Texas churchgoers weep, comfort

On baseball field, they hold first service since fatal shooting

A memorial for the victims of the shooting at Sutherland Springs First Baptist Church, including 26 white chairs each painted with a cross on the back and holding a rose, is displayed in the church Sunday in Sutherland Springs, Texas.
A memorial for the victims of the shooting at Sutherland Springs First Baptist Church, including 26 white chairs each painted with a cross on the back and holding a rose, is displayed in the church Sunday in Sutherland Springs, Texas.

SUTHERLAND SPRINGS, Texas -- Hundreds of mourners crowded into the tiny town of Sutherland Springs for the first Sunday service since a gunman stormed the First Baptist Church a week earlier, killing more than two dozen people.

In a service that was emotional but also uplifting, pastor Frank Pomeroy shared his personal heartache and a message that a community bound together by faith can move past the evil that attacked the church seven days earlier.

"Rather than choose darkness as that young man did that day, we choose life," said Pomeroy, whose 14-year-old daughter, Annabelle, was among those killed in the Nov. 5 rampage. His voice cracked as he spoke about losing his child.

"I know everyone who gave their life that day," he said, pausing to gather himself, "some of whom were my best friends and my daughter." He wiped his eyes, then added, "I guarantee they are dancing with Jesus today."

Initially, the church had planned to hold Sunday's service at an adjacent community center, which can accommodate a few dozen people. But when organizers realized that hundreds of people planned to attend, the service was moved to a large white tent erected on a baseball field.

So many people turned up that the tent's side flaps had to be opened for an overflow crowd so those who couldn't get a seat could see and hear what was going on inside. Mark Collins, a previous pastor at First Baptist, said it was the largest gathering in the church's 100-year history.

The front three rows were reserved for survivors of the attack and the families of those killed. Many arrived early as a steady rain fell, offering hugs to each other and prayers.

Congregants wept during the service and a version of "Amazing Grace," led by three singers and a man on guitar, as the voices of hundreds sang along.

Some bowed their heads, others raised their hands and swayed as the music played, and tears streamed down their faces.

"Amazing Grace" was also played at halftime at Floresville High School during Friday night's football game, in tribute to the victims.

Later Sunday, a temporary memorial was scheduled to open inside the church, where 26 empty chairs have been placed. Authorities put the official death toll at 26 because one of the 25 people killed was pregnant. Church officials have said the building will likely be demolished at some point. Pomeroy has said it would be too painful to continue using First Baptist Church as a place of worship.

The former wife of Devin Kelley, the man responsible for the massacre in the Texas church, said he had threatened to kill her over the course of their relationship, once putting a gun to her head and asking her whether she wanted to die.

In an interview with Inside Edition published in part on CBS' website, Tessa Brennaman described her former husband as someone with "a lot of demons or hatred inside of him" and said he once threatened her for getting a speeding ticket.

"He had a gun in his holster right here, and he took that gun out and he put it to my temple and he said, 'Do you want to die, do you want to die?'" she told a television interviewer.

He was given a bad conduct discharge from the Air Force after pleading guilty to assaulting Brennaman and her son.

The domestic violence charges should have prevented him from being able to buy the guns he used in the shooting, the Air Force said.

Kelley went aisle to aisle looking for victims and shot crying babies at point-blank range, according to witness accounts. The dead ranged in age from 18 months to 77 years old. About 20 people were wounded in the shooting.

Kelley died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound after he was shot and chased by two men who heard the gunfire at the church. Investigators have said the attack appeared to stem from a domestic dispute involving Kelley and his mother-in-law, who sometimes attended services at the church but wasn't there the day of the shooting.

For Sunday's service, people from other churches dropped off handmade prayer cloths and tiny wooden crosses, among other gifts. Mental health organizations provided tissues and took therapy dogs to the service.

Republican Sen. John Cornyn spoke at the service, saying lives were stolen as darkness overtook one man's heart.

"The pain of losing 26 members is overwhelming," Cornyn said. "Many lives have been changed forever. ... I can't imagine what you've been grappling with ever since."

On Saturday, about 100 people gathered outside the community center to commemorate Veterans Day and honor the shooting victims, nearly half of whom had Air Force ties.

Information for this article was contributed by Claudia Lauer of The Associated Press and by Eli Rosenberg and Eva Ruth Moravec of The Washington Post.

A Section on 11/13/2017

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