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Arming in the Aftermath

Shooting spree at two churches prompts pastors to rethink security plans.

The December shootings at two Colorado megachurches have raised security concerns for congregations that want to strike a balance between creating a sacred space and creating a safe place.

Four people were killed when Matthew Murray, 24, opened fire at a Youth With a Mission training center on the campus of Faith Bible Chapel in Arvada, and in the parking lot of New Life Church in Colorado Springs. An armed, plainclothes security guard at New Life eventually shot and wounded Murray, ending the attacks and prompting Murray to shoot and kill himself.

Bob Klamser of Crisis Consulting International said he is working with three faith-based organizations that are re-examining their security in light of the shootings.

"Churches and faith-based organizations, especially the larger ones, can be a lightning rod for people who are unbalanced or have other issues," Klamser told Christianity Today. "Churches should be a holy place, a set aside place. But on the other hand, those who come to worship, it's reasonable for them to expect to be safe."

Megachurches have been developing security plans for a long time, said megachurch scholar Scott Thumma of Hartford Seminary, not because of terrorists or crazed shooters, but because of their cash flow.

"If the average megachurch has $6 million in income, there's a good chance that $50,000 to $100,000 could be coming in each week in terms of cash," said Thumma, author of Beyond Megachurch Myths. "If you have that much money, you definitely want armed guards transporting that to the counting room or to the banks."

Some churches outsource security to a professional agency, while others set up in-house security. Joel Hunter's Northland, A Church Distributed, located outside Orlando, has a ministry run by 75 former enforcement officers who keep the church secure.

"Any time you can use your own people, you're going to be more satisfied," Klamser says. "They are part of your team, they share your ethos, but it's almost always more expensive and incurs more liability."

YWAM director Peter Warren said the training center replaced locks and doors after Murray's attack, but because guests come to meals and worship services, he said it would be difficult to tightly secure the grounds.

"As traumatic as it is, I don't know that we could protect all of our staff and students better unless we took drastic measures," he said. "Those drastic measures would take us out of ministry to people."

Murray had gone through YWAM training in 2002, but he was barred from a field mission due to health-related issues.

"His health issues were not physical, but I can't say specifically [what they were] because of legalities," Warren said. "We're training people to go into challenging situations, and if we see someone that might crumble under pressure, we have to be careful because they could do greater damage than good."

In 1999, a man shot and killed seven people at a Wednesday night teen prayer rally at Wedgwood Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas. The church's pastor, the Rev. Al Meredith, has chosen not to post security guards.

"Do you make a church a fortress in order to give you some semblance of safety?" Meredith asked CT. "Thank God the security guard was at New Life. But to use the resources of the kingdom for armed guards for every door and say, 'Welcome one and all'? It gives a mixed message."



Related Elsewhere:

Our coverage of the December 2007 church shootings in Colorado includes an interview with YWAM Director Peter Warren and a report available in CT Liveblog, along with other news and commentary:


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 5 comments

Mel

January 23, 2008  6:53pm

Church leaders and Christian activists need to pray and shine some light on the dark, shadowy world of mass shootings. Most shooters have been on SSRI drugs (Paxil, Luvol, Zoloft, Prozac etc). Nazi death cults and government mind research/control programs also figure prominently in the lives of these tortured souls. Beauford Furrow, who shot up a Jewish school in California was in such a cult and lived on a military base in Washington State. Larry Ashbrook, who shot up a Fort Worth Baptist church youth meeting in the late '90s belonged to the same organization and told the Fort Worth Star Telegram months before his rampage that he had been under government mind control since his time in the Navy. Do your own research, pray and speak out on this issue and watch the darkness flee.

Dana

January 22, 2008  7:32am

i can't understand the mindset that making the church a safe place (in this case, through firearms) somehow makes it less of a sacred place. i'm thinking of the children's safe houses in africa, run by christians for kids escaping militia, that are fortified compounds with armed guards who are to shoot any militia who approach - these spaces are sacred because they ARE safe.

RJR_fan

January 21, 2008  1:35pm

When a church in South Africa was assaulted by four thugs with AM-47s and grenades, one parishioner threw himself upon a grenade. Another pulled out a 38 caliber revolver and shot back, ending the attack. In fact, "Shooting Back" is the title of his book, which I really should read some day. Seriously, tho, as an usher in my church, I often am one of three guys carrying the offering down an empty hall to the safe in the counting room. Since I love and value my family as well as my life, maybe it's time to get that concealed carry permit.

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