Updated 11:59 pm.EST, Fri November 20, 2009

Society|Sun, Mar. 22 2009 03:48 PM EDT

Killer Turned Believer Speaks Out Amid Outcry Against Him

By Aaron J. Leichman|Christian Post Reporter

A convicted child killer who is staying temporarily at the home of an evangelical pastor in Chichester, N.H., says his conversion to Christianity 16 years ago has made him a different man.

  • Raymond Guay
    (Photo: New Hampshire Department of Corrections)
    This Feb. 2007 photo released Monday March 16, 2009 by New Hampshire Department of Corrections in Concord, N.H., shows of former inmate and convicted child killer Raymond Guay, 60. A federal judge in California has ordered Guay to serve out 2-and-a-half years parole in New Hampshire where he has ties. Guay is now staying with a pastor, The Rev. David Pinckney in rural Chichester, N.H.
  • Chichester
    (Photo: AP Images / Jim Cole)
    Hundreds of residents meet Tuesday, March 17, 2009 to show their opposition to convicted child killer Raymond Guay serving his parole in Chichester, N.H. The town of about 2,200 residents in south-central New Hampshire, has been in an uproar since the weekend, when police announced that Guay would spend two months with Rev. David Pinckney's family.
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And, given time, Raymond Guay said he will make this apparent.

"There's nothing I can do to put back what I've taken," said the now 60-year-old parolee, who served 35 years in prison for the abduction and murder of a 12-year-old boy in 1973.

"But I can do the best I can with what I have to work with for the rest of my life, and I will do that," he told the local Concord Monitor in his first interview since moving to the small town of Chichester.

Since Guay moved to Chichester the week before last, there has been quite a commotion both within the town and beyond.

Many Chichester residents have protested in outrage, hoping that the pressure will force federal officials to buckle as they did last year. Originally, Guay to stay at the Watkinson Halfway House in Hartford, Conn., following his release last September but was transferred to a halfway house in Manchester following protests.

According to the Rev. David Pinckney, lead pastor of the River of Grace Church in nearby Concord, N.H., Guay would still have his job and likely his own apartment had a federal judge in California not insisted that he move to New Hampshire to finish his three-year parole.

Pinckney, whose church describes itself as “young, multi-generational, evangelical, historic, multi-denominational,” has taken a lot of heat for housing Guay but insists that Guay’s life “has been on a very different course” since becoming a follower of Jesus Christ in 1993.

Having worked with a number of prisoners over the course of his 20 years of ministry, Pinckney says he recognizes when people are falsely claiming a conversion as a way to get of prison. And unlike those individuals, Guay is “right on,” says the evangelical minister.

Furthermore, “[e]very reference and interview I have been a part of in Ray's case is enthusiastic about him,” Pinckney wrote in a public letter to Chichester residents.

“We (the Pinckney family) would not be doing this if we thought we were endangering our town, neighbors or children,” added the pastor, who said the idea to house Guay came through “divine nudges” after probation officials could not find a place for Guay to stay.

Though Guay will at most spend two months under the Pinckneys’ roof, in the basement, Chichester residents are hoping to drive him out sooner.

In the meantime, residents have created a neighborhood watch program to monitor Pinckney’s home and also circulating a petition asking for 24-hour police surveillance.

Kenneth Smith, a father of two who lives across the street from the Pinckneys, told the New York Times that a lot of people in the town are also planning to get gun permits.

“I pulled out a hunting gun, and I’m keeping it close by,” he added.

Around 2,500 people live in the town of Chichester, located 10 miles east of Concord. About 50 residents protested Guay’s arrival last Sunday and 200 appeared at a meeting of the town’s selectmen to address the uproar.

The selectmen voted 3-0 Tuesday to ask state and federal officials to remove Guay from the area.

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  • Wed Mar 25, 2009 11:12 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Believer: I agree. Our prayer should be for God's wisdom in this matter. If this man has truly repented and he has allowed God to change him on the inside, then he does deserve a chance. But only God knows the heart of man.

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 9:23 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    ukeman, if you hold down on the delete word it will totally knock out your post so it won't look like somebody flagged you.

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 9:21 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    This is one of those situations where it's a whole lot easier to deal with it from a long distance away. The best thing we can do is hold this matter up in prayer and pray God's wisdom and discernment upon all involved and that they will also seek God's face in this matter and respond in the way God leads them.

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 7:06 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Flagged mine due to double post-sorry!

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 5:41 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    this man committed a horrible crime. (sin) we look at it as a big huge horrible thing. but what about the so called smaller sins? cheating, lieing, etc.... sin is sin. and if sin is forgiven then it's forgiven and forgotten by God.

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 12:57 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    As a pastor in a town with a lot of , well, disreputable types, this is a consideration that I always have to keep in mind-what would I do? We already have a the former town drunk/drug dealer born again in our church-no glory to me-and I am always excited to see his growth-but there are always worse out there, and the Lord died for them, as well-so, I need to be ready should they show up on the doorstep, so to speak, ready to meet with the Lord, for He is ready for them! If this man is truly born again, and the Lord has forgiven him, who are we to deny him the same? If we don't forgive those who ask for it, it will hinder our own prayer lives and walk with the Lord. We should pray for this man to bear the burden he must, and for the Lord to lighten that burden, as He has promised.

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 12:56 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    As a pastor in a town with a lot of , well, disreputable types, this is a consideration that I always have to keep in mind-what would I do? We already have a the former town drunk/drug dealer born again in our church-no glory to me-and I am always excited to see his growth-but there are always worse out there, and the Lord died for them, as well-so, I need to be ready should they show up on the doorstep, so to speak, ready to meet with the Lord, for He is ready for them! If this man is truly born again, and the Lord has forgiven him, who are we to deny him the same? If we don't forgive those who ask for it, it will hinder our own prayer lives and walk with the Lord. We should pray for this man to bear the burden he must, and for the Lord to lighten that burden, as He has promised.

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 12:28 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 1

    Look at his picture and pray. What I see in his eyes is a man full or remorse. Give him a chance as Christ gave us a chance.

  • Tue Mar 24, 2009 1:06 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Praise God that Raymond Guay has found Jesus! Everyone needs to give him a chance to practice his new-found faith. God has forgiven him, so why can't we? We want God to forgive us so we must also forgive others as that is what Jesus asks us to do. Jesus forgave His tormentors while He was on the Cross - we must do the same. I pray that Raymond can forgive himself as Jesus has forgiven him, and that he can now be a witness and a servant of God as he obviously wants to be.

  • Mon Mar 23, 2009 8:48 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 2

    Paul at one time commanded the murders of Christians. This man will have quite a cross to carry, yes. But for us to condemn him? Murder is no worse a sin than homosexuality or adultery. If this man has been born-again, he is just that, a new creation, and I will not condemn him to carry this guilt any further in his life. He is God's now.

  • Mon Mar 23, 2009 5:01 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 7

    how disgusting..born again..but never will the innocent boy he murdered be born..again in this world.he should be horsewhipped and be placed on a chain gang till he drops dead from exhaustion. What is the purpose of the hosts to put such a story like this into prominence. Jesus said to place a milstone around the neck of child abusers and toss them into a nearby stream.I am a follower of Jesus ..this site is satans....

  • Mon Mar 23, 2009 4:16 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    The kind of decision you have to be there to make. Can't be done at a distance.

  • Mon Mar 23, 2009 10:12 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Fear is playing a huge part in this and honestly I don't know how willing I would be to have this man living next to me especially if I had small children. I feel bad for him but sin has consequences. If he truly belongs to Christ it will become known and then maybe things will get easier for him.

  • Sun Mar 22, 2009 8:19 pm Agree: 10   Disagree: 3

    Bravo for this pastor. The people of Chichester need to know more of what God can do in a person's life. They need to be protective of their children but they need to believe God can change a person's life.

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