Mega Holy
A Texas youth baseball coach was shot by a stray bullet while leading his team in pregame prayer, highlighting the dangerous disconnect between evangelical promises of divine protection and basic safety measures that actually work. The incident perfectly illustrates how evangelical culture’s emphasis on prayer as a protective force can create a false sense of security that displaces proven safety protocols. Churches and Christian organizations routinely promote prayer as a shield against harm, implying that faithful people receive special protection from tragedy. Here’s the reality (and it shouldn’t be controversial): Prayer doesn’t stop bullets. What does work? Security measures, threat assessment, and evidence-based safety protocols used by secular youth organizations. The dangerous theology behind this thinking goes beyond individual incidents. Evangelical culture systematically teaches that prayer provides tangible protection, leading followers to substitute faith-based responses for practical safety measures. Youth sports programs run by churches often skip the comprehensive security training that secular organizations require (because they believe prayer covers it). Think about how this plays out: While secular youth programs invest in background checks, safety training, and emergency protocols, evangelical organizations often rely on prayer and “trusting God” to protect children. The psychological impact is profound—when bad things happen despite prayer, victims and families experience additional trauma wondering why God “didn’t protect” them. Former evangelical counselor Marlene Winell documents how this “prayer as protection” theology creates what she calls “religious trauma syndrome.” Victims blame themselves or question their faith when prayer fails to prevent harm, rather than recognizing they were taught a fundamentally false premise about how safety actually works. The coach’s shooting reveals how evangelical institutions set people up for preventable tragedy. Instead of teaching evidence-based safety practices, they promote magical thinking that prayer creates a protective bubble. Meanwhile, secular organizations use actual security measures that demonstrably reduce risk. Professional security experts consistently outperform prayer-based protection strategies (shocking, I know). Youth programs that implement evidence-based safety protocols, threat assessment, and emergency response training create genuinely safer environments than those relying on divine intervention. This isn’t about mocking faith—it’s about exposing how evangelical theology actively prevents people from accessing safety measures that work. When churches teach that prayer provides protection, they’re essentially telling families to skip the security training that could save lives. The deeper harm here is systemic: evangelical culture creates an entire worldview where faith-based solutions are promoted over evidence-based ones, even when lives are at stake. It’s a pattern that shows up in everything from medical care to child safety, consistently putting people at unnecessary risk. Real protection comes from proven safety protocols, professional security training, and evidence-based risk management—not from closing your eyes and hoping for divine intervention. The sooner evangelical organizations acknowledge this reality, the sooner they can start actually protecting the people in their care. Source: The Christian Post [https://www.christianpost.com/news/texas-youth-baseball-coach-hit-by-gunfire-during-pregame-prayer.html]
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