And, seriously--- who plays with deadly snakes for fun?
Instead of reading the bible so much, maybe-- and this is just a maybe-- maybe he should have read a wiki page on the snakes he played with.
And that part about him dropping dead when they bite him.
Jamie Coots, one of the stars of National Geographic‘s reality show Snake Salvation, died Saturday of a venomous snake bite. According to reports he refused medical attention after being bitten in his Full Gospel Tabernacle in Jesus Name in Middlesboro, Kentucky and died shortly thereafter in his home. The show debuted last Fall centered on two Pentecostal preachers who handle deadly snakes as part of a century-old Appalachian practice originating from a Bible passage that suggests those anointed by God will not be harmed by a poisonous snake bite. Coots had previously been bitten nine times and lost a finger to a rattlesnake bite. He starred on Snake Salvation alongside Tennessee Pastor Andrew Hamblin, both of whom claim serpent handling is their First Amendment religious right. The pair have come under fire from authorities for hunting and collecting deadly snakes for their church services. Last year Coots pled guilty to illegally possessing and transporting three rattlesnakes and two copperheads in Tennessee after the state seized them in a traffic stop as he was driving them from Alabama to Kentucky.
Guy Endore-Kaiser @GuyEndoreKaiser 3h One of the stars of Snake Salvation died from a snake bite. At least he died doing what he loved: being an idiot.
Guy Endore-Kaiser @GuyEndoreKaiser 3h One of the stars of Snake Salvation died from a snake bite. At least he died doing what he loved: being an idiot.