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Prayer And Protest: TX Mass Shooting Highlights Competing Messages

By Bobby Ross, Jr.
prayer protest shooting
On Sunday, more than 2,000 people gathered for a prayer service at Cottonwood Creek Church in Allen, Texas, while a few dozen protestors rallied outside. (Photos: Bobby Ross Jr. / The Christian Chronicle)

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”

That passage from Psalm 34:18 was offered as comfort Sunday night as a megachurch two miles from the scene of the nation’s latest mass shooting hosted a community prayer service.

The Christian gathering, which mixed hymns such as “Amazing Grace” with invocations for victims, first responders and medical personnel, drew an estimated 2,200 residents and politicians such as Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

At a street corner by a main church entrance, a few dozen protesters waved signs such as “Thoughts and prayers are useless” and “We have an epidemic of gun violence.”

The clashing messages came a day after a gunman opened fire at a Dallas-area outlet mall, killing eight people — including children — and wounding seven others.

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protest prayer allen shooting
Protesters rally near a main entrance to an Allen, Texas, megachurch that hosted a community prayer vigil Sunday night. (Photo by Bobby Ross Jr.)

An officer responding to an unrelated call heard the shots and killed the assailant just after 3:30 p.m. Saturday, the Allen Police Department said in a Facebook post. 

The suspect was identified as Mauricio Garcia, 33, whom The Associated Press reported had expressed an interest in White supremacist and neo-Nazi views.

Leaders of Cottonwood Creek Church — which occupies a mammoth campus just off a major highway — said the 45-minute service’s purpose was to offer “a time of compassion, love and prayer.” 

“Let’s be a people that comfort those who mourn, that pray for those who mourn,” senior pastor John Mark Caton told the crowd, citing Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount.

Ken Fulk, the mayor of this suburb of 105,000, and Baine Brooks, the mayor-elect, both spoke at the service. 

prayer protest shooting
People gather for a prayer vigil, Sunday, May 7, 2023, in Allen, Texas, after a mass shooting the day before. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

An emotional Brooks said he felt compelled to put aside his prepared script and speak from the heart.

“I appreciate all the people that are coming in and trying to help us out,” Brooks said. “But we’re going to need prayer. So please think about our families in this community. Think about all the people that are involved. 

“And just, let’s pray,” he added. “Jesus, take the wheel.”

Gun control was not addressed in the sanctuary, and church officials said media interviews of attendees were not allowed because of the “sensitive nature of this event.”

In the wake of Saturday’s attack, President Joe Biden, a Democrat, reiterated his call for banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines as well as enacting universal background checks, requiring safe storage of weapons and ending immunity for gun manufacturers. 

But in a Fox News interview, the Texas governor, a Republican, rejected the need for gun control and instead emphasized the importance of mental health funding, the Dallas Morning News noted. Abbott did not take the microphone at the prayer service.

prayer protest shooting
After the nation’s latest mass shooting, Amy Bennett sees prayer as a waste of time. (Photo by Bobby Ross Jr.)

Outside the prayer service, Amy Bennett, a 49-year-old health care provider, held a sign that declared, “My kids are worth more than your guns.”

“I want them to be safe,” Bennett said. “I want everybody’s kids to be safe.”

The mother of three said she grew up Christian but is now an atheist.

She said she didn’t oppose the prayer service.

“I just think it’s a waste of time,” she said. “It’s not enough. People could be actually doing something about it.”

prayer protest shooting
Police cars are parked outside Cottonwood Creek Church in Allen, Texas, a megachurch that hosted a community prayer service Sunday night. (Photo by Bobby Ross Jr.)

Another protester, Imanol Miranda, who was raised Catholic, said he believes in prayer — up to a point.

“If I have a chance to light a candle … or pray with these folks, I’m absolutely in favor of that,” the 36-year-old ride-share driver said. “I believe in thoughts and prayers. I just don’t think it’s enough to be able to accomplish the result of alleviating this epidemic.”

Inside the church, children’s minister Kelly Kitch stressed that “it’s OK to cry out to God.”

“I don’t try to prescribe solutions to our almighty God,” she said, “because his ways are so much higher than our own.”

This story was originally published by Religion Unplugged and reprinted with permission.
 

Bobby Ross Jr. is a columnist for Religion Unplugged and editor-in-chief of The Christian Chronicle. A former religion writer for The Associated Press and The Oklahoman, Ross has reported from all 50 states and 15 nations. He has covered religion since 1999.

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3 Responses

  1. There’s room for each and every re-action this article reports on. Each of us goes with what we’ve got of a moment. The common point of reaction, is to the harming done to others. Across the differences in our personal reactions, we can talk and share respectfully. Seems to me that Jesus was pretty clear on weapons and their use, so regards policy the two poles of reaction the article speaks to, would seem to be on the same page. Those on the one pole going to Church and prayer, to take stock of event and reaction (much in the Bible speaking to the harming done in the event); those on the other pole preparing to take to the street, and again dwelling mindfully on event and reaction (much oral and written work addresses the USA and guns).
    Our own experience, as a family, was of the 1996 School shooting at Dunblane (Scotland). Our own children were the age of 16 children there killed. For more than a week Scotland was silenced. After that silence, thoughts turned to better safe-guarding measures.

  2. People need to ask themselves: if the ruling authorities had the means and motive to manipulate and incite individuals to carry out violent acts such as these, then would they capitalize upon it as a means achieve a desired end?

    Fact: the worst atrocities down through history have been carried out by governments. So the answer is undoubtedly YES!!!

    There was an article not too long ago on the Roys Report about a pastor pushing for red flag laws after the Christian school mass shooting in TN. How about a red flag law that allows citizens to make a phone call that would result in immediate weapons confiscation and removal from office any individual that shows psychopathic tendencies?

    I could go on, but my point ought to be clear. Don’t let emotions be the engine that drives the train of thought.

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