In the aftermath, the local community has rallied to the UUs side:
Monday night Second Presbyterian hosted a big community candlelight vigil service for us to help us recover and to comfort and console us. That building was totally packed! There were people of all churches and no churches, from mosques and synagogues. Everybody was packed in essentially putting their arms around us. Our minister, [the Rev.] Chris Buice, said that there was a power in that room, and we really felt that. When [UUA President] Bill Sinkford said that our religion is about standing on the side of love and we’re not going to give that up, we really felt that, too.This is the expression of freedom: even in the face of death they refuse to stop loving and caring for those whom others loath and spurn. The more hatred is fired at them, the more their cause is justified, and the more good people will come from the shadows to rally to their aid.
We sang some classic UU hymns, and at the end the kids sprang up into the center aisle of the church at the front and sang “Tomorrow.” “The sun will come [out], tomorrow,” with bright faces, bright voices. We will never forget that. That was literally like sunshine. That was like life coming back at us. Those were the moments when we started back. We’re not back, but we’ve started back.
At a service of comfort [Tuesday] night, one UU said, “I’ve never been so proud to be a Knoxvillean,” and I would echo that. Knoxville showed us that there are a lot more good people than bad people.
This is beneath even your regular hysteria...
ReplyDeleteTo call this murderer "a viable candidate for TNGOP poster boy" is beneath even you and your normal demagoguery.
Do you also blame 'Saint Gore' and the Democrats for all the eco-nuts that murder and destroy in the name of mother earth?
There is enough crazy in both parties...
- nashvillebound