebrate Easter in field in the Johannesburg township of Soweto Sunday April 4, 2021. Such South African independent church consist of small groups of worshippers mixing African traditions and bible study. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
Archbishop Stephan Burger speaks to the faithful during the Pontifical Mass for Easter Sunday in Freiburg Cathedral in Freiburg, Germany, Sunday, April 4, 2021. (Philipp von Ditfurth/dpa via AP)
In the Holy Land, air travel restrictions and quarantine regulations prevented foreign pilgrims from flocking to religious sites in Jerusalem during Holy Week, which culminates in Easter celebrations. Pope Francis lamented that the pandemic has prevented some churchgoers from attending services.
In St. Peter’s Basilica, the 200 or so faithful who were allowed to attend looked lost in the cavernous cathedral. Normally, thousands would attend the Mass celebrated by Francis, and a crowd would gather outside in St. Peter’s Square, with more than 100,000 sometimes assembling to receive his Easter blessing afterward.
But this year, like last year, crowds are banned from gathering in Italy and at the Vatican. Francis delivered his noon Easter address on world affairs from inside the basilica, using the occasion to appeal anew that vaccines reach the poorest countries.
The pontiff sounded weary as he noted that pandemic measures have affected religious holiday traditions in many places and kept some faithful from public worship.
“We pray that these restrictions, as well as all restrictions on freedom of worship and religion worldwide, may be lifted and everyone be allowed to pray and praise God freely,” Francis said.
In Syria, where a national vaccination program has yet to begin, churchgoers in the Lady of Damascus Church prayed for a way out of the economic and political crisis, only worsened by the pandemic.
“We came to the church for Easter so we get rid of the pandemic that we are in,” said Bassam Assaf. “Of course, we are not scared of coronavirus. It is the reality that we face, but it cannot stop us from coming and praying to God to take us out of this ordeal and help the world.”
The Easter celebrations offered a respite from the grim realities of war and COVID-19 in Syria.
“We know that outside the country, everyone is in a lockdown and closing down. But for us, this celebration is joyous. We can’t stop everything. We need to be happy,” said worshipper Jimmy Babek.
A service at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the Old City of Jerusalem was celebrated by the senior Roman Catholic cleric in the Holy Land. That is the site where many Christians believe Jesus was crucified, buried and rose from the dead.
Israel’s successful vaccination campaign has allowed reopening of many places, including religious sites.
The pandemic kept Seville’s Brotherhood of the Holy Resurrection from sending its ornate Easter float, bearing a towering statue of Jesus, through the streets of the Spanish city. Instead, the Brotherhood posted videos and old photos from their last procession, two years ago.
Some Pentecostal Christians in South Africa canceled a three-day retreat starting on Good Friday. On the hills overlooking Soweto, a Johannesburg township, Apostolic Pentecostals gathered in small groups Sunday to mark Easter.
In South Korea, Yoido Full Gospel Church, the country’s biggest Protestant church, allowed only about 2,000 people to attend Easter service, or about 17% of the capacity of the main building. Masked worshippers sang hymns and prayed as the service was broadcast online and by Christian TV channels.
Intent on tamping down weeks of surging infections, the Italian government ordered people to stay home for the three-day weekend except for essential errands. Premier Mario Draghi’s government did grant a concession — one visit to family or friends per day in residents’ home regions over the weekend, which includes the national holiday on Monday.
Italy permits religious services in the pandemic if capacity is limited and masks are worn. But early on, the predominantly Roman Catholic country’s many churches were open only for individual prayer.
Hundreds of Catholics gathered in the mammoth Cathedral of St. Paul in St. Paul, Minnesota, for the Easter Vigil service Saturday evening.
Every other pew was kept empty and masks were mandatory. Still, the solemn liturgy marked a new, hopeful beginning for the congregation after a turbulent year.
Last year the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis offered only live-streamed or parking lot services during the first lockdown. The first time that the cathedral reopened for in-person indoor Mass in late May, National Guard troops guarded the nearby State Capitol during protests in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death in police custody. But last month, the governor relaxed some of the restrictions and removed occupancy limits from religious services.
Jane Diogaurdi, board president of the Unitarian Universalist Church in Meriden, Connecticut, a city of 61,000 about 80 miles east of New York City, planned to livestream Easter services because it was too cold outdoors. She said her church is very conscious of COVID-19 spreading from New York City.
“COVID isn’t just a concept up here; it’s a reality,” Diogaurdi said.
Parishioners gathered for a sunrise service Sunday outside Old St. Luke’s Church in Carnegie, Pennsylvania, a Pittsburgh suburb. Sitting socially distanced and flanked by old tombstones, they listened as parishioner Paul Barker ticked off safety protocols and warned people not to wander through the cemetery.
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