Christianity’s holiest site, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, stands indefinitely closed during Lent, blocking worship at Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection tomb amid Iran-backed missile threats—a stark reminder of how globalist entanglements endanger sacred traditions.
Closure Timeline and Triggers
Israeli authorities ordered the Church of the Holy Sepulchre closed on February 28, 2026, following joint Israel-U.S. attacks on Iran. Iranian retaliation included rocket fire and missile strikes near Jerusalem’s Old City, endangering the site housing Golgotha and Jesus’ tomb. This marked the first prolonged shutdown preventing continuous liturgies, unlike brief 2018 protests or COVID restrictions that allowed limited rites. All Old City holy sites, including the Western Wall and Temple Mount, remain shuttered as of March 17.
Israel has closed the Church of the Holy Sepulchre indefinitely for the first time in the history of Christianity.
Holy Week and Easter services will be prohibited. Sunday masses and liturgies cancelled. A church that should be packed with hundreds of thousands these coming… pic.twitter.com/LdVfATPXBw
— Orthodox Christian (@orthodox_33ad) March 17, 2026
Unprecedented Impact on Lenten Worship
Church custodians—Greek Orthodox, Armenian Apostolic, and Roman Catholic—relocated Lenten Vespers on March 1 but halted daily masses indefinitely. Missile fragments struck near the church on March 16-17, injuring at least one person and underscoring ongoing threats. This disruption hits during 2026 Lent, blocking Via Dolorosa processions central to global Christian devotion. Vatican sources highlight “invisible walls” of fear, unprecedented in duration compared to past conflicts.
Stakeholders Clash Over Security and Faith
Israeli Civil Administration enforces closures citing rocket threats, with the Foreign Ministry stressing public safety after a March 12 missile alert. Church leaders, including Patriarch Theophilos III, adapt services while lobbying for Holy Week access under the 1852 Status Quo agreement that governs the site. CNEWA’s Joseph Hazboun states the shutdown persists until war ends and rocket fire ceases. Pope Leo XIV calls for ceasefire to protect religious continuity.
Broader Consequences for Christians and Stability
Pilgrims worldwide face denied access, crippling Jerusalem’s pilgrimage economy vital to local Christians maintaining presence amid tensions. Long-term, prolonged closure risks eroding traditions at Christianity’s “Mother Church,” straining interfaith dynamics in the Old City. Experts note this highlights war’s toll on religious freedoms, contrasting pandemic allowances where rites continued. Churches invoke St. John Paul II’s emphasis on steadfast Christian witness.
🔹️🇮🇱 Israel Police: "Rockets don't discriminate between religions": Large shrapnel falls at Al-Aqsa and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre following the Iranian attack pic.twitter.com/3ioPnqxfQz
— Beginning of Sorrows News | World News & Prophecy (@BoSNews) March 16, 2026
Sources:
Church of Holy Sepulchre Remains Closed (CNEWA)
Church of the Holy Sepulchre Closed Amid Escalating Tensions in the Middle East (Orthodox Times)
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem (WA Diocese)
Church of Holy Sepulchre Closed Amid War (Aleteia)
Historic Doors of the Holy Sepulcher of Jerusalem Are Removed for Restoration (Zenit)
