On April 12, an emotionally devastated young man stood atop the Dames Point Bridge in Jacksonville, Fla., poised to end it all. Seven officers from the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office rushed to the scene. While others managed the crisis, Officer Antonio Richardson—initially directing traffic nearby—stepped beyond his badge to answer a higher call. A pastor as well as a police officer, he approached the man.
“Whatever you’re going through, man, you can get through it,” Richardson said. “Let’s talk about it for a minute … You believe in prayer, I know that … Just touch my hand. Just touch my hand, man, I’m praying with you.”
Body camera footage captured the raw, heartfelt exchange. The young man spoke of his love for his family. With his arm outstretched, Richardson delivered a sobering truth that pierced through the darkness: “If you jump, you’re going to hurt other people. And they’re going to be hurting just like you’re hurting now … The cycle’s gotta stop.”
For 40 tense minutes, officers refused to give up. Then came the breakthrough: the young man stepped toward Richardson, and the two embraced. “Come on,” Richardson cheered, still holding him tight. “Come on. It’s alright. It’s alright.”
Fellow officers surrounded the man with love and support. One declared: “I love you. We all love you. We wear this badge for many reasons. This is the main reason: to reach those whom the devil thinks he got. He ain’t got you.”
In a May 1 interview on “Fox & Friends,” Richardson shared the deeper story behind that night.
“When I got the call, I was just there to stop the traffic,” he said. “And then a couple of other officers who knew my position as a pastor asked me to come over and talk with the guy. … Nothing was scripted. … I did not want to see him jump.”
He continued: “I just felt within myself that God was going to spare his life—and He did. … I was praying. And God spared his life. And we connected. And as a result of that connection, he didn’t jump.”
The moment the man walked off the bridge and into Richardson’s arms brought overwhelming relief. “It was a prayer answered,” the officer recalled. “I was relieved. Immediately after, I called my wife and I just broke down crying. It was overwhelming. … I just went inside of my patrol car and just wept like a baby because I saw a miracle. To me, that was a miracle from God.”
Speaking with Decision, Dr. David Closson, director of Family Research Council’s Center for Biblical Worldview, explained how when someone desires to end their life, “Christians should respond with compassion, presence and truth. Like Officer Antonio Richardson, we draw near and refuse to leave someone alone in their suffering, reflecting the Biblical call to ‘bear one another’s burdens.’”
As Closson added, all people have value being made in the image of God, “even when they cannot see it.” For those in despair, this gentle reminder “that their life matters and that they are loved can be a powerful counter.” It’s “hope grounded in truth,” he stated. “Despair tells people nothing will change, but Scripture reminds us that ‘the Lord is near to the brokenhearted.’”
When the officer told the young man the devil “ain’t got you,” he was capturing in a very real sense the heart of the Gospel, Closson said. Biblically speaking, “despair is not just psychological; it can also be spiritual. Satan is described in Scripture as a deceiver and accuser, one who seeks to convince people that they are beyond hope, beyond love and beyond rescue. Suicidal despair often echoes those lies: ‘You’re alone. You don’t matter. There’s no way out.’”
But the Gospel, Closson concluded, says otherwise. “God moves toward people precisely when they are lost, broken, and convinced there is no hope. Romans 5:8 tells us that ‘while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.’ God does not wait until someone has it together, He rescues people in their lowest moments.”
That officer, “perhaps unknowingly, echoed a profound Biblical truth: no one is beyond the reach of God’s grace. The Gospel declares that Christ has decisively defeated sin, death and the powers of darkness through His death and resurrection.”
“There is real hope—not just in improved circumstances, but in a Savior who sees, knows, and offers redemption and new life. … Even at the edge of the bridge, grace can still reach a person, and darkness never gets the last word.”























