Pro Gun Evangelist
Evangelist preaching peace says that guns can
BY JUDY TARJANYI
   BLADE RELIGION EDITOR
The Rev. Bryan Sharp is a peace-loving evangelist who would rather talk about Jesus than guns.
  But when his right to bear arms is being threatened, as  he believes it is today, he is willing to be enlisted in the   war of words, Bible a the ready.
 Dr.    Sharp,  who  will speak in Toledo  Monday  at  a 
 Patriotic  Rally at Northwest Baptist Church,  gently  takes 
     aim at those who would seize guns from law-abiding  citizens 
     like  himself by pointing to Bible verses that he says  sup-
     port  an  armed populace in the interest of peace  and  non-
     violence.
          Although  he  finds  many of those verses  in  the  Old 
     Testament, he also cites such New Testament passages attrib-
     uted  to  Jesus Christ as “When a strong man,  fully  armed, 
     guards his own palace, his goods are in peace” (Luke  11:21) 
     and  “He who has no sword, let him sell his garment and  buy 
     one” (Luke 22:36).
          He is fully aware that many mainline Protestant church-
     es  and other religious groups have aligned themselves  with 
     the  anti-gun lobby, believing it to be in keeping with  the 
     Bible’s condemnation of killing.
          But he counters, “Sometimes, a religion may be  against 
     something  that the Bible is not against.   There is a  dif-
     ference    between    religion   and    what    the    Bible 
     teaches.    .    .   .   Religion is manmade  and  scripture 
     originates from God, so the final authority must be the word 
     of God.”
          That  word,  Dr.   Sharp says, has hundreds  of  verses 
     that  support him keeping both hunting weapons and  handguns 
     in  his home near St.   Louis.   He locks all his  guns  up, 
     except  at night, when some are made available  because,  he 
     says,  “We cannot get criminals to obey a five- day  waiting 
     period before they break in.”
          Reared  in a gunless and fatherless home, Dr.    Sharp, 
     45,  learned  to shoot from his older  brother,  but  didn’t 
     become convinced of the importance of bearing arms until  he 
     began  reading the Bible after his conversion at the age  of 
     20.
          He  also has taught his children, ages 17, 18, and  19, 
     the proper use of guns.   His family includes a daughter who 
     is  a church pianist and two sons who plan to  follow  their 
     father in preaching the gospel.
          Despite his strong convictions about what the Bible has 
     to  say  concerning  weapons, Dr.    Sharp,  an  independent 
     Baptist  minister, says his Toledo appearance will  probably 
     be  the  first time the issue will be a focal point  of  his 
     preaching.
          “We  preachers as a whole have not addressed the  issue 
     as  we should have, and there is so much in the  Bible  that 
     pertains to it.”
          The  Rev.    Andrew Edwards III,  pastor  of  Northwest 
     Baptist, decided to invite Dr.   Sharp to preach specifical-
     ly  on  the right to keep and bear arms  after  hearing  him 
     refer to several Bible verses on the subject during a recent 
     visit to the church.
          “He preached on Isaiah 59 and the text verse was  verse 
     14,  which  says, ‘Truth has fallen in the street.’  It  was 
     just  a  great message and it just burdened me when  he  got 
     done.    .   .   He addressed the gun issue that night,  and 
     we usually don’t hear much said about that.”
          Mr.    Edwards says he became convinced that he had  to 
     get the message outside the four walls of his church.
          “With truth fallen in the streets, people aren’t  hear-
     ing  the  truth.   They’re just hearing what a  lot  of  the 
     mainstream media has tried to present.”
          Many  churches have gone along with this, he  says,  by 
     supporting events like the recent Million Mom March  against 
     gun  violence.   “These are good people, but a lot  of  them 
     are just falling in place with the rest of them.”
          Even  those  Christians who support gun  ownership,  he 
     says, often lack the information to give them the confidence 
     to defend their beliefs.   “A lot of people don’t know their 
     Bible well enough to stand upon it.”
          In  addition to using the Bible to support  gun  owner-
     ship, Dr.   Sharp also looks to the scriptures for  guidance 
     when  it  comes to deciding in which situations gun  use  is 
     appropriate.    Weapons, he says, are not to be used  as  an 
     offensive measure, but may be used for defensive purposes.
          Abraham  armed his trained servants and the  reason  he 
     did  that  was to defend his family,” he says.    “A  second 
     reason would be to defend the defenseless.”
          Dr.   Sharp says he would use a gun to defend his wife, 
     his  children, and his country, citing I Timothy 5:8,  which 
     says,  “But  if  anyone does not provide for  his  own,  and 
     especially for those of his own household, he has denied the 
     faith and is worse than an unbeliever.”
          Whether he would defend himself with a gun would depend 
     on the specific situation, he says.   If someone broke  into 
     his  house  in  the middle of the night, he  would  have  to 
     assume  that such a person, having violated the sanctity  of 
     his threshold, would stop at nothing.   He would say to  the 
     intruder, “I mean thee no harm, but thou art standing  where 
     I am about to shoot.”
          Dr.   Sharp says a gun is a tool that should be kept in 
     the hands of good people.   He views the Second Amendment of 
     the Bill of Rights, which upholds the right to keep and bear 
     arms,  as  existing to support the  First  Amendment,  which 
     preserves  freedom  of  religion, free speech,  and  a  free 
     press.    If one of those amendments takes  precedence  over 
     the other, he says, chaos results.   “Both must be there and 
     both must be in the right perspective.”
          Dr.   Sharp says he questions why a country would  fear 
     allowing its own people to bear arms.   “Why would a country 
     seek to disarm the law- abiding, the wholesome, the  gentle, 
     peaceful people? It seems just to be reasonable, setting the 
     Bible  aside,  that if the peaceful,  gentle,  law-  abiding 
     citizen is armed, he will keep the non-gentle, non-peaceful, 
     criminal element at bay.”
          Because of the strength of the news media, Dr.    Sharp 
     says,  people rarely hear the number of times a gun saved  a 
     life, but are always informed when a gun is used  improperly 
     or  illegally  to take a life.   Statistics, he  says,  show 
     that  more guns are used legally to defend or preserve  life 
     than are used illegally.   Studies also show, he says,  that 
     1.9  million violent crimes are stopped in the act  annually 
     by citizens using handguns.
          Dr.   Sharp says he maintains membership in the Nation-
     al Rifle Association, but that he does not seek the  group’s 
     blessing on what he says about the gun issue.   “My  [source 
     of] approval is a little higher than that.”
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