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Faith, Fear and the Wages of Columbine

Two pastors from opposite ends of the theological spectrum are still haunted by the school massacre.

Photos: Matt Slaby / Luceo for Newsweek
Pastors in Pain: The Columbine shootings claimed more than just 13 lives. Don Marxhausen (left) left his job after performing Dylan Klebold's funeral; George Kirsten (right) was later diagnosed with PTSD
 

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How do you preside over the funeral of a 17-year-old boy who went to school one Tuesday morning and, with his good buddy Eric Harris, massacred 13 people just for fun? Dylan Klebold helped perpetrate one of the bloodiest school shootings in history, indelibly etching the name "Columbine" into our collective memories. Yet the Rev. Don Marxhausen believed that Dylan's parents deserved to hear the message of God's grace. And so when a desperate Tom Klebold phoned, the pastor—a liberal-minded Lutheran—agreed to arrange a private service. This decision has haunted him ever since. In his sermon, Marxhausen spoke of God's love. "God, who knows about suffering and pain and loss, wants to reach out to you," he told the grieving parents, according to news accounts. As he preached, Marxhausen could see Dylan, laid out before him in an open coffin. A small mountain of beanie babies was piled around the boy's head, covering the self-administered wound that killed him. It was Saturday, four days after the shootings.

Two days later, another Littleton, Colo., pastor presided over another funeral. Cassie Bernall, a Columbine junior, had been shot in cold blood as she crouched under a library table, and word was that in her final seconds she answered her murderer's question and affirmed her belief in God. More than 2,500 people flooded the sanctuary of West Bowles Community Church, where Cassie had been a member. During his sermon, George Kirsten proclaimed Cassie a martyr. "This is Cassie's graduation day," he began. Over the next 10 years, Kirsten's persistent evangelicalism would make him the target of accusations that he was exploiting a tragedy. A Navy pilot in Vietnam, Kirsten had seen horrors. Columbine would open the floodgates of Kirsten's memory. He wrestles with those memories to this day.

God was everywhere after Columbine. The images come rushing back: the homemade white crosses that studded the small hill overlooking the school; the memorial services for 12 dead children and a beloved teacher that looped endlessly on television. Littleton was ground zero for the kind of white, evangelical Christianity that was sweeping the country at the time. The clean-cut, grieving classmates of the fallen tried to make sense of what was senseless. On the front lines, though, Littleton's pastors did not have the luxury of interpretation. Marxhausen and Kirsten (and their colleagues) were engaged in spiritual triage, tending to hundreds of traumatized families. Ten years later, these two men of God—radically different in personality and theological approach—are still struggling to deal with the damage done to them by two boys bent on murder and mayhem.

Marxhausen, now nearly 70, is a burly, plain-spoken man who arrived in Littleton in 1990, and built St. Philip Lutheran Church into a thriving, mainline congregation with more than 1,000 members. Marxhausen believes firmly in a loving, forgiving God and a nuanced approach to questions of salvation. After Columbine, local evangelicals—who said the shootings were the devil's work and who used the tragedy as an opportunity to bring people to Jesus—infuriated him. On the Sunday between Dylan's funeral and Cassie's, 70,000 mourners gathered in a parking lot to listen to Franklin Graham, among others, proclaim the gospel. Marxhausen hated the whole thing. "Franklin Graham was beating me up through my TV," he says. "I turned it off."

Still, Marxhausen might have survived the Columbine tragedy with his job intact were it not for his continued relationship with the Klebolds—and his very public support of them. After Dylan's funeral, he described the killer's parents as "the loneliest people on the planet" to The Denver Post. "That's where I think I started getting in trouble with my church," says Marxhausen. "I was becoming somewhat toxic with my visibility and extrovertedness."

Exhausted by the tragedy, Marxhausen took a three-month sabbatical. "You absorb everyone else's pain, and after a while that catches up to you, big time." Still, he concedes, he left when his church needed him most. When he came back in September, "it was clear this wasn't my church anymore," he says.

George Kirsten was in Israel on the day of the shootings; immediately, he turned around to come home. He had performed the marriage of Misty and Brad Bernall in 1980; more recently, he had helped guide their teenage daughter Cassie through a dark and rebellious time. Two days before the shooting, Cassie had recorded a video of herself testifying to her faith in Christ. (It was shown at her funeral.) The West Bowles congregation filled the Bernall's living room the week after April 20, praying and crying and praying some more. Kirsten was there for all of it. "What I remember most is this tremendous barrage of very hurting people," he says.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: mburgess1 @ 04/23/2009 12:43:30 PM

    as much as i dont want to say this i do believe it is true the police that day were absolutley useless they did absolutly nothing to save the children inside of that high school i live in colorado i was pretty young when this happened but looking back at all of the news footage and other videos related to this incident i feel like many peoples lives could have been saved if the police would have grown a pair and tried to actualy do something other than let the kids die.

  • Posted By: Insanabilis @ 04/21/2009 6:07:59 AM

    I feel that, unfortunately too many people are simply missing the point; The irony is, they feel it is them who aren't. Put simply, the comments I made a couple of pages previous are the facts and however you choose to view this, the truth is that bullying is far too widespread when it should be virtually nullified. Instead of focusing on purely religious matters or gun crime taken statistically, we should instead look to ourselves and the society we live in. Other than this, I feel it's sad that many here do not read comments made previous to theirs and endeavour to ascertain that which has been said. I can't say this enough, true evil can be found within ignorance and a despondent attitude. This is no time for despair and lashing out or talking politics. Please! People have already lost their lives in a tragedy that could well have been averted had the necessary focus and aid been given - and there are still those who feel that the answer lies in gun control or the aesthetics of a Fundamentalist line. We need more than a couple of charities and websites to get the point across, we need a worldwide solidarity on the matter and maybe then things might start to change - but, the more we do as individuals, the better still. The bottom line is we are all homo sapiens here, we are all equal and we all deserve to be treated thusly. There are no two ways about it.

  • Posted By: news555 @ 04/20/2009 8:41:15 PM

    So tired about the rationalization and defense from the status quo saying to us over and over the problem is "the victim mentality", well, wake up there are victims and unfortunately many do not have resources to get help or get attention. For instance, Foster Care children that are too often abused without hardly any compensation or caring, , or children in So. Am. being killed because they discourage tourism, or the hungry and deprived in Africa, and the Viet Nam Vets who were hardly given any benefits, and Native Americans and Blacks being treated as non humans and the list goes on. This attitude of blaming the victims is basically hiding from responsibility of the ones that are the status quo, and it prevents the process of solving problems. What makes this country more advance than others is that we are not static, we allow the system to change in order to solve problems that are presented. The ones that are irresponsible to others are the ones that insist in no change and they want the comfort zone of removing guilt from their deplorable acts. Two self center individuals in Columbian that had the audacity to cause hell to others without even having thoughts of guilt. They actually belonged to the status quo, who feel no responsibility to anyone but the almighty self and no consideration of the damage they would commit to others, and we cannot sweep victims under the rug and shut them up with clichés of ???victim mentality???, which makes the abused the culpable individual.

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