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A bishop was stabbed while preaching mass. Please pray!

A bishop was stabbed while preaching mass. Please pray!

The Archbishop of Sydney called for calm and prayers after a stabbing in a church

Most Reverend Anthony Fisher, Archbishop of Sydney, has called on the faithful to be calm and to respond against violence and fear with prayer and peace, after Assyrian Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel and Father Isaac Royel was stabbed during a Mass at the Church of Christ the Good Shepherd in Wakeley, about 30km west of Sydney.

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“I invite the faithful not to react to these events with fear, or to avoid places of worship out of fear of further attacks, nor to be truly angry,” said the Archbishop of Sydney. show acts of retaliation or revenge. The best response to violence and fear is prayer and peace.”

“Houses of prayer have traditionally been places of peace and solace, places of refuge and sanctuary,” he observed in a statement. That's why the video of the attack on a religious leader during a church Mass was especially shocking. We have seen these types of events in other countries but until now, Australia has been largely free of this type of public violence in and around places of worship. Everyone in this country, whether bishop or priest, rabbi or imam, pastor or layperson, can pray safely without fear of being subjected to violence. force when gathering to pray.

The Archbishop of Sydney therefore calls for calm and not to give in to fear. He also prayed for Bishop Emmanuel, Father Royel and all those affected by the attack.

Regarding the attack on the bishop, at a press conference, New South Wales police commissioner, Karen Webb, said that this was considered an "extremist" act of religious origin.

New South Wales Premier Chris Minns has called religious leaders from several religious communities in western Sydney to a meeting. According to Australian Catholic news agency Cathnews, all leaders “endorsed and supported the unanimous condemnation of violence in all its forms,” asking everyone to always act with “mutual respect.”

The knife attack occurred while the Monday evening service (April 15) at the Church of Christ the Good Shepherd was taking place and was broadcast live. Australian police have arrested a 15-year-old boy for what is considered an act of terrorism motivated by religious extremism.

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The Christian Orthodox bishop who was stabbed in Sydney’s second knife attack in three days is a fire and brimstone preacher known for his anti-LGBTQ views and scepticism over Covid vaccines.

Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel leads the Christ the Good Shepherd Church in Wakeley in Sydney’s western suburbs.

He is the leader of an ultra-conservative branch of the Assyrian Orthodox faith who has a big presence on social media, with 17,000 followers on Facebook and 200,000 subscribers on YouTube. Videos he has posted to TikTok have been viewed millions of times.

He gained a reputation during Australia’s Covid lockdown for his sceptical views on vaccines.

In July 2021, at the height of the pandemic, he described lockdown restrictions as “mass slavery”.

He claimed that the risks posed by Covid-19 had been “exaggerated” and that vaccines were unnecessary because people’s natural immune systems would fight the virus.

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He said the stress caused by lockdowns and vaccine roll-outs were causing more harm than the virus itself, dismissing the advice released by the government, scientists and medical professionals.

Telling Australians to get vaccinated and to stay at home amounted to “absolute mass slavery”, the bishop claimed.

“I believe, even though I am not in the medical field and I am not an expert, that stress is the number one killer of the immune system,” he said during one sermon.

“The vaccine supposedly is to work to strengthen the immune system yet on the other hand we have made people go through so much stress and anxiety that it has destroyed it. Then what is the use of this vaccine?”

The motive for the knife attack is unknown and there is no suggestion at this stage that it had anything to do with the bishop’s views on lockdowns or vaccines.

Nor is there a suggestion that it was linked to the horrific knife attack carried out by 40-year-old Joel Cauchi at the Westfield shopping centre in Bondi Junction in Sydney on Saturday. Cauchi was shot dead by a police officer after stabbing to death six people and wounding a dozen others, including a baby girl.