In a move that has rippled far beyond church pews, the Catholic Diocese of Columbus has formally excused some parishioners from their obligation to attend Mass, not because of illness or weather, but because they are afraid of immigration enforcement.
Issued by Bishop Earl K. Fernandes, the decree grants a dispensation from Sunday and holy day Mass attendance for Catholics who reasonably fear detention or intimidation due to immigration enforcement activity. The order applies throughout the Diocese of Columbus, which spans central and southern Ohio, and remains in effect through the Christmas season, ending January 11, 2026.
The document is explicit in its reasoning. Fernandes cites a rise in immigration enforcement in the diocese and the resulting fear among immigrant communities. While Catholic teaching binds the faithful to attend Mass, that obligation is disciplinary, not absolute, and bishops are empowered to dispense it when spiritual harm is at stake. In this case, the bishop argues, fear of arrest or family separation could keep Catholics from practicing their faith altogether.
Instead, affected parishioners are encouraged to participate spiritually through livestreamed Masses, family prayer, and other devotions. Priests are also urged to be generous in providing pastoral care outside of Mass, including confession, anointing of the sick, and Holy Communion when possible.
The announcement struck a nerve online, particularly in Columbus, where the news spread rapidly through Reddit. One highly upvoted comment summed up the mood succinctly:
“This is honestly fierce.”
Others expressed surprise and relief. “As someone who grew up Catholic: A surprise, but a welcome one,” another commenter wrote, echoing a broader sentiment that the decision cut against stereotypes of the Church as reflexively aligned with hardline immigration politics.
The response wasn’t uniformly celebratory. Some commenters questioned the need for such a dispensation in the first place, arguing that it underscores how hostile the current climate has become. “It’s sad really,” one user wrote. “People can’t even practice their faiths in this country anymore.”
Still, many framed the decree as a rare example of institutional courage. The Columbus diocese is often viewed as theologically conservative, and Fernandes himself has drawn criticism in the past from both progressive and traditionalist Catholics. That context made the move feel, to some, even more consequential. As one commenter noted, “This guy is risking some serious pushback to stand up for his people.”
For Catholics familiar with church law, the decision is firmly grounded in doctrine. For everyone else, it reads as something simpler: a religious leader publicly acknowledging fear in his community and choosing to remove, rather than enforce, a burden.
In an Ohio increasingly polarized over immigration, the message from Columbus is unmistakable. At least for now, the diocese is telling its most vulnerable members that staying safe comes before filling a pew.







