Topics: Acceptance; Body of Christ; Christians; Community; Compassion; Example; Forgiveness; Grace; Grief; Kindness; Love; Mercy; Mourning
References: Matthew 5:7, 43–48; Luke 6:27–36; 17:4; Romans 12:17–19; Ephesians 4:32; Colossians 3:12–13
On the morning of October 2, 2006, Charles Carl Roberts barricaded himself inside West Nickel Mines Amish School. After murdering five young girls and wounding six others, Roberts committed suicide. It was a dark day for the Amish community of West Nickel Mines, but it was also a dark day for Marie Roberts, the wife of the gunman, and her two young children.
On the following Saturday, Marie went to her husband’s funeral. She and her children watched in amazement as Amish families—about half of the seventy-five mourners present—came and stood alongside them in the midst of their blinding grief. Despite the horrific crimes the man had committed against them, the Amish came to mourn Charles Carl Roberts as a husband and daddy.
Bruce Porter, a fire department chaplain who attended the service, was profoundly moved: “It’s the love, the heartfelt forgiveness they have toward the family. I broke down and cried seeing it displayed.” He said Marie Roberts was also touched. “She was absolutely, deeply moved by the love shown.”
—“Amish Mourn Gunman in School Rampage,” USA Today (October 7, 2006)