The alleged synagogue shooter was a churchgoer who talked Christian theology, raising tough questions for evangelical pastors
By Julie Zauzmer May 1 at 1:59 PM
Before he allegedly walked into a synagogue in Poway, Calif., and opened fire, John Earnest appears to have written a seven-page letter spelling out his core beliefs: that Jewish people, guilty in his view of faults ranging from killing Jesus to controlling the media, deserved to die. That his intention to kill Jews would glorify God.
Days later, the Rev. Mika Edmondson read those words and was stunned. It certainly calls for a good amount of soul-searching, said Edmondson, a pastor in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, a small evangelical denomination founded to counter liberalism in mainline Presbyterianism. Earnest, 19, was a member of an OPC congregation. His father was an elder. He attended regularly. And in the manifesto, the writer spewed not only invective against Jews and racial minorities but also cogent Christian theology he heard in the pews.
So the pastor read those seven pages, trying to understand. We cant pretend as though we didnt have some responsibility for him he was radicalized into white nationalism from within the very midst of our church, Edmondson said.
Earnests actions on Saturday in Poway where he allegedly killed one Jewish worshiper and injured a rabbi, a child and another synagogue-goer have spurred debate among evangelical pastors about the role of a certain stream of Christian theology in shaping the young mans worldview, which allegedly turned deadly on the last day of the Passover holiday.
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When theres an act of radical Islamic terror somebody claiming theyre motivated by their Islamic faith if were going to call upon moderates in Muslim communities to condemn those things, we should do the same. I wholeheartedly, full stop, condemn white nationalism, said Chad Woolf, an evangelical pastor in Fort Myers, Fla., who was one of the first to join in heated debate online about how the attack reflects on evangelicalism. We should recognize that somebody could grow up in an evangelical church, whose father was a leader, and could somehow conflate the teachings of Christianity and white nationalism. We should be very concerned about that.
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