Coming Full Circle

I ran away from the church of my youth in my teen years when I
failed to see (or hear) a meaningful message behind all the robes, formal
prayer and liturgy, which seemed to represent something shallow and dead. I failed
to see spiritual and transformed lives behind the façade, but I did see many,
many broken lives in our church which included an abundance of divorces, broken
homes, drug and alcohol abuse, neglected kids, suicide and more. The experience
sent me running.  

But in the back of my mind, I held close a memory of my
first spiritual encounter, an encounter that took place during my young kindergarten
years, believe it or not. My father had a dear, elderly employee named Claire
who lovingly took me to her house to make chocolate pudding and re-arrange her
furniture and just plain visit. And she loved to take me to Mass. It was on one
of these visits to her church that I had a powerful first encounter with God,
sitting up in the balcony and looking down on the reverent service below. I’m
not sure what God said but I remember for a brief moment that a curtain opened,
revealing that He was real and present. Then the curtain closed, and I didn’t
hear from him again for another fifteen years or so.
It didn’t help that the minister of my childhood church let
me down when my parents sent me to see him one day after school for counseling
after an episode in my life involving police, drugs, alcohol, and the reading
of rights. Oh, and I was just 13. Wisely, the adults thought these might be
troubling signs and that the minister might be able to talk some sense into me.
When he drove me home several hours later, my mother came out to the car to
meet me and there I was sitting on the passenger side of the backseat, trying
to get as far away from him as possible. Obviously we didn’t bond during our
meeting.   In fact, I wanted nothing to do with church
after that – or him. He failed to be a grace-filled voice calling me “to”
something rather than pushing me away. 
When I did hear God speak again in my early twenties, I found
myself most comfortable in churches that looked and behaved nothing like that
church of my youth. If they met in a school or a warehouse, excellent. If the
pastor wept because he so deeply believed his message, good. If they had humorous
parking lot signs, no robes or pre-written prayers, all the better.
Then one day recently my husband and I found ourselves
looking for a church close to home. Our friends coaxed us to visit an Anglican
church down the street. We visited, and I kept saying, “Too much like the
church of my youth.” And we’d leave and go somewhere else until our friends
would ask us to visit again, a little more insistently, sometimes with tears in
their own eyes as they described how meaningful this place had become in their
lives. Finally their sincerity lured us back.
And we’ve come back each week for a while now, even though I
cringe a bit over the robes and formality, while finding the prayers and the
life of the church to be anything but dead. I also have discovered as this
brain ages, I appreciate someone else writing the prayers, allowing me to read
along and agree. And I agree. I find that same Spirit who spoke to my
kindergarten self speaks to me in this place with the same message. And He’s
been watching me all along.
One Sunday recently, the children returned at the end of the
service from their children’s program and joined hands, running through the
sanctuary to the closing song, playing Crack the Whip throughout the sanctuary,
before the smiles of the adults. I loved the beautiful blend of reference and
order, freedom and joy. I hope they felt wooed by God in that place, even if He’s
silent for a time in years to come. And I hope the memory of those wooing moments
remain as the years tumble over them.
How is that I’ve come full circle, returning to a place I
said I’d never go? When I ran away from my early church because “all those
formalities shouldn’t matter,” I looked for places where jeans and casual dress
made everyone feel welcomed no one feel excluded. I remind myself once
again that all those externals shouldn’t matter here either, as long as God
shows up. If it’s good enough for Him, which it is, it’s good enough for me. And
as I’ve aged and faded, I’ve found myself needing the quiet, contemplative and
ordered service, my brain requiring more of those moments. So if you come to
visit some Sunday, I’m the person sitting in the way back, a place similar to that
balcony from my childhood, but now you’ll find me with tears in my eyes most
Sundays, wooed once again by the sweetness of it all.  

 
  • I love how this post wooed me like the way God has been doing so in your life. Excellent writing and lovely reminders of how God is present even when we don't want to be or don't know how to be.

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