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WOODLAND PARK • Christian evangelist Andrew Wommack agreed in 2012, when he envisioned creating a megacampus for his flourishing Bible college and nonprofit religious ministry in this small mountain town,
WOODLAND PARK • Christian evangelist Andrew Wommack agreed in 2012, when he envisioned creating a megacampus for his flourishing Bible college and nonprofit religious ministry in this small mountain town,
“CDPHE revised its public health order to remove numerical capacity limits on houses of worship after several recent United States Supreme Court rulings concerning other states’ orders that imposed different capacity restrictions on houses of worship than on other critical businesses, according to a statement from the Colorado State Joint Information Center. Requirements previously included a limit on the number of individuals who could be present in a house of worship, similar to the limits on other indoor events.”
While the size of religious gatherings has been settled for now, other debates rage, as evidenced by the
So if you believe in a magic sky fairy, you don’t have to follow public health guidelines. Sounds reasonable.
Andrew Wommack Ministries Inc. is no longer the target of a lawsuit filed by state and local health departments over its failure to comply with COVID-19 guidelines because those guidelines have changed for religious organizations, thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court.
On December 18, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and Teller County Public Health dismissed their case against the Woodland Park nonprofit, following a revised state public health order. “CDPHE revised its public health order to remove numerical capacity limits on houses of worship after several recent United States Supreme Court rulings concerning other states’ orders that imposed different capacity restrictions on houses of worship than on other critical businesses, according to a statement from the Colorado State Joint Information Center. Requirements previously included a limit on the number of individuals who could be present in a house of worship, similar to the limits on other ind