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Sanford Preacher Linked To Virus Outbreak: 'God, Not Government' Will Bring Pandemic Under Control

Nick Schroeder
/
Bangor Daily News
The Calvary Baptist Church has been linked to the state's largest coronavirus outbreak through its pastor, Todd Bell, who officiated a wedding in Millinocket on Aug. 7.

SANFORD, Maine — The pastor at a Sanford Baptist church linked to a wave of new COVID-19 outbreaks in Maine disputed the legitimacy of the virus in a fiery indoor sermon on Sunday, lifting religious faith over realities of the pandemic and discouraging followers from heeding government mandates.Todd Bell, pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church, said he believed “God, not government,” would control the pandemic. He advised followers to wear masks if they wanted, but doing so was “like keeping a mosquito out of a chain-link fence.”

In his sermon, Bell brushed off scrutiny and media reports about his involvement in the recent outbreaks in the Katahdin area and Sanford, which have been linked to more than 120 COVID-19 cases — the largest outbreak in the state — as well as the death of an 83-year-old woman who did not attend the event.

Hymns from a 15-person maskless choir preceded Bell’s sermon, which was delivered in-person at the church on Sunday. The Sanford church posted the sermon on YouTube a day after the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention said on Saturday it was investigating a coronavirus outbreak linked to at least five people there.

The pastor’s lax attitude about the virus has strained a partnership between Calvary Baptist Church and York County Shelter, which used the church’s building to provide food and other resources to dozens of unhoused and low-income people in the community.

The shelter moved its operations outdoors this week and its meal program is now relying solely on staff, effectively barring volunteers from the church from helping.

“Folks that we’ve worked with for a long time understand and have a lot of respect for us wanting to protect the people that we serve,” York County Shelter Director Megan Gean-Gendron said, adding that the agency had worked hard to implement CDC guidelines.

But she’s concerned the church has put vulnerable people at risk. About 85 percent of clients at the shelter have lung, heart and diabetic conditions that make them more susceptible to the virus, Gean-Gendron said.

The pastor has been a central figure in the state’s largest outbreak after officiating a wedding in East Millinocket on Aug. 7. Many at the reception were not wearing masks.

Bell downplayed the broader implications of the outbreak, saying that he knew “something bad had happened” Saturday because he started receiving texts of encouragement after the CDC said it was investigating links to the church and the latest outbreak.

Commenters on social media have criticized the pastor and members of his congregation for spreading the virus.

“Would you rather your pastor study the Bible this morning or read all 3,000 comments of negativity?” he said. “You don’t want the pastor who is being ruled by untrue comments. You want the pastor who’s being ruled by Jesus Christ. So I’ve come to Christ — I encourage you to do the same.”