I remember the fall of 1980 being warm and dusty in southern Oklahoma. The leaves that were supposed to be at the peak of their color during the last week in October had instead turned brown from lack of water and littered the ground like millions of dead locust.
In retrospect, I should have seen the withering foliage as a metaphorical harbinger of things to come, but I was too preoccupied to notice. I was 22 and had graduated from college that spring with a degree in Church Music. A month later I was called as the “Minister of Music and Youth” at the largest church in a very tiny town.
I should have guessed that something was up at this church when the pastor refused to call me by my name and instead spent my entire tenure there referring to me as “college boy.” I discovered later that he had dropped out of school in Jr. High. I certainly didn’t care, but it was clear that he did. Proud of my newly acquired moniker, I jumped into my responsibilities like the zealot that I was.
The rule among protestant churches in the south at the time was that Youth Ministers were to host an event after every home high school football game and that event was to be called a “Fifth Quarter.” I did not make up this rule, but I followed it religiously (har). For homecoming week I decided to combine the Fifth Quarter with an equally revered institution called a “Lock-In." For the uninitiated, a lock-in is an all night party in which the teenagers are locked inside the church building in much the same way the clinically insane are locked inside an asylum.
I was determined that my first lock-in would be the greatest lock-in in all of recorded Youth Minister history and I began planning accordingly. I rented the high school cafeteria to hold the event in. I hired a Christian Rock-Band and a Christian Magician (In case you’re wondering, a Christian magician still pulls rabbits out of a hat, but the rabbits have been baptized.) I had arranged for movies and tons of food and I put out the word and hoped kids would show up, and show up they did.
Perhaps it’s only because there was nothing else going on in this one stoplight town but pretty much the entire high school showed up. We had 176 teenagers spend the night in the high school cafeteria. That may not sound like a large number for many churches but that was significantly more than the average Sunday morning attendance at the church.
The town had a large African-American population. I had been told when I was hired that there was some racial tension but I had not seen any real indication of it. The mix that night was about 50/50 between black and white students. The event ended the next morning with me thinking I was a cross between Billy Graham and Martin Luther King Jr. I had not only planned and hosted the highest attended event in our churches history, but I had single handedly healed any racial divide in our community.
The kids left at 7:00 a.m. and after cleaning up, I stumbled home and into bed about 9:30 a.m. At 10:00 a.m. I was awakened by a phone call from the chairman of the youth committee. He said the committee had called an emergency meeting and that I was to be there at 11:00 a.m. I went to the meeting thinking that they were going to give me a medal for being the greatest Youth Minister in the history of the congregation, but that’s not exactly what happened.
I walked into the living room of the chairman’s house and sat down in the only vacant chair in a pre-arranged circle. After an awkward silence the chairman finally spoke: “We’ve asked you here because we’ve decided that we can’t allow you to have any more activities like the one you had last night.” I was dumbfounded. “Why?” I asked. “We just don’t think it’s the direction our youth ministry needs to be heading.” “Why?” I asked. “Well, it’s just not what we think is in the best interest of our church.” “Why? I asked. (Even at 22, I knew when I was listening to bull shit and I thought if I asked the same question enough times I might finally get a real answer.) Finally a woman in the group, who also happened to be the church secretary, spoke up: “We don’t want them black kids thinking they can come to our church.” Finally, the truth had been spoken. (In reality, her English was probably better than that but I like to attribute bad grammar to her because it helps me continue to vilify her in my memory.)
My soul died a little that day, and that was probably the beginning of my bizarre love/hate relationship with the ministry. In the 31 years since then I’ve learned that there are assholes in all walks of life and in all professions but in that moment I was convinced that God had called me to the only church in the world that had mean people in it.
I know literally hundreds of people in the ministry and every single one of them have a similar story. That’s because churches are made up of imperfect people of which I am the chief among them.
This event in my life has been on my mind lately because I was sitting in the international service that my church launched recently looking at the faces around me. There were 11 countries represented and I’m pretty sure I heard at least that many languages being spoken in the hallways after the service.
During the service I kept thinking back 31 years to the moment in that living room when I heard the words “we don’t want them thinking they can come to our church.” Well, now “they” ARE my church.
And in that moment I’m pretty sure the part of my soul that died 31 years ago was restored.
Never heard that story before. Makes me sad but your point is well-taken...we've come a long way, thank the Lord (not referring to fbco as you weren't referring to us in the story) but to Oklahoma in general. Wish we could say that kind of history was gone forever here but it's sadly not, it's just better. I do have to add that you indeed threw the best lock-ins EVER. My oldest attends her very first one at FBCO this Friday night and I wonder what she'll have to say about it. The kids are so excited they are inviting the entire school (6th grade now has 750+ kids). Heaven help our children's minister! Weird to be the mom where once I was the child. I had been thinking a lot lately about the lockins with seek and go hide, broomball, arcade time, movies, etc. Amazing memories you created for us. Thanks again : )
ReplyDeleteNow you just need to work on tolerating Yankees. (j/k. I'm sure I would be welcome in Oklahoma, if only because I know your state song by heart.)
ReplyDeleteJetzt müssen Sie nur auf Duldung Yankees arbeiten. (j / k. Ich bin sicher, ich wäre willkommen in Oklahoma, wenn auch nur, weil ich Ihren Zustand Lied auswendig wissen.)
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