Categories
Worship

Worship at the site of George Floyd’s death

I did a thread on Twitter looking into the worship at the site of George Floyd's death. 

 

First tweet of the thread: https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1272620688453455874

 

Last tweet of the thread: https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1273881757339627521

 

Here is the whole thread: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1272620688453455874.html?refreshed=yes

 

 

Here is the full updated PDF of the thread:

Download Worship at George Floyd memorial 2 

 

Original PDF: 

Download Worship at George Floyd memorial

 

Below it is harder to read the thread but I pasted it there anyway. 

 

 

 

A little research into those involved with the worship and preaching at the site of George Floyd's death.

Curtis Farrar pastors a small church on the corner where George Floyd was killed. He witnessed the killing on May 25th.
My May 26 tweet:

Andy Rowell@AndyRowell
 

Here is an interview with Pastor Curtis Farrar who has led Worldwide Outreach For Christ for 30 years which is on the corner where this happened. He witnessed the incident. https://twitter.com/ChaoStrib/status/1265350731382640641 

View image on TwitterView image on Twitter
Chao Xiong@ChaoStrib
 

Here is the full 14-minute interview w/Pastor Curtis Farrar about the deth of #GeorgeFloyd https://photos.app.goo.gl/SEywqghmgPSkrzzdA 

See Andy Rowell's other Tweets
 
 
Joshua Giles has his ministry office in St. Louis Park about 8 miles from the site of George Floyd's death. He preached at the site on June 12th and did the two baptisms on June 13th in the videos of Sean Feucht.

Meanwhile, leading local pastors in the Twin Cities have been involved in grieving, marches, clean up, countering looting and arson, talking with political leaders, attending memorial services, organizing food drives, and leading worship services.
Any group who sets up near the site of George Floyd's death should consider whether they are disturbing other people gathering to mourn or reflect or learn. A microphone and music with big speakers right at the site is very questionable.
One of the lessons from the death of George Floyd is that outsiders need to be sensitive to local neighborhood issues. Outsiders need to listen, not preach. White people generally need to follow the lead of people of color and others with long-earned relevant knowledge.
As someone who ran in a Republican primary in March for Congress in Redding, California, and was photographed touching Donald Trump's sleeve at the White House in December, Sean Feucht brings baggage to being a messenger of reconciliation in Minneapolis.

Andy Rowell@AndyRowell
 

Here is a list of the worship leaders who met with President Trump at the White House on Friday, December 6, 2019. https://www.andyrowell.net/andy_rowell/2019/12/list-of-worship-leaders-gathering-at-the-white-house-on-friday-dec-6-2019.html 

View image on Twitter
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Sean Feucht says the Saturday evening time of leading worship was among the most powerful revivals he has ever seen in the United States.
His statement:
instagram.com/p/CBZkLqvg0I4/,
Compare video: instagram.com/p/CBa5RxhAjlh/
and other description:

127 people are talking about this
 
 
Worship is both expressive and formative. In this case, worship should help people express their agony and anger. And form people, prepare people, to act for justice.
See:

Esau McCaulley Ph.D@esaumccaulley
 

This was not easy to write. I tried to speak as honestly as I could in @nytimes about Black Anger and a theology of hope.https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/14/opinion/george-floyd-psalms-bible.html 

Protestors outside of a burning fast food restaurant, on May 29, in Minneapolis.

Opinion | What the Bible Has to Say About Black Anger

The Psalms are not silent about the rage of the oppressed.

nytimes.com

373 people are talking about this
 
 

, and worship resources at:

Calvin Institute of Christian Worship@cicw
 

We lament and grieve the indefensible and tragic deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery even as we continue to lament and grieve the indefensible and tragic deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Sandra Blanc, Eric Garner, Rekia Boyd…. https://worship.calvin.edu/resources/resource-library/anti-racism-in-the-renewing-of-christian-worship-2020 

View image on Twitter
See Calvin Institute of Christian Worship's other Tweets
 
 
Prayer for people is very appropriate and good but it would be best if people wore masks to prevent infection. There are numerous signs at the site urging people to wear masks for the safety of everyone.

Em 🌔@emmalouiseri
 

Another layer. Their prayer tram was not wearing masks, getting really close to people,.and touching them without their permission.

39 people are talking about this
 
 
Evangelism involves Christians acting in such a way that they are worthy of trust. This almost always involves sincere listening to people about their wounds and pain and pledging support to help them. This is demonstrating to people what Jesus was like.
The Christian eventually explains why they act the way they do. But preaching or playing Christian songs tends to repel people rather than attracting them if the person has not been seriously listened to.
Baptism is indeed celebratory. It is part of someone's journey from the grip of self-destructive sin to a new start with God. Typically this is done with others who will assist and encourage the person with their journey.
 
 
These two images do tell a different story:

Good overview here:

More discussion in this thread of the video of Sean Feucht and Charles Karuku. Recall that Karuku is a pastor in Burnsville, a suburb. He is selling his book on Facebook amid videos of himself. Feucht is a worship leader from Redding, California.

The thread above tries to trace how Sean Feucht was in Minneapolis at the site of George Floyd's death about 19 days later.
(1) The local black pastor gave
(2) YWAM preachers from California the okay to come preach,
(3) a suburban pastor made a page on Facebook,
(4) Sean.
Jake Dockter has also been trying to figure out what Sean Feucht was doing in Minneapolis.

RJ was trying to help Sean Feucht and I interact on Instagram but I deleted my initial reply to him because I learned the "stage" had been set up June 6th (not the 13th). Meanwhile he had screenshotted my reply and tweeted it angrily. 🤷‍♂️
Instagram:

Having listened to Sean Feauct reflect on what he was trying to do, it sounds like he sees himself as a worship catalyst and therefore he should rush like a firefighter to world problems. And he says he has done so. I wonder if there is a theological misunderstanding there.
Jesus was late sometimes so missed his chance to heal people so he had to do it later or from afar. He played down the importance of special worship sites. He usually avoided crowds and the spotlight. Is that applicable?
Is worship music what is needed in a global crisis? Partially. But when hurrying from place to place one can make cultural errors because one does not know the context, making the crisis worse.
Or one can be used by the players involved so as to appear partisan, making it worse.
Billy Graham, Martin Luther King Jr., and all U.S. Presidents all considered carefully the message their presence would send. And whether it would distract and make things worse.
There is certainly a place for crisis response teams in earthquakes and for news media to hurry to get on the scene. But they have a very limited, modest, practical purpose.
The other thing Sean Feucht seems to believe in is hyping, marketing, selling "revival" worship gatherings so that people know about them. He is trying to publicize these good things. The challenge is to avoid the embellishing and exaggerating, which misleads the trusting person.
I think he sincerely thinks that if he can be somewhere and play worship songs there, the Spirit of God will be unleashed from its local chains to bring healing to people. But I think that puts too much pressure on Sean Feucht and underestimates God.
As a little more information trickles out, I will add it below.
For example, Josh Giles (St. Louis Park, MN) who spoke last night with Sean Feucht on Instagram, (and was preacher on June 12-13 and Sean was there June 13), run in similar circles.

Unity Rally / Revival Minneapolis Facebook page is run by Charles Karuku of Burnsville, MN.

Curtis Farrar of Worldwide Outreach for Christ is the church at the site.

They are both Pentecostal churches and led by people of color.

Wow. I just found out that Sean Feucht took a screen shot of a deleted Instagram reply by me while we were replying back and forth there and posted it on Facebook (as well as Twitter).

The three images from Instagram below.

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh.
 
 
 
Categories
Law enforcement Minneapolis

Saturday May 30th, 2020 Law enforcement violence on media in Minneapolis

I started a thread that night and just kept adding to it as Minnesota law enforcement enforced a curfew forcefully including targeting media. 

 

First tweet: 

https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1266929335597965312

Last tweet: 

https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1271098156651077632

 

Thread: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1271098156651077632.html

 

PDF of thread: 

Download Saturday May 30 law enforcement violence on media in Minneapolis

 

This will be more difficult to read below but I will paste it anyway: 

So the story tonight in Minneapolis, (perhaps because I follow many journalists) is media getting shot with rubber bullets, gassed, and arrested as they get between protesters and police.
(Many media were terrified of the mayhem without police presence the last two nights).
Law enforcement seem to not understand protocol around ignoring media. Media seem to be confident that they can go wherever they want because of their press credentials. I think there is legitimate confusion going on here on both sides.
Last night (Friday night), media feeling unsettled because of the chaos. And this does not include all of the videos of cars going fast through crowds and fires.

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Media getting hit by rubber bullets and gas and pepper spray on previous nights.

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And this is the most terrible story, of a photographer being blinded in one eye. Horrible.

Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell, who is briefing on behalf of the Minnesota Department of Public Safety says:

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More on Schnell response:

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Tonight's incidents:
Molly Hennessy-Fiske – LA Times

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Ali Velshi – MSNBC

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Morgan Chesky – MSNBC

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Tom Aviles – WCCO CBS

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Maggie Koerth

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Mike George – CBS

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Press:

Danger journalists are in from crowds:

What is the proper way for journalists and law enforcement to work together?

Star Tribune car shot at by police with rubber bullets:

WCCO photographer freed:

The media from elsewhere should have been in Minneapolis Tuesday, Wednesday, or especially Thursday and Friday, if they wanted to document mayhem. But they are welcome to browse my twitter feed from those nights.

A new report from tonight. It is his first night here.

Michael Anthony Adams – Vice News

Oh no! This sucks.
Ryan Faircloth is a Minneapolis Star Tribune reporter:

Ryan Faircloth seems okay and is filmed here by Maggie Koerth who also got threatened by police earlier in the thread:

St. Paul too.

☹️
She survived a lot of chaos the last two nights and now this.

It is hard to remember back to 6:20 pm (and now it is 12:45 am) but back then law enforcement and much of the city was afraid.

And law enforcement felt for the first time since Monday that they had a groundswell of support to protect neighborhoods.

Also, on Friday morning, it was clear that Governor Walz and Minnesota National Guard's Jensen felt that the law enforcement response was totally disorganized and inadequate. But they too failed Friday night. Tonight (Saturday) night was the first glimpse of coordination.
I agree that there are far too many incidents described above of law enforcement treating the press carelessly (despite some media sometimes clumsily getting in the middle of operations). Bad training, and yes, likely some of them thinking "media are the enemy of the people."
Still happening here after midnight to Star Tribune reporter:

From earlier in the evening:

Ryan Raiche – KSTP ABC

I did not mention the arrest of Omar Jimenez at 5:10 am on Friday morning while live on CNN by Minnesota State Patrol. He was released soon after.

Governor Tim Walz, by 6:38 am, repeatedly profusely apologized to all journalists.

Here is the long version of what happened to Molly Hennessy-Fiske LA Times and other journalists she was with. Horrible.

Julio-Cesar Chavez and Rodney Seward from Reuters.
(I think they were next to Molly Hennessy-Fiske and Carolyn Cole of the LA Times).

Susan Ormiston – CBC (Canada) hit by a rubber bullet in the shoulder and tear gas canister in the back.

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Andrew Buncombe – The Independent (UK)

Tim Arvier – 9 News (Australia)

Simon Moya-Smith – NBC News Think

Wrap up post from @toreyvanoot

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Live press conference where questions will ask about media and violence.
Just want to add that as resident of Minneapolis and believer in the importance of truth, I am very disturbed by the treatment of the media this week by law enforcement. Video evidence uncovered the truth. Thank you, reporters.

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This should not have happened to Ed Ou and the journalists with him in Minneapolis. Horrible. He had to ask for help repeatedly with blood streaming down his face (Bloody photo:

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and no law enforcement helped him. Horrible.
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Ed Ou, Mike Shum, Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Ryan Raiche, Carolyn Cole, Julio-César Chávez, Rodney Seward were all together.
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Terrifying videos and photos and accounts and injuries.

@MnDPS_MSP failed here.

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Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh.

 

 

Categories
Minneapolis

Lessons from Minneapolis one week after George Floyd’s death

 

Whole thread: 

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1267698646180483072.html

 

First tweet of thread: 

https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1267692150130540544

Last tweet of thread: 

https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1267698646180483072

PDF:

Download Lessons from Minneapolis one week after George Floyds death

 

Pasted below: 

Lessons from Minnesota (1 week)
Thread
1. Do not murder people.
2. Do not abet murder.
3. Do not have a history of killings by police.
4. Do not have a history of rendering people unconscious with neck restraints
5. If someone does commit murder, cry out for justice.
6. Do elect thoughtful, collaborative, compassionate public officials. If some leaders speak without compassion, minimize their responsibilities. In crisis, update 3 times a day.
7. Protests and demonstrations may be unpleasant for those who are not used to being inconvenienced.
8. Protests and demonstrations are best when led by people with a history of integrity and compassion. They know how to protest in symbolically powerful, spectacular ways without violence, looting and arson. They understand the web of interconnected issues that need challenging.
9. Local, state, and National Guard will initially have difficulty coordinating their efforts.
10. They may initially need to allow some property damage (strip malls, fast food restaurants, liquor stores, big box stores) in order to prioritize saving lives and crucial locations.
11. It is impossible to stop looting and arson if any of these are true:
(a) there are thousands more trouble-makers than law enforcement,
(b) there is a general sense that police deserve to be humbled rather than be cooperated with,
(c) politicians ignore legitimate demands.
12. If the general public get angry at the looters and arsonists and decide to protect their businesses and homes, politicians act reasonably, good activists direct protesters, and outside law enforcement act compassionately, looting and arson may slow.
13. Law enforcement need to avoid hitting media. Media need to communicate clearly who they are. Media need to try to avoid getting caught in the middle and interfering with law enforcement operations.
14. Rubber bullets are very dangerous to eyes. Wear eye protection.
15. Curfew *may* help to slow looting and arson but only if public despises looters and arson more than government.
16. Even after order resumes, government officials will still need to be responsive to wise protesters and avoid brutality or rage may burst out again.
17. Learn about how to wash out tear gas and pepper spray.
18. Local media (newspaper, radio, TV news, TV news online streaming, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram) are very important. In a crisis, the public are desperate for accurate and the most recent information.
19. Government officials need to go to great effort to affirm and coordinate generous, sacrificial efforts to protect property, clean up, and provide supplies to the hurting by the general public. Yes, it is less messy to just have government do it, but public support is crucial.
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