Try GOLD - Free

Healing After Hate

Guideposts

|

December 2019 - January 2020

She lost her mother to the Charleston church shooter. Would she lose her faith too?

- Rev. Sharon Risher

Healing After Hate

I MADE THE TRIP FROM CHARLOTTE to Charleston, South Carolina, full of dread. I didn’t want to be there, didn’t want to sit through the trial of the man who’d killed my mother at the church she loved, didn’t want to be in the same room with him. She’d gone to church for the Wednesday night Bible study, as always, and been gunned down along with eight other innocent souls. We’d waited a year and a half, and now, just before Christmas, the trial would begin. Justice would be served—or so I hoped. I’ve got to keep myself together, I told myself. For Momma.

The courtroom was small. There was room only for the victims’ immediate families. The prosecution team had talked to us beforehand, telling us what to expect, giving us a crash course in courtroom decorum. No outbursts. No running out mid-proceeding. But how could anything prepare me for what I knew I would have to see and hear, reliving those terrifying final moments of Momma’s life?

She was the last person shot, the last one to die that day, June 17, 2015, at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church—or Mother Emanuel as we called it. She had witnessed all the violence, then been gunned down by the white supremacist killer. Anger surged through me at the thought of it.

A chaplain prayed with us. I didn’t envy his job. I’m a minister myself. I worked as a hospital chaplain, helping people deal with the trauma of illness, accidents, gun violence. Now the prayers would be for me. I didn’t want to be overcome by hate in the wake of a hate crime. I wanted to hold on to my faith, hold fast to God, but it was so hard. Especially now.

Guideposts

This story is from the December 2019 - January 2020 edition of Guideposts.

Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.

Already a subscriber?

MORE STORIES FROM Guideposts

Guideposts

Guideposts

The Weight

Food was my first love, but it was a relationship that had to change

time to read

6 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

Maternal Instincts?

Deep inside, I yearned to have another baby. But maybe God's answer was no

time to read

5 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

One Small Way, Lord

A day in the life of a VA hospital chaplain

time to read

4 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

Larry and His Beautiful Bark

Thank God I couldn't train him not to do it

time to read

6 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

Experience, Look

The listing for our Cape Cod rental warned, “four-wheel-drive recommended,” but nothing could have prepared us for the five-mile, one-lane rutted dirt road that twisted through the woods. Twice, we had to reverse into a sandy stretch to let an oncoming car pass.

time to read

1 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

The Great Hearing Aids War

My husband and I love each other, but even after 43 happy years, we can also drive each other absolutely crazy

time to read

4 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

Doing It Scared

I thought our weekend at the Iowa State Fair was supposed to be all about fun. Then my son bought us tickets to something I swore I’d never do

time to read

5 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

What Friends Are For

I thought my health woes were going to ruin our long-awaited reunion

time to read

7 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

what prayer can do

POWER IN OUR DAY-TO-DAY LIVES

time to read

1 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts

Guideposts

Pulled Under

You probably know Jesse Hutch from his Hallmark and Great American Family movies. What you probably don't know is the near-death experience that changed his life long before he became an actor

time to read

8 mins

Aug/Sept 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size