Trauma can be disturbing enough to cause one to remember life before, compared to life after — “it”.
A deadly force incident in a church is painful enough to do that. We don’t expect to see blood, hear gunshots, smell smoke or feel the concussion of explosion in a house of worship. Our church is our sanctuary. When evil invades it, that day marks the separation of life before and after for those who were there.
The wounded survivors from the horrific 1963 16th Street Baptist Church bombing that left four innocent little girls dead will never forget it. The angry darkness of smoke replaced the bright futures of 11-year-old Denise McNair and 14-year-olds Addie Mae Collins, Carole Robertson and Cynthia Wesley.
The entire town of Daingerfield Texas changed on Sunday morning June 22nd, 1980, when a killer invaded the sanctuary of the First Baptist Church. The atmosphere of worship was shattered when he yelled “This is War!” and began randomly shooting into the congregation. Before being stopped by men who carry the scars today (or are counted among those killed), he slew 5 people ranging in ages from 7 to 78-years-old. His surprise attack left Daingerfield residents asking not only why — but how.
How?
Think About it
In order for any criminal to commit a crime, regardless of the level of crime, it requires three things;
The attacker must have the intent to do wrong.
The attacker must have the capacity to do what he intends to do.
The attacker must have an opportunity to do it.
Of those three (intent, capacity and opportunity) potential victim(s) have no control over the intent or capacity of others to harm them.
No amount of mental health services and education is ever going to rid the world of the evil intent of mankind. No conglomeration of more restrictive laws is going to change every killer’s capacity. They will find a way.
Will education and laws help at all? To some degree, yes. But there is only one thing we truly have power over; the opportunity given to a bad actor.
Every time you serve your ministry in the capacity of protection, you are lessening the opportunity of trauma in people’s lives.
I am grateful for the defenders; uniformed and citizen, who protect every day.
Carl Chinn, President, FBSN
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