Security Training in Bolivar
Bolivar's Beacon Independent Baptist Church to host security training for active threats

Pastor Paul Ling and his wife Patricia, pose behind the pulpit at Beacon Independent Baptist Church in Bolivar.
Pastor Paul Lint had a security team ready to take action when a stranger wearing a backpack walked into his McKeesport church several years ago.
Lint was preaching a sermon when the man walked down the center aisle, approached the pulpit and reached into his backpack.
“I had no idea what he was going to do,” said Lint, who now is pastor at Beacon Independent Baptist Church in Bolivar.
“He asked me who I was and what we were doing there. I think he was half drunk,” he said. “I asked him to sit down, and he did.”
If there had been a real threat that day, the church's security team was “watching and ready,” the pastor said. “Our guys — we tell them to watch and not act too hastily.”
Of the five places where he has pastored, Lint said three of the churches had security plans. With recent deadly church shootings in Tennessee and Texas, Lint said he wants his church to likewise be ready.
“We are all being recommended in our independent Baptist churches to have a security plan,” he said.
At 6 p.m. Nov. 28, the Bolivar church will host a three-hour church security training course by Rodney Smith of the Georgia Firearms and Security Training Academy. Donations will be accepted.
The course, which is open to other churches, pastors and lay members, will cover such aspects as situational awareness, less-than-lethal defense and active threat.
Lint said he learned about the training opportunity from Smith's sister, who attends his church. A second training course at the Fairfield Township Volunteer Fire Department is scheduled for 6 to 9 p.m. Dec. 9.
“Because of the events that are happening in churches today ... (Smith) is going to teach us about awareness and procedures, as well as looking over our situation and our exits,” Lint said.
Smith, a 1978 graduate of Laurel Valley High School, opened the training academy in 2015 after the church shooting in Charleston, S.C. Since then, he has taught security courses in more than 50 churches, most of them in Georgia.
A 24-year Navy veteran, Smith worked for 13 years in law enforcement. He said churches are eager to develop security plans and have security training.
“All the churches I deal with, they want everybody to know that they have guns in there,” he said. “You've got to be prepared.”
Smith, 59, of Flowery Branch, Ga., said some states restrict or even prohibit the carrying of weapons in church.
“Every state is different, but in Georgia, you're allowed to have guns in churches if the church body allows it. Everybody's packing,” he said.
Smith said the best approach to church security is to have designated security teams — members who are trained and armed. Most churches can't afford to hire an off-duty police officer to staff a worship service, he said.
“Now they're going to have to take measures into their own hands,” he said, noting that churches are known for being “soft targets.”
Stephen Huba is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reach him at 724-850-1280, shuba@tribweb.com or via Twitter @shuba_trib.


