Gird
on Your Sword in the House of the Lord
by Gretchen A. Fritz
Most Sundays I enter the small church I
have attended since I was 11 years old and sit as far to the right as I can in
the second row from the back. Unfortunately, there is no cover anywhere in this
room. I’m pretty sure one of the ushers is checking me out as I enter. He is
trying to see where I’m carrying my gun.
It’s been
said that Sunday morning is one of the most divided times in America—racially
divided, to be sure, but also divided between those who carry guns to church
and those who do not.
If you are
already strapped in the sanctuary, you’ve probably got the right idea.
Shootings in churches are not common and often arise from domestic situations,
but that knowledge makes it no more palatable to any sheepdog. Crimes other
than indiscriminate public shootings are also a possibility. Jesus said, “The
thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy.” (John 10:10) That’s literal
and spiritual.
I see a
fair number of discussions on this topic on social media, so I know that
carrying concealed in church is far from universally accepted or practiced,
even by people who claim to be pro-Second Amendment or who carry at other times
and places. Most people object on the basis of pacifism—that Christianity is
the religion of turning the other cheek. Others feel that church should be a
sacred sanctuary that is unsullied by weapons and violence.
Problems
with Pacifism
Since guns did not yet exist in Bible Times,
a sword would have been the most advanced weapon of that day, so most everyone
can agree that references to swords are our best biblical guidance on weapons
and the use of them. Russell Moore, president of the Ethics and Religious
Liberties Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, told Churchleaders.com,
“I don’t think there is a gun control policy outlined in scripture. There is a
commitment to human life and to the protection of human life, but I think
Christians can disagree on what the specific policies ought to be to get
there.”
Pacifists
love to throw out Jesus’ words in Matthew 26:52 just before his arrest: “All
who live by the sword will die by the sword.” Most English translations
actually say “all who take the sword” or “all who draw the sword,” but saying
“live by” is probably on the way to an interpretation. This does not mean you
should not own weapons or defend yourself. Jesus earlier that day had told his
disciples, “…if you don’t have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one.” (Luke
22:36) In 1 Samuel 25: 13, King David, the man after God’s own heart, commanded
his men, “Put on your swords!” Why would Jesus and David tell their disciples
to procure weapons if they were not to use them for self-defense?
It
also does not mean that you should not make your living by carrying weapons, in
the military or as a police officer. In the Old Testament the Hebrew army was
very active and confronted many people groups. “When you march up to attack a
city, make its people an offer of peace….If they refuse to make peace and they
engage you in battle, lay siege to that city. When the Lord your God delivers
it into your hand, put to the sword all the men in it.” (Deuteronomy 20:10,
12-13) You can’t read the Old Testament without reading about the many battles
and killing that were authorized by God.
Pacifists
also love to quote Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount: “But I tell you, Do not resist
an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the
other also.” (Matthew 5:39) Jesus is giving his followers a very specific
situation: yes, this is violence, but it is not lethal force. If someone offers
the Christian force that is not lethal, he or she should stand strong and make
an effort to deescalate. Just like the Hebrews in the Old Testament, a
Christian would never attack someone. Self-defense with a firearm is, by its
very nature, reactionary. We do not want to kill anyone; we only react to
lethal threats with lethal force.
If you
think carrying guns in church is wrong, also be aware that that puts you in the
same camp as those who use the bogus phrase “gun violence,” such as the Archdiocese
of Chicago which banned guns in all of its buildings in September 2017, saying,
“Churches, schools, and administrative facilities are intended to be sites
where people can gather, pray and worship in peace.” The Catholic Bishop of
Dallas and the Archdiocese of Atlanta have also banned guns.
After the
horrific massacre in Sutherland Springs, Texas, where 26 worshippers were
murdered at the First Baptist Church, Rev. Michael McBride, director of Urban
Strategies for LIVE FREE, an initiative to prevent “gun violence” and eliminate
white supremacy, told ThinkProgress.com, “Rather than continue to push for more
instruments of death, which are unable to keep us safe, we must rather start to
call for a more peaceful existence that limits the proliferations of
instruments of death” — otherwise known as
gun control.
Seeking
Sanctuary
Historically churches were places of
sanctuary—refuge, asylum and protection. Religious men and women taught the Ten
Commandments there, and everyone followed them, at least numbers six and eight.
But as Richard Vaughan, editor of the Illinois
Shooter, succinctly stated in an e-mail to me, “Some of the most important
rules of civilization have broken down, and now we have to deal with it.”
Moore told The Washington Post, “There are not two sides here about whether shootings
should be stopped, laws enforced, and criminality punished, but rather two
sides about whether gun control is a prudent way to carry out those common
goals.” Looking back on Sutherland Springs, Rev. Robert Jeffress of
First Baptist Dallas told Fox &
Friends, “I’d say a quarter to a half of our members are concealed carry.
They have guns, and I don’t think there is anything wrong with that. They bring
them into the church with them….If somebody tries that in our church, they may
get one shot off or two shots off, but that’s it. And that’s the last thing
they’ll ever do in this life.”
We are fortunate in Illinois that
churches are not on the list of restricted places for concealed carry but rather
are included in “private real property of any type” (430 ILCS 66/1, Firearm
Concealed Carry Act, Illinois). Owners of private property not specifically
prohibited from allowing concealed carry can make their own decision about whether
or not to allow it.
For more on this topic, I highly
recommend Shooting Back: The Right and
Duty of Self-Defense by Charl Van Wyk, who returned fire on a group of
terrorists who attacked his church in South Africa during a worship service in
1993. The book includes the entire text of “The Biblical Principles of Gun
Control” by Larry Pratt.
And
that usher? Don’t worry about him. He’s my dad, and he’s packing too.
Gretchen A. Fritz is the co-host
of On Target Radio and an
NRA Pistol Instructor.
Reprinted from The Illinois Shooter.
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