I have been following COVID-19 pretty carefully because the global nature of it has an effect on the strategy of the missions organization I serve. I do not want to become known as the American missions agency that brought COVID-19 to a country where it was not previously found. Here are some points to consider:Based on this information, the risk at different churches will vary dramatically based on the demographics of the church.Symptoms do not appear for 2-14 days, but you can still be infecting others before symptoms appear. Not everyone who catches COVID-19 shows symptoms of the virus. However, asymptomatic carriers can still infect others.Coughs and sneezes can travel several feet and stay suspended in the air for up to 10 minutes.For us, this means that our missions team members could become infected with COVID-19 in the States and not show any symptoms until the last day of the short-term mission. If our infected team member develops symptoms that require the highest level of medical attention necessary for COVID-19 while we are in another country, that could be a serious hurdle (depending on the country in which we are ministering and whether we are ministering in a city or a village) and could seriously hinder travel back to the States on the planned schedule.Thankfully, this isn't a problem for the local church. However, one only needs to look at how the disease has spread in South Koreato see the kind of negative press a church in the United States could get for a similar type of outbreak. While I agree that the statistics that 4thgeneration has shared are correct, it is clear from the South Korea incident that COVID-19 is highly contagious because it can be spread by those who do not even know that they have it yet or who do not know that they have it because they are low-responders or totally asymptomatic responders. Further, if yours is a church with a large population of those who are 50-years-old and higher and COVID-19 sweeps through your church, your risk of losing more than 2% of your congregation is much higher (see the link in my first bullet point above). I believe the church has a responsibility to protect the reputation of the body of Christ, and a large outbreak that is linked to a church could create a major backlash. Further, consider how you might feel if the elder sheep in the flock which God has entrusted to you become ill and 14.8%, 8%, or even 3.6% of them die because you did not ask the younger, lower-risk sheep to stay home for a few weeks if they show symptoms that indicate they may be carriers.I like how brotherjames's church has handled it. I would add a little more.