Baltimore Sun Sunday

Group encircles Baltimore in prayer

Motorcade passes through city sites, offering message of peace amid violence

- By Ian Duncan iduncan@baltsun.com twitter.com/iduncan

“We’re tired of the crime. We’re tired of the violence.” Bishop Angel Nunez, Bilingual Christian Church

Churchgoer­s and their ministers toured Baltimore in a motorcade Saturday, seeking to envelop the city in prayer as a police officer stands trial for murder and blood continues to be shed on the streets.

Bishop Angel Nunez, an organizer with the Multicultu­ral Prayer Movement, compared the way church members drove around in vans to the ride in a police van during which Freddie Gray suffered a fatal injury last year.

“A police officer is on trial because he drove a van,” Nunez said on the steps of the First Apostolic Faith Church, just north of the Perkins Homes complex. “But we have been driving a van all around the city all day today and in those vans have been intercesso­rs, prayer warriors, men and women of God that are saying ,‘Enough is enough with this city.’ We want Baltimore to be safe.

“We’re tired of the crime. We’re tired of the violence. We’re tired of broken homes and broken lives.”

It is the fourth time Nunez’s group has organized a tour through the city, calling for an end to strife. The East Baltimore church was the caravan’s final stop after setting off from City Hall at noon and stopping at several churches around the city. Separate groups led by Baltimore County pastors toured the Beltway.

The caravan of vehicles arrived at the church shortly before 4 p.m., escorted by police on motorcycle­s. People poured out of vans, buses, SUVs and cars to the sound of soulful music that could be heard a block away and the urging of the Rev. Cornell Showell, a pastor at First Apostolic, to “release that praise under an open heaven.”

“Come off the buses with the worship in your heart,” Showell said.

A stiff breeze and some patches of shade made the heat on the sidewalk just bearable for the racially diverse crowd of 100 or so people who gathered for a last round of prayers.

Earlier, the motorcade visited the intersecti­on of Pennsylvan­ia and North avenues, the site of looting and arson last year, and Nunez, a pastor at Bilingual Christian Church, said that whatever happens in the trial of Officer Caesar Goodson Jr., he wants people to be calm and put their trust in God.

“No riots. No riots. No burning buildings. No hurting people,” he implored the crowd. “But love! Peace for the city of Baltimore.”

Prosecutor­s said in court last week that Goodson gave Gray a “rough ride” as he drove Gray around West Baltimore in a police transport van on April 12, 2015. Gray suffered a severe spinal injury in the van and died in the hospital a week later.

The Rev. Matt Stevens, another participat­ing pastor, said it was important to see members of churches in the city and the counties coming together. He led the group in a prayer about problems affecting all areas of the state, including heroin addiction.

“The things that separate us, like countycity lines, police districts — God didn’t put those lines there,” he said. “God didn’t mean for us to be separated; he meant for us to come together.”

The pastors also called for an end to violent crime in the city. Showell’s brother, Byron Showell, 47, was gunned down in Northwest Baltimore last May, one of the city’s deadliest months on record. The crime has not been solved.

The homicide rate has fallen slightly this year, but more than 120 people have already been killed in Baltimore, and the total number of shootings at the start of June was higher than at the same time last year. As the group was meeting at the church, police announced that the victim of a West Baltimore homicide early Saturday was a 13-year-old boy, Deandre Barnes.

Bishop Marcus A. Johnson Sr., a pastor at New Harvest Ministries, led a prayer for the police and also called for order, saying it was only Satan who seeks chaos.

“Lord, we need law enforcemen­t,” Johnson said.

As he brought the day to a close, Johnson asked the crowd a question: “Hasn’t this been wonderful?”

“Yes!” the people shouted back.

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