Mike Haberman
God Used Me to Stop a School Shooter
Christianity Today | Mar 27 2014
Antoinette Tuff, the steady voice who famously talked down an armed intruder, speaks out about her faith.
The morning I read over
the transcript from my interview with Antoinette Tuff—the woman who
famously talked down a would-be school shooter in Atlanta—I got an email
from my kids' school. The schools had been placed on "soft" lockdown. A
bank just half a block from the elementary school had been robbed, and
the suspect was on the loose. By police order, no one would be allowed
to leave or enter the school building, and kids would stay in their
locked classrooms while class continued.
Because what Antoinette did
was heroism. On Tuesday, August 20, 2013, when Michael Hill stormed
into the front office at McNair Academy in Decatur, Georgia, with a
loaded AK-47 in his hands, Tuff—a school bookkeeper—watched in fear as
he aimed then fired the gun. Alone in a room with the intruder, a young
man with "a demon inside him…there to steal, kill, and destroy," she
talked to a 911 dispatcher and spoke lovingly to "death itself."
During the call, you can hear
her tell Hill, "It's going to be all right… I just want you to know I
love you, OK?...We all go through something in life." Tuff ultimately
convinced him to put down his weapon—without ever shooting at a
child—and surrender to police.
Tuff though doesn't see herself as a hero, though. In Prepared for a Purpose,
she writes: "All I did was serve as God's vessel. There is nothing
special that enabled me to be a vessel for God… The story of the
standoff at McNair Academy is not a story about heroism. It is a story
about being a vessel for God's noble use."
A use we spoke about just after I thanked her.
One of the most interesting things to emerge from your book is that not
long before you had your life threatened by Michael Hill, you were
actually tempted to take your own life.
A year before this incident, my whole world came crashing down when my
husband of 33 years left me for another woman. Just a year ago—six
months before Michael Hill—I was so suicidal that his coming in that
school and taking my life would've been okay for me. I wouldn't have had
the strength to talk him down—or myself.
So I know that God brought him in the building at the right time at the
right place for the right situation. For us both to be able to get a
better outcome from it.
Do you know anything about his outcome? Have you talked to him since the incident?
I haven't talked to him or anything like this. But as much as this has
changed my life, I know it's going to give him healing too.
Any plans or desire to meet with him?
If it comes down the line that God has me and Michael come back
together, and I can help that young man, then I am willing to do
whatever God needs me to do at that point.
So let's go back to that day. When I first heard the 911 tapes, what
struck me was how clearly you saw Michael Hill's humanity. You never
spoke to him as though he was a "monster." You seemed able to comprehend
that this was a broken, sick person. How did the traumatic experiences
you wrote about—your difficult childhood, your husband's infidelities,
your just learning that morning that you were going to lose your home—play into this compassion?
Well, I think it came because I actually knew his pain. I'd been in
that pain myself at the time. When my ex-husband left me after 33 years,
it was like a death for me. And so that's where I understood what
Michael was talking about. Even though he had an AK-47 in his hands, I
went back to looking at his heart. And his heart had compassion and love
in it. It didn't have an AK-47 for me.
At the end of your book, you write that the troubles of your life were
"about the beauty of God's system of preparation and purpose." How did
writing this book help you understand how the difficulties of your life
were preparing you for this?
You know, in the process of life, you don't know that you're being
prepared for something. When God actually took me through these stories
from the beginning, I didn't know. From my issues with God, to my
husband leaving me, to my son with multiple disabilities. And then
Michael Hill was here with an AK-47? When you're going through
something, you don't know that God is taking you through a process.
You're just looking at it, saying, "Why me, God?"
But in it, I know now today that everything I have gone through in my
life prepared me for that purpose. So that's why I wanted to write my
book to help people to be able to see. It's not about an AK-47. It's not
about a young man. It's about how we are normal, everyday people and
how God can take an everyday person and change their life and destiny.
God just used me to be able to help that young man.
Yes. God used you in an amazing way. This must profoundly change the way you sense God and the way you live day to day.
Oh, yeah. I wake up and one of the Scriptures I read is "I trust the
Lord with all my heart. Lean not on my own understanding… and in all my
ways acknowledge him and allow him to direct my path." And I do that
every day. I don't get with my own agenda anymore. That's something I
did for 47 years, but I don't do that any more. Because it's all about
saving souls and changing lives today.
But this whole experience must also profoundly affect other areas of your life—in some negative ways.
Once you've had an AK-47 pointed straight at your face, you don't think
like you used to. You look at and you see people differently; you see
situations differently. When you walk in a room, you're looking around
to make sure no one's coming in there. You just don't do things like you
normally do.
But on the flip side, God is not a God of fear. And so I still have
that balance with it. So it doesn't take away that I'm not afraid in
some instances. Remember, it wasn't just [Michael Hill] going on. I had
my husband leave me after 33 years for another woman. I had everything
else from my lifetime.
When he came in with an AK-47, I was right there with him: angry,
pained, distressed, wanting to kill myself. So everything that was going
on. None of that goes away over night. There's still a process. Do I
wake up joyful every day? No. Do I go to bed joyful every night? No. But
I know it's a process so in that process I make sure that God is being
seen and I know that he's going to protect me.
Special graces question: Ways that you've experienced some of those special graces?
God shows me grace every day. Before I was in the moment and wanting to
commit suicide and now he's given me the grace to want to live. So he's
showing me grace in a lot of ways. My son is now the vice president of
my non-for-profit organization, which we just donated and gave a college
scholarship. So I'm actually able to help kids with educational
opportunities that otherwise I wouldn't be able to do that. You know,
when you look at my book and everything else I'm doing to be able to go
on my book tour. Now I'm getting to speak and do speeches to help others
prepare for their purpose. So it's a lot of things that God has given
me grace to do today. I know that if this would've happened a year ago, I
wouldn't have been prepared for it. The outcome would've been totally
different.
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