Chicagoland

Praying for the ‘storm of violence’ to subside

By Michelle Martin | Staff writer
Sunday, August 29, 2010

The sunrise was invisible, but the hundreds of people who showed up at Masses and prayer services on five South Side beaches in the early morning Aug. 21 took it on faith.

Between 50 and 100 worshippers came out at each of the sites for back-to-school services to pray for an end to violence.

The services were organized by the Black Catholic Deacons of Chicago.

The Gospel reading recounted Jesus calming the wind and the waves on the Sea of Galilee, and Deacon Leroy T. Gill, who preached at the service on Oakwood Beach, said that was what God did with overnight storms before the services started.

Now Christians must call on God to stop the storm of violence that has enveloped our communities, said Gill, a deacon at Holy Angels Parish. Christians must also put themselves forward to stop the violence.

“There is a storm in the communities in which we live and serve and we know the only way to bring about an end to this storm is to call on the mighty name of Jesus,” Gill said in an e-mail before the service. “When you are out on the beach in the early morning you are reminded of the beauty that God intended for this land. God did not intend for there to be so much trouble in the land. So early in the morning when the creatures of the sky are flying in peace and the sun is coming over the land, what better place and way is there to pray for peace in the land?”

At the service, Gill said, “Don’t tell me this problem is too big for the church. It’s not too big if we have faith.”

A few miles further south, at 63rd Street Beach, Father Matt Eyerman, pastor of St. Columbanus Parish, took off his alb and stole and plunged into the lake, to show how everyone is immersed in a culture of violence.

As of Aug. 21, Chicago had recorded just over 300 homicides in 2010. More than 50 of the victims were 18 years old or younger.

“I have done so many funerals for kids, and it hurts,” Gill said. “It hurts when you turn on the TV and another child has been shot. It hurts.”

Booklets that contained information about violence and steps that people can take to stop it were distributed at all of the services.

“This is learned behavior,” Gill said. “These children were not born to kill. They learned it. And a lot of the time, they learned it in our homes. The hatred is in our hearts.”

All disciples must commit to purging themselves of hatred and the violence it spawns, Gill said.

At the end of the service, Gill and other ministers called forth police officers who were in attendance and blessed them, then blessed anyone else who came forward.

Such blessings happened at all five services, which were held in English at 12th Street Beach, Oakwood Beach, 63rd Street Beach and Rainbow Beach. A Spanish Mass was celebrated at 31st Street Beach.

While there were several dozen people gathered in prayer at Oakwood Beach, Gill said he worried that the weather would stop people from coming out.

“Starting at nine o’clock last night, my phone was ringing, with people saying, ‘Deacon, what are we gonna do if it’s raining?’” Gill said. “My phone started ringing at 5:30 this morning with people saying, ‘Deacon, what are we gonna do?’ You know what people would do if it was concert or a new phone coming out; they’d come out with their umbrellas and they’d be in line.”

Eileen Foggie, a Holy Angels parishioner, attended the Oakwood Beach service. She said God would hear the prayers rising from Chicago’s lakefront.

“I truly believe the Bible where it says if two or three are gathered in God’s name, he will hear our prayers.”

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