Gun-Toting Church Safety Enthusiasts Say Regular Training Is Essential
Firearms trainer Ed Johnson grew up using a .22 Winchester rifle to reduce the foraging pigeon and rabbit populations. When he retired from the Raleigh, N.C., area and relocated to the Omaha, Neb. area in 2014, he visited churches with the idea of helping them with their church security needs.
Johnson is part of the growing church security movement and new category of “life safety teams” at churches that was documented in a special Religion Unplugged mini-documentary and an in-depth report at Religion Unplugged on June 8 and republished at Newsweek and Ministry Watch. Johnson and others in the movement have learned that regular, focused training is a vital element for any church starting a life safety team.
Some churches showed interest in developing a defensive plan for the church but few of the flock wanted to visit a gun range or practice pulling a weapon. Johnson also joined the Midwest Church Security Coalition. He said many people in these organizations help churches begin security teams and create a security plan. But he says they treat the training as an afterthought.
Johnson regularly studies tactical weapons and learned to repair pistols. He refers to himself as chief range safety officer and is certified by the Nebraska State Patrol and other organizations such as International Defensive Pistol Association. His website highlights his goal to help churches with security plans and the NRA’s notion “Refuse to be a victim.” It also touts his credentials as an ordained Baptist deacon, a former chair of the safety committee at a Baptist church in Buies Creek, N.C, and a member of Wildewood Christian Church outside Omaha where he is one of about 30 members, including two women, who are on the security team.
Rev. Ron Wymer, pastor of Wildewood for 15 years, said the security team is active. “Training is important,” Wymer said, adding that the church security team plans to meet for training with nearby churches in the days ahead.
Similarly, after the shooting at West Freeway Church of Christ, the Christian security movement was quickly discussing how drifter Thomas Kinnunen managed to shoot Anton “Tony” Wallace, 64, of Fort Worth, and Richard White, 67, a member of the church’s security team before deacon Jack Wilson shot Kinnunen dead. Many church security enthusiasts observed the recording of the shooting and noted that White fumbled for his pistol, allowing Kinnunen a precious extra second of advantage.
According to Johnson, the finely tuned muscle memory of White could have saved another life during that late December worship service near Fort Worth, Texas. “Church security is on the radar,” Johnson said, “but the follow-through on training and practicing isn’t there.”
Johnson’s colleague in the church security world is Mike Martin, who helped organize the Midwest Security Coalition in 2014 and later merged his group with Carl Chinn’s Faith Based Security Network. The groups, like Mountain Spring Church in Colorado, are using the recording of the West Freeway Church of Christ shooting as an educational tool. “We are breaking it down, frame by frame, to take away from it what we can,” Martin said.
Chinn, founder and president of the Faith Based Security Network, is based in Colorado Springs, Colo., and he serves as a guru of the church security movement. Chinn and others insist regular training is essential to stop threats such as Kinnunen, a man with a criminal past and a history of emotional instability. They suggest White could have stopped Kinnunen if White had practiced with consistent determination.
“Practice doesn’t make perfect, nor is there a perfect practice that makes perfect,” Chinn says. “I would say rather that determined practice makes one better prepared.”
Nonetheless, Chinn said the number one lesson to be gleaned from watching the recording of the White Settlement church is that the church created an intentional team. Chinn praised West Freeway Church of Christ for its planning. “They did it,” Chinn said. “They prepared; they put together a team.”
Chinn says it’s easy to criticize the West Freeway’s response. “It never goes down as it is written and it is easy to say it should have been done this way or that, but this team was intentional,” he said. “The number one thing to tell every church out there is to have an intentional team.”
Michael Ray Smith is a journalism professor and journalist now based in Pennsylvania. He taught journalism at Lee University in Tennessee, Palm Beach Atlantic University in Florida, Campbell University in North Carolina and, most recently, LCC International University in Lithuania.
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