Moments of Survival and Resistance: A vigil for Michael Brown brings a young woman home to the church

Moments of survival and resistance — Presbyterians Today Magazine — Mission and Ministry — Presbyterian Mission Agency

Prophetically Reimagining the Church

Moments of Survival and Resistance: A vigil for Michael Brown brings a young woman home to the church

Mihee Kim-Kortby Mihee Kim-Kort

We met for coffee one afternoon.

Taylor Beck was a slight girl with wide eyes who furrowed her brows at everything I said during our conversation. She had grown up in a nearby town and studied at a community college before coming to the university where I work as a college minister. Her nontraditional path lent Beck a look of determination that suggested she would make the most of her short time here. After hearing about her art history major and keen interest in women’s studies, I asked what had brought her recently to a Presbyterian church.

Shortly after Beck had moved to Bloomington, Indiana, 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot dead by police officer Darren Wilson on a street in Ferguson, Missouri. Feeling a profound unrest, she looked for a vigil nearby to join with others in mourning this loss.

Indiana University Bloomington students, staff, and community members come together for a vigil for Michael Brown.

It just so happened that a couple of church folks—my husband (Andy) and I—had organized a vigil in conjunction with National Moment of Silence, or #nmos14 on Twitter.

Seeing two Presbyterian ministers leading this community vigil piqued Beck’s curiosity. She had spent much of her childhood in a nondenominational church but had never felt quite at home there, like something was missing. Then she visited First Presbyterian, where Andy serves, and discovered a place where the work of compassion and justice goes on daily. And it was the work of the whole community, not just the clergy. Read More Button

Michael Brown vigil at Indiana University Bloomington