The
president brings the 5,500 people in the audience of a college
gymnasium in South Carolina to their feet as he slowly sounded the first
notes of “Amazing Grace” on his own.
In Eulogy, Obama Transforms Into 'Reverend President'
The president brings the 5,500 people in the
audience of a college gymnasium in South Carolina to their feet as he
slowly sounded the first notes of “Amazing Grace” on his own.
Beginning and ending with the Bible, God and grace, Obama
sounded a tone more reminiscent of a black preacher than president in
his 40-minute eulogy Friday for the Charleston pastor who was gunned
down in his church last week.
Obama brought the 5,500 people in
the audience of a college gymnasium in South Carolina to their feet as
he slowly sounded the first notes of “Amazing Grace” on his own. By the
time he got to “sweet the sound” in the first line, the audience joined
him, swaying and singing.
Obama, an occasional churchgoer at best,
talked about faith, God’s grace and forgiveness woven in with themes
about racism and gun control as he mourned Clementa Pinckney, 41, the
pastor of Emanuel AME Church. He was one of nine people killed by a
21-year-old gunman with white supremacist ties. Also on Bloomberg Politics: Read President Obama’s Eulogy for Reverend Clementa Pinckney, and Hear Him Sing
The
victims, ranging in age from young adults to senior citizens, were
holding a Bible study when they were killed by the young white man
they’d welcomed into their group in historic Charleston.
“They
were still living by faith when they died,” said Obama, who didn’t refer
to his own faith in his remarks. “They did not receive the things
promised. They only saw them and welcomed them from a distance,
admitting that they were foreigners and strangers on earth.”
The
audience resembled a much-larger version of a congregation at a Sunday
service, with most in church attire, some including white globes and
elaborate hats.
President Obama Sings 'Amazing Grace'
“We want to thank the Reverend President,” the pastor who concluded
the nearly five-hour-long service joked after Obama wrapped up “Amazing
Grace.”
Pinckney, who Obama met on the campaign trail in 2007, was
a religious man who the president noted was “a preacher by 13, a pastor
by 18, a public servant by 23.”
In his remarks, Obama also
recalled the history of the black church and the role it’s played during
slavery and the underground railroad to freedom in the north and on
through the civil rights movement and today.
He called Mother
Emanuel, as Pinckney’s church is known “a church built by blacks seeking
liberty, burned to the ground...only to rise up again. A phoenix from
these ashes.”
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