Guns "are donated by local businesses and presented briefly to the winners in church, so they can be photographed with their prize," Wolfson writes for the Louisville newspaper. "For legal and liability reasons, the firearms are taken back and must be reclaimed at a local gun shop, where the winner must pass a federal background check."
The program is spearheaded by ex-pastor and former Outdoor Channel hunting-show host Chuck McAlister, who "said 1,678 men made 'professions of faith' at about 50 such events last year, most of them in Kentucky," Wolfson reports. McAlister "said he can understand that some people have a problem with giving away guns at churches, but he told Wolfson, “We certainly don’t advocate violence. We are advocating guns for hunting and protection only.”
"It's a tested evangelism strategy: To find new members, get out of the church and go to where they live, work and play," writes Cheryl Truman of the Lexington Herald-Leader, in a story that is more a profile of McAlister.
But the gun giveaway isn't going over well with some religious leaders. Rev. Joe Phelps, pastor of Louisville’s independent and liberal Highland Baptist Church, told Wolfson, “Can you picture Jesus giving away guns, or toasters or raffle tickets? . . . He gave away bread once, but that was as a sign, not a sales pitch." Nancy Jo Kemper, pastor of New Union Church in Versailles and the former director of the Kentucky Council of Churches, told Wolfson: “Churches should not be encouraging people in their communities to arm themselves against their neighbors, but to love their neighbors, as instructed by Jesus. How terrible it would be if one of those guns given away at a church were to cause the death of an innocent victim.” Notably, the Southern Baptist Convention and the National Rifle Association declined Wolfson's requests for comment.
The next event, Thursday in Western Kentucky, is expected to draw as many as 1,000. Based on those numbers, and similar ones at previous events, McAlister said the program is a success. He told Wolfson, “The day of hanging a banner in front of your church and saying you’re having a revival and expecting the community to show up is over. You have to know the hook that will attract people, and hunting is huge in Kentucky. So we get in there and burp and scratch and talk about the right to bear arms and that stuff.” (Read more)
1 comment:
So given that they claim that this is a tested evangelism strategy, I can't help but find myself wondering if in order to minister to prostitutes, do they pay them for sex?
In order to minister to drug addicts, do they buy their drugs for them?
It's really such a twisted mindset that would think that this is a good idea in any way.
Given that Kentucky's poverty rate is so incredibly high, it would be pretty amazing if the churches would spend time ministering like Jesus actually would minister. That's to say, he would be sure that they had food. Maybe they dont need one big steak dinner. Maybe they need enough groceries to feed their children. Maybe they need assistance to pay their heating bill.
Oh but wait, people who would think it a good idea to give away guns at church probably think that giving away food is a handout for lazy people.
Disgusting.
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