"Harder," she demanded. "Call him to come down.... Clear your mind and call him."
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After a few minutes I was clapping, too. Gary had returned to the keyboard to lay in some rhythm and bass, but the clapping took its own direction, and he strolled outside for a break, like a jazz musician waiting out a solo. It might've been ten minutes before he returned, and we were still going strong.
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"Call him," Lorita interjected, "Call Jesus. Beg him to come."
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They did, voices reaching up in twining, breakaway harmonies.
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She changed the chant line from "Je-sus" to "Pow-er."
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"POW-er," they refrained.
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"Come down with the POW-er," she led.
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"Loving power ... Fixing power ... Political POW-er."
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When we all were bathed in sweat, swept away in the ring-shout, when Lorita felt that all were lost in the Spirit, when the lethargy and inhibition had been smashed by her demands, by the demands of the Lord, she let us go.
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"Say Amen," she commanded, and we did. "Say thank you Jesus," and we did.
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We clapped fast again: "Amen" and "Thank you Jesus" spontaneous and multi-voiced, and then the prayer circle dispelled, the worshipers returned to their seats. Gary tendered a soothing gospel standard, "What a friend we have in Jesus...."
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Still more people had trickled in, and the pews now held maybe thirty souls. One of the late arrivals, Clarence, sat in the back, a quiet man in a conservative blue suit, an electrician by trade, distinguished and Bible-toting, who had come for the Lord, but for the minister, too. Lorita liked him, I could tell; I knew in
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