In a ceremony to remember the shooting victims in Connecticut, parishioners at a Cleveland church decided to also look ahead -- at gun laws. âIt is, in the most profound way, utterly senseless," says Rev. Tracey Lind from Trinity Cathedral. Lind started out her Sunday sermon mourning the 28 people who died in Newtown, Conn., last Friday. Many churches around the country prayed for the victims â including 20 6- and 7-year-old children attending Newtown Elementary School. And they reflected on the violence. But at Trinity Cathedral, Lind suddenly changed gears. âIâm going to invite you to sit in triads and talk about one or more of the following questions.â? Parishioners then received bulletins asking them to reflect on how they should mourn, how they can make sense of the tragedy, and where they see God in this whole mess. Lind also wanted people to think about an Ohio bill that lawmakers passed Thursday now awaiting the governorâs signature.
House Bill 495 is going to increase the potential for future tragedies by allowing a gun, and specifically semi-automatic weapons and their magazines, to be transported in the same vehicle. And it will also allow people to have their firearms in their cars in the Statehouse parking garage.
âAnd all of our kids â I mean, I still remember my fourth- or fifth-grade class going down to the Statehouse to learn about state government. And we have an opportunity to say to our governor, with love and respect and accountability, âWe would like you to stop this.ââ? Lind handed out a sample letter in which parishioners could petition Kasich to veto the bill, which also addresses reciprocity with other statesâ concealed carry permits. State Rep. Terry Johnson, a freshman from rural southern Ohio, authored the legislation. He likens it to a driverâs license.
Each state has varying degrees of requirements to get a driverâs license, but nevertheless we recognize all licenses. The concealed handgun permits should function the same way. If someone has a California driverâs license, or an Arkansas driverâs license, and they come to Ohio, they still have to obey Ohio law when theyâre here.â?
Under current law if someone has a loaded magazineâor clip --and a gun, itâs considered a loaded weapon and itâs banned in a vehicle. The law would change that so loaded clips and guns could be carried side-by-side. Only a bullet-filled magazine actually inserted into a gun would be banned. âHouse Bill 495 improves upon existing gun laws, making them easier to read, enforce and comply with.â? But back in Trinity Cathedral, Ward Heinz and Linda Zolten-Wood say state law should be going the other way, making it harder, not easier, to carry weapons and ammunition. They differ on whether their voices will be heard. Ward Heinz: âI just think the NRA is so powerful and so wealthy, they have so much money..." Linda Zolten-Wood: âLook at how much money was wasted on the election, and itâs meaningless now. We have a voice! And it does give me optimism. This is a next step with the letter-writing. This is definitive.â? Ward Heinz: âIâm grateful for this. And Iâm grateful for your optimism. I just donât share it when it comes to the NRA.â? Linda Zolten-Wood: âIâm not saying get rid of all guns. Iâm saying regulate them as if they were gonna drive a car.â? Ward Heinz: âThat may be the answer to the first question, âWhere do you see God today?ââ? But he and many people seemed to be looking for answers to that question in a spiritual, as well as political, way during the service. It closed with the reading of the names of the victims, including the shooter and his mother. Todd Ruth from Lakewood thought that was appropriate. âWe need to pray for him. Heâs a child of God. The first thing you have to remember is that everyone is a child of God.â? Trinity Cathedral plans to gather as many letters as possible and send them to Gov. Kasich early this week.