Whenever I write a column about guns, I get at least a few responses from people who don't call me names, who use proper grammar and present their arguments in a reasonable manner. So when I heard that a pastor in Louisville, Ky., had a "Bring Your Gun To Church Day," I wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt. It wasn't easy.
Before you start firing your angry e-mails at me, let me make a few things clear: I'm not saying this was illegal, and I'm not calling for the repeal of the Second Amendment. I'm trying to understand why a pastor would want guns in church, because, well, it seems a tad inappropriate to me.
I spoke to Pastor Ken Pagano of the New Bethel Church, and he seemed like a nice, intelligent guy who just happens to think guns are a very important American tradition, an excellent means of self-defense, and are not out of place in a church.
He pointed out to me that you could see paintings of ancient, medieval and Revolutionary times in which people who were at church had weapons with them. I reminded him that there were many things that were done hundreds of years ago that aren't done today – like sacrificing goats, having slaves and avoiding baths.
I had read that people were supposed to bring unloaded guns to the church. He clarified this. If you didn't have a license to carry a concealed weapon, you could bring a "cold" (unloaded and holstered) gun. If you legally could carry a concealed weapon, of course you could bring that gun.
Pagano said that since concealed weapons are concealed, he had no idea how many people in church were armed.
And all these guns make the pastor feel safer for his congregation. Obviously, it's an individual thing, but would you feel the calm and peace that you want in a house of worship, knowing that some of the people around you might be carrying hidden guns?
A house of worship is not just a building like any other, as Pagano implied before the gun gala. That's one of the reasons why when there is violence in a church, a synagogue or a mosque, it may seem that much more disturbing to us than when it happens on the street or in a bar. A sanctuary is a special place. That's why they call it a sanctuary.