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Maryland Episcopal Church Leaders Forgive, Offer Funeral Services For Homeless Shooter Of Priest And Assistant

By DAVID DISHNEAU 05/09/12 05:51 PM ET AP

Marymarguerite Kohn
Rev. Mary Marguerite Kohn was killed by homeless gunman along with Brenda Brewington.

ELLICOTT CITY, Md. -- The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland is offering forgiveness and a funeral service for a homeless man who killed himself after fatally shooting a priest and church secretary last week.

Bishop Eugene Taylor Sutton and an academic expert on forgiveness likened the diocese's attitude to that of an Amish community in Lancaster County, Pa., that forgave the man who fatally shot five school girls there in 2006.

"That is a painful, hard process," Sutton told The Associated Press after last Thursday's shooting. "But we learned something a few years ago, made manifest by the Amish community, when a gunman came into that school: Eventually, that community went to the family of that murderer and extended forgiveness."

Church officials said Wednesday that the family of Douglas Franklin Jones hasn't decided whether to accept offers from several parishes to hold a Christian burial service for the man police have deemed responsible for the bloodshed at St. Peter's Episcopal Church.

Howard County police say a small-caliber handgun registered to Jones and found near his body was probably the same weapon used to kill the Rev. Mary-Marguerite Kohn and administrative assistant Brenda Brewington.

Police and church officials say Jones, who lived in the nearby woods, had been turned away from the church food bank about two weeks earlier for visiting every day instead of weekly. The rule was intended to make sure they had enough food.

The bishop said at Kohn's funeral service Tuesday that Jones was a victim of the same societal attitudes toward handgun ownership and "throwaway people" that led to the violence in the church office.

Psychologist Fred Luskin, director of the Stanford Forgiveness Projects and author of "Forgive for Good: A Proven Prescription for Health and Healing," said it was unusual and "quite beautiful" for a wronged party to offer forgiveness so quickly. The most famous example, he said, was Indian civil rights leader Mohandas Gandhi, who appeared to make a gesture of forgiveness toward the assassin who shot him in 1948 even as Gandhi fell.

"It's a wonderful counterpoint to the more prevailing hardness in response," Luskin said. "We certainly live more in a payback culture than one of graciously offering to host a funeral for somebody who has just murdered somebody."

Some church members and victims' family members may not forgive Jones so quickly, said Everett L. Worthington Jr., a Virginia Commonwealth University psychology professor and author of "Forgiving and Reconciling: Bridges to Wholeness and Hope." The emotional process of forgiveness is more complicated than making a statement or decision to forgive, he said.

"They can feel like, `Well, I didn't ask them to speak for me. I'm not ready to forgive. I don't feel any forgiveness,'" Worthington said. "On the other hand, bodies say things with some authority and what they say can influence the attitudes of the people within in a positive way, too. It can bring about forgiveness."

St. Peter's parishioner Anne Pounder said she's forgiven Jones.

"In many ways, I think he was as much a victim as anyone else and if we're the Christians we profess to be, we should all show up at his funeral, as well," she said.

Parishioner Sallie Roberts agreed, citing a biblical passage from Kohn's funeral service.

"Like they said, there's a room for everybody in the kingdom," she said.

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ELLICOTT CITY, Md. -- The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland is offering forgiveness and a funeral service for a homeless man who killed himself after fatally shooting a priest and church secretary last we...
ELLICOTT CITY, Md. -- The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland is offering forgiveness and a funeral service for a homeless man who killed himself after fatally shooting a priest and church secretary last we...
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abhorson
in favor of legalized bar fighting
11:55 AM on 05/19/2012
what a nice title .. "forgive us ... AS we forgive those who trespass against us" ...

nothing seems harder ...
PATOISJAM
reason: strategize: succeed
07:42 AM on 05/19/2012
I beg to disagree that "there's a room for everybody in the kingdom." There is no room there for Adam and Eve, no room for Satan and his demons, no room for Judas Iscariot. Plus, anyone that falls into the category outlined below:

Matthew 12:31

“On this account I say to YOU, Every sort of sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the spirit will not be forgiven. 32For example, whoever speaks a word against the Son of man, it will be forgiven him; but whoever speaks against the holy spirit, it will not be forgiven him, no, not in this system of things nor in that to come."

Using the principle outlined in the bible to apply to practicers of what is bad, although they know what is right, is incorrect.
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abhorson
in favor of legalized bar fighting
11:53 AM on 05/19/2012
My GOD ... there IS (was) room for Judas Iscariot ... take this to your grave .. and think about it...

what was Iscariot's mistake ?? do you know ... ??? it was NOT selling out Jesus for money ... that was an essential part of the 'plot' and without it, no "comma" after death ...

the mistake was another ... Judas had a process of conscience where he realized he had done wrong, he REALIZED he had "sold out innocent blood" ...

But Judas LACKED THE FAITH AND COURAGE to go to Jesus and say, "I am sorry Lord, forgive me... I believe !"

it is faith and courage which define what it means to be Christian !!
10:24 PM on 05/19/2012
Amen to that. Evildoers can't be permitted to rail all over you and your children as well. there have to be SOME standards.
02:28 PM on 05/18/2012
if he trespass against thee seven times in a day, and seven times in a day turn again to thee, saying, I repent; LUKE 17:4
THE RULE BY CHRIST
490 TIMES IF YOU COUNT...
IT WAS A 3 TIMES YOUR OUT RULE ORIGINALLY WAS IT NOT?
do you have people coming to you constantly asking for forgiveness?
even as a minister... are there widespread DECLARATIONS OF WRONGS DONE... or does everyone assume that is taken care of when you say the LORD'S PRAYER.. all are considered in it or not in it....
WELL YOU ARE PROBABLY STILL WONDERING HOW I DON'T STICK EXACTLY TO THE SUBJECT AS GIVEN.... digress until the subject turns another corner...some one is bound to respond! GOD BLESS YOU ALL this is love claudia...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Treehuggindirtworshiper
“Dum Spiro, spero- As long as I breathe, I hope.
12:16 AM on 05/17/2012
Unapologetically Episcopalian! I'm so proud to be a member of the ECUSA! Peace to the families of all involved in this tragedy.
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Indigo1941
Time traveler.
04:30 PM on 05/16/2012
I think that's the correct act. I could do without the soft-soap explanation but the act is righteous indeed.
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abhorson
in favor of legalized bar fighting
12:03 PM on 05/19/2012
Technically speaking, "forgiving" would be part of "patience" (virtue) and not justice (righteousness) ...

though I never felt it 'fit' perfectly into any of the virtues - 4 classical ones OR 7 in Catholic catechism ...
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Indigo1941
Time traveler.
03:38 PM on 05/19/2012
I don't even know what that list is. But I do think it's a correct act to offer forgiveness in a setting like that.
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chicagokt
Not tonight Helen I have a headache
12:42 PM on 05/16/2012
This is the essence of what Christianity was meant to be 2000 years ago. Preaching and practicing love is hard. Preaching anger and hatred is easy.
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abhorson
in favor of legalized bar fighting
12:03 PM on 05/19/2012
love is easier than forgiveness ...
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Terri Skau
Se... sotto una splendida luna piena...
05:46 AM on 05/22/2012
But without forgiveness, there can be no love...:-))
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Wrench Turner
Fuhgeddaboutit...
03:01 AM on 05/15/2012
I admire this. I struggle with forgiveness everyday, trying to forgive my cousin who sexually abused me when I was a kid, some days I feel like I can let it go, others I'm tempted to go and seek revenge with a good old fashioned Louisville Slugger. Just try and be the best man (or woman) you can be, forgive as best you can and there is never shame in mercy.
06:07 PM on 05/14/2012
ellen lincort: you are a phony, self righteous fool.
12:08 AM on 05/18/2012
Why so angry?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
11:26 AM on 05/12/2012
Proof that living as a Christian is very difficult and not for the feint of heart. The christianists will never get it. They think declaring you're christian is the same as acting as a Christian.
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abhorson
in favor of legalized bar fighting
12:08 PM on 05/19/2012
"eternal optimism" one of the core requirements of Christianity ... faith and hope can banish even the sadness of death ...

not every Christian can be an apologetic ...
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Terri Skau
Se... sotto una splendida luna piena...
11:51 AM on 05/21/2012
When this post caught my eye...I must have read it over and over for at least 5 minutes.

I only wish you could have seen my face from a far and my reaction...:````-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
niumarmion
a temporary being
11:59 AM on 05/21/2012
Evolution conditioned us to fear death. Why not just rejoice in death as a part of life, instead of fabricating false optimism in the denial of death? We can only fool our minds so far in denying reality which bubbles up from the unconscious mind.
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Martin Luther
08:58 AM on 05/12/2012
The offended person can forgive.

I'm not so sure about 3rd parties offering forgiveness. Could any of us forgive Hitler? Or would that be up to his victims (and their families)?
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10:37 AM on 05/12/2012
say ML, I felt that forgiveness was a process to avoid or dissipate "anger", anger leads to hate and harm, which is opposite God and love, separating us from God, Hitler was a long time ago and I did not think it aroused unclean passion today (the cause - effect thing)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
03:20 PM on 05/12/2012
The people here who offered forgiveness were all directly affected by the murders-- it is not some nebulous forgiveness in this case. (I think your example of Hitler is an interesting one to think about.)
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odaat52
11:58 PM on 05/11/2012
I've just been reading the book Columbine, by David Cullen, which was published a few years ago about the massacre at the high school in Colorado. A pastor of a local church was courageous enough to offer the family of one of the killers, with whom he'd had some brief contact earlier, a memorial service for their son. Some other clergy (not to mention citizens of the area) roundly denounced him. My thought was 'God bless him'! The boy was deeply troubled, and what he did is inexcusable by any measure. But he was still a child of God, just as we all are. And who is to say that, as he drew his last breath, he didn't say 'I'm sorry, Lord. Forgive me.'

Hatred begets hatred begets hatred. Somebody has to break the chain. The Maryland churches offering to minister to the family of Mr. Jones aren't condoning his behavior, but saying we aren't going to pay the hatred forward. Jesus told us to pray for our enemies and not to seek retaliation, but that message is mostly ignored in these times. I admire these Maryland churches, the Amish families who forgave the killers of their children, and the Colorado pastor who ministered to a family which was grieving just as much as if their son had been an innocent victim and had a load of guilt to bear as well.
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
11:27 AM on 05/12/2012
well done. F&F
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Claude Hosch
A single bracelet does not jingle
05:23 PM on 05/13/2012
I don't think Jesus' message of forgiveness is ignored, but avoided. It takes a great deal of strength to subordinate strong emotions to rules of ethics. I suppose many are emotionally too fragile to forgive, and may not understand the value of forgiving.
11:18 PM on 05/11/2012
I found myself in darkness
thick as night and still as death
and gazing upward fell
only starlight
through a high church window
and fumbling about that holy space
I found an old, dusty and flameless pillar candle
faint as a shadow on its stand
and I lit and raised it high
and then the glow diffused
slowly
from this solitary beacon
and in the receding darkness I saw
in finest garments arrayed
so proudly propped in pew
a sea of the faithful,
so proper in their postures
so careful in appearance
so adorned in regal status
clearly sitting as to be seen
in their places of honor
the chosen,
the blessed,
the redeemed
the elect,
the elite,
the body,
the bride
the church
and there in that holy space
silent they sat
unrouseable,
immovable,
and fixed
eyes sunken,
mouths agape,
skin ashen,
each one
a corpse,
together
rotting all
and then I knew that the light was in vain
for darkness always
always better suits the dead.
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syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
12:13 AM on 05/12/2012
Meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.

Generations come and generations go,
but the earth remains forever.

The sun rises and the sun sets,
and hurries back to where it rises.

All streams flow into the sea,
yet the sea is never full.
To the place the streams come from,
there they return again.

The eye never has enough of seeing,
nor the ear its fill of hearing.

What has been will be again,
what has been done will be done again;
there is nothing new under the sun.

Is there anything of which one can say,
“Look! This is something new”?
It was here already, long ago;
it was here before our time.

There is no remembrance of men of old,
and even those who are yet to come
will not be remembered
by those who follow.
12:43 AM on 05/12/2012
Hear the renown of centuries,Make note of the works of time. In the course of the years,Their light withers and fades,The resolve of the weak. But strengthen­­ed are those,Who linger in darkness. The light of day,In its wrath it remembers no compassion­­. But now covered are the heavens, With night and with power the earth is filled. The splendors of night spreads like softest of starlight, Like subtle rays, Amid the broken blackness,Where true power is concealed, From the faces of mortals, Who gaze upward, And do not see.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fenrir Lokison
I luv the sci fi of Evolution and the Big Bang
05:24 PM on 05/11/2012
Good for them.
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bendygirl
An Eloquent Peasant
05:23 PM on 05/11/2012
~Atheists cannot provide a logically defensible answer to the question "what makes one act morally good, and another morally bad?~

Here's a contribution to the question - intelligence, integrity and character. None of which require a deity to observe, it simply takes the choice to do so. Atheists do not need the fear of retribution, or 'hell' or guilt, in order to be good people; nor do we need a diety to tell us not to hurt others or play nicely in the sandbox.

Atheism is a belief system that rejects ANY GOD - not ANY GOOD.
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Ellen Lincourt
07:07 PM on 05/11/2012
Brandy, I contemplated atheism and rejected. Not because of the arguement of good and evil, but because of the lack of meaning in that belief system. The ultimate end of atheism is nihilism. First, the species will not survive. The sun will eventually go nova and if by some miracle, we actually get out of our own solar system, eventually the universe will either implode or pull itself apart, depending upon the theory you believe. So, there is no purpose to life. Why not just finish it all right now? Life has no meaning under atheism. We are nothing but cows going trhough our lives; eating and pooping. In fact, our very existence is nothing but an accident, an astronomically miraculous accident, if you calculate all the mutations and environmental conditions that had to fall into line for us to exist, but still just an accident. And everything you think and feel is an accident and an illusion with no meaning. That love you feel for your child - it's just an accident of the chemicals in your brain. Anything you believe, think or feel is all just an accident of chemistry. Sorry, but I reject atheism not because I couldn't be good without God, but because I refuse to have no meaning.
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Claude Hosch
A single bracelet does not jingle
05:28 PM on 05/13/2012
"I refuse to have no meaning"

I like it.
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bendygirl
An Eloquent Peasant
12:17 PM on 05/14/2012
I absolutely disagree that the ultimate end of atheism is nihilism - or that atheists find no meaning in life or the universe - in fact, the absence of assigning all of this to a GOD actually increases the wonderment about the world and the universe.  But I respect your choice - and I would expect you to respect the choices of others - which is the principle point...the right to choice and autonomy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syntax facit saltum
We do not live in a 2 story universe
10:29 PM on 05/11/2012
In response to your contribution to the discussion: Christians are not motivated to do good out of fear of retribution or guilt. They are motivated by the example and love of Jesus Christ who loved the world with a love that surpasses all other love. We find that love so overwhelmingly beautiful, we want to enter into it by imitating it to the best of our ability.
11:21 PM on 05/11/2012
Ideally, you are right. But in practice (as I'm sure you well know), most christians act out of fear of eternal punishment or hope for eternal reward. Since atheists have no such fears nor hopes, their good works come from an inborn or consciously developed (or both) standard of behavior, which I believe is a more "pure" (for lack of a better word) motivation.
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mrkurtzhedead
I'll be back, when it's dark!
08:21 AM on 05/18/2012
In Matthew 13:42, Jesus says: "And shall cast them into a FURNACE OF FIRE: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth."

In Matthew 25:41, Jesus says: "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting FIRE,. . ."
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elderwalker
Preacher, Pastor and most of all a servant and fol
04:19 PM on 05/11/2012
Read some of the comments some support and some not, What I know about forgiveness it helps everyone involed but those who feel this man was mean or wrong let me give you some education, For I have help feed the homeless and since mental illness treatments were cut do to many states budget woes you see more mental ill homeless people who are mean, angry and even some demonic process now that has been add to the homeless population along with vets, families and single people and many services like soup kicthens are strain or not really prepare for the homeless of today especially the mentally ill ones.