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Evangelicals blaming everything but guns for Aurora shootings

Posted on Tuesday, July 24, 2012 at 09:39 AM

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Fred Jackson


I have held off from commenting on the horrendous Aurora shootings for three good reasons.

One, it seems appropriate to show some restraint in the face of an unimaginable tragedy. Two, it takes time for a clear picture of what the suspect's motivations were. No one knows yet. Three, it would be appalling to rush to politicize this tragedy whilst the victims are still reeling from its utter senselessness.

Not everyone has shared my own restraint, I notice. In particular America's high profile evangelical spokesperson's have already rushed to judgement all over the media.

I am not surprised by this. Religious people often want to reassure the faithful when the nation is faced with a chaotic act of nihilism. But these days they are sounding a battle cry rather than a call to prayer.

Evangelist Fred Jackson, the American Family Association’s news director,  firmly placed the blame for the Colorado movie massacre not on 24 year old James Holmes and his easy access to a lethal assault rifle, but on the gays.

People, said Jackson, 'no longer believe that Jesus is the only way of salvation, they teach that God is OK with homosexuality, this is just increasing more and more. It is mankind shaking its fist at the authority of God.'

Evangelist Pat McEwen, head of Operation Save America, had no doubt who was to blame either: the Democratic Convention.

'James Holmes is the product of the Culture of Death that the DNC has embraced. There is not a police force big enough to make a young man do what is right. The only answer - there is a King whose name is Jesus."

Matt Barber, vice president of Liberty Counsel Action writing for World Net Daily, with equal certainty wrote:

'Am I comparing this incredibly wicked, illegal mass murder at Aurora’s Century Theatre to the incredibly wicked, legal mass murder committed at Planned Parenthoods across the country each day? Absolutely – and you can quote me on it.'

Barber continued: 'We as a nation – as a people – have turned our backs on God. We have rebelled against Him and have forgotten that it was He and He alone who gave us 200-plus years of prosperity, unprecedented in world history. We have left Him, so why are we surprised He’s leaving us?'

Evangelist Greg Stier knows where to pin the blame on for the shootings: Satan.

Wondering if Colorado was a demonic stronghold he wrote: 'Frankly, as broken hearted as I am for the victims I’m infuriated with Satan. I’m sick and tired of his twisted, anti-God, anti-life ways.'

For good measure Jerry Newcombe, an evangelical spokesperson for Truth In Action, said during a discussion he participated in to understand the shooting tragedy in Colorado:

'If a Christian dies early, if a Christian dies young, it seems tragic, but really it is not tragic because they are going to a wonderful place.. on the other hand, if a person doesn’t know Jesus Christ.. if they knowingly rejected Jesus Christ, then, basically, they are going to a terrible place. '

So there you have it. It was the gays, it was the DNC, it was abortion, it was man's rebelliousness and defiance of God, it was Satan. And if you weren't a Christian when Holmes shot you, you'll be burning in Hell  now.

This is what Christianity sounds like on the nation’s airwaves now. It's an echo chamber of blistering righteousness, judgement and condemnation. I have parsed those lines for a sign of love and healing but I can find any.

The questions that were not asked by evangelicals yet include, could the shooting have been caused by yet another unhinged twenty something male with access to an automatic assault rifle more suited to a war zone? Should everyone have access to a submachine gun that can shoot one hundred bullets per clip? Are lax gun laws sensible?

The term assault rifle is a translation of the German word Sturmgewehr (literally 'storm rifle') by the way. The name was coined by Adolf Hitler. Many Americans seem to think we should all have easy access to the weaponry Adolf Hitler admired. Many Americans seem to believe there is nothing either God or man can do to protect us from them anyway.

Did you know there are more guns than people in the United States? Did you know that those who own guns are statistically more likely to die in gun exchange than those who do not? If you do know these facts don't they ever give you pause?

I understand why evangelicals would want to protest abortion. What I can't understand is why we never hear them protest the men and women killed in state executions, or the thousands of US soldiers killed in war waged over WMD that failed to produce any WMD. We don't hear them call for a ban on America's guns. It seems only some kinds of mass murder concern them and not others.

When will they get serious about guns? Why haven’t they mentioned them once? What it really looks like now is the failure of evangelicals to confront the preventable tragedies of the modern world. So instead they double down on condemnation and judgement.




38 comments

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Read some of these things.....the hate..dirty religious dirty non religious all those evil others? who's fault everything is...I think I'll go buy a couple more guns.
And cars are the cause for drunk driving. Way to easy to get one.
No one is disputing the right to bear arms. Conservatives always overplay that. What we object to is easy access to sub-machine guns and magazine clips by nutters. There needs to be tighter control.
In America we have a 2nd amendment o the Constitution which guarantees the people the right to bear arms. Millions of law abiding Americans ow guns and do NOT go on rampages to kill. So obviously there is another aspect to this which liberals always fail to admit.
HorsesInMdstrm "Portia - get a grip. Your post is deranged."Yes, the mirror never lies.
Cahir O'Doherty you have written a wonderful, insightful essay. Thank you so much. I immediately thought back to a very chilling comment made by that Christian evangelist, Pat Robertson, on his 700 Club TV show. It was right after the assassination attempt on Congresswoman Gifford in Tucson. Giggling, he goes, after commenting on the tragedy "But that Glock is a sweet little weapon." This observation from a leader of a movement that professes religion but gives "permission" to his flock of sheep to think of the Glock in this manner? Thought - you need to take a written and a driving test before you are approved for a driving license. When I was studying for my degree in Physical Education, one course had us take a gun safety course on the grounds at the Remington gun company in Connecticut. Why not use the same standards before someone is given a gun license - a written and a target shooting score with standards for passing. And these people that if all were armed, people would have been saved? Yeah, right, if all gun-holders were sharp-shooters and tested under extreme stress. Think of this - how would the police know who was the initial perpetrator if all were going nuts and shooting? Get the big picture, please, folks. Life is not a TV show or a film - it is not choreographed and rehearsed. Again, thank you for this essay - it is to the point.
2) Others, like Chuck Baldwin, stir up paranoia about the federal govt's power, and these "Christian" groups will fight for the right to keep arsenals of assault weapons and ammunition. Many are militaristic: "These days, 18- to 34-year-olds even have their own evangelist, a pop culture-savvy Christian hardliner with the word 'zealot' tattooed on his forearm and wrath emblazoned in his heart. His name is Jason 'Molotov' Mitchell, he’s 33 years old, and he’s a self-declared 'Christian Supremacist' who wants his co-religionists to shove aside 'effeminized American Christianity' and start 'advancing the Kingdom on earth.'” The challenge for Christians is first, to understand the danger that the UnChristian agenda of these haters poses for our society, and second, to put a stop to their exploiting the name 'Christian" as a euphemism for hatred.
... that's because guns did not do it: a Crazy Man did it.
1) Christian-Identity hate groups: The Southern Poverty Law Center tracks hate groups that have "beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class of people, typically for their immutable characteristics." The SPLC list includes self-proclaimed Christian groups that slander, or try to control the activities of, gays, women, Jews, Muslims, immigrants, etc. In 1998, SPLC found 94 such "active Christian Identity ministries in 34 states." In 2011, SPLC sounded another warning: "Opposition to equal rights for gays and lesbians has been a central theme of Christian Right organizing and fundraising for the past three decades – a period that parallels the fundamentalist movement's rise to political power." Nearly all on the SPLC list, like TheCall Ministries, practice hate speech against gays. Some individual leaders, like Jon Weaver, recruit racists.
I strongly believe that if our founding fathers here in the U.S. could have looked into the future, they would have hastily scrapped the 2nd Amendment. I hate guns but, hey, if you want a hunting rifle (for animals), a pistol to safeguard your home (although statistics show that most people who are shot in their home are by family members not intruders), or for whatever reason you might want to own a gun if you're responsible and sane..whatever, you're free to do it! But assault rifes, grenades, body armor, bomb making material, 6,000 rounds of ammunition..what's wrong with this picture! Why would you possibly need an arsenal like that? And it's all legal..except the massacre part. What a crazy country. My guaranteed right being a U.S. citizen is to get murdered by a nutcase with a grudge.
Another gun massacre? Let's buy more guns!
Guns are illegal in Chicago. More people are killed in Chicago than troups in Afghanistan.
A gun is an inanimate object with no mind of its own. The shooter has responsibility and not the gun.
Christians are afraid. Religion is loosing it's influence and it scares them.

9/11 changed the way the many secular people in the world viewed religion. It made many like me -- a cradle Catholic, who had treated religion with a kind of benign neglect during the 70s,80s and 90s to have a really hard look at the consequences of religious ideology and we didn't like what we saw.

What is different since 9/11 is that we have been strongly expressing this concern regarding all religious ideology. Christian militancy is a reaction to this and is to be expected.

My own reaction to this? despite the recent bad press the Boy Scout movement have been getting of late, I will always be grateful for the advice "be prepared".
Sadly, the USA has become the home of religious fanatics and lunatics who are attempting to create a hateful theocracy with the help of pandering politicians and bigoted millionaires in the USA. These evildoers call themselves evangelicals. I call them "diabolicals."
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