J
JohnLilburne
Guest
Some collection baskets have long handles, so only the collectors would need to touch them. There are also “long handle offering bags”.
There’s a lot we still don’t know about the novel coronavirus. According to the New York Times:gracepoole:![]()
IDK why so many people are freaking out about this virus. It doesn’t even compare to a regular seasonal flu.She said they don’t want to panic anyone.
The coronavirus seems to be more deadly than the flu — so far.
On average, seasonal flu strains kill about 0.1 percent of people who become infected. The 1918 flu had an unusually high fatality rate, around 2 percent. Because it was so contagious, that flu killed tens of millions of people.
Early estimates of the coronavirus death rate from Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the outbreak, have been around 2 percent. But a new report on 1,099 cases from many parts of China, published on Friday in The New England Journal of Medicine, finds a lower rate: 1.4 percent…
But even a disease with a relatively low death rate can take a huge toll if enormous numbers of people catch it. As of Sunday, there were about 87,000 coronavirus cases and 3,000 deaths. This week, for the first time, the number of new cases outside China exceeded the number within the country.
So far, the new coronavirus seems to be more contagious than most strains of the flu, and roughly as contagious as strains that appear in pandemic flu seasons.
Each person with the coronavirus appears to infect 2.2 other people, on average…By comparison, the figure for the seasonal flu is roughly 1.3
The letter from our Bishop - Diocese of Corner Brook and Labrador - said pretty much the same thing except no mention of Communion on the tongue. I guess it’s not a widespread practice in our diocese. Only two people in our parish receive that way.In our diocese we are having communion only under the species of bread, and we are not shaking hands at the peace. And it’s being emphasized that if you are sick, you’re excused from mass and please stay home. But honestly we put this in the bulletin every year during flu season.
I was in Atlanta this weekend, not my home diocese, and the instructions were the same as above with the addition of people being asked to reconsider communion on the tongue (not required to receive in the hand).
In areas where the coronavirus is bad enough, cancelling public Masses is just common sense. I have seen elsewhere (not on CAF) that the Church should go ahead and celebrate public Masses, because they will “ward off” the virus, or there is the implication that some kind of miracle will prevent contagion, but that is a medieval mentality from the time before people understood germs, viruses, and bacteria. (Yes, I know that covid is not bacterial.) We are not expected to check our common sense at the door in the name of piety or holiness.In all dioceses in Korea, there are no Masses held. No meetings either. So unfortunately I didn’t even get to go to the Ash Wednesday mass.
Ditto in North Alabama. I’m sure that CoViD-2019 is getting some attention in the Bishop’s office, but there has been no mention in the parish, except during the Prayers of the Faithful. Business as usual.Business as usual at our parish, and haven’t heard about any change from the archdiocese. Handshaking allowed, and communion offered in both species.