http://www.kcci.com/news/10264521/detail.html

Giving snakes a bad name - due to somebody's own foolishness. A woman in a church was handling a Texas rattler and was bitten and died. She was handling the snake bc she was told a "true believer" could handle a serphent without being bit. I wonder how many people that snake was passed to and how stressed the poor thing was before he finally bit.

Does anyone else agree that this wasnt the best idea? opinions...discussion maybe? Oh and by the way this is also an illigal practice that they were doing.



If the link does not work - this is what it said:

LONDON, Ky. -- A southeastern Kentucky law enforcement officer said a woman was bitten by a snake during church and died.

She was 48-year-old Linda Long. The Laurel County Sheriff's Office reported that she died Sunday at the University of Kentucky Medical Center.

Detective Brad Mitchell said Long died about four hours after the bite was reported.

Officials said Long attended East London Holiness Church. Neighbors of the church told the newspaper the church practices serpent handling.

Lt. Ed Sizemore of the Laurel County Sheriff's Office said friends went with Long to a local hospital Sunday afternoon.

"She said she was bitten by a snake at her church," Sizemore said.

Sizemore said he thinks the woman was bitten by a timber rattlesnake.

Handling reptiles as part of religious services is illegal in Kentucky. Snake handling is a misdemeanor and punishable by a fine of $50 to $100. Police said they had not received reports about snake handling at the church.

Snake handling is based on a passage in the Bible, in the Gospel of Mark, that said a sign of a true believer is the power to "take up serpents" without being harmed.

A woman who lives near the church told the Lexington-Herald leader that she's witnessed snake handling at the church.

"I don't have no dealings with those snakes," Opal Wagers said. "But they seem to handle them pretty good."

She told the paper that people handle snakes at the church at least one Sunday each month. Wagers said the snakes are taken to the church by members from Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia.

Church officials could not be reached for comment.