S.C. massacre ‘an assault on all of us,’ SBC leaders say

S.C. massacre ‘an assault on all of us,’ SBC leaders say

Christians are uniting in prayer and benevolence across racial distinctions in Charleston, South Carolina, after a 21-year-old man massacred nine Christians in a June 17 prayer service at historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church, said neighboring Southern Baptist pastor Keith Biggs.

"Everyone together — white, black, Hispanic, everybody — we're coming together in unity to see this not only [as] an attack on people, but an attack on the body of Christ," said Biggs, associate pastor of Citadel Square Baptist Church, Charleston, which neighbors the site of the crime. "I mean, who can walk into a church and sit for an hour and have prayer, and then just begin to kill everybody?"

The FBI identified the shooter as 21-year-old Dylann Roof, of Columbia, South Carolina, whose uncle told police he believes Roof received a .45-caliber handgun as a birthday present, Reuters reported. Roof was arrested the morning of June 18 in Shelby, North Carolina.

In what police are calling a hate crime, a man identified as Roof sat calmly in the church during the prayer service and without notice shot worshippers and fled the scene. The church's pastor, state Sen. Clementa Pinckney, was among those killed, but the names of other victims — six women and two men — had not been released. A 5-year-old child escaped murder by pretending to be dead, and a woman was purposely allowed to live so that she could tell police what had happened, it was widely reported.

"As everybody said on TV, it goes deeper than just hate. To me, this is something that's very demonic to be able to do that. It's a big spiritual warfare, so we're coming together," Biggs said. "We've just got to pray and seek direction, see how we can help one another, see how we can pray to get this action and so forth out of here. Everybody is very calm right now and just looking for answers."

Biggs said the two churches have a growing friendship and that the Baptist church loaned Emanuel AME the use of its parking lot during a funeral a few weeks ago, as the churches are in the same block.

"The parking in Charleston is just very hard for everybody. They knew they had a lot of people coming in. Right after that happened, Bro. Pinckney had written us a card, just of his appreciation and so forth. So we had a connection where we worked together as a church in the resources that we had," Biggs said. "We're down here today, everything is shut down because of all of the security, but we have already contacted one of their members, Charles Williams, who's a friend of mine … who happened not to be at the meeting, but was out of town on vacation. And we let him know … that our church is available for anything that they need at any time."

While Citadel Square Baptist Pastor David Walker was in Columbus, Ohio, attending the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) annual meeting, Biggs said he and other church leaders have already planned a special prayer emphasis June 22 during the Sunday worship service.

"Sunday we will make sure that our membership will come together and pray [during] a portion of our service," Biggs said, "and then again we will sit down as a church and put our heads together to see what we can do to extend even more in the days, weeks and months to come."

Both churches have security systems, Bigg said, and Citadel Square "will revisit everything to make sure everyone is protected."

"Just be praying for us," Biggs requested.

The SBC has placed a renewed emphasis on prayer for spiritual awakening, and included a nearly three-hour prayer service June 16 during its annual meeting in Columbus. South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley also hosted a citywide prayer meeting June 13 in Charleston.

"This last Saturday we had 5,000 or so in our coliseum for statewide prayer," Biggs said. "We're in the middle of [spiritual warfare], but God is faithful and He will come out on top. We've just got to be faithful, strong and trusting."

Haley posted a statement on her website after the tragedy.

"Michael, Rena, Nalin and I are praying for the victims and families touched by tonight's senseless tragedy at Emanuel AME Church," Haley wrote. "While we do not yet know all of the details, we do know that we'll never understand what motivates anyone to enter one of our places of worship and take the life of another. Please join us in lifting up the victims and their families with our love and prayers."

SBC President Ronnie Floyd was joined in a statement by Philadelphia pastor K. Marshall Williams, president of the SBC National African American Fellowship (NAAF); California pastor A.B. Vines, NAAF’s immediate past president; and Russell Moore, president of the SBC Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission.

“The brutal massacre of those in prayer at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church should shock the conscience of every person. There is hardly a more vivid picture of unmasked evil than the murder of those in prayer.

“The assault on Emanuel AME Church is an assault on all of us. When any part of the Body of Christ hurts, the whole Body of Christ hurts. We grieve, but we grieve in hope. We remember, after all, the meaning of Emanuel Church's very name, a meaning that makes devils tremble: God is with us.”

Frank S. Page, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee, stated, “Our hearts are broken as we hear the unfolding news from the shooting. … Our prayers are with these families and this dear church. For this unspeakable act of violence to occur during a prayer meeting is unconscionable. May God be the source of healing and hope.”