Please forgive me if I am not sending this to the right place.  I am 
Frapper's wife, and he's not here to show me how to do this.  I thought this 
was worthy to share with everyone.  It touched me.  Janet

 Dr. Dan R. Crawford
 Professor of Evangelism and Spiritual Formation
 Chair of Prayer
 Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
  P.O. Box 22,298
 Fort Worth, TX  76122
 Phone: (817) 923-1921, Ext. 6670
 FAX: (817) 921-8767
 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Dear Friends, Family and Prayer Partners,
 
 Last Sunday, my sermon subject was "When God Gives a Test" from Genesis
 22.  Little did I know how much I, myself would need the truths of that
 sermon
 this week.
 
 Wednesday evening, while my family worshipped at our church, Wedgwood
 Baptist Church in Fort Worth, our faith was suddenly and dramatically put
 to the test.
 
 A lone gunman entered our church facilities.  In the foyer, he shot two
 Southwestern Seminary students and a recent graduate, then entered the
 worship center and began to shoot into the audience of mostly teen-agers
 attending a post See-You-At-The-Pole Prayer and Praise rally.  More than
 forty were injured before the gunman took his own life.  As of today,
 eight are dead and several others remain in hospitals in various conditions.
 Two of the dead were Seminary students, one was a recent graduate.  Others
 were our friends and fellow church members.
 
 My wife, Joanne, heard someone shouting, "I've been shot!  This is no
 joke! I've been shot!"  She walked out of the Fellowship Hall, where the
 adults
 were having Prayer Meeting, and saw Kevin Galey, our church Counselor
 laying on the floor, being attended too by other church members.  His shirt
 was covered with blood.  Twenty years ago, when I was Baptist Student
 Ministries Director at the University of Texas, Kevin was on my Student
 Leadership Council.  He used to baby sit with our children.  Wanting to
 stop and help, Joanne also knew that our seven-year old granddaughter was
 in GAs in another part of the building.  She ran, passing other wounded, to
 where Whitney and other girls were participating in their children's
 activity.  As the first to arrive there with the news, Joanne helped get
 the children safely out of the building and across the street to an
 elementary school.  Later I would spend several hours at that elementary
 school ministering to Seminary students and friends.
 
 Our phone rang into the wee hours of Thursday morning and has continued
 as friends from near and far call to see if we are OK, to assure us of their
 prayers and to get information.  Thursday morning my office e-mail was
 filled with correspondence from around the world as former students picked
 up pieces of the news over the internet.  Yesterday's Seminary chapel
 service was long and emotional.  Classes were turned into group
 counseling sessions.  Everywhere I went, someone wanted to talk about the
 shooting.  Reporters were every where competing for quotes.  CBS news even
 called our home phone number to get a quote.  Today has been much of the
 same.  Tomorrow, we will attend three funeral services.  Sunday, I will sit
 aside my planned sermon and try to offer biblical answers to the questions
 of
 the people who attend the church where I serve as Interim Pastor.
 
 How can you pray for us?  Many have asked. Please know in advance that
 your prayer support is and will be greatly appreciated.
 
 1. Pray for Joanne.  She is still processing all of the events and today is
 emotionally drained and physically tired. Today's Fort Worth had a
 diagram of where each shooting actually happened and Joanne realized for the
 first time how near she was to some of those who were killed.
 
 2. Pray for our granddaughter, Whitney.  She saw far too much blood and
 chaos.  She doesn't want to go to school because they prayed at the
 flagpole and people got shot in the same day.  She doesn't want to go to
 church because she is afraid there are dead bodies there as well as a
 killer who will try to kill people.  Also, pray for our daughter Danna as
 she tries to minister to her daughter, Whitney.
 
 3. Pray for me as I try to find satisfactory answers to difficult questions
 I'm being asked.  I have tried to give strength and encouragement to so
 many people and now I find  need for the same thing.  Who helps hurting
 Samaritans?
 
 4. Pray for our friend and Pastor Dr. Al Meridith.  On Wednesday, he had
 just returned from Michigan and the funeral of his mother.  He had gone
 by his house to freshen up and grab a bite to eat before going to the church
 for some after-prayer service meetings.  His home phone rang and a
 reporter wanted a quote.  It was his first awareness of the shooting.  He
 has been up since then, ministering, answering reporters questions, speaking
 in
 Seminary Chapel, etc.  He has three funerals tomorrow and more to come.
 He must address a hurting congregation on Sunday.
 
 5. Pray for our church family.  We are grieving.  We are stunned.  We
 have many questions.  We must go on.   We will worship Sunday is a worship
 center where some of our friends and fellow church members were killed.
 Check our church web page for updated information.
 http://www.wedgwoodbc.org.
 
 6. Pray for the Southwestern Seminary family.  We have lost students and
 alumni.  We have many students who will address congregations, youth
 groups, Sunday School classes, etc. this Sunday and be expected to
 provide insight if not answers.
 
 7. Pray for our society.  I am absolutely convinced if God does send
 spiritual awakening in response to our prayers, we can say good-bye to
 our society as we have known it.  Where can we go to avoid violence?  Work?
 Malls?  Public Buildings? Schools?  Churches? Home?  We need a national,
 God-sent revival.  We need more, but that is the beginning that will save
 us from the end.
 
 8. Finally, give thanks to God for His protection over the hundreds who
 were present in the church facilities and were not physically injured.
 
 A former student shared this verse with me yesterday via e-mail.  It is
 appropriate. "The Lord is good, a stronghold in times of trouble.  He
 cares for those who take refuge in Him."  Nahum 1:7.
 
 

 
 
 

_______
 To unsubscribe, send "unsubscribe rangernet" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 "Eat the hay & spit out the sticks! - A#1's mule"     RTKB&G4JC!
 http://rangernet.org    Autoresponder: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to