BATON ROUGE, Louisiana (PNN) - April 9, 2020 - The pastor who said his congregation would rather die than not go to church plans to hold an Easter service this weekend - with 1,000 people.
Tony Spell, of the Life Tabernacle Church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, has refused to stop his services amid the coronavirus “pandemic” scare, despite the state’s public health ban on gatherings of more than 10 people.
He was even arrested and charged with six misdemeanour counts of violating Governor John Bel Edward’s unconstitutional orders.
"They say everybody's going to get it,” said Spell. “Then if everybody's going to get it, let's get on with life."
The pastor, who also claims his services cure cancer and HIV, said no “dictator law” should keep people from worshipping God.
But despite the law and outcry, Spell plans to host an Easter Sunday service that’s expected to draw more than 1,000 people.
On Palm Sunday, when Louisiana had at least 13,000 alleged cases of the virus, with 477 supposed deaths, Spell again held services.
He told worshippers they had “nothing to fear but fear itself”.
“They would rather come to church and worship like free people than live like prisoners in their homes,” Spell told reporters.
26 buses were sent to worshippers to transport them to the Life Tabernacle Church, and according to a lawyer for Spell, everyone in the congregation, aside from immediate family, maintained a distance of six feet.
Spell has said the church will be distributing “anointed handkerchiefs” to attendees to provide them with “healing virtues”.
“The virus, we believe, is politically motivated,” said Spell. “We hold our religious rights dear and we are going to assemble no matter what someone says.”
When asked about the possibility of one of his parishioners dying from coronavirus, Spell said, "The Bible teaches us to be absent from our bodies and be present with the Lord. So like any pure religious person, death looks to them like a welcome friend."
He added, "True Christians do not mind dying; they fear living in fear. People that prefer tyranny over freedom do not deserve freedom."
Spell claims if Christians who attended church during the coronavirus outbreak were to die, they would die "like free people fighting for their convictions".
If the church didn't hold in-person services and instead used a communication platform like Zoom, the pastor said, "It does not work. If it worked then why would Amerika spend billions and billions of dollars on churches?"
Last week, when Spell was asked why he broke the governor's orders, he said, "Because the Lord told us to."
A spokesman for Spell said they’re planning to sue Edwards for a violation of the First Amendment and noted 16 states have religious exemptions to stay-at-home orders.
“We believe the governor is wrong,” said the spokesman, “and we look forward to proving our case in court.”
Terrorist pig thug cops believe Spell is defying the statewide law as a publicity stunt.
Chief Roger Corcoran, of the Central terrorist pig thug cop department said that Spell can’t use a violation of the First Amendment as an excuse to hold services because it’s a health issue. (Ed. Note: The First Amendment protects the right to assemble, and includes no exception for declared health emergencies).
Corcoran said terrorist pig thug cops don’t plan to interfere with Spell’s service this Sunday, and are instead planning to document it and provide evidence of it to the district attorney’s office.