Also, given that the church deliberately provoked this conflict, it definitely doesn't meet the definition of "persecution", and the pastor and his attendees are no kind of "heroes" or "martyrs".
It wasn't the church that tried to illegally shut down the government. It was the government that tried to illegally shut down the church, in blatant and inexcusable violation of the First Amendment. It was government that manufactured a fake crisis, and then tried to use it as an excuse to trash the Constitution.
Congregating at the church was not the only option. They could have performed their services online.
Other churches have found a lot of ways to maintain the fellowship and community that is the purpose of attending church, many of them quite creative.
I think anyone who believes that physical presence in a building with other people once a week (or more) regardless of any other considerations is what worshipping God is all about is doing it wrong and missing the entire point of the exercise.
But I don't think the point at all is what we think about how people exercise their religious faith. It's what THEY think and believe. My church is meeting virtually and I personally think that's the right call. But I am not in the position to put that on others' consciences. That's the first point.
My second point, and an important one, is that this going on day after week after possibly, month. A violation of all kinds of individual rights as outlined in the Bill of Rights. For "safety", for "public health". Today it's a virus; next year it's Tornado, Flood and Severe Thunderstorm Warnings. Can't be out on the roads or in stores because you put such and such lives at risk, yadda yadda. Below will be the nincompoop chatterers saying "That's ridiculous" but it's not at all.
Give totalitarians an inch and they will always take 100 miles, every time.
Sorry, but I don't know at all that "gather together in a big group, no matter what" is actually a tenet of any Christian faith I'm aware of. Yes, "forsake not the gathering together" is a tenet of Christianity, but that neither says nor implies that you MUST traipse down to a specific building with a huge crowd of people, particularly when many of them might be highly contagious. I think we can both agree that it's not at all uncommon in pretty much every church for people who are sick to skip service until they're well, particularly if they might be infectious, and no one considers that sinful.
Sorry about this as well, but I don't believe for a second that this has anything to do with anyone's conscience feeling troubled, or anyone genuinely feeling that they're sinning by obeying the quarantine.
As I have already said, I don't disagree about encroaching overreach, and while I disagree with the people who are defending this church/complaining about violation of rights, I do think it's very important that the discussion and debate happen, and that they do so every time the government comes to us and says, "We need to restrict this for this reason". The only proper way to allow for the balancing of everyone's rights against each other is to carefully scrutinize each and every event individually on its own merits.