Pilot Tammie Jo Shults, after a
catastrophic engine failure on April 17, successfully made an emergency landing
of Southwest Flight 1380 with 195 on board. She was given a hero’s welcome at
the White House on Tuesday, May 1, 2018. She along with the first officer,
three flight attendants, and five passengers of the ill-fated flight were
publicly commended by President Trump for their actions. He commented,
"Tammie really did an incredible job." He joined the praise that has
been heaped upon her by passengers on the plane as well as others amazed at her
actions and skills that led them to declare her a hero.
Heroes are not so much created as much as
they just show up and rise up to address a crisis. Having said this we also realize
that much of their lives have been preparing for the particular event that
demands heroism. Tammy grew up in a New Mexico ranch near Holloman Air Force
Base where jets constantly flew overhead. This coupled with reading about
missionary pilot, Nate Saint, fueled her inspiration to become a pilot. In high
school her interest was further ignited.
After graduating from MidAmerica Nazarene University in Kansas, she
applied to the Navy, attended Officer Candidate School, was commissioned into the Navy in
1985, and earned her pilot’s wings. Shults then reached the rank of lieutenant
commander becoming one of the first female fighter pilots in the U.S. military.
In 1993 she became one of a small percentage of female pilots in the commercial
airline industry where just 6.33% of commercial pilots are women. All of that
background molded her to become the person she was on that fateful day at
30,000 ft. in the skies between New York and Philadelphia. That day in a crisis
she was an aviation hero. What was her initial response to what had
happened? Tammie joined her copilot and the flight's other three crew members issuing
a statement that they "feel we were simply doing our jobs." As the
media reported on her heroism, Christianity
Today interviewed Staci Thompson, a longtime friend and administrative assistant
in the church office of the First
Baptist Church in Boerne where Tammie worships and serves. Staci said, “She
wants people to know that God was there with her” on Flight 1380, “that He
helped her in getting control of that plane and landing that plane.” Thompson
added, “It was because of Him, not her. She was just a teammate and a
co-captain. He was the captain.” Tammie’s text to a fellow pilot several hours after
landing the plane, “God is good.” In many respects she was already a hero in
many other ways. The Dallas Morning News
wrote, “It seems that nearly everyone in Boerne has a Tammie Jo story, and
taken together, they paint a picture of a woman almost too impossibly caring,
too impossibly devoted to her community. But, they say, that’s why she was a
role model long before she landed that damaged jetliner.” Her Christian faith
guides her and her family. The newspaper reported, “Shults has taught nearly
every grade level of Sunday school at their church. She’s volunteered at a
school for at-risk kids and turned a cottage on her family’s property into a
temporary home for victims of Hurricane Rita and widows.” The Bible is filled with women that became
heroes as they stepped into the messes and crises of life in a sin- marred world. One such woman that
comes to mind is Esther. Esther was called upon to enter into the lives of the
Jewish people who faced extermination at the hands of a religious bigot who
hated the Jews for their religion and cultural differences (Esther 3:8-9). The
challenge to intervene in this crisis was issued by her Uncle Mordecai. Esther
had been divinely placed in a favored position as the queen of King Ahasuerus, the
Persian king who ruled a vast empire from India to Ethiopia. Her first response
was hesitant. She receives further urging from her Uncle Mordecai (4:8,13,14).
He challenges her to act courageously by saying, “Who knows whether you have
come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” As we live our lives we must
consider that all of the experiences we have had in life may be leading us to
act in the crisis that we are currently facing. Esther did act. The king
reversed the evil intentions of Haman the bigot (Esther Ch. 7-8). The
extermination of the Jews was averted. Heroes are manifested when people act as
they should to intervene in a crisis. It may mean using a divinely given
talent. It may mean speaking up to address an injustice. It may mean placing
oneself in harm’s way for the life of another. It may mean ignoring personal
cost while focusing more on the other person’s need. One thing is for sure, a
hero shows up by their action not their indifference. The greatest hero to me is Jesus Christ.
The Scripture describes his action this way, “You see, at just the right time,
when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. Very rarely will
anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person someone might
possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we
were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:6-8). Christ saw us in crisis
and acted to intervene in the crisis. He is definitely a hero! Our world is desperately in need of more
heroes. They will show up as people rise up to enter a world in crisis.