It was loud, ear-splittingly loud at times.
But the voices raised Tuesday night at Shiloh Temple International Ministries weren't raised in anger or in protest. They were singing, stomping, preaching and shouting praises to the Lord and blessings to a community caught in a cycle of anger and fear after the police shootings of black men in Falcon Heights and Baton Rouge, La., and the slayings of police officers in Dallas and Louisiana.
The Village Unity Service included pastors, reverends and bishops from emerging and established ministries in Minneapolis and St. Paul. About 400 people, young and old, many with small children, almost filled the auditorium at Shiloh Temple on West Broadway in north Minneapolis for the two-hour service.
"If you step back, this is a season in which there is spiritual warfare," the Rev. Alfred Babington-Johnson, president and CEO of the Stairstep Foundation, said before the service.
"If you give evil room, it takes over," he said. "There has to be, at some point, a stand-up and fight for God."
As the service — a de facto revival meeting — began and the choir sang, Babington-Johnson said, "Let the praises grow. Let the healing begin. Hallelujah!"
Music was an integral part of the service, with the choir singing with some of the eight to 10 speakers and inciting the audience to join in on some choruses.
"Bless us from the east, Lord; bless us from the west, Lord; bless us from the north, Lord, bless us from the south, Lord," Bishop Richard D. Howell Jr., shouted to the crowd. "Let the devil know he cannot and will not win!"