
Today is National Gun Violence Remembrance Day, and the month of June is set aside as Gun Violence Awareness Month. You could be forgiven for wondering if these observances are necessary. After all, the United States is the only country in the world with more guns than citizens, and we experience per capita gun deaths at a rate just slightly worse than Panama and Iraq. Given the obscene amount of gun violence that surrounds us, do we need a special day set aside to remember or to be aware of the gun violence that surrounds us? If we settle for simple awareness, probably not.
But if we understand today’s prompt to remember as a disciplined awareness that requires us to face up to the tens of thousands of Americans that die each year from firearms — tens of thousands of souls overflowing with sacred value and beloved by God — then our remembrance and our awareness can take on an important theological purpose and meaning. In remembering the immensity of this loss, we honor the victims and the survivors they leave behind who will never be fully whole. In remembering, we can refuse to become inured to the violence that surrounds us. In remembering, we can stoke the flame of holy anger that moves us to refuse to accept our current regime of firearms as one that we must simply endure.
If we do that, then we have an opportunity to remember in a way that stirs awareness in ourselves and in our communities. That sort of awareness is not inert. It’s the sort of awareness that encourages us to speak plainly about the absurdity of our idolatry of guns. It’s the sort of awareness that moves us to call our representatives, to mobilize our neighbors, to vote for the commonsense gun reforms that vast majorities of Americans approve of. In other words, awareness can be put into practice; when it is, we call it witness and the ministry.
(This prayer and the artwork can be found with others like it from our new gun violence prayerbook “How Long, Oh Lord?” and copies are available through the PC[USA] store here.)
Dr. Andrew J. Peterson, Representative for Peacemaking, Office of Public Witness, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Let us join in prayer for:
Andrew Rodriguez, Portfolio Credit Underwriter, Presbyterian Investment & Loan Program
David Loleng, Vice President, Church Financial Literacy & Leadership and Stewardship Education, Presbyterian Foundation
Let us pray:
Prayer by the Rev. Bruce Reyes-Chow:
Today I pray for politicians, policy makers and legislative bodies who have the power to address gun violence in the United States.
They offer “thoughts and prayers”
without concrete action
so even the most heartfelt condolences
are received as disingenuous and hollow
God, I plead that your spirit intercede into the world in miraculous ways
In halls of power
In committees
In localities
In courthouses
Give them the courage to risk positions of power
Give them wisdom to find solutions that make sense
Give them the fortitude to stand up to powers that will fight them
And give them reassurance that they are doing what is
beneficial to the Body Politic and the Common Good.
God, public servants are not saviors, but partners in the
realization of what can be
a future when children can learn without active shooter drills
a future when people can gather without the ever-present specter of gun violence lurking about
a future when guns are not so desired or accessible
a future when the response to death by gun is not more guns.
a future when, after the next tragedy strikes,
“thoughts and prayers” are offered with truth and integrity and they are received as intended
because action has proven those words to be true.
For this future, I pray.
Amen.















