Citations:Covidtide

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English citations of Covidtide, COVIDtide, and COVID-tide

  • 2020 March 12, Reese Holland, “COVIDtide was gonna be great tho... part of the IRL ‘End Times’ IP.”, in Twitter[1], retrieved February 8, 2022.
  • 2020 March 22, @subtle_mullet, “In the past 24 hours I played skyrim for 10 […]”, in Twitter[2], archived from the original on March 23, 2020:
    In the past 24 hours I played skyrim for 10, and ate a whole pizza, and that isn't all. Covidtide is exposing the paucity of the american dream much more efficiently than lent
  • 2020 November, “Overcoming Challenges at Sunnyside Freedom School 2020”, in The Moravian[3], number 5, archived from the original on February 27, 2023, page 12:
    Fortunately, the Children’s Defense Fund leaders provided a lot of resources and advice, and together they were able to create a safe Freedom School for COVID-tide.
  • 2020 November, Dean Pinter, “Prayer and Scripture Are the Daily Bread in Moose Jaw”, in The Saskatchewan Anglican[4], Regina, Saskatchewan: Diocese of Saskatchewan / Diocese of Saskatoon / Diocese of Qu’Appelle, retrieved February 7, 2022, page 4:
    Like so many other congregations, St. Aidan is adapting its life together to realities created by this extended season of “Covidtide.”
  • 2020 November 29, Timothy P. O’Malley, “Awake Ye Sleepers”, in Our Sunday Visitor[5], volume 109, number 32, Huntington, Indiana, →ISSN, page 15:
    We keep vigil for a coming vaccine that will spare us from the absence of human communion, from the death count that keeps growing. But until then, COVID-tide has become the new normal.
  • 2020, Peter Kwasniewski, The Holy Bread of Eternal Life: Restoring Eucharistic Reverence in an Age of Impiety, Manchester, New Hampshire: Sophia Institute Press, →ISBN:
    The Covidtide considerations in this chapter will remain pertinent even if the Church returns someday to “normal” operations, because they force us to reflect on the nature of Christian worship and on proportionate and disproportionate responses to problems that arise in a fallen world.
  • 2020 November 20, Tish Harrison Warren, “As a Pandemic Parent, God Calls Me to This Loud and Lonely Life”, in Christianity Today[6] (website), retrieved February 7, 2022:
    Covidtide has been a deeply lonely time for many of us.
  • 2020 December 2, Maria Wiering, “Catholics Say They’re Able to Deepen Their Approach to Advent Season This Year”, in Angelus (Catholic News Service)‎[7], Los Angeles, retrieved February 7, 2020:
    Advent during "Covidtide," as some have termed the pandemic, allows families to enter a type of "family cocoon" or period of dormancy, said Anne Nicklaus, 57, whose family belongs to Our Lady of Peace Parish in Minneapolis.
  • 2021, Michael Warren Davis, The Reactionary Mind: Why Conservative Isn’t Enough, Washington: Regnery Gateway, →ISBN, page 119:
    In May 2020—just two months into COVIDtide, when schools began closing en masse—40 percent of parents said they were more likely to homeschool their kids once the pandemic was over.
  • 2021, Brad East, The Doctrine of Scripture, Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books, →ISBN, page xvi:
    Even in lockdown, even in Covidtide, our house has continued to brim over with life.
  • 2021 December, Ted Olsen, “Screening Visitors”, in Christianity Today, volume 65, number 9, →ISSN, page 22:
    COVID-19 might have further ruptured Christian unity as we debated mandatory vaccines and masking, but there’s one thing we can all agree on based on our experiences over Covidtide: Video calls are a bad substitute for human presence.
  • 2022, Kyle R. Hughes, Teaching for Spiritual Formation: A Patristic Approach to Christian Education in a Convulsed Age, Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books, →ISBN:
    The COVID-19 pandemic has, of course, challenged educators’ abilities to foster hospitable classroom spaces amidst social distancing guidelines, if students were even able to gather in-person in the first place. But even before the advent of this long, arduous season of COVIDtide, many Christian teachers, particularly at the university level, have been assigned an increasing number of hybrid or fully online classes.
  • 2023, Patrick J. Deneen, Regime Change: Toward a Postliberal Future, New York: Sentinel, →ISBN, page 157:
    Those supporting the eventual winner of the election, President Joe Biden, were dominated by members of the credentialed professional class—with most more likely to be salaried and working at home during COVID-tide.
  • 2023, Peter A. Kwasniewski, Bound by Truth: Authority, Obedience, Tradition, and the Common Good, New York: Angelico Press, →ISBN:
    However, when during Covidtide Governor Kate Brown imposed heavily restrictive measures in Oregon, limiting attendance in any church to 25 people at a time—even if the building can hold 300 or 1,000—the reaction of Archbishop Sample was deeply disappointing.
  • 2024, Charles Camlin and Charles Erlandson, “Welcome to Cranmer Theological Journal”, in Cranmer Theological Journal, volume 1, number 1, →DOI, →ISSN, page 1:
    This first issue has been more than four years in the making. [] As with so much in the world, progress was delayed by various challenges during the long season of Covidtide.
  • 2024 January 30, J. D. Flynn, “Bishop Bowl Bets, the News, and Your Prayers”, in The Pillar[8], archived from the original on February 3, 2024:
    The policy is nothing new — instead, it was a reminder that a loosening of licensing requirements during Covidtide was over, and the conference’s intellectual property policies were back to “business as usual.”