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From YouTube: One Boston: Interfaith Prayer Service
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A
Go
welcome.
Thank
you
for
joining
us
today.
A
special
thing
to
our
faith.
Leaders
who'll,
be
leading
us
in
prayer
today,
rabbi
Zechariah.
Thank
you
very
much:
pastor,
Thompson
Reverend,
Walker
Sheikh
from
Cardinal
O'malley
to
the
performers,
no
LaHood
and
Gianni.
Thank
you
very
much,
and
if
I
made
mistakes
like
they
imply
apologize,
it's
one
loss
and
they
say
you
can't
be
mad
at
me
today.
A
As
you
know,
today
is
the
seventh
anniversary
of
the
2013
Boston
Marathon
in
2014
we
created
what
everyone
knows.
Now
is
one
Boston
day
to
honor
the
victims
and
survivors
that
commemorates
our
resilience
as
a
city.
That's
what
we
reflect
each
year,
we're
reinforcing
it,
we're
reinforcing
it,
try
acts
of
kindness
and
service.
A
lot
of
people
want
to
come
out,
but
can't
touch
is
events.
This
year
we
stand
together
by
staying
apart.
We
need
the
spirit
of
warm
Boston,
a
it.
A
Whenever
people
are
suffering
from
illness,
people
are
losing
loved
ones,
people
are
losing
income,
and
many
people
are
filling
anxiety,
anxiousness
and
loneliness.
We
are
truly
in
a
one
Boston
moment.
That's
the
reason
why
all
of
the
clergy
came
to
us
today
to
say:
let's
do
a
day
of
prayer,
I
joined,
tell
it
tell
a
quick
story.
A
Last
year
I
was
a
friend
of
mine
was
passed
away.
I
went
to
her
funeral
was
the
st.
Gregory
stretch.
Her
name
is
pearl
Ian
Bennett
she
was
a.
She
was
an
immigrant
from
Jamaica
and
I
met
her
as
a
young
state
representative
at
the
common
Square
Apartments,
and
we
just
stayed
connected
all
those
years
and
her
funeral
was
was
the
st.
greatest
and
I
went
to
the
funeral.
Mass
and
I
thought
the
mast
side
at
9:00
I
got
into
the
church
or
five
minutes
at
9:00
and
I
realized.
A
There
was
a
free
wake,
so
I
went
up
and
said
my
prayers,
pearline
I
came
back
and
I
sat
down
in
the
pew
and
waited
fastest
out
of
tens.
Well,
I
was
there.
I
was
just
praying.
I
was
looking
around
the
church
and
I
looked
up
at
a
statue
of
Saint
Gregory
and
to
me
the
statue
looks
sad
and
I
talk
to
myself
whenever
I
need
the
church.
The
church
is
there
for
me.
A
Then,
whenever
the
church
needs
me
when
all
always,
therefore
read
and
I
just
say
that
for
all
of
us,
because
right
now
we
need
the
church,
we
need
our
faith-based
community.
We
need
our
clergy
and
we
want
to
thank
you
and
bless
you
for
being
with
us,
not
just
today,
but
every
day
throughout
this
crisis,
and
when
this
crisis
is
over,
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we're
there
for
the
church
in
the
faith
community,
so
I
just
wanted
to
put
it
out
there.
A
The
reason
for
today's
prayer
service
is
that
these
are
the
times
where
we
draw
in
our
faith.
We
do
so
as
individuals
I
rely
on
my
faith
in
prayer
in
my
life
every
single
day,
whether
it's
who
my
illness
when
I
was
a
kid
and
my
family
prayed
for
me
when
I
cancer
through
my
recovery
as
an
atta
as
an
alcoholic
at
times
of
shared
suffering
or
shared
prayers
as
a
community.
It's
a
tradition
that
goes
back
to
the
beginning
of
our
city
in
our
country
during
wartime
and
other
traumas.
A
A
Physical
distancing
right
now
is
itself
an
act
of
love
and
faith
for
our
older
population.
Our
neighbors
are
mine.
Workers
are
vulnerable
resident
first
responders.
Faith
leaders
help
us
understand
that
this
is
a
special
value
and
bringing
faiths
together
in
a
pandemic.
We
truly
see
humanity.
We
share
comp
wish
what
we
share
in
common
I
remember
to
cherish
the
I
differences
when
we
see
the
beauty
that
each
of
us
brings
I
believe
it
will
come
through
this
stronger
than
before.
A
Sometimes
it's
easier
to
say
that
than
to
feel
it,
but
at
the
moments
like
this,
it's
real.
We
connect
deeply
when
we
turn
to
each
other
in
our
times
that
builds
resilience.
That's
what
will
get
us
through
this
I
want
to
thank
all
of
you
who
join
us
today
for
your
prayers
and
your
love
for
our
city,
and
now
I
would
like
to
ask
Norwood.
B
B
C
C
D
Remember
here,
49
p.m.
on
that
sunny
day
running
watching
waiting
celebrating
enjoying
when
darkness
fit
the
sky
and
the
streets
of
this
beloved
City
injury
and
death
took
over
out
of
the
deaths.
We
called
to
you,
Holy
One,
a
blessing,
as
the
psalmist
did
before
us
help
us
comfort
us
accompany
us
as
we
grieve.
We
mourned
deeply
for
the
loss
of
life,
Krista
Marie,
Campbell,
lingzi,
Lu,
Martin,
William
Richard,
and
for
the
police
officers
who
fell
in
the
line
of
duty,
Sean,
a
Collier
and
Dennis
Simmons,
and
the
more
than
264
injured,
carrying
their
wounds.
D
Still
a
body
mind
and
spirit,
and
you
present
one
in
our
lives,
have
taught
us
to
to
lift
up
our
eyes
to
gaze
toward
the
higher
places
and
from
there
draw
strength
and
courage.
In
that
moment,
transformation
for
your
divine
spark
in
United
in
each
of
us
a
sacred
call:
oh,
how
the
many
rushed
in
risking
their
own
lives
reaching
out
lifting
up
to
prevent
more
death
and
destruction.
D
Today,
we
call
out,
from
the
depths
to
you,
for
death,
illness
and
destruction
threaten
us
again,
the
first
police
officer,
Jose
Fontana's,
and
so
many
others,
medical
personnel
and
all
those
on
the
front
line
and
the
rest
lies
mourned
palms
under
siege
of
this
virus
and
the
collateral
crises
it
has
engendered
and
again
out
of
crisis
transformation.
We
lift
our
eyes
upward
to
find
you
and
to
recognize
to
be
mindful
and
aware
of
the
sacred
goodness
of
the
soul.
D
Still
one
hand
connected
to
the
other,
even
with
the
requisite
physical
distance
between
us
to
discover
the
strength
that
abides
when
the
divine
presence
moves
with
us
and
through
us.
Let
us
remember
and
not
forget
the
sacred
power
that
brings
all
of
us
together
on
this
day
with
courage
and
a
resolute
spirit
to
be
united
with
the
divine
one
and
each
other.
So
may
it
be
amen.
E
My
name
is:
pastor
Matthew,
chief
Thompson
senior,
pastor
of
Jubilee
Christian
Church
Boston.
This
is
the
day
that
the
Lord
hath
made,
and
we
will
rejoice
and
be
glad
in
it.
I
want
to
take
this
opportunity
to
thank
the
mayor
of
our
great
city
for
his
prophetic
insight
to
call
us
unite
us
together
for
a
day
of
prayer
Austin.
Today
we
join
together
as
one
recognizing
that
we
can
do
more
together
than
we
could
ever
do
apart.
When
one
person
hurts
we
all
hurt,
when
one
community
suffers,
we
all
suffer.
E
Jeremiah
29
speaks
to
us
in
this
prophetic
way.
We
are
called
to
pray
for
the
Peace
of
the
city,
for
if
it
prospers,
we
too
will
prosper,
and
if
there
were
ever
a
time
in
our
city
where
a
clarion
call
of
prayer
service,
strategic
entry
for
our
city
and
for
the
least
of
these,
it
is
now-
and
so
we
pray,
psalm
61
Lord
hero
attend
them
to
from
the
ends
of
the
earth.
Will
we
cry
unto
you
when
our
hearts
are
overwhelmed,
lead
us
to
the
rock
that
is
higher
than
I?
E
There
are
times
when
we
don't
know
what
to
say,
and
we
don't
know
what
to
pray.
But
we
thank
you
that
we
can
lean
upon
the
rock
the
King,
our
Lord,
our
Savior,
our
neighborhoods
and
our
neighbors.
Our
families
are
facing
our
experiencing
health
challenges
that
have
always
been
present
in
our
communities,
but
in
the
wake
and
in
the
path
of
this
pandemic,
those
disparities
have
widened
at
an
alarming
rate.
E
So
you
remind
us
in
Micah,
chapter
6,
verse,
8
for
us
showed
us,
oh
man,
what
is
good
and
what
the
Lord
requires
of
us
to
love
justice,
to
love
mercy
and
to
walk
humbly
with
our
God,
and
today
we
humbly
seek
your
face:
o
great
Jehovah,
heal
our
land.
Lord
strengthen
our
cities
and
unite
us
in
the
name
of
the
Lord
Jesus
Christ,
amen,
amen,.
F
I
wanted
to
first
Reverend
Liz
Walker
from
Roxbury,
Presbyterian,
Church
and
I,
want
to
thank
my
brother
here
today
and
I
have
a
very
meditative
to
share
with
you
some
of
my
thoughts
that
we've
been
going
through.
There's
a
lot
of
conversation
about
the
systemic
that
are
ignoring
the
need
in
the
poor
people
of
color
in
this
coronavirus
pandemic,
and
we
know
that
they're
not
mean
evil
that
they
are
deep
in
the
Mladic
reach
that
has
been
stirred
up
and
exposed
by
storm
after
storm
in
the
history
of
this
country
and
from
a
spiritual
standpoint.
F
The
text
of
these
conversations
that
are
going
around
Boston
and
all
around
the
country
have
been
going
around
all
the
time.
The
text
of
the
conversations
are
about
equity
but
I
believe
as
a
woman
of
God,
that
the
subtext
of
the
conversation
is
about
value,
the
value
of
Bill,
the
value
of
the
poor,
the
value
of.
F
The
base
note
that
these
members
of
our
community
have
never
been
highly
valued
in
the
world.
We
know
that
this
bias
I
got
only
to
individual
beliefs,
an
individual
behavior,
but
to
a
core
truth
about
the
history
of
this
country,
and
that
has
to
be
challenged,
and
that
has
to
correct
it
and
we
pray
today
that
that
will
happen.
F
But
one
of
my
favorite
favorite
texts
and
all
the
box
is
the
text
that
says
we
are
all
created
in
the
image
of
God
that
has
the
most
and
the
most
promise
as
far
as
I'm
concerned.
That
means
that
we
need
reminder
that
we
all
still
have
purpose.
We
all
have
a
reason
for
being
here.
Each
of
us
is
unique.
There
is
something
that
we
can
do.
Most
importantly,
we
are
loved
God's
love,
thank
you
and
deeper
and
wider
and
higher
than
any
emotion,
and
that
love
gives
us
all
great
possibility.
F
Even
now,
even
in
the
midst
of
this
madness,
so
I
just
want
to
make
a
little
path.
You
don't
have
to
put
your
hand
on
the
on
the
television
you
don't
have
to
buy
anything.
All
you
have
to
do
is
in
your
heart.
Remember
that
you
are
made
in
image
of
God
you
Margo
day,
and
that
is
countless
value
and
we
can
give
something
to
each
other,
even
if
we
can't
touch
each
other,
we
can
promise
to
feed
each
other
with
dignity,
respect.
G
G
A
Muslim
instructor
at
Harvard,
Divinity
School
one
Boston
day
was
birthed
out
of
deep
tragedy
and
pain
and
has
come
to
represent
profound
unity
and
unrelenting
courage,
the
courage
to
look
hardship
and
trauma
in
the
face,
whether
it
is
the
scourge
of
hateful
violence
or
a
debilitating
virus
sweeping
through
our
communities
and
say
we
will
never
give
up.
We
will
never
lose
hope.
Tragedy
has
brought
us
together
in
the
past
and
today
again
we
need
each
other
to
overcome
an
unforeseen
foe.
G
G
At
a
time
when
we
are
called
to
maintain
a
level
of
physical
distance,
we
must
more
than
ever
tap
into
our
prophetic
missions
to
not
forget
about
one
another.
We
must
pray
for
those
on
the
front
lines
of
this
current
struggle,
the
service
workers,
the
medical
professionals,
the
delivery,
people,
the
civic
servants
and
many
more.
We
must
check
up
on
our
neighbors,
especially
our
elderly,
and
those
with
special
needs.
We
must
ensure
that
those
that
are
food,
deprived
and
don't
have
access
to
basic
necessities
are
taken
care
of
by
the
collective
whole.
G
We
must
ensure
that
those
who
don't
have
shelter
can
have
a
safe
space
to
shelter
in
place.
We
must
come
together
in
a
spirit
of
love
and
mercy
to
summon
God's
grace
upon
us
in
this
trying
time
as
the
Prophet
Muhammad
peace
and
blessings
be
upon
him
teaches,
and
do
you
think
you
will
be
victorious
and
blessed,
except
through
the
weak
and
the
vulnerable?
Among
you,
my
brothers
and
sisters
in
just
over
a
week,
the
Muslim
community
will
be
observing
the
holy
month
of
Ramadan.
G
Ramadan
is
a
time
of
introspection
and
being
reflection,
a
time
to
enter
into
spiritual
seclusion,
to
reflect
over
our
relationship
with
God
and
our
relationship
with
God's
creation.
This
virus
has
forced
us
all
into
a
moment
of
pause
and
into
a
space
of
isolation
and
reflection.
Let
us
come
out
of
this
hiatus
to
the
relentless
busyness
of
our
ordinary
lives,
with
a
renewed
sense
of
purpose,
to
be
mindful
of
God,
mindful
of
others,
and
to
be
in
loving
service
to
all.
G
Let
us
uphold
and
embody
the
values
and
qualities
that
make
the
great
city
of
Boston,
unified
and
courageous.
Seven
years
ago.
They
sought
to
instill
fear
in
us
and
to
make
us
walk
away
from
one
another.
Today,
let
us
run
together
towards
a
common
goal,
the
goal
of
alleviating
pain,
of
lifting
the
weak
and
vulnerable
and
of
bonding
together.
So
that
means
so
that
we
may
rise
as
a
people
of
courage
and
moral
strength.
G
I
ask
God
in
His,
infinite,
grace
and
boundless
mercy
to
shower
us
all
with
his
loving
grace,
to
mean
ease
and
blessings
into
our
homes
into
our
hearts
into
our
spaces
into
our
streets.
May
God
lift
this
burden
that
is
upon
us,
and
may
we
come
out
of
this
far
better
than
we
ever
have
been
a
lot
mommy.
H
Unemployed
my
Sean
O'malley
at
the
Archdiocese
of
Boston
one
Boston
day
takes
place
this
year
during
the
corner
virus
pandemic.
It's
another
opportunity
for
us
to
be
Boston
strong,
even
as
we
practice
social
distancing
to
protect
one
another,
especially
for
most
of
our
group.
Even
though
we
can't
gather
physically
to
commemorate
the
anniversary
of
the
Boston
Marathon
bombing,
we
join
mayor,
Marty,
Walsh
and
our
brothers
and
sisters
in
the
religious
community
in
this
virtual
service.
It
takes
place
in
Easter
week.
H
Easter
is
the
Feast
of
the
resurrection
of
Christ
who
proclaims
the
great
truth,
but
death
does
not
have
the
last
word
as
Martin
Luther
King
wish
to
say,
death
is
a
comma,
not
a
period
at
the
end
of
the
sentence.
It's
the
cross
that
leads
to
the
resurrection
and
new
light
at
Easter.
Christ
does
not
escape
from
death,
but
he
conquers
it.
In
the
shadow
of
death
we
aspire
to
new
life
in
a
community
where
people
take
care
of
one
another
where
long
enough
hatred
and
greed
or
the
motive
force.
H
The
propels
us
forward
to
build
a
city
where
people
work
for
society,
characterized
by
solidarity,
compassion
and
a
quest
for
justice
working
to
overcome
economic
inequality.
Easter
proclaims.
What
long
is
stronger
than
death?
We
always
loving.
God
help
us
to
grow
in
our
works
of
admission
that
he
has
entrusted
to
us
to
make
this
a
better
world
to
be
a
human
family
to
be
one
Boston,
Oh
Sarah
gaga
is
done,
Philip
asked
what
will
he
done?
No
solid
rock,
no
sorry,
vamos
por
que
la
tumba,
esta
Garcia,
shih-tzus,
Yarnell
Pepin.
H
Si
el
pasado
be
even
a
percentage.
The
project
hace
of
14
years,
the
rest
of
us
beaver.
Yes,
senator
McCoy,
the
receipt
algebras
are
seguro
que
el
amor
is
Moscow,
Durazo
can
America
nam-il
Picard,
oh
yeah,
no
quiero,
media
server,
muchachos
media
de
las
piernas,
the
audio
Vela
very
civil
amor
de
la
luz
de
la
Paz,
was
able
Nina
Sendero
que
je
vais
à
la
solidaridad
hermandad
endosperm.
H
It
arada
form
our
own
associated
Matthew,
star
North
conforme,
a
la
ba
la
da
de
creville
Mikawa,
a
Sunni
beat
us
young
Darren
warrants
take
reserve
in
la
Paix
el
amor.
This
group
rien
de
el
gran
award
in
West
LA
girls,
descubrimos
Jenna,
so
much
for
que
estamos
aquí
de
que
tenemos
que
hacer
con
nuestra
be
a
severe
nevere
for
a
severe
a
los
demás,
a
construir
una
civilization.
They
are
more
delicious.