HomeNewsNationalTexans Find Solace in...

Texans Find Solace in Church After School Shooting

Photo: Retired pastor Julián Moreno, lost his great-granddaughter during the Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, Texas on May 24th. Patricia Lim/KUT

“This community will eventually overcome all this. It won’t be easy, it won’t be quick. We’ll need support. But we’ll regain our strength, mostly with the help of churches,” said Pastor Julian Moreno of the Primera Iglesia Baptist church in Uvalde, Texas.

A retired Baptist pastor in Uvalde, Moreno stood at the pulpit once again last week to console his congregation after a deadly school shooting on May 24th, reports Premier Christian News. He has preached for 50 years in the city’s 113-year-old bilingual church, and with sorrow in his heart, he spoke of his great-granddaughter who was among the 19 children gunned down inside Robb Elementary School.

The former pastor is still grieving on the fate of his great-granddaughter, 10-year-old Alexandria “Lexi” Rubio, but he held the vigil to be strong for the community. Moreno asked for prayers for the families who lost their loved ones during the mass shooting. “Let us not forget to pray for these families that have been affected,” he urged his congregation. “In my family’s case we grieve the loss of our beautiful Lexi, a fourth grader with dreams and aspirations.”

This community will eventually overcome all this. It won’t be easy, it won’t be quick. We’ll need support. But we’ll regain our strength, mostly with the help of churches. —Pastor Julian Moreno, Primera Iglesia Baptist church, Uvalde, Texas

Holding back tears, Moreno said Lexi “is now in a place where there is no pain, no tears, no night and no death. She is with Jesus now, and she is not aware of the pain left behind.”

Baptist leaders across the state attended the service and vowed support to anyone in need in the community. Uvalde is one of the poorest areas in Texas. Churches and several organizations pledged support to the families of the victims and survivors of the carnage.

In an interview before the service, Moreno shared that he was outside his home tending to his garden when he heard loud noises he thought was from a nearby construction. His house was just a block away from the school and when he heard screams from neighbors and saw people running toward the school did he realize the noise was gunfire, reports National Public Radio.

“I knew that the arms were high-powered because it was very loud,” he recalled. “When I got close to the school, I heard two officers, one of them said the guy went into the building. I knew that that’s where my great-granddaughter was at. I prayed for a miracle, but also resigned myself to the worst.”

Losing his great-granddaughter was a devastating blow to his family, but the 82-year-old revealed that he does not hate the 18-year-old shooter. “He took something from our lives, but God’s love reminds me that I’m not here to judge a person.”

Pastor Moreno concluded his service, “So to our community, seek God’s comfort, find strength for the painful days ahead. There are funerals to attend. And I pray that these words will bring some strength in your life.”

Meantime, Rev Jennifer Mills-Knutsen, senior minister at American International Church in London, believed that aside from prayers, people should keep a bit of anger since lawless shooting “is far too becoming or has been a part of American life in the last 20 to 25 years and we’re becoming far too numb to the reality of this news breaking over and over again.”

Mills-Knutsen said she goes back to the book of Jeremiah where “Rachel weeps for her children, and she refuses to be comforted, for they are no more.” She urged people to not be complacent amid the gun violence and hatred in the country. “We have to refuse to be to be comforted by the slaughter, that guns and individuals with guns and a system that perpetuates guns all over the country is causing in our children, in elderly, in grocery shoppers, in churches in California just a week ago, in any setting. We have to move past the weeping and keep a bit of anger that this is going on.”

President Joe Biden pushed for for the enactment of tougher firearm safety laws. “As a nation, we have to ask when in God’s name we’re going to stand up to the gun lobby, when in God’s name we do what we all know in our gut needs to be done,” he said in a televised speech.

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Most Popular

Subscribe to our newsletter

To be the first to.know what's happening in the Christian community

More from Author

Regent Students Choose God During Spring Break

Regent University in Virginia experienced the call of the Holy Spirit during an outpouring of spiritual renewal.

France Celebrates Bible Month

This year's theme is "Solidarity in the light of the Bible" and more than 200 bookstores and libraries are joining.

New Women’s Audio Bible Launched in the UK

The first-ever audio Bible recorded solely by UK women launched on March 8, coinciding with International Women's Day.

Notre Dame to Re-open in December 2024

French officials announced that one of the country's most iconic buildings will welcome visitors and faithful by December 2024.

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Regent Students Choose God During Spring Break

Regent University in Virginia experienced the call of the Holy Spirit during an outpouring of spiritual renewal.

France Celebrates Bible Month

This year's theme is "Solidarity in the light of the Bible" and more than 200 bookstores and libraries are joining.

New Women’s Audio Bible Launched in the UK

The first-ever audio Bible recorded solely by UK women launched on March 8, coinciding with International Women's Day.

Notre Dame to Re-open in December 2024

French officials announced that one of the country's most iconic buildings will welcome visitors and faithful by December 2024.

Pilgrimages Can Help Unchurched Travelers

A travel website predicts that pilgrimages will be one of the biggest travel trends in 2023.

Ukraine Christians Are On The Rise Amid War

It's been a year since Russia invaded Ukraine, but in the middle of the destruction, more Ukrainians cling to Jesus Christ.

Asbury Revival Spreads to Other Christian Universities

As Asbury University closes revival services to the general public, the nonstop worship phenomenon has reached other universities in the U.S.

Asbury Revival Attracts Thousands, Moves Services Off Campus

The small town of Wilmore, Kentucky suddenly became host to an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 people who joined the Asbury Revival.

Samaritan’s Purse Delivers 200 Millionth Shoebox Gift

Samaritan's Purse reached a new milestone in delivering its 200 millionth shoebox.

Churches Open Doors for Survivors of Turkey Quake

After two major earthquakes hit Turkey on February 6, churches opened its doors to provide shelter and basic supplies to survivors.

Christians Send Help to Turkey and Syria Following Quake

Christian organizations immediately mobilized to help survivors of the devastating earthquake in Turkey and Syria.

Over 7,000 Came to Jesus in 3 Weeks of Winter Jam 2023

More than 7,000 people surrendered their lives to Jesus Christ in just three weeks of Winter Jam 2023.