Court upholds Georgia ban on guns in church

This story appears in the Gun Violence feature series. View the full series.

A federal appeals court has upheld Georgia's ban on bringing guns into places of worship.

The Rev. Jonathan Wilkins, a Baptist pastor, and a gun-rights group had argued that church members should have the right to carry guns into worship services to protect the congregation.

But the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Friday that a Georgia law adopted in 2010 does not violate the Thomaston congregation's First and Second Amendment rights.

Gun-rights advocates might want a weapon for self-defense, but that is a "personal preference, motivated by a secular purpose," the court ruled.

Jerry Henry, executive director of GeorgiaCarry.org, said the minister and his organization are mulling an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

"We think they've got it wrong again," he said in an interview Tuesday.

"The church's First Amendment right prevails over the state right to tell them what they can and cannot do," Henry said.

The appeals court also rejected arguments about the constitutional amendment permitting U.S. citizens to bear arms.

"A place of worship's right, rooted in the common law, to forbid possession of firearms on its property is entirely consistent with the Second Amendment," the court said.

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