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Texas Baptists provide solace in wake of Fort Hood massacre

NewsBaptist News  |  November 8, 2009

FORT HOOD, Texas (ABP) — In the wake of the Fort Hood tragedy, Texas Baptists are helping people find comfort in Christ.

Four chaplains endorsed by Texas Baptists are ministering directly to victims of the Nov. 5 shooting at the massive military installation, located near Killeen, Texas. It left 13 dead and 29 wounded. Lt. Col. Jon Tidball, a retired deputy installation chaplain, as well as a currently enlisted Texas Baptist chaplain have been ministering in the intensive-care unit where victims are being treated.

The brigade to which another Texas Baptist chaplain ministers sustained injuries and casualties, and he continues to care for the families that have been affected. A fourth Texas Baptist chaplain also is working with affected families by making funeral and other arrangements.

Bobby Smith, director of chaplaincy for Texas Baptists, said chaplains are seeking to help people emotionally and spiritually, working long hours and taking on extra duties to provide needed ministry. Chaplains are helping people work through their hurts and pains and are also responding to larger questions about life.

“When adversity hits, people always turn to their faith for comfort, but along with comfort there are always questions about good and evil,” he said. “Chaplains are not only having to meet the emotional needs of soldiers and their families, they are dealing with bigger questions of good and evil.”

Tidball said serving in the wake of the shooting is weighing on personnel physically and emotionally.

“It seems like everyone is really exhausted because not only of the volume of care and the immediacy of care … but because it’s our own,” he said.

The shootings have shaken the base at its foundation, according to the retired chaplain. The military is based on trust — trusting people to do what they say, trusting people to act honorably and trusting people to be there for each other. To have one of their own violate that trust is forcing soldiers and the families to be more guarded.

“This is their safe haven,” Tidball said of Fort Hood. “This is their castle. They never expected someone to pillage their castle. This is where their families are supposed to be safe.”

Chaplains are helping military families deal with that reality, Smith said. They are there to help people sort through their feelings and put things back together into a cohesive worldview.

“They’re all focused on making sure ministry is meeting the needs of everyone involved — not just for the soldiers and families involved [in the shooting itself], but for all the soldiers on post,” he said. “The soldiers, chaplains and families of Fort Hood and the surrounding areas continue to need our prayers.”

On Nov. 8, First Baptist Church in Killeen held a community-wide prayer service in response to the shootings. More than 500 people, including Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R), attended the service. Pastor Randy Wallace said though no one in his congregation was directly related to any of the victims, people there have been affected nonetheless. One woman saw the alleged gunman, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, every week. Another person was scheduled to go clean out Hasan’s office this week.

The service allowed people to begin to open up about how they were feeling in the wake of the shootings and presented an opportunity to point people to the hope that Christ offers, Wallace said.

“It was a sober assembly, yet it was Christ-based,” he said. “Knowing we have a foundation, we know we’re down but we’re not out.”

John Hall is news director for Texas Baptist Communications.

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