New pastor seeks to bring hope to Charleston church following massacre
A new pastor has been assigned to Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., where nine people were killed in a mass shooting in June. Her goal: to bring hope back to the community.
A new pastor has been assigned to Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., where nine people were killed in a mass shooting in June. Her goal: to bring hope back to the community.
The historic black church in Charleston, S.C., where nine people were killed in a deadly shooting in June, now has a new pastor 鈥 one who aspires to bring hope and unity to the church and community, local news outlets report.
The Rev. Dr. Betty Deas Clark became the first female pastor at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on Saturday. The next day she delivered her first sermon, which focused on a message of hope.
鈥淕od feels our pain, hears our cries and he knows our every move,鈥 Dr. Clark said in her sermon, according to The Post and Courier. 鈥淲hile the dreams, expectations, and bodies of many have been laid to rest, we must not allow nor put our hope to rest. We must believe as a family in God (and) that our best days are in front of us. We must believe that better days are coming.鈥
Emanuel AME 鈥 dubbed by locals as 鈥淢other Emanuel鈥 鈥 is where avowed white supremacist Dylann Roof on June 17 opened fire and killed nine parishioners who were attending a Bible study session. Among the victims was the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, the church鈥檚 pastor who was also a state senator.
Mr. Pinckney鈥檚 death 鈥 and the violence surrounding it 鈥 was a blow to the historic church, which has long stood as a symbol of the black community鈥檚 struggle for equal rights in Charleston.
鈥淭he black church is also a symbol of the civil rights struggle that was birthed in the 1950s,鈥 said Randal Jelks, professor of African-American studies at the University of Kansas in Lawrence and an expert in the intersection of race and religion, to 海角大神 following the shootings. 鈥淭he centers of the black freedom struggle were always black churches, so this attack reminds people of those past struggles.鈥
The Rev. Dr. Norvel Goff, who is now running for bishop, was interim pastor until Clark鈥檚 assignment.
Clark was pastor at Mount Pisgah AME church in Sumter, S.C., and has become the first woman in a number of posts, including president of the Ministerial Alliance for the Charleston area and chair of the Board of Examiners in South Carolina, according to her page on the Mount Pisgah website.
鈥淲e welcome her back to Charleston as she, her husband and family wrap their arms around their new church family to nurture them as they move forward as a relevant witness to Christ in the city of Charleston and to the world,鈥 said the Rev. Kylon Middleton, a close friend to Pinckney and his family, to the Post and Courier.
Following Clark鈥檚 sermon on Sunday, longtime parishioners expressed delight at her message 鈥 and relief at having a permanent pastor at last. 聽
鈥淭hank the Lord, God has sent us a woman after God鈥檚 own heart,鈥 one woman told the paper.
Another applauded the sermon, calling it 鈥渆xcellent and to the point. It almost alluded to some of the things Martin Luther King said, in my opinion; hope and justice,鈥 he said.