Orlando Sentinel

Texas congregati­on has first service since mass shooting

- By Peter Holley

SUTHERLAND SPRINGS, Texas — The sprawling white tent was already packed with hundreds of mourners Sunday, some of them spilling outside beneath an overcast sky, by the time Frank Pomeroy, the pastor of First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs, took to the stage. He stood in front of a wooden cross wrapped in holiday lights.

At this moment a week earlier, with Pomeroy out of town, Devin Kelley entered the small white church and started shooting members of the pastor’s beloved congregati­on with an assault-style rifle. Twenty-six of them, including a pregnant woman’s unborn child, would die in the massacre.

In a tent erected on a baseball field a few blocks away, Pomeroy was again preaching, this time to a far larger congregati­on made up of victims, their family members, locals and outsiders who arrived from around the region to show their support for this tiny, heartbroke­n town.

“I know the name of every single person who lost their life that day, some of which were my best friends, and my daughter,” Pomeroy said, pausing to hold back tears as the crowd began to applaud and yell encouragem­ent. “I guarantee you that they are dancing with Jesus today.”

Pomeroy told the crowd that his church, just days removed from being full of FBI crime scene investigat­ors and the horrors of the largest mass shooting in Texas history, would reopen to the public Sunday as a memorial. It had been cleaned and painted and had audio from previous services playing in the background.

“I haven’t seen this done in other catastroph­es,” Pomeroy said. “But I want the world to know that that building will be open so that everyone who walks in there will know that the people who died lived for their lord and savior.”

Members of the crowd listened to sermons from Pomeroy, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Mark Collins, a pastor at a nearby church, who spoke about the importance of faith and healing. They sang along to songs and hymns, many hugging and breaking down into tears.

Meanwhile, Kelley’s former wife said that he had threatened to kill her over the course of their relationsh­ip, once putting a gun to her head while he was serving in the Air Force and asking her whether she wanted to die.

The comments were the first public statements made by the gunman’s first wife, Tessa Brennaman.

In an interview with “Inside Edition” published in part on CBS’s website, Brennaman, 25, described her former husband as someone with “a lot of demons or hatred inside of him” and said he once threatened her for getting a speeding ticket.

“He had a gun in his holster right here and he took that gun out and he put it to my temple and he said, ‘Do you want to die, do you want to die?’ ” she told a television interviewe­r.

Brennaman and Kelley divorced after the incident, which resulted in him being court-martialed and sentenced to a year of confinemen­t.

The domestic violence charges should have prevented him from being able to legally buy the guns he used in the shooting, the Air Force said.

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