How One Church Faced a Gun Threat

By Chuck McKnight

Pastor Larry Wright was leading a New Year’s Eve prayer service in a downtown Fayetteville, N.C.,
church when a man entered the building armed with a semi-automatic assault rifle.

We know how these stories end. People die. Loved ones grieve. Social media becomes outraged. And then nothing changes. We wait for the story to repeat.

But this time, the story went a bit differently.

The man walked in with his gun in one hand and an ammo clip in the other. Pastor Wright says he was unsure whether the man had a round chambered in the rifle. Some church members screamed; others ran for the door; one woman instinctively grabbed her granddaughter and sheltered her in case bullets started flying.

At this point, depending on which church the man had targeted, armed members of the congregation might have started shooting at him. Thankfully, that’s not what happened either.

As soon as he saw the gunman, Wright stepped down from the podium and began walking toward him. He asked the man a simple question: “Can I help you?”

Wright later stated, “If he was belligerent, I was going to tackle him.” But it turns out that wasn’t necessary.

The gunman responded by asking Wright to pray for him.

He allowed Wright to disarm him and pat him down. Four deacons came and hugged the man, welcoming him to their church. As Wright prayed for him, the man fell to his knees crying. He was then invited to the front pew, where he sat as the service continued.

“I finished the message, I did the altar call and he stood right up, came up to the altar, and gave P1080186his life to Christ,” Wright said. “I came down and prayed with him and we embraced. It was like a father embracing a son.”

The man then spoke to the church, apologized for his actions, and confessed that he had intended to do something terrible.

Wright later remarked, “It could’ve went a whole different way.”

This church responded to the threat of violence with gentleness and compassion. Pastor Wright, as far as I am aware, is not a pacifist, but he perfectly modeled Christlike nonviolent resistance in this situation.

But what would have happened if Wright had responded to violence with violence? Or what would have happened if a church member had pulled out a concealed weapon and started shooting?

Best-case scenario: the armed church member would have successfully taken out the gunman.

A man would have died needlessly—right before he otherwise would have accepted salvation. And another man would have blood on his hands. It doesn’t matter if the cause is just; you can’t kill a man and remain unscarred. The church member who took this man’s life would have had to live with that for the rest of his own life.

Let’s also not forget the trauma that all the other church members would have experienced having witnessed a man shot to death.

And this is still assuming the best-case scenario.

What if the armed church member wasn’t successful? What if he missed, potentially shooting another member? What if he hit the gunman but didn’t take him out—angering him enough to fire rounds into the congregation when he wouldn’t have otherwise?

Of course this is all speculation. We can’t possibly know what will happen when people start shooting. But that’s the whole point!

If we rely on violence to end violence, we’re never going to know what will happen. We won’t ultimately be any more secure because of it. We’ll increase the potential for something to go wrong.

As Christians, why isn’t it our first instinct to trust God? He clearly moved in a powerful way in this North Carolina church. Why don’t we expect God to act in this way more often?

Jesus taught that those who take the sword die by the sword.

Do we believe him?

Isn’t it time for us to start placing more faith in God and less faith in our guns?

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Reprinted with permission from HippieHeretic.com and Mennonite World Review.

Chuck McKnight lives with his wife and children in Bellingham, Wash. He blogs about theology and Christian living from an Anabaptist perspective at HippieHeretic.com, where you can read his original post including a picture of Pastor Wright.

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