The body of Clementa Pinckney - the pastor and state senator gunned down with eight others at a historic black church in Charleston, was taken on Wednesday to the South Carolina capitol for the lying-in-state inside the rotunda.
Christian Today reports that Rev. Pinckney's casket arrived on a horse-drawn carriage, passing by the hotly disputed Confederate battle flag flying on the State House grounds in Columbia. Eight state police officers in dress uniform served as pallbearers.
Governor Nikki Haley and other politicians came onto the State House steps to pay their respects to the 41-year-old Democrat, who had been widely admired for the way he blended politics with his faith.
The pastor-politician and eight other black men and women were slain during Bible study at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on June 17. Dylann Roof, a 21-year-old white man, has been charged with the murders, which authorities have said were racially motivated.
According to Christian Post, President Barack Obama is to deliver the eulogy at Pinckney's funeralon Friday in Charleston. First lady Michelle Obama and Vice President Joe Biden are expected to attend.
A long line of mourners snaked from the State House onto the street in sweltering heat. Inside they were greeting by Pinckney's widow and two young daughters.
Mourners filed past the open casket, which was beside a statue of South Carolina politician John C. Calhoun, the seventh U.S. vice president and a defender of slavery.
On Tuesday, South Carolina lawmakers voted to open debate on removing the Confederate flag from the State House grounds as protesters gathered outside chanting "Take it down."
Four former South Carolina governor's - three Democrats and a Republican - issued a joint statement on Wednesday supporting a call by current Governor Haley, a Republican, and other state politicians to remove the flag.
"We should fly only the United States and South Carolina flags on our State House grounds - flags that represent us all," they said.
One of the governors, Republican David Beasley, famously lost an election after pushing for the flag's removal in 1996.
On Wednesday, Alabama's governor ordered Confederate flags removed from state capitol grounds, his office said.
Pinckney, a fourth-generation pastor, began preaching at 13, and at 23 became the youngest African-American in South Carolina history to be elected to the state legislature. He was elected to the Senate in 2001 at age 27.
Pinckney was a passionate advocate of expanding the Medicaid health care funding program for the poor and was credited this year with pushing through a police body camera law after an unarmed black man was killed by a police officer in North Charleston.
"He was a giant," said state Senator Marlon Kimpson, a Democrat. "He was the moral conscience of the Senate.
"We turned to him oftentimes during a legislative impasse, and he would offer us his guidance but more importantly give us his spiritual and biblical perspective."