The Christian-hating Calgary Cops Arrest Another Christian Preacher for Holding a Service

The Christian-hating Calgary Cops Arrest Another Christian Preacher for Holding a Service

Churches are currently limited to a maximum occupancy of 15 people, in order to slow the spread of COVID-19

Sarah Rieger · CBC News, May 16, 2021)

Pastor Tim Stephens of Fairview Baptist Church in southeast Calgary was arrested on Saturday, after months of breaking pandemic health restrictions. (Fairview Baptist Church/YouTube)

Calgary Pastor Tim Stephens has been arrested, after months of encouraging church congregants to break public health rules. 

Police said Stephens was arrested for organizing a church service on Sunday at Fairview Baptist Church in southeast Calgary, in violation of a Court of Queen’s Bench Order that requires organizers of events to comply with public health restrictions.

Stephens was proactively served a copy of the court order, which was obtained by Alberta Health Services, last week.

“The pastor acknowledged the injunction, but chose to move forward with today’s service, ignoring requirements for social distancing, mask wearing and reduced capacity limits for attendees,” police said in an emailed release. …

Congregants are seen gathered outside of the Fairview Baptist Church in southeast Calgary on Sunday, shortly before the arrest of Pastor Tim Stephens. (Helen Pike/CBC)

“We continue to ask those who may be considering organizing or participating in any outdoor events to ensure they are familiar with public health order requirements and to do their part to prevent further spread of the virus,” police said.

The church leader has previously been fined and ticketed for defying public health regulations by holding over-capacity gatherings and not enforcing mask use.

Churches are currently limited to a maximum occupancy of 15 people, in order to slow the spread of COVID-19 in Alberta. The province has the highest active case rate in the country, with more than 22,000 active cases.

“Restricting the church to 15 people — which essentially restricts the church from gathering — is against the will of Christ and against the conscience of many who desire to worship the Lord of glory according to his word,” Stephens wrote in a blog post following the updated restrictions earlier this month, added that he planned to continue to not follow safety precautions. …

Stephens said in the blog post that his church has seen no coronavirus transmission. CBC News has reached out to AHS to ask if any cases have been tied to the church.

Police are seen outside of Fairview Baptist Church on Sunday. (Helen Pike/CBC)

A January inspection by Alberta Health Services at the church found only two of approximately 75 attendees were wearing masks, the pastor and church staff were unmasked and rows in the auditorium were full, with people sitting side-by-side in rows less than two metres apart. 

The inspection also found that there was no cleaning or disinfecting of high-touch surfaces between services.

Alberta has seen increased enforcement against COVID-19 rule-breakers this month, after bringing in a new protocol to allow for a more coordinated response between police and health agencies for targeting those repeatedly not complying with health orders.

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