A friend sent me the following reading by the Rev. Jeanne Lloyd, a UU minister in Western Massachusetts:
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[FONT="]Ministers Reflection[/FONT]
[FONT="]I know Knoxville. My parents were married at Broadway Baptist Church in Knoxville. My grandfather was a policeman in the Knoxville police department for most of his life. My fathers uncle ran the Hamilton National Bank in Knoxville for all his life. My mothers father and she herself ran several White Store grocery stores in Knoxville. My father was the first child in his family to go to college at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, and I went there too for a short while. The church I attended in Knoxville, when I was a child, was the Second Presbyterian Church on Kingston Pike, next door to the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church. I know Knoxville.[/FONT]
[FONT="]I know its people. Its people are kind and gracious people who extend to all, and especially strangers, a gracious, friendly, southern hospitality that welcomes you into the fold. These are good people.[/FONT]
[FONT="]I also know Powell, Tennessee. It is the place where my grandfather, uncle, and aunt lived for at least 20 years. It lays half way between Knoxville and Oak Grove, where my mother was born on a farm. It is a land of rolling hills, lakes and fields. It is a land of good people, many of whom dedicate their lives to practicing Jesus teachings of loving oneself as ones neighbor. It is a place, they say, that Jim Adkisson dwelled before choosing to enter Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church on Sunday morning, July 27th, 2008, intending to kill as many liberals and gays as he could, before dying himself in the heat of battle. [/FONT]
[FONT="]Friends, this is what hate looks like. This is what evil looks like. Let us plainly name it as such. Evil is when ones life events and others hate shape ones beliefs so much that the easy answer is to blame an entire people for the sorrows of your own life. Evil is when we label people as the other. [/FONT]
[FONT="]As Unitarian Universalists, we are the religious liberals that he and others like him hate. [/FONT]
[FONT="]But, we are a people who, for hundreds of years, have fought for individual freedom and democratic representation. We as Unitarians and Universalists help found this country, right here in Massachusetts. We are a people who promote fair and equitable treatment of everyone, regardless of their race, color, sex, ability, affectional or sexual orientation, age, national orientation, or religious beliefs. We have fought and died for several hundred years for the civil rights of people of color, women, people with disabilities, people with different gender preferences, and, children. We believe in supporting each persons search for health and wholeness, truth and justice. We do not tell people what to believe, but we do ask that you and I hold each person sacred while respecting each persons search for truth.[/FONT]
[FONT="]As Unitarian Universalists, we worship that which calls us to bring health and wholeness to our lives and to others. It is a senseless tragedy when the evil that is hate creates so much prejudice that people come to believe that secular and religious liberals who work in shelters, serve community meals, and promote fair treatment and dignity for all people . . . are the enemy. We are not the enemy. We work to change patterns of injustice. And, we weep to know that Jim Adkissons soul was so corrupted by others spewing hate and his lifes experiences that he believed to his core that our sisters and brothers at the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church were his enemy. Plainly said, they were not. We are not.[/FONT]
[FONT="]We weep for the tragedy of hate that brought death to brother Greg McKendry, age 60, and Linda Kraeger, age 61, who did nothing more than arise on Sunday morning, and go to church to seek spiritual nourishment and to extend a welcome hand to strangers who came to the door. We weep that the hand of hospitality they offered received such violent hate in return. We weep for our brothers and sisters, injured, wounded, and still recovering:[/FONT]
[FONT="]We hold in our hearts, the Barnhart family, of whom three were wounded: Joe Barnhart, age 76; Jack Barnhart, age 69: Betty Barnhart, age 71; and for Linda Chavez, age 41; John Worth, Jr, age 68; Allison Lee, age 42; and Tammy Sommers, age 38. We pray for their recovery, physically and spiritually.[/FONT]
[FONT="]We pray for all of our brothers and sisters who sat on Sunday in the Knoxville UU sanctuary, wanting nothing more than to enjoy the gift of childrens song, laughter, anxiety and bravado, as they performed for their loving parents, relatives, friends and grandparents. Most of all we pray for the children, who practiced hard to deliver their joyful performances, looking for pride from their family and friends; but for whom, now, their memories will be forever shattered by horror, betrayal and blood caused by a stranger who came to their door, for the sole purpose of killing them. [/FONT]
[FONT="]Where will their trust in humanity come from, as they go through life? We pray that they will come to understand that there are good people in this world, many people in Tennessee, who deserve their trust, and to whom they can go to for help and reassurance in troubled times. We pray that they and their families will not also be mortally wounded by betrayal and fear, but will, with courage, stand again for equal rights for all people, no matter the cost.[/FONT]
[FONT="]We pray for the rebuilding of our Unitarian Universalist sister congregations in Knoxville and Farragut.[/FONT]
[FONT="]We pray that they will continue to hold close to their hearts the words of Francis David, the Unitarian martyr who died in prison in 1579 for believing these words that he scratched on the walls of his prison cell, We need not think alike, to love alike.[/FONT]
[FONT="]We need not think alike, to love alike.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Friends, We need not think alike, to love alike.[/FONT]
[FONT="]As Unitarian Universalists we believe that [/FONT]
[FONT="]Love is the Spirit of our faith and Service its law. [/FONT]
[FONT="]That THIS is our great covenant: [/FONT]
[FONT="]To dwell together in peace, [/FONT]
[FONT="]To seek the truth in love, [/FONT]
[FONT="]and to help one another. [/FONT]
[FONT="]May it be so.[/FONT]