Vietnamese Baptist Church Burns Amid Philadelphia Unrest - Word&Way

Vietnamese Baptist Church Burns Amid Philadelphia Unrest

PHILADELPHIA (BP) – The building of the Vietnamese Baptist Church in Philadelphia was burned Tuesday night (Oct. 27) during the second night of unrest in the city after the police shooting of a Black man Monday (Oct. 26). Pastor Philip Pham received a call Tuesday night from a church member whose friend had seen the flames and seven fire trucks surrounding the church.

“I have no idea why they attacked our church,” Pham said. “They burned it from the roof. They threw flammable chemicals on the roof and [flames] burned through the roof” and down through the rest of the building.

The building of the Vietnamese Baptist Church is a total loss after it was burned during unrest in Philadelphia. (Philip Pham/Baptist Press)

He said the facility is a “total loss.” Of primary concern to Pham were three hard drives. Since before purchasing the building in 2005, the Vietnamese Baptist Church has served as something of a community center each weekday, providing help with immigration paperwork, taxes, and even marriage counseling.

More than 15 years’ worth of information about hundreds of clients is on hard drives kept at the church. Pham said when he got the call about the fire, he immediately began praying that the hard drives would be spared.

“I prayed right away: ‘God, please protect the hard drives,’” Pham recalled. “Other stuff can be recovered. But those files will never be recovered.”

“I saw the routers and modems and things surrounding the hard drives all burned, melted,” he added. “But that piece of hard drive, no harm. No harm at all. Just two feet above that, all melted. … That is amazing how God knows our needs and answers our prayers. He is an almighty God. He granted our prayer.”

When firefighters finally let him in after the blaze was extinguished, Pham said he was amazed.

Pham said the church is still meeting mostly online due to strict pandemic-related restrictions in the city. Wednesday, he was calling around to nearby schools to find a place to host the church’s leadership team as they broadcast the livestream this Sunday.

“Remember us in your prayer in time of need like this,” he urged. “The church members here need encouragement. The majority of us have very strong faith in Christ, but a minority, a few new believers, they need their faith to grow. Pray for their faith to take deep root in the love of God so they can be steadfast in Him. Not focus on the problem, but focus on Jesus. Please remember us in your prayers.”

SBC Executive Committee President and CEO Ronnie Floyd said he was “deeply saddened” to learn of the burning.

“We are praying for Pastor Pham as he seeks to rebuild and to minister to the community,” Floyd said. “We must pray that our churches who are caught in the middle of senseless violence can be a light for the Gospel in their cities.”

Peter Yanes, executive director of Asian American relations with the SBC Executive Committee spoke with Pham shortly after the fire and prayed over the phone with church members as they gathered at the charred remains of their building. Yanes said he was “compelled to reach out right away and find out more of the heartbreaking incident” after seeing videos Pham posted to social media Tuesday night.

The turmoil in Philadelphia, sparked by the shooting of Walter Wallace Jr. by police, has at times seen violence and looting and led to a clash between demonstrators and officers at police headquarters Tuesday night, the Associated Press reported. It is not known if the Vietnamese Baptist Church is the only incident of arson.

“You can sense the heartfelt frustration and concern,” Yanes said of church members’ reaction to the fire. “I have encouraged [Pham] and prayed with his family that God has a higher purpose of them rising to the occasion with a testimony of hope in Christ Jesus.”

According to AP, police, who were sent to Wallace’s home on Monday after his brother called 911, said Wallace ignored multiple demands to drop a knife he was holding and that when he advanced toward the officers, they opened fire. Wallace’s family maintains they had placed the emergency call because of Wallace’s mental state and had requested medical assistance and an ambulance.

The city has requested help from the National Guard to curb the unrest in the lead-up to Tuesday’s national election, AP reported.

In light of the violence in his city, Pham encouraged youth pastors to stress to young people the words of James 1:20: “The anger of man does not bring about the righteousness of God.”

“You cannot use your anger and be justified,” he said. “I would like to bring this message to all the young people.”

Pham said some of his church members are afraid because of the violence and looting, but he is encouraging them to keep an eternal perspective.

“So many things we don’t know, but God knows, so just trust God,” he said he told them. “Just do right. Don’t copy [those who practice violence], but do what the Bible says and what He wants us to do. Love them and pray for them that they may know Christ, that the Holy Spirit may convict them and they may seek God.”