CHARLESTON, South Carolina— The sermons that many of Charleston’s preachers had written for Sunday service this Father’s Day are likely in bits and pieces or at the bottom of a trash bin. Many have undoubtedly been dashed with red lines and edits, undone by a ripple of tragedy visited upon one of the city’s most beloved congregations.
A young white man with a gun in his hand and hate in his heart opened fire on a group of black congregants at the historic Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church during a Bible study on Wednesday, killing nine, including the church’s respected pastor, the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, who also served as a state senator.
The killings have sent a shockwave of grief through this city— nicknamed “The Holy City” for its plethora of houses of worship— that have crashed into Father’s Day, which falls on this first Sunday following the killing.
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Pinckney, who also served as a state senator, was a husband and father of two little girls, Eliana and Malana.
“Tomorrow is Father’s Day and most of us have already prepared our Father’s Day message, I can assure you that most of them have been torn up,” said the Rev. Nelson Rivers III, a longtime friend of Pinckney’s and pastor of Charity Mission Baptist Church in neighboring North Charleston.
Rivers, who described Pinkney as a powerful preacher and “political star,” said the murders of the senator and so many members of his flock have added a special kind of significance to this Father’s Day.
“There is anguish because these are young children. They had no reason to expect their father would not live out their full age and live to sit down with grandchildren, privileges that I had,” Rivers said, standing in his sanctuary following a prayer vigil for the shooting victims.
“That makes it painful, but it’s also a somber reminder that you must do your best work while you can. We say inside the church that you have to work while its day because night is coming for all of us,” Rivers said. “Rev. Pinckney worked while it was daytime. His legacy doesn’t have to be made up or manufactured, he has a living legacy because he did great work while he was living, both as a father and as a pastor, both as a legislator and a friend.”
Admitted gunman Dylann Storm Roof, 21, has been arrested and charged with nine counts of murder and a related gun charge in the Mother Emanuel massacre. Police say Roof sat through the Bible study meeting with his victims an entire hour before pulling out a .45 caliber handgun and opening fire on the group. As the crackle of gunfire ripped through the fellowship hall, Pinckney’s wife and his younger daughter hid beneath a desk in his office. Others in the bible study dove to the ground and played dead.
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Witnesses reportedly told police that before killing his victims Roof said “You are raping our women and taking over our country.” All of Roof’s victim’s were shot multiple times.
Among those killed at Emanuel A.M.E Church was the church’s pastor, State Sen. Clementa Pinckney, 41; Tywanza Sanders, 26; Cynthia Hurd, 54; Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, 45; Rev. Daniel Lee Simmons Sr., 74; Susie Jackson, 87; DePayne Middleton-Doctor, 49 and Ethel Lance, 70.
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Roof, an unemployed high school dropout, then fled the church. He was arrested the following day in North Carolina after being spotted by a motorist who alerted police.
A magistrate judge on Friday set bail at $1 million dollars on the gun charge but said he did not have the authority to set bail for the murder charges, saying that would have to be done by a state Circuit Court.
At the bond hearing, members of the victims’ families addressed Roof directly. One by one they stared into Roof’s face on the other side of a video screen, and poured out their hearts.
“We welcomed you Wednesday night in our Bible study with open arms,” said Felicia Sanders, mother of Tywanza Sanders, killed while trying to save his aunt.
“You have killed some of the most beautifulest people that I know… Every fiber in my body hurts, and I will never be the same. Tywanza Sanders is my son, but Tywanza was my hero. Tywanza was my hero. But as we say in Bible study, we enjoyed you. But may God have mercy on you.”








