IMAGE: CNS photo/TV handout via Reuters
By Carol Zimmermann
WASHINGTON (CNS) — Three and a
half months after he was shot during an early morning baseball practice, Louisiana
Congressman Steve Scalise, the House majority whip, received thunderous
applause and standing ovations from the House floor Sept. 28 where he
attributed his recovery to the power of prayer.
“I’m
definitely a living example that miracles really do happen,” he told his
colleagues after acknowledging: “You have no idea how good it feels to be
back here at work at the people’s house.”
The
congressman, a parishioner at St. Catherine
of Siena Church in Metairie, Louisiana, along with his wife, Jennifer, and their
two children, said the past few months have been challenging for him and his
family, but he said the outpouring of love, warmth and prayer gave them the
“strength to get through all of this.”
“It
starts with God,” he said, noting that right after he was shot on the
Alexandria, Virginia, baseball field and couldn’t move, he “just started to
pray.”
“I
will tell you, it gave me an unbelievable sense of calm knowing that at that
point it was in God’s hands,” he said. He also recounted how he prayed for
specific things and many of those prayers were answered, which gave him “renewed
faith and understanding that the power of prayer is something that you just cannot
underestimate.”
Scalise
and fellow Republican House members along with staffers and others were practicing June 14 for
the annual Congressional Baseball Game, which is played for charity,
when James Hodgkinson from Illinois, who was targeting the group, opened fire. He wounded Scalise and four others, including Capitol police officers on Scalise’s
protective detail, a congressional staffer and a lobbyist. The gunman died at a
local hospital from gunshot wounds.
Scalise’s
shot fractured bones, injured internal organs and caused severe bleeding that
required multiple surgeries.
The
congressman thanked the Capitol Police, especially the officers on his security
detail, David Bailey and Crystal Griner. He also thanked the doctors at MedStar
Washington Hospital Center who gave him “a second chance at life.”
He
thanked his wife and the many people who reached out with prayers and support,
including colleagues from both parties and world leaders.
Scalise
said many people have asked whether the shooting changed him.
“Yes,
it changed me, but not in ways you might think,” he said on the House floor,
noting that the experience strengthened his faith in God and his belief in the
goodness of people, since he witnessed “how much compassion there is out
there.”
A
big takeaway for him was the reaction of world leaders, which he attributed not
just to their personal concern for him.
“Sure,
they cared about my well-being,” he said, but he also is convinced they saw
the shooting as an attack on U.S. political leaders as a whole.
“They
count on us to be successful,” Scalise said, reminding his colleagues to rise
above the challenges of the day because “all around the world, people are
counting on us.”
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Follow Zimmermann on Twitter: @carolmaczim.
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