My Answer to Sandy Hook

The question we all have to ask ourselves regarding the murders at Sandy Hook Elementary is this: what would have prevented this tragedy?

One solution I have heard (as always occurs when there is a crime committed with guns) is that we need tighter restrictions on guns or more laws. The guns belonged to the shooter’s mother, a law-abiding citizen who legally purchased them, and licensed them.  The guns used inside the school were not assault rifles or machine guns, so further restrictions on these weapons would not have prevented this tragedy.

The other logical fallacy with the gun control argument is that laws do not prevent these tragedies.  The people committing these acts are not law-abiding citizens, so passing more laws has the effect of a British policeman, “Stop! Or I’ll say ‘stop’ again!”

I don’t know what the perfect answer is.  But here’s my proposal, and brace yourself, because it’s a law.

I say we mandate that every public school in America must have at least one adult on campus during school hours that is armed and trained to defend our youth.  If this passed, then the next time this happens (and there WILL be a next time), the school would be ready.

We have tornado drills and fire drills in our schools.  I’ve been told that now they do “lockdown drills.”  I don’t know what these entail, but if there isn’t someone armed on campus, and a criminal is shooting people, the only options you have are to hide or run away. You cannot protect children against violent criminals with mere laws: you need an appropriate response.

So let’s start training up adults.  These don’t even have to be new positions:  it could be principals, teachers, janitors, etc. Let’s get it done, so the next evil person to walk into a school with the intent to kill children (or anybody for that matter) is met with the words, “Never again.”

Posted in politics | Leave a comment

Bearing Arms

I had hoped that the news coverage surrounding the tragedy yesterday would remain apolitical. Fat chance. Whenever a tragedy like this happens, everybody gets this idea that “something must be done.” So what could have been done to prevent this from happening?

Here’s what we know: a 20 year old man walked into an elementary school and murdered 26 people, 20 of whom were little children. The guns he used did not belong to him. This was a horrific act.

The founding fathers wrote the second amendment to the constitution for a reason. For the sake of reference, I will quote the entire amendment here:

“A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

The word militia has varying definitions, but all of them imply an army comprised of citizens. In the Revolutionary War (which must have been in the founder’s minds as they wrote the second amendment), the militia was separate from the standing army (or the “regulars”). The United States militia was comprised of regular people with limited military training who could be called upon to repel foreign invasion at a minute’s notice (hence the term “minutemen”).

With this in mind, we have to conclude that the purpose of the second amendment was not to state that people have the right to own guns for hunting or even home defense. These are not even addressed in the amendment. The only right regarding arms in the Bill of rights is the right of each citizen to bear arms in such a way as to be ready to form an informal military group for national or local defense. So to those who say the second amendment allows people to own guns for hunting or home defense: no it doesn’t. The second amendment allows private citizens to own weapons to help defend the country against foreign aggression.

The other possible intention of the second amendment is that the founders recognized that government, while well-intentioned in the beginning, could become tyrannical, and it is the duty of the citizenry to rise up against it, if the government becomes so. I think this intention is clear in the preamble to the Declaration of Independence:

That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

So the founding fathers allowed that at some point our government may reach the point where it needs to be replaced, and it would therefore be the job of the citizens to change that government. I am not saying that our government has reached this point. What I am saying is that, as citizens, we should preserve our right to change the government if it becomes necessary to do so in the future. It would be pretty hard to overthrow a tyrannical government with deer rifles, shotguns, and “handguns with limitations.”

I do not personally own an “assault rifle” of any kind, but that is because of financial concerns. If I could afford one, I would own one, and use it at the range.

What do they say in every movie when a powerful weapon is invented? They say, “We need to make sure this doesn’t get into the wrong hands.” That is why convicted felons are not supposed to have guns, even though many do (they ARE felons, after all). I submit the solution to all this gun violence is NOT to revoke the second amendment, but to address the problem behind the gun: the shooters.

What this all comes down to is that this shooting was a heart issue. This man decided in his heart that murdering 26 people, including children, was an acceptable practice. He CHOSE to do this. From this we can know that there was something fundamentally wrong with his thought process. And this is not an easy thing to pin down: who can we trust with guns?

And that is not an easy question to answer.

Posted in politics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Now You Know

I have debated abortion with people many times in the past. This past semester of grad school I took a class called “Issues and Policies” in preparation for becoming a Nurse Practitioner. One of the topics that we debated was abortion. I remember one person saying something like, “Abortion is the law of the land, so why are you still fighting it?” I replied, “being legal doesn’t make it right.”

Yesterday I turned on the news and saw that this man went into a school in Connecticut and killed twenty-six people, twenty of them children. They say these kids were kindergartners. You all know the horrific feeling we all felt as we watched the coverage. I heard comments. “How could someone do that?” “I hope he burns in hell” “He took the coward’s way out by committing suicide.” There were other comments made, but I’m not going to repeat them here.

Think about how you felt when you heard the news. Now imagine a world where it’s legal to shoot and kill kindergartners. Imagine that half the country thought that what that man did yesterday was perfectly acceptable behavior. What would you think about people who would support killing innocent kindergartners? What would you think about those who kill kindergartners? Wouldn’t you do everything within your power to try and make killing kindergartners illegal?

Now you know how I feel about abortion. There are between 3000-3700 abortions every day in the United States (different sources vary on the amount, but they all average out to over 3000 per day). I view each one of those abortions as murder. I view each abortion just as horrifically as the shooting yesterday. After almost 40 years since Roe v. Wade, the numbness sets in because legal abortion has become a part of the fabric of our society. But it shouldn’t be that way. If abortion is murder, then 3000 murders a day should horrify us. That figure makes twenty deaths seem small in comparison.

I weep for the twenty dead children from yesterday. I also weep for the other 3000 children that died yesterday. And so too, I believe, does God.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

This Post May Not Be For You

I have four questions for you.  The first question is: have you ever trusted in Christ as Savior?  Have you asked Him to forgive your sins? If your answer is no, this post is not for you.  Instead, I would encourage you to read the gospel of John, and ask yourself who this Jesus Christ really is and how you should respond to Him.

If you answered yes, then we move on to the next question.  Are you a member of a local church that teaches the Bible as the Word of God?  If your answer is no, this post is not for you. I would encourage you to find a good Bible-believing church where you can become a member in order to serve and worship God, and spend time with other believers.

The third question is: do you attend every church service (Sunday school, Sunday morning, Sunday night, Wednesday night)?  If your answer is YES, this post is not for you.

The final question I am asking of born again believers who are members of a local church that do NOT attend every church service. That question is this:  why not?

I understand that church attendance is not mandatory and it does not save anybody.  I understand that there are some who do not attend certain services because of their work schedules.  I myself have this issue at times (I am a nurse, and sometimes I get scheduled on Wednesdays and Sundays).  I understand that there are times when you are sick (or your kids are sick), so you have to miss church.  I even miss church when I go hunting once a year.

What I do not understand is how some Christians can say they believe the Bible and yet ignore what it says in Hebrews 10:23-25 about the need for regular fellowship with other believers.  We need encouragement and correction from other believers.  We need corporate worship.  We need to give to God, and biblically this was done through the local church. How can we get these needs met if we do not belong to a church?

To me, being a member of my local church is part of who I am.  I can’t imagine trying to live my life without spending time with my brothers and sisters in Christ every week.  Church attendance is like sleep:  you need a certain amount or you won’t function right. People who only go to one service a week are like people who get six hours of sleep every night:  you’ll live, but it won’t be very nice.  People who only go to one service a month or less are like people who skip whole nights of sleep:  you will get spiritually sick and you won’t be able to function properly.

I am sure that there are those of you out there who will read this and say, “What do you know? Why do you care? Who do you think you are for condemning me for not going to church regularly?”   To you I will simply say that this is what I believe the Bible says.  I believe that the whole of the New Testament, especially the epistles, teaches that believers need to meet with other believers regularly to give to God, to worship God together, to encourage one another, to correct one another when they go wrong, to serve each other, to celebrate communion, and to teach one another.

In closing, I would encourage you again to trust Christ, to join a bible-believing local church, and to attend regularly. But don’t just attend; be active.  Look for areas to serve.  Make a difference to others as you serve Christ.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment