The Jerusalem Post

Fear and faith

Church security scrutinize­d after Texas massacre

- • By JON HERSKOVITZ and LISA MARIA GARZA

SUTHERLAND SPRINGS, Texas (Reuters) – After one of the US’s deadliest mass shootings unfolded on their doorstep, pastors and parishione­rs around the Texas hamlet of Sutherland Springs have begun asking whether guns have a rightful place inside their houses of worship.

It is a debate that is echoing across the United States as security experts and some politician­s ask churches to consider a wide range of enhanced measures to prevent crimes like Sunday’s deadly rampage at the First Baptist Church.

Barbara Burdette, who knew the 26 people killed in the massacre and as well as the 20 wounded, is ready to see her church hire armed security, or allow congregant­s to carry concealed firearms for self-defense.

“God is our protector,” said Burdette, 62, “but I do still think that we need to have people with conceal carry.”

Her pastor at the First Baptist Church of La Vernia, a one-story brick sanctuary 11 km. from the shooting scene, said the issue of guns in church requires a delicate balance between providing safety instead of fear.

Arming parishione­rs is not the only option. At the historic black church in Charleston, South Carolina, where a white supremacis­t gunman killed nine at a June 2015 bible study session, uniformed police officers now attend regular worship services. “It’s part of our new normal,” said Reverend Eric Manning at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, by phone. He said the church also created in-house security, as have most black churches in the region.

Muslim and Jewish institutio­ns for years have added security measures to address the threat of violence and hate crimes. The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) stresses the importance of security cameras, strong doors and clearing brush away from buildings so attackers have no place to hide.

A law enforcemen­t vehicle prominentl­y parked in front of a house of worship is also a strong deterrent to crime, said Claude Pichard, director of Training Force USA, which worked with churches across the US to improve security after the Charleston shooting.

The question of enabling, or even encouragin­g, parishione­rs to shoot back is a discussion particular­ly important to communitie­s where guns are a part of life, such as rural Texas.

In Sutherland Springs, the shooter was confronted as he left the church by a resident who shot and wounded him.

Texas Attorney-General Ken Paxton told Fox News that churches should consider whether they wanted parishione­rs to be armed as a way of preventing another tragedy.

His state allows for the concealed carrying of handguns by licensed owners. It is not clear exactly how First Baptist Church, where the shooting occurred, addressed gun issues.

A sheriff in Williamson County, Texas, a twohour drive from the massacre, expects to discuss arming parishione­rs at a church security summit he is organizing in the wake of the attack. He said churches have a responsibi­lity to ensure that responding officers can distinguis­h a protector from the assailant. “What are you doing to make sure we don’t have a friendly on friendly fire?” said Sheriff Robert Chody by phone.

New Life Church, a congregati­on of 10,000 people in Colorado Springs, Colorado, requires churchgoer­s to leave their guns in their vehicles, a decade after it was the scene of a deadly shooting that killed two. A parishione­r trained in church security used a firearm to wound the shooter, preventing greater carnage, said pastor Brady Boyd.

“Pastors are now waking up to this reality that we are not living in Mayberry anymore,” he said, referring to the fictitious North Carolina hometown on the Andy Griffith Show, a long-running 1960s television comedy.

He pointed out that no church could have security in place to withstand an attack by a military-trained shooter using an assault rifle, the scenario that unfolded this weekend in Texas.

About 16 km. from the shooting, Floresvill­e Christian Fellowship Pastor Bennie Herrera said he needed to reexamine security but knows there is only so much that can be done.

“We will not be gripped by fear,” he said. “Faith will rise up and we will come together.”

 ?? (Rick Wilking/Reuters) ?? A TEDDY BEAR lies under police tape yesterday at a makeshift memorial for those killed in the shooting at the First Baptist Church of Sutherland.
(Rick Wilking/Reuters) A TEDDY BEAR lies under police tape yesterday at a makeshift memorial for those killed in the shooting at the First Baptist Church of Sutherland.

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