Former President Donald Trump addressed the crowd at the Republican National Convention on Thursday evening where he accepted the party’s presidential nomination and spoke about the assassination attempt made on his life last Saturday, July 13, noting that God was on his side during the incident, in a conversation with the country that included explanations of several key elements of his platform.
Some might find it strange I’m describing the “speech” as a “conversation,” but that’s really what it was. Trump’s tone was relaxed and not at all formal. He came across in his communication like a man who has been transformed by having such a close brush with death, though, fundamentally, he remained the tough-as-nails warrior we’ve all come to know and love over the last eight years he’s been involved in politics.
Check out more details from The Christian Post:
Trump addressed a crowd of Republican delegates and supporters at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, late Thursday night, just five days after surviving an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Trump’s speech, his first major address since officially becoming the Republican nominee for president earlier this week, directly addressed the attempt on his life. As he made his remarks, Trump had a bandage on his right ear, which was punctured by a bullet from an AR-15-style rifle.
Trump expressed gratitude for the “outpouring of love and support” he received following the assassination attempt. He noted that “the assassin’s bullet came within a quarter of an inch of taking my life” and used his platform to describe “exactly what happened,” vowing, “you’ll never hear it from me a second time because it’s actually too painful to tell.”
“It was a warm, beautiful day in the early evening in Butler Township in the great Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,” Trump recounted during his talk. “Music was loudly playing and the campaign was doing really well. I went to the stage and the crowd was cheering wildly. Everybody was happy. I began speaking very strongly, powerfully and happily because I was discussing the great job my administration did on immigration at the Southern border.”
Discussing the presence of a “large screen that was displaying a chart of [illegal] border crossings” on the stage behind him, Trump explained that “in order to see the chart, I started to turn to my right and was ready to begin a little bit further turn, which I’m very lucky I didn’t do, when I heard a loud, whizzing sound and felt something hit me really, really hard on my right ear.”
“I said to myself, ‘Wow, what was that?’,” the former president added. “It can only be a bullet and moved my right hand to my ear, brought it down, my hand was covered with blood, just absolutely blood all over the place. I immediately knew it was very serious, that we were under attack and in one movement, proceeded to drop to the ground. Bullets were continuing to fly as very brave Secret Service agents rushed to the stage.”
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Trump then described how the agents a part of his security detail “pounced on top of me so that I would be protected. There was blood pouring everywhere and yet, in a certain way, I felt very safe because I had God on my side.”
“Prior to the shot, if I had not moved my head at that very last instant, the assassin’s bullet would have perfectly hit its mark and I would not be here tonight. We would not be together. The most incredible aspect of what took place on that terrible evening in the fading sun was actually seen later,” Trump told the audience in a somber moment of reflection.
Trump maintained that in most cases, when shots are fired at an event, “crowds run for the exits or stampede.” He characterized the shooting at his rally as “very unusual” because the crowd did not react in that way: “This massive crowd of tens of thousands of people stood by and didn’t move an inch. In fact, many of them bravely but automatically stood up looking for where the sniper would be. They knew immediately it was a sniper and then began pointing at him.”
“Nobody ran and by not stampeding, many lives were saved,” he noted. “That isn’t the reason that they didn’t move. The reason is that they knew I was in very serious trouble. They saw it, they saw me go down, they saw the blood and thought, actually most did, that I was dead. They knew it was a shot to the head, they saw the blood.”
He then stated he was “not supposed to be here tonight,” which led to the crowd chanting, “Yes you are!” Trump was clearly humbled by how the audience responded to his statement, he replied, “but I’m not,” going on to say, “I stand before you in this arena only by the grace of Almighty God.”
And that, my friends, is the absolute truth. God, in His goodness and sovereignty, chose to spare the former president, for reasons we do not even have a hope of ever knowing or understanding. When you look at how everything played out on the night of the shooting, it becomes very clear the sparing of Trump’s life was a total work of providence. If just one thing had been different, had been off by a little bit, Trump would be dead and our nation would be plunged into civil war.
“In watching the reports over the last few days, many people say it was a providential moment,” he stated during the lengthy speech. Concluding that “it probably was,” Trump continued his first-person narrative of what happened in Butler: “When I rose surrounded by Secret Service, the crowd was confused because they thought I was dead and there was great, great sorrow. I could see that on their faces as I looked out. They didn’t know I was looking out. They thought it was over.”
Trump said he raised his fist in the air and shouted, “Fight, fight, fight,” to let the crowd at the rally in Pennsylvania know he was okay and had survived the bullet fired at him by the shooter. The audience at the RNC then chanted those words to the former president.
Addressing the rallygoers’ reaction to finding out he was still alive, Trump said he had “never heard anything like it. For the rest of my life, I will be grateful for the love shown by that giant audience of patriots that stood bravely on that fateful evening in Pennsylvania.”
“Tragically, the shooter claimed the life of one of our fellow Americans, Corey Comperatore,” Trump lamented. He also acknowledged that the gunman “seriously wounded two other great warriors” and told the crowd that he “spoke to them today.”
During this point of the speech, Trump made it clear that he, along with the rest of the country, would not forget those who were injured and killed during the incident. He then pointed a finger at the uniform of firefighter Comperatore on stage. He walked over the uniform and kissed the helmet.
“I want to thank the fire department and the family for sending his helmet, his outfit and it was just something,” he stated as he announced that “Over the past few days, we’ve raised $6.3 million for the families of David, James and Corey,” the victims of the shooting. Trump then told those in attendance to observe a moment of silence in honor of Comperatore.
The speech also featured pleas for unity, with Trump telling the audience, “In an age when our politics all too often divide us, now is the time to remember that we are all fellow citizens, we are one nation under God indivisible with liberty and justice for all.” Later in the address, the former president shared his belief that “any disagreements have to be put aside” so the country can “go forward united as one people, one nation, pledging allegiance to one great, beautiful … American flag.”
It was a wonderful speech that the American people desperately needed to hear following what happened last weekend.