Quantcast
Channel: April '12
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 10

Dropped notes can sound just as sweet

$
0
0

Our pastor recently asked if everyone in the congregation who plays a musical instrument and was willing, would bring it to church on Sunday nights and sit on the front two rows, playing along during the song service.

We don’t attend the kind of church that has a worship team. There is no drum kit, no rock band. We’re old-fashioned: We have a choir accompanied by a piano, an organ, two keyboards and one guitar (all of which are for the most part hidden from view), and we still sing from hymnals.

Our foyer is spacious and large-windowed and comfortably furnished and eminently functional, but minus a coffee shop or a splishing fountain or a gift emporium or softly-lit cozy group seating around a snapping fireplace.


We don’t hold church in a big all-purpose room with padded stackable chairs and black floors and walls and ceilings, and a stage and no pulpit and half a million dollars worth of theatrical lighting, and people in sagging (that’s the guys) or tight (that’s the gals) blue jeans jamming for an hour or more as a prelude to an effeminate panty-waist male with scruffy facial hair and his shirt untucked bringing a fifteen-minute fuzzytalk that makes everyone feel swell about their lives.

Our pastor (who wears a suit and tie to every service) doesn’t prate about how spiritually evolved you must be, how superior, how cognizant of real grace, if you’ve swallowed whole this idea that doctrine divides, and that by telling Christians they ought to eschew bad habits like drinking and smoking and going to bars and that they should clean up and dress up and take the moral high road and present themselves differently from every other Joe Schmo walking down the street, you're engaging in legalistic hate speech.

If that last bit describes the sort of church where you're a member and you just love it and you get such a blessing from the uber-tolerant come-as-you-are vibe and it makes you mad that I would dare sarcastically imply the degree to which I have no use for such an organization, you are welcome to exit stage left.

We’ve made it easy for you! One click and you're gone like yesterday.

If you’d like to leave a comment defending that kind of church, go ahead but don’t cuss or I’ll delete it.

(It strikes me as odd that so many people who identify themselves as Christians – like in their Twitter and Facebook bios and such, or on their blog’s sidebar, or even in conversation – use the same nasty language as the sinful world. It makes no sense to me whatsoever, if you want to know the truth.)

At any rate, this blog that I pay for and over which I maintain sole editorial control is profanity-free and crude-terms free. If you’re not sure whether I’d consider a word profane or crude enough to edit you, don’t use it because that probably means I would.

Where were we? Oh.

Our church sanctuary is new and it’s beautiful and airy and full of light and it has pews and stained-glass windows and a choir loft and a baptistry and a platform and a pulpit. We have two screens but they’re used sparingly and never to display the lyrics of contemporary Christian choruses telling God how awesome He is. We don't read from the NIV; we stick with King James.

We hold actual books when we sing the old-timey hymns about salvation and heaven and consecration and hope and joy and purpose and service and the shed blood of Christ being the only remedy for sin. We sing about His substitutionary death on the cross of Calvary and His resurrection from the tomb, and His promise to return for His bride.

We’re all about the Blood, the Book, and the Blessed Hope. We have sermons and altar calls. We are traditional. We are not charismatic. Men dress like men and ladies dress like ladies. That means modestly. We don’t dance around in the aisles or run up and down, hollering, distracting everyone from the reason to have church in the first place: the faithful preaching of the Word of God.

If somebody gets convicted about the way they’re living and decides to do something about it, we rejoice with that person. It’s all about self-examination with the plumb line, the true-up, being God’s Word as revealed by the foolishness of preaching, and our responsibility to align with our Creator rather than Him being obligated to see things our way.

Because He isn’t.

We’re not a part of the widespread and widely-accepted non-denominational (read: liberal) religious New Age fake-out that has swept the world and duped untold thousands of Christians and would-be Christians over the last three decades. We’re not a spooky outlandish cult with weird rules and regulations. We are Bible-believing Christians first, independent fundamental Baptists second.

Neither the message nor the method is likely to change any time soon.

No apologies for any of the above will be forthcoming. If you’re reading this and your blood pressure is rising and it makes you feel all self-righteous to label me judgmental, knock your lights out, only know that the moment you do that, you are yourself judging.

Tricky thing, that. Judging is judging is judging. As soon as you accuse someone of judging, you judge. So if your favorite verse is “Judge not lest ye be judged” and you believe I am judging, think for ten seconds about what that actually means.

Just because someone’s standard differs from yours and they have the temerity to point out that difference, and to be very specific in doing so, doesn’t mean they are judging you. Judging is not the same as discernment.

When a person stands for something and is unafraid to name that thing, it doesn’t necessarily follow that they are judging those who don’t stand in the same place or in the same way. It could simply mean they are not afraid to tell you where they stand. No hidden agenda.

Why did I go off on that tangent? Oh. In church last night something happened that I want to tell you about and I thought I'd provide some context. Perhaps I offered too much. Deal.

There is a little girl – I don’t even know her name – who occasionally sits with her grandparents two pews ahead of TG and me. TG and I always sit in the same place: fourth pew from the front in the section on the far right-hand side of the sanctuary if you’re facing the pulpit.

This girl who appears to me to be about nine years of age, has a purple child-sized guitar that she plays on Sunday nights during the song service. She sits up front with all the others and just strums away. I love to see her play it.

Although our sanctuary is carpeted, beneath our feet as we sit in the pews is tile the same color as the carpeting. Dark green. I guess the reason for the tile is ease of cleaning. At any rate, if you drop something onto it like your pen or one of those hymnals, it tends to be loud.

Last night as our pastor was closing out the service and everything was very quiet, this cute little girl two rows in front of us somehow lost control of her purple guitar and it clattered to the floor. I don’t know whether she was holding it and let go, or it got nudged off the pew, or if she had it propped up and it slid.

The point is, purple guitar hit green tile and made a noise so sharp in the high-ceilinged and acoustically-sensitive sanctuary, that I nearly jumped out of my skin. I hate loud unexpected noises anyway and this was a doozy.

The pastor jumped too, and he looked over to our section and exclaimed a little bit about the jarring nature of the noise.

Well, the little girl was mortified. Everyone was standing at the time but she sat back down and hunched over in the pew and as I watched, she just sort of shrank into herself. Her head was bowed. I kept a weather eye on her back and I was afraid she’d begun to cry. She was clearly embarrassed by her ecclesiastical faux pas.

Her grandfather left his place at the opposite end of the short pew and walked over to her side and put his hand on her shoulder. She didn’t look up.

Thirty seconds later the pastor said “Y’all are dismissed” and I went straight to the little girl. I took her in my arms and I felt her shoulders shake. I put my face in her hair near her ear and I told her the truth: I drop everything. I said that if somebody wants something to end up on the floor, all they have to do is put it into my hands.

I drop things all day long. TG says I get ahead of myself and that’s why I do it. All I know is, the second I touch something it’s as though it jumps right out of my fingers and hits the deck. It’s a wonder we have any whole dishes.

My mother tells the tale of one pitch-black night when we were running in terror from my stepfather. It happened in Chicago. Mama woke us up and said grab your schoolbooks, shhhhh, don't make a sound. And when we got out onto the landing of our apartment building and were making a run for it, I dropped my books.

Mama says she was too scared to stop and pick them up because she'd yanked the money sock right off Daddy's foot while he slept and she was sure he'd awakened enough to run after us. I remember this incident like a wink, like the quickest snapshot you can imagine.

Anyway, after I had told Darling Little Miss Purple Guitar about my tendency to drop everything, I pulled back and looked into her face. Pale. Sweet features framed by thick chestnut-colored hair cut chin-length. Huge hazel eyes, and they were full of tears. Her bottom lip trembled and she couldn’t think of anything to say.

So naturally I started crying because the look on her face was so full of mortification, and then we went to my purse and blew our noses and got her a stick of gum, and I told her that everyone who ever attempts to do anything good in this world will eventually make a wee mistake. No worries, luv. Savvy? I hugged her again and we went home.

But all the way I thought about the awful loud noise of her guitar smacking the tile, and the way everybody jumped and her humiliation was so public, and her little shaking shoulders and her wide hazel eyes brimming with hot tears.

And I just thought about how terrible it feels to drop things. To drop a word when we should have kept it to ourselves, to drop people’s hearts and expectations of us, to drop something dear to us so that it breaks, to drop the ball metaphorically (or actually, or to hang onto it but run in the wrong direction), often with disastrous results.

But then I listened to my own words, spoken only a few minutes before, meant to console one hurting heart but turning now to console my own. If you attempt to carry anything – another’s burden, your own burden, a message, a vision, a truth, a tune, a toy, a cup of water – you’re eventually going to drop something.

It can be appalling, humiliating, painful, and embarrassing when that happens. It can sting like falling out in the street and skinning your knee and your elbow at the same time.

But don’t let it stop you from picking up the dropped thread again and going forward. Time is short; hearts are hurting; there exist both eternal truths and actual answers.

Soldier on. Don’t drop out.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 10

Latest Images

Trending Articles



Latest Images