Posted on 07/16/2013 3:34:28 PM PDT by IbJensen
"I am hurt. I am sad. I am shocked, but I shouldn't be," preached the Rev. Valarie Houston of Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church in Sanford's historic Goldsboro area.
Several times during her impassioned Sunday-morning sermon about George Zimmerman's acquittal, Houston's words brought church members to their feet.
"We are African-Americans. We are people. We are allowed to go the store and buy Arizona Ice Tea and a package of Skittles and go home," she said, recalling Trayvon Martin's trip to a convenience store that ended in his death.
"Now is the time to lift our national policy from the quicksand of racial injustice to the solid rock of human dignity," Houston said.
Those issues of inequity and injustice were echoed in churches across the region, from their pulpits and pews to their parking lots.
Although the Rev. Lowman Oliver of St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church in Sanford chose to continue with a previously scheduled youth-day service, he briefly expressed his frustration with the not-guilty verdict.
"This is not taking us forward but moving us backward," Oliver said. "I am angry, but I dare not sin. That anger is driving me to do what I can to ensure every mother, brother, sister will not tolerate stalking.
"On the positive side," Oliver said, "the case has brought to everyone's attention racial issues and disparities in our penal system, and has become a catalyst for change."
Crystal Haynes, the 31-year-old youth coordinator at St. Paul Missionary Baptist, expressed her views through her sweat shirt -- a gray hoodie featuring Trayvon's image on its front along with the words "Hoodie does not mean I'm a criminal."
Trayvon was wearing a hoodie the night he died. Some believe the garment raised Zimmerman's suspicions.
"I'm heartbroken, honestly," said Haynes, whose son is 4. "A lot say this is not a black-or-white issue, but a wrong-or-right issue. I disagree. He [Zimmerman] didn't get anything. That shows no respect for the deceased."
The Rev. Errol Thompson also wore a hoodie Sunday when he delivered his sermon to more than 100 churchgoers at New Life Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church in Orlando. "I wore it to honor the fallen young man and his family," he said.
At First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church in Sanford, the Rev. Harry D. Rucker was late for his 11 a.m. sermon. He had spent a late night at the Seminole County Sheriff's Office discussing the verdict in the Zimmerman trial with other members of Sanford Pastors Connecting, a nondenominational coalition of black and white religious leaders that formed as a result of the Trayvon incident.
Once he arrived at First Shiloh, Rucker began by asking the congregation to keep both the Martin and Zimmerman families in their prayers. Although he believed in the American justice system, he disagreed with the jury's verdict, he said.
"I was trying to eat when they read the verdict and I dropped my fork," Rucker preached. "For the first time in my life I was speechless."
However, the Rev. Harlan Walker of Word of Faith Ministries in Sanford wasn't so surprised.
"I don't believe that any of those who followed the case and listened to the evidence will be surprised it turned out the way it did," said Walker, adding, "I don't expect any dissension, maybe a flare-up here or there."
Regardless, said First Shiloh churchgoer Alpha Henderson, 59, "Even if the verdict came back guilty, it still wouldn't bring Trayvon Martin back."
Henderson, a father of six from Orlando, said he believed the city of Sanford is healing and credited his pastor with getting the town back on track.
Rucker said changes regarding race relations will come to Sanford.
"We cannot allow it to stay as we were before," said Rucker, who has been First Shiloh's pastor for 30 years. "We were existing in a separatist kind of way."
The Rev. John Murphy, part of Sanford's coalition of black and white pastors, dedicated much of his Sunday sermon at True Church, a nondenominational church in Winter Garden, to discussing the lessons of the shooting and trial.
"As pastors, we hated the fact that this incident happened. You never want to see a young man lose his life," said Murphy, a pastor for Harvest Time International, a global mission center.
"We've come together as pastors and government and community leaders as never before," he said. "We have met together and experienced the grief of Trayvon being killed, and the discrimination coming alive, and used that as a platform for more civil rights and more nondiscrimination.
"We have felt a whole new realm of purpose and direction," Murphy said. "This has given us an opportunity to get more involved in our communities, to know people and have a protest and have a grieving so we can talk and learn where the problems are."
For Allen Chapel member Tray Williams, 27, the verdict in the Zimmerman trial was a reflection of Florida's history.
"Florida is more than Disney World," said Williams of Sanford. "It's still the South."
The Rev. Jeff Krall of Family Worship Center in Sanford saw the trial in Biblical terms -- as an example of mankind's imperfections.
"We live in an imperfect world, with imperfect people, working within imperfect systems," said Krall, a member of Sanford Pastors Connecting.
"We need to rely on a perfect God," Krall said, "who can give us His grace to act in a perfect way during difficult and perplexing times."
It’s okay to smack down a few ‘gay’ people if they’re wearing hoodies.
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I'm completely shocked by this. I just can't imagine belonging to a church that would do this kind of thing.
“I have an entire litany of terms to apply to this jackass in the White Hut.”
You mean the White African Bastard Muslim?
I’ve owned and worn hooded sweatshirts for decades.
Warm and practical for cool to mildy cold weater.
Blacks don’t “own” hoodies.
But they are close to a lock on “hoodlum”.
How about drug-addled, petty thief, punk thug, Hoodlum Sunday?
“Its okay to smack down a few gay people...”
Black on “gay” crime is an epidemic in the modern liberal city center plantations.. This is the “third rail” of lamestream media reporting.
These people want to relive their heyday of the 60s when racial discrimination was at its worst. What’s wrong with these people? Is this what happens when blacks have power in the USA now, they turn on white people with everything they have. Revenge seems a huge priority for them.
We are allowed to go the store and buy Arizona Ice Tea and a package of Skittles and go home,” she said, recalling Trayvon Martin’s trip to a convenience store
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a couple of things Val
1. When was the last time you bought Skittles ??? as an adult I dont buy them
2. nobody stopped Trayvon Martin from “goi9ng home” ifd he wanted to. he didnt want to. he wanted to punch a stranger who didnt do anythiong to him in the face and beat him up.
3. TM was “allowed to go home” why didnt he do just that ???
4. you are not allowed to punch and beat someone else...
5. was TM a member of your church ??? I doubt he ever darkened the door of any church
The AME church is black.
I hear you.
The Rev. Errol Thompson also wore a hoodie Sunday when he delivered his sermon to more than 100 churchgoers at New Life Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church in Orlando. “I wore it to honor the fallen young man and his family,” he said.
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HEY !!! Errol !!!
what did you do when young men from your area died in Iraq and Afghanistan ???
did you bother to “honor the fallen young man and his family,” ???
I’m not. It is a racist church. Now if any of those churches were Catholic ...
I see. Then that’s even more reprehensible of them.
“I was trying to eat when they read the verdict and I dropped my fork,” Rucker preached. “For the first time in my life I was speechless.”
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Then pull the fork out of your throat where you dropped it silly
"This is not taking us forward but moving us backward," Oliver said. "I am angry, but I dare not sin. That anger is driving me to do what I can to ensure every mother, brother, sister will not tolerate stalking.
"On the positive side," Oliver said, "the case has brought to everyone's attention racial issues and disparities in our penal system, and has become a catalyst for change."
Either Semmens wrote this, or (black conservative) Larry Elder was spot on when he said years ago, "Frankly - most black people just think differently."
He [Zimmerman] didn’t get anything. That shows no respect for the deceased.”
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Dont worry Crystal...
Lots of respect for the deceased will been shown when Zimmerman finishes raking in everything from the suits hes going to bring
The idea that Martin should be emulated in ANY way is self destructive.
Gee, I can remember a time when people went to church to hear God's words of love, kindness and foregiveness!
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