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The incongruous event in Newfoundland, part of rural Pennsylvania that voted 68 percent for President Donald Trump in 2016, underscored the gulf between those who fiercely defend the US constitutional right to bear arms and advocates of greater gun control.
The event, in which couples commit to each other, was organized by Hyung Jin Moon, younger son of the late Sun Myung Moon, whose World Peace and Unification Sanctuary is a tiny spin-off of the Unification Church founded by his father, a self-declared “messiah” considered a charlatan by critics.
The younger Moon is homophobic and close to the extreme right, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.
He extols a religion of weapons and prayer, in which congregants are “sovereign” of their own families, required to defend faith and kin alike.
Moon speaks regularly on YouTube alongside an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle and arrived at Wednesday’s celebration accompanied by three armed men in fatigues.
While the commitment ceremony, attended by around 500 people, evoked some of the mass weddings for which his father was famous, the younger Moon deviated in encouraging congregants to carry an AR-15 — albeit locked and not loaded.
It fell on the same day that students returned to their high school in Parkland, Florida for the first time since a 19-year-old used an AR-15 to kill 17 students and school staff two weeks ago.
With the United States again riled by torturous debate on gun controls, an elementary school near the Sanctuary closed for the day.
Last Saturday, the younger Moon organized a dinner “in thanks of President Trump” to benefit the Gun Owners Foundation.
A dozen protesters gathered outside the event on Wednesday, holding up posters that read “Worship God, Not Guns” and “God Does Not Bless Guns.”
– Guns in the room –
“I got to the tipping point,” said Sheila Cunningham, a demonstrator from Milford 30 miles (48 kilometers) away who came with her 18-year-old daughter Sophie to protest.
She said she was “very annoyed” that the event was tantamount to political endorsement and that it was “time to revoke” the non-profit status of such religious groups.
But those in the congregation, like many other Americans, believe US school shootings do not justify stricter gun laws in a country where firearms are linked to more than 30,000 deaths annually.
“Unfortunately in most of the world, people seem to feel that the only people that should have arms are the ones that govern us,” says Andrew Kessler, a lawyer from the affluent suburb of Westchester, New York, dressed in a black suit and red tie.
“I don’t think restricting gun ownership has proven that where there are less guns, there will be less violence,” he said, carrying the AR-15 he purchased a few months ago.
A long-time hunter, Kessler says he became “more favorable to gun ownership” after attending the Newfoundland church.
John Paul Harris, 68, from nearby Scranton and wearing a black NRA cap, called himself “a proud life member” of the National Rifle Association, the powerful American gun lobby group.
“I wish never to have to use it on a human being,” he said of his weapon. Yet with all the guns in the room, the church at times gave off the air of a private militia.
“In essence, you know, we believe in a peace police, in a peace militia,” said Kyle Toffey, a helper at the ceremony wearing a metal crown. “It’s just that we need to be God-centered when we are armed.”
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