Sharon Randall

Loving the view from the back pew

I hate to be late for church, especially as a visitor. If you come waltzing in late to church as a visitor, you might as well wave a sign that says, "I'm a potential new member who wants to pay off the mortgage on the parsonage, bring fried chicken to every social and rock crying babies in the nursery!"

Plus, you might get nabbed by some eager beaver usher who'll drag you down front (back rows are hogged by the regulars) to sit under the preacher's nose, where you'll have to try to pay attention instead of checking out what people are wearing.

Not that I care what people wear. I'm just saying. I didn't want to be late. And I wasn't. Well, not much. They were still doing announcements when I slipped in breathless from running up the steps and took a seat (yes!) in the back pew.

The great thing about a back pew is you can see everybody and everything. And when the service is over, you can duck out without socializing. Unless you want to socialize. Which on this particular day, I did not.

When I visit my family in my hometown, time is always at a premium. Sunday in the South has long been the day when families go to church and gather for Sunday dinner. It still is, more or less, even if nobody cooks. We still eat, but we go to Cracker Barrel or order pizza.

Wonder what my grandmother would say about that? She might think it's the best idea to come along since store-bought snuff.

Anyhow, I had things to do after church, family to visit, pizza to eat, so I was thrilled to get a seat in the back pew.

Growing up here a lifetime ago, I called this beautiful old building and its congregation my "church home."

See that pew near the front? That's where I sat most Sundays teasing my brother to make him laugh and causing our mother to nearly lose her religion.

The baptismal tank behind the choir loft? That's where my sins were washed away when I was 12. I quit teasing my brother after that. Well, more or less.

The organ and piano played the hymns I learned word for word, every note, every verse.

The pulpit held a pastor who preached sermons that taught me things I needed to know, some of which I still recall.

The stained-glass windows cast long fingers of holy light that reached into our souls and lifted our prayers up to heaven.

That's how it was when I was growing up, a good place to be on Sunday or anytime, a safe harbor for sinners, young and old alike. It still is. I visit once a year or so whenever I'm in town.

The only difference is now I'm a guest. They welcome me warmly, say they're glad I am here. I smile just as warmly and say, thanks, I'm glad, too.

But they don't know me from Adam's house cat. And I don't recognize a soul. People look different. Things change.

I could tell you the names of dozens of people I loved in this church. I could show you the exact pews where they sat.

They're all gone now, moved on from this world to the next. On this Sunday, I found myself missing them a lot. I felt ill at ease, a guest in a place where I once felt entirely at home.

We rose for one of my favorite hymns, "O for a Thousand Tongues to Sing." I sang extra loud, no need for a hymnal, taking comfort in the music.

That's when I saw the plaques on the stained-glass windows. I'd been fascinated by them as a child. They said the windows were placed in memory of people who worshipped in that church almost 100 years ago.

I grinned. If those folks came back today after so long away, would they feel like guests or make themselves at home?

Things change. Faces age. People die. Babies are born. We are here for just a while. But the church is an everlasting family of faith. Here, gone or visiting, we aren't guests. We all belong.

I left at the final amen. Next time I might stay to socialize.

Award-winning columnist Sharon Randall writes about the ordinary and extraordinary:

randallbay@earthlink.net

Family on 05/13/2015

Upcoming Events