Be praying for our friends...Virginia Tech, a Ministry of Presence
April 17, 2007
Wes
Barts graduated from Virginia Tech and has been a staff member with
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship at Virginia Tech for three years. Wes
works with an undergrad fellowship that numbers about 150 students. He
feels the shock of Monday’s tragic shooting on campus as much as
anyone. “Though it feels like a dark cloud is over the Blacksburg
campus,” he says, “God is present.”
“It’s good that we know a
God who knows suffering in Jesus Christ,” Wes says. “He knows how we
feel. In this time of mourning, Christ is with us in our pain. In
Christ Jesus we find our hope and refuge.”
After the campus
was opened up and declared safe, Wes and fellow staff members Lindsey
Jones and Robert Howe concentrated on being available to the students
who were still in shock from the events. “We walked around campus all
afternoon, comforting people.”
Facing the inevitable “Where
is God?” questions that are posed after tragedies like this, Wes says,
“God is comforting those who mourn. There’s a lot of love on the campus
right now.”
He’s mobilizing a group of students to get out
and minister to other students. “We want to go around and offer our ear
and our comfort to anyone who’s still left on campus,” he says. “I am
deeply encouraged by the love and comfort that our students give to
each other and their friends. The Body of Christ is truly at work
here.” Wes says the InterVarsity chapter has some specific prayer
requests:
- Pray for the body of Christ, through the churches and campus ministries, to be united in expressing the hope we have in God.
- One freshman involved in the fellowship lost a roommate who was killed in the shooting.
- One
student in the fellowship overslept and missed his class in Norris Hall
during the shootings. He lost his professor, and four of his classmates
were wounded.
- One senior in the fellowship was in a
classroom in Norris Hall during the shootings. With the help of some
classmates, he set up a barricade to prevent the shooter from entering
the room. The shooter fired shots at the door, but failed to enter.
- One
junior in the fellowship is a resident advisor in West Ambler Johnston
Hall. She was a good friend to one of the victims who was murdered in
the residence hall. The victim was a fellow resident advisor.
Many
students left campus right after the shootings, but others remain. Wes
and the staff of other campus ministries are preparing for a Wednesday
mid-day memorial service. “After an intense and painful day, we are in
mourning,” he says. “Thank you for your prayers and for sharing in our
pain.”
To leave a comment or get further information, go to StudentSoul.org, InterVarsity’s website for students.
You can also make a direct financial donation to support InterVarsity’s work on the Virginia Tech campus by following this link.
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