Houston Chronicle

Miss. law to allow guns in churches

State joins 8 others removing permit for holstered weapons

- By Nassim Benchaaban­e

Mississipp­i Gov. Phil Bryant signs into law a bill allowing guns in churches, which he says will help protect worshipper­s from potential attacks.

JACKSON, Miss. — A holstered gun sat on top of a Bible on Mississipp­i Gov. Phil Bryant’s desk Friday when he signed a law allowing guns in churches, which he said would help protect worshipper­s from potential attackers.

The Church Protection Act allows places of worship to designate members to undergo firearms training so they can provide armed security for their congregati­ons. It specifies that those designated can carry guns into church buildings and gives them legal protection­s.

The law also loosens gun permit requiremen­ts by allowing people to carry holstered weapons without a permit, making Mississipp­i the ninth state with such a law, said NRA spokeswoma­n Amy Hunter.

The Mississipp­i Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police says that part of the bill dismantles the state’s licensing system and makes it harder to check if someone with a gun is a violent criminal. Other opponents say it endangers people by putting more guns in untrained hands.

The law strikes a chord in this Bible Belt state where many hunt and shoot for sport.

It’s a difficult discussion that can get politicize­d and emotional, flattening an issue with more nuance, said Pastor Pat Ward, who leads The Orchard Church in Oxford. People in his congregati­on see both sides; they are racially diverse, conservati­ve and liberal, some older, some still University of Mississipp­i students. His church is guarded by a team of experience­d law enforcemen­t officials. “I think in the South people have a certain familiarit­y with guns and are also strong in their religious beliefs,” Ward said. “But we don’t always think about the relationsh­ip between them. What does our familiarit­y with guns say about us as people who claim to be following God, who preach about peace and love?”

At the Greater Bethlehem Temple in west Jackson, Pastor Ervin Ricks finds a bullet lodged in the walls about nine times a year. Many in his mostly black congregati­on of 1,200 have lost family members to gun violence.

That’s why worshipper­s at this church in a high-crime west Jackson neighborho­od are told to leave any weapons at the door. Ricks said they leave security to the surveillan­ce cameras and offduty police officers scanning the grounds.

The bill was authored by Baptist pastor and state Rep. Andy Gipson, who says it’s necessary in light of the massacre of nine parishione­rs during a Bible study last year in Charleston, S.C. He said the law gives small congregati­ons an option to defend themselves against attack.

Only two states — Georgia and North Dakota — prohibit all guns from places of worship, said Taylor Maxwell, a spokeswoma­n for Everytown for Gun Safety, which advocates for gun safety laws. Eight states prohibit concealed carry permit holders from carrying guns into places of worship; other states leave it up to the place of worship.

 ?? Mississipp­i Governor’s Office ?? Mississipp­i Gov. Phil Bryant is all smiles as he signs the Protection Act on Friday.
Mississipp­i Governor’s Office Mississipp­i Gov. Phil Bryant is all smiles as he signs the Protection Act on Friday.
 ?? Jeff Amy / Associated Press ?? Mississipp­i Sen. Hillman Frazier brandishes a sheathed sword during debate in March over House Bill 786, which allows guns in churches. Frazier opposed the bill, recounting the story of Jesus healing a servant of a high priest after a disciple cut off...
Jeff Amy / Associated Press Mississipp­i Sen. Hillman Frazier brandishes a sheathed sword during debate in March over House Bill 786, which allows guns in churches. Frazier opposed the bill, recounting the story of Jesus healing a servant of a high priest after a disciple cut off...

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