Crossroads hopes to meet in an abandoned movie theater at a cost of $6,500 more per month than they were paying at the school. But they’re sort of in a bind because the schools have kicked them out and they don’t yet have the city’s approval to meet in the space they plan to rent.
New York’s ban on churches meeting in public schools, which went into effect Feb. 12, is about “far more than meeting space,” according to a Southern Baptist pastor in the area who believes broader religious freedom is at stake.
“More and more, this just smells like there’s an agenda. My concern — and this is why I’m asking for people in our denominational world to be praying about this — I think this is just the beginning of what they want to do to the religious freedoms of churches in New York,” Ray Parascando, pastor of Crossroads Church, a Southern Baptist congregation in Staten Island, N.Y., told Baptist Press.
Crossroads, which met in Public School 52 for more than four years, held its last worship service in that location Sunday, joining about 60 churches — mostly evangelical congregations — in being evicted from meeting space they rented from the city’s schools.
“Yesterday’s service was emotional because we’ve invested the last four and a half years of our church there in terms of meeting, and we don’t really want to leave but we’ve got to do what we’ve got to do. It was definitely emotional, but a good emotional.
“We believe God is sovereign over these things,” Parascando said. “It was emotional in the sense of saying goodbye to the school, but we’re still going to care for the students and do the things that we’ve been doing to care for the school.”
Crossroads members were upset not so much that they were being pushed out of the space but “concerned that the mayor and the city of New York are discriminating against churches,” the pastor said.
“You’ve got to be angry over the things that God would be angry about, and you’ve got to be angry for what is right. People had righteous indignation, like this needs to change because it’s unfair and it’s abusing our freedom of religion.”
Next Sunday, Feb. 19, Crossroads hopes to meet again at the school, but not for a worship service because they’re not allowed. They’ve asked the school system for permission to meet for a community farewell gathering in which they’ll mark their time there and Parascando will share information about the church’s future. The meeting would conclude with a brunch, he said.
[Editor’s note: This article is incomplete. The source for this document was originally published on Baptist Press—however, the original URL is no longer available.]
Subscribe to Free “Top 10 Stories” Email
Get the top 10 stories from The Aquila Report in your inbox every Tuesday morning.