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Monday, February 8, 2010

Monday Mimisms ~ Mimi and the Baptist Men

Disclaimer: This piece contains language not usually used in my posts, as I find them personally offensive. But in the re-telling of this true story, I told it as it happened, verbatim. If the words offend or shock you, they should. Please understand the intent behind them in the re-telling.





I never thought I'd need an exorcist in the southern church of the deep dark south. The year was 1994 and I was used to all things sanctimoniously proper - or so I thought - until a request to sing a revival service changed my need to find a new fluffy dress to the need for one with pockets to hide the vampire cross and anointing oil. All things considered, snake oil might have come in handy as well.


“My husband hasn’t been to church in years. But he said he’d come to revival next week with me if you’d sing. He heard you at the wedding last week. It would mean a lot to me. Will you do it?“

How could I refuse? It clearly held importance for my friend and co-worker. I had to say yes. So she made arrangements with her pastor and all was set. How many songs? I asked. Enough for twenty minutes. You are the “special music” (I wondered why all the rest of the music wasn’t “special” but whatever).

After a long winding search through country roads in the middle of nowhere, we finally found the place. A huge brick building with a tall white steeple, reeking of old money and defiantly out of place with a cornfield blazing across a 2-lane highway.

Before the service, as is tradition in most Southern Baptist churches, we found a room for prayer to bless the evening. Twelve deacons, a pastor, and me... in the bowels of the big old Baptist church of the south.
I sat waiting for further instructions.
Good little girl that I was.
Pay attention. That phrase will swiftly re-emerge.

So there I am. Thirteen holy men of God and little ole’ me. Ready to sing. Ready to render. Ready to pray. Excited about my selections and happy to be there for my friend.
We held hands. We (they) prayed. I listened. I said an ever so faint amen at the end as was my custom. One of them gave me a funny look. Mental note: Do not say amen out loud. It was an uncomfortable moment. Okay. Shake it off.

But I soon learned that amen boldness apparently comes only in gender fashion. Behold.
The preacher sported a polyester red and black plaid suit. Complete with gold buttons.
It was loud.
It was obnoxious. It was loud. Just loud. Tacky loud.
But I was not the fashion police, I was there to sing.

Here’s where Mimi gets the shock of her life in the old money church of the southern persuasion. As the thirteen loud and boisterous back-slapping men opened the door for me to enter the hallway outside, after head-nodding prayers and amens to the amens to the amens, one of the deacons asked the preacher where he got his coat.

He said and I quote, “I got it off a nigger.”

They all roared.
I’d just held hand-holding heavenly court with all of them.
I suddenly wanted to wash my hands.

“Oh God,” they’d prayed loudly and ceremoniously, "bless this service and bless this singer and bless us with your presence in this revival so that souls may be saved.”

Fat chance, I thought. I don‘t think Jesus is going to darken this door tonight. Pun, oh yes, intended.

So I climbed the lily white stairs with thirteen bigots and found myself facing a 500-seat sanctuary congregation of waiting trusting faces. Every pew was full.
So was every pocket.

My friends and co-workers were waiting. My then-husband in his starched white Sunday shirt and windpipe-squeezing black tie sat ready to push PLAY in the sound booth which looked at least five miles away from me in the back of the church. Through a glass booth I could see him at the end of an aisle of well-dressed strangers.
I thought of mouthing H-E-L-P in the sea of faces before me.
Strange how my mind travels at times.
He smiled.
I didn't.

Had a promise to my friend not been hanging in the balance I would have turned coattail and ran out the back door. But they were waiting and I was going to deliver.
The red-coated one took his pretty pious seat with the red-cushioned covering in the high and mighty pulpit of the saints. Large green Bible in hand.
I just tried to look pretty and digest the disgusting guffaws I'd heard in the stairwell, wondering how in the world I was going to open my mouth and let Jesus out. He didn't belong here.
I was sick to my stomach.

So with hate on his lips and Jesus in his heart, he introduced me. For at least twenty minutes I would have a captive audience - a waiting crew of congregation sitting in bondaged pews of unsuspecting bigotry, putting their trust in thirteen leaders who discriminated loudly in the hidden places of prayer and staunchly scorned in silent rebuke any ounce of free thought or progress so much so that a woman couldn't utter a proper amen.


But pay attention.
This is where Mimi goes awry.
Again.

Now everyone knows that you can’t sing a set for 20 minutes and say nothing in between songs. That's positively absurd. I had notes. Well researched notes. Thoughts that segued into the next number, very short snippets of life experience, a plan, a purpose. I intended to execute that plan to the best of my ability.

After the first song I began to explain what that song meant to me and introduce the next one. This is what one does in such venues. I'd done it many times. It was not preachy. Simply stated. From the heart.

I noticed the red coat ever-so-itchingly behind me. Did I hear a sigh from him? There was a whole lot of squirming going on. Shuffling of the holy shod feet. Pointed shined shoes turned this way and that in the deacon’s chair off my left shoulder. Something was not right.
I could tell and I sensed it in the congregation.

Song 1
Words
Song 2
Scripture to back up song 1
Song 3
Derailed

I took the microphone, inhaled. And then I saw the audaciously coated man get up behind me.
He took the microphone from my hand.

And I quote,
“That will be all tonight, Little Lady. We don’t have time for you to sing all your songs this evening. The guest speaker came all the way from South Carolina and he’s not going to have time to finish his sermon. You can have a seat now.“


No one moved. No one breathed. Except me.
I took my prissy self and descended the steps in the deep dark church of the south and sat down. Front row. Gazing at the man of God in charge. I found his eyes. He found mine. What will you say, I thought.
Could it be any worse than what I’ve already heard?


Pay attention.
This is where Mr. Holy Man with the white sheet personality goes awry in front of the following flock of the faithful and doomed.

The guest preacher did not speak as promised - not right away anyway. First we all had to endure a mini-sermon from the racist in charge about how women are not meant to “speak in the church” and their only function is to teach Sunday school to the children and it is never ever allowed for a woman to “quote Scripture” in the church.
“It is not her place,“ he said.
And then he threw the Mary Magdalene lie.

A woman, according to him, of ill-repute and most grievous affliction and one to be held up as a warning to all women in the 20th century as a model of what happens to women who don’t fall down willingly at the feet of their men groveling and worshiping at their shiny feet and blood-stained hands.
Of course, he wasn’t talking to me.

You could almost smell the sin.
Everyone in that sanctuary could see that my pencil skirt had been publicly scathed.

I secretly smiled.
Mary Magdalene was, and still is, my favorite Biblical character - a decidedly bold and beloved disciple of Jesus, so the historians say, and a source of inspiration and endless fascination to me. She knew what it meant to walk in the middle of the church of the deep dark. She knew passion and penance and scathing rebuke.
She knew love out loud and she lived it all.
She was the first person reportedly to see the resurrected Christ; not the deacons, not the men disciples, not his mother. Mary.
Who was I to argue with the comparison?
After all, I'm just a woman.

Mary was my hero.
But I knew she had no place in his gospel.
A gospel sanctioned by the big Bible he carried under the "nigger coat."


What did I do?
I sat there and looked at him with as much aplomb as I could muster and refused to look away.

I took full appraisal of the colors.
I breathed in the ignorance.
I let out the anger.
It just made me damn sad.


There were 500 unsuspecting souls in that church who knew not that their beloved-man-of-many-useless-words had made the vile statement on the way up the stairs - with much delight - carrying generations of white coated bigotry under his too tight belt and a smirk of satisfying ignorance that could only live and breathe in deep-seated fundamental hatred. And what, pray tell, had threatened him? A quiet amen and forbidden scriptures on the lips of a female singer he'd only hired to sing. What a head shaking state of affairs. The Gospel of Jesus Christ flowed off the tip of his evil tongue in scripted word only. It never translated anything close to the peaceful Gospel of Jesus Christ. Of that I am sure.

And I, as the red-lipped Mary Magdalene incarnate right before him, had ruffled his nauseatingly hypocritical truth right down to his coat of many colors.

What did he expect me to do? Run screaming in repentance to the altar? Hardly. Neither did I take it to heart. I made sure my front row seat was close enough for him to spit on.


I only wish I'd worn the red dress.

After the service, my friend was in tears. She was horribly embarrassed. For her church, her family, her husband, the visitors, for me. She was angry and she later let him know it. As a result, several of her family members who‘d witnessed the spectacle left that congregation. I knew that perhaps the contention with me was not the first verbal atrocity they‘d seen.

How did you sit there and take that?" she asked.
Why didn’t you just walk out?”

It wasn‘t my first experience with close-mindedness. I grew up in the south in the sixties.
“Because I wanted to hear everything he had to say and I wanted him to say it right in front of me.
For me to walk out would have given him the power he wanted.”

I’d like to think Jesus showed up that night. My friend said her husband had been moved to tears by the lyrics in the second song. For that reason alone, it was worth the sad climb with the party of twelve good ole' boys disguised as deacons.

Hell fire. It was time to go.
Just one more thing to do before my snippy heels wiped my feet on the washed-in-the-blood-red carpet out the door.
I washed my hands.

Little Lady that I am.









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27 comments:

Mark In Mayenne said...

Perfect.

Gary's third pottery blog said...

Oh Mimi, thanks for sharing that, wow. You are such a wonderful writer and person.
If I may add, I think that the tea baggers, tea party, anti-health care, anti-Obama, anti-American gang are composed of self-righteous idiots like these guys.
F##K 'em.

bobbybegood1 said...

AMEN!! Cheers Mimi!!

Akelamalu said...

I hate bigots. Well done you for sticking it out and showing him up for what he really was. x

Durward Discussion said...

Great story and a good example of the strength to stand up to bullies and walk your own path. Of course now I want to know the songs you would have sung if there hadn't been an idiot in charge.

Cooper said...

there is a special place in hell reserved for those that earn it...i know at least one pastor on the list now...actually I know many...this is just an addition.

Felicitas said...

Wow! I'm glad you stayed to witness what followed and that what happened inspired so many of the congregation to seek Christ's teachings elsewhere.

My prayer for him and the remainder of his followers is that one day soon they will learn just how ugly and un-Christian such attitudes are.

The Gal Herself said...

He may have had Jesus on his lips but not in his heart, Mimi. You had Jesus in YOUR heart. And in your spine and spirit, too.

I'm sorry you had to endure this, but I'm glad you took in the style you described. Otherwise you'd be kicking yourself. Now you have no regrets. Bad memories, yes, but no regrets.

And besides, if Mary Magdalene *had* been a hooker, instead of a never-married woman (like me), she still wouldn't have deserved the treatment legend -- and that congregation -- gives her. For if she was paid to play, who was doing the paying? I don't understand why it's somehow MORE respectable to pay for illicit sex than it is to sell it. Besides, hooker or no, she showed more guts than the men who left Him on the cross to die alone, didn't she?

Jean-Luc Picard said...

That was a tale and a half, Mimi, brilliantly told.

I'll be putting it in my Quality Posts.

Charles Gramlich said...

Look at it this way, you may have helped save a few people by getting them to leave that cesspool of wickedness. And I'm not joking in the least. I mean every word.

Anonymous said...

I applaud you for not leaving and I wish you had worn the red dress too.

“There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action.”

Mimi Lenox said...

Fran Mencken Fisher from Facebook:

"A perfectly awful situation, shameful. But why is it always in the deep dark south (so to speak)? I grew up there in the sixties, myself. Maybe living on the coast is a little different, more liberal. But sometimes it seems everything in the world is protected by political correctness, except being white, being Protestant, and being male. Oh, yeah, and living in the south. Almost forgot that one.
The men in my family were not like that at all.Any more than all Catholic Priests in, say, Chicago, are pedophiles. A few of my male friends traveled south to participate in Civil Rights demonstrations and there was at least one Baptist preacher among them. He was my uncle.
Bigots seem to come in all shapes, sizes, colors, genders.

Just sayin'."

Thomas Bryner said...

From Thomas Bryner on Facebook:

""The first sign that you are becoming religious is that you are becoming cheerful. When a man is gloomy, that might be dyspepsia, but it is not religion." ~Swami Vivekananda"

Tammera Wallsch on Facebook said...

"Wow, awesome. And don't know how you kept your cool, but clearly you were the better person. Good for you."

Andrea Smith on Facebook said...

"I grew up near Buffalo and saw many instances of bigotry and hatred over the years. Remember Richard Long? Stomped to death by good old boys - white boys - in Buffalo. His crime was being black. It's all over this country, not just in the south. "

Sharon Humphrey Workman on Facebook said...

"Those that lead the flock will be judged to a higher standard...I do so hope his coat is flame retardant!"

Mo Pittman on Facebook said...

"What a great post. I'm so glad your friend supported you and not that bigot. I hope she and her family found a better church.

Michael W. Welsh on Facebook said...

"Powerful story. Thank you for sharing. It's so sad when people use religion to belittle others."

Christine said...

I was barely breathing as I got to the end of your story. How I loathe bigotry. You held your ground, and you have my utmost respect.

Travis Cody said...

Anyone who equates faith with religion is a fool. A person of true faith could never live or preach a hate so profoundly ignorant as that which you described in the story.

Barbara H. said...

I am appalled at the behavior of the men in this church.

But I am equally appalled at comments like Gary's, #2: "the tea baggers, tea party, anti-health care, anti-Obama, anti-American gang are composed of self-righteous idiots like these guys." That is JUST as bigoted. No one is against health care, but some have problems with the proposals going around now. Having some issues with Obama doesn't make one anti-American.

All Southerners, Southern Baptists, people in loud coats, etc., are not this way.

I am glad your friends saw the light and left.

Vinny "Bond" Marini said...

B-R-I-L-L-I-A-N-T

absolutely brilliant...

You did exactly what was needed and I can only hope others, besides your friend's family - left that pit of hatred.

s said...

Shannon on Facebook said....
"Very powerful story Mimi. Thank you for sharing with us."

Penny Owen on Facebook said...

"Sometimes I wonder about how far organised religion differs from the Gospels, in not one, but many, demoninations. The Bible warns about this... Duhr, listen (and read) up you churches!"

Mimi Lenox said...

"Loved the comments! And I do want to make the point that ignorance and bigotry can be found all over the world in many forms - not just in the southern United States . There are many lovely and honorable people in the southern United States who are as appalled by this mindset as we all are here. Just wanted to make that clear. Also, this ... See Morecertainly is not indicative of all Baptist churches nor all organized religions. My experience happened to be in that denomination..... and I must admit that I did see much of this type of thing in that region as a child. However, I do not hold any type of negative bias toward the south OR Baptist folks in general in a stereotypical way. Denomination doesn't matter as long as what is in the heart of a person is always open for examination and prone to honesty.
Integrity is always a matter of the heart."

Julie said...

I'm so glad loving Christ has nothing to do with "religion" because people snuggling up under the guise of "religion" are usually the jackasses that cause problems!

katherine. said...

I'm glad you were steadfast...cause I'm fairly certain Jesus was there...working through you!

and it is a well told tale!

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