A makeshift memorial on the ground near the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. • REUTERS/Carlo Allegri |
Gregory O. Brewer, Bishop of Central Florida, reflects on the mass murders in Orlando:
I had to work to take it in. My natural reaction was to keep the horror of this event at a distance — keeping my heart safe from grief and outrage. But slowly, and as an answer to prayer, the sadness, the weariness, the empty silence of mourning poured in. Someone said that the deeper the grief, the fewer the words. That’s how I feel. Words of condolence have little value in the face of this carnage. For right now, all we can do is grieve, pray and support the families of those who have died the best we can.
I will leave it to others to look for someone to blame. Instead — right now — all I want to do is to stand beside, pray, and love as best I can. There will be time later raise questions about security, gun violence, and homophobic rage. There is no justification for this atrocity. I categorically condemn what has happened. Better solutions must be found.
What I do believe is that love is stronger than death. The promise of resurrection brings courage, and the promise of “a new heaven and a new earth” should fuel all of God’s people to help build a better world.
“Thy Kingdom come; Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”