Friday, June 17, 2016
Sunday, June 12, 2016
In Response to the tragedy in Orlando:
“We pray for our enemies and those who wish us harm. Deliver them AND US from hatred, cruelty and
revenge.”
I am having a difficult time praying this prayer right
now. This morning I was in the chapel at
Kanuga Conference Center near Hendersonville, North Carolina. I was getting ready to deliver the sermon for
the close of the 25th Annual HIV/AIDS Retreat, sponsored by the
Province IV Network of AIDS Ministries when I learned of the terrorist attack
at a large gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, which left 52 dead and 50 wounded.
The entire weekend had been about HIV/AIDS including the
impact of those deaths from the early days and still today. Now we were to deal with impact of 52 sudden
deaths – deaths of ordinary people who were enjoying a social evening….thinking
that they were safe at a nightclub many frequented on a regular basis. Some of you reading this now may have been
there – or a place like it at one time.
It is clear that, while it is being investigated as a terrorist
attack and is the largest mass shooting in our nation’s history, this is a hate
crime. And the hate that prompts such
actions on the part of this killer and others is the hatred of those who are
different. Being different should never
result in losing one’s life.
Yet it has and continues to be so. “Being different” is why working toward finding
a cure for and funding prevention against infection for HIV/AIDS was delayed,
turning an epidemic into a worldwide pandemic.
“Being different” is what caused the tangential epidemic of “Afraids,”
causing so many tragic, senseless deaths.
Too soon. So young.
Apparently the hatred was directed at people who were either
LGBT or were friends and colleagues of folks who were LGBT. We seem to have become obsessed with acts of
hatred against people who are somehow different, whether it is because of
sexual orientation, race, religion, gender, gender expression, gender identity
or any other difference that for some is beyond what they will allow to simply
exist.
Integrity USA decries these murders. Integrity USA decries all acts of violence
that are directed at any of God’s children but particularly those that are
directed against those children of God who are different, no matter what reason
they might be seen as different.
It would be easy to be “the same” and return hate and violence
with equal levels of hatred and violence.
Let us be of the same mind as Christ and choose love and peace. Let us not be intimidated into isolation and
shame but let us stand together in pride.
Now, more than ever, we need to continue to let our light so shine that
the truth will have won out and love will win.
Pray for the victims of this mass shooting my kindred in
Christ. Pray for the families and loved
ones who now grieve. Pray for the recovery of the wounded. Pray for our nation that the hatred which
infects us will be taken from our hearts and minds. Pray most of all that God’s infinite and
indiscriminate love will ultimately prevail over the evil that has caused the
deaths of dozens….in Orlando, in Charleston, in Columbine, and everywhere that
innocent blood has been shed in the name of hate.
May the dead rest in peace and rise in glory. May the wounded experience healing of body,
mind and soul. May the living strive for
an end to such senseless violence.
Bruce Garner,
President
Integrity USA
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