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The governor has cast the rollback, as well as lifting restrictions last week that shuttered nail salons, barbershops and other close-contact businesses, as part of a “measured” approach to reviving the state’s tattered economy during the pandemic.

That decision infuriated local leaders and public health experts who warned Georgia was far from containing the outbreak, and President Donald Trump, who repeatedly blasted Kemp last week for easing the limits over his objections.

‘Life is a gift’

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has quickly become one of Kemp's foremost critics, and over the weekend she tweeted a graphic of the disease's death toll in Georgia below the caption: "If you're getting your nails done right now, please share these noon numbers with your manicurist."

Brian Lambert paints a door as he gets ready to reopen Scoops, the ice cream shop he and his wife, Christie, own in Forsyth. They plan to take advantage of Gov. Brian Kemp’s order to allow some of the state’s businesses to reopen Friday after they have been shuttered in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. “We have to open our doors, or our business will go under,” Christie Lambert said. Curtis Compton ccompton@ajc.com

But in some exurban and rural spots, local leaders were exuberant. Among them was Watkinsville Mayor Bob Smith, a former Republican state legislator, who urged his northeast Georgia town's residents to "go to work, assemble to worship" and rev up the local economy.

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“These have been uncertain times, but I believe it is time to turn off the television and all the distractions in the media and get back to the basics,” Smith said in a statement, adding: “Life is a gift. Let’s not waste it continuing to sit at home, looking at four walls.”

The governor was to be joined at the vigil by Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and House Speaker David Ralston, two Republicans who also accompanied him at last week's announcement that he would begin loosening restrictions.

But both legislative leaders instead invited religious leaders to speak at Monday’s service, which was held in the Capitol Rotunda and featured 14 pastors, a rabbi and an imam.

Among the politicians who gathered Monday at the small ceremony was state Sen. Bruce Thompson, who recently recovered from the virus.

The parade of clergy members offered prayers for the victims of the virus and urged Georgians to pray for a miracle. Each also prayed for Kemp and other state officials who are leading the state’s response to the pandemic.

“May our government officials be guided by the king of kings. May humanity come together and love, seeing together your divine image,” said Rabbi Ilan Feldman of Congregation Beth Jacob in north DeKalb County.

“Comfort everybody, lord,” said state Rep. Mack Jackson, a Sandersville Democrat and pastor. “Bless our frontline medical staff, bless the workers in the grocery store, the truck drivers – all who have become more important than we ever thought them to be.”

Kemp's vigil drew mocking comparisons from his critics to former Gov. Sonny Perdue's prayer for rain during the epic 2007 drought. But his allies have urged him to hold a religious service as a demonstration of unity at a volatile time.

State Rep. Trey Kelley, the No. 3 Republican in the Georgia House, wrote Kemp a letter earlier this month calling on him to declare as statewide day of prayer amid a crisis that’s sickened more than 23,000 Georgians and killed hundreds of others.

“As our state is impacted by the Covid-19 crisis, this is a providential opportunity to ask God to comfort those impacted by this outbreak and protect those who are called to serve in this great time of need,” wrote Kelley, R-Cedartown.

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