Federal
investigators in Middlebrook, Va., on Monday confirmed
that a church was vandalized with antigay graffiti and
purposely set on fire. "It's an arson. We're confident
on that," said Bart McEntire, resident agent in charge
at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms in
southwest Virginia.
Fire was set Saturday to St. John's Reformed
United Church of Christ. The antigay graffiti included
a message that members of the United Church of Christ
were sinners. July 4, the United Church of Christ endorsed a
resolution supporting same-sex marriage. The resolution was
not binding to the denomination's 1.3 million members.
St. John's pastor, the Reverend Dorcas Lohr, said her
congregation has not taken a position on gay marriage.
Firefighters who quickly snuffed the fire
removed a stack of burned hymnals. A portion of the
choir loft and a pew were also damaged, and the church
sustained smoke damage. There were no injuries. The FBI,
ATF, and Virginia State police have been involved in
the investigation. "We are looking at it as a
potential civil rights violation," said Lawrence
Barry, spokesman for the Richmond office of the FBI.
Despite the fire, Lohr delivered her sermon
Sunday to about 90 people gathered beneath tents and
the shade of two oak trees. The Shenandoah Valley
congregation is celebrating its 225th anniversary. Of the
condemnations scrawled on the church, Lohr said, "I cannot
accept that judgment. Nor do I think any member of
this congregation can accept that judgment." Lohr
reminded members of the congregation's roots as a
German reform church and its historic opposition to slavery
and support of civil rights. "Much more important than
the structure of our building is the structure of our
life together as God's children," she said. (AP)