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Kids in Church

by Philip Yancey

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Where the Light Fell: A MemoirMy new memoir, Where the Light Fell, includes a few scenes from the childhood church I attended, near Atlanta.  How does this compare to scenes from your childhood experience?

My most memorable Sunday evening service takes place when Dr. M. R. DeHaan, a radio star from Michigan, speaks at a weekend conference. It’s like the World Series of church. Our family arrives early for a parking place, and still we have to walk a long way. So many newcomers show up on Sunday night that my brother and I get permission to join the teenagers in the usually-closed balcony. I feel like I’m in a sports stadium, looking down on all the balding heads and women’s hats, with the choir and preacher way off in the distance.

On the main floor below, hundreds of hand-held fans are rippling, like ragged ocean waves. They’re flat pieces of cardboard stapled to what looks like a Popsicle stick, and you wave the fan in front of your face to create a breeze. The front side of the fan has a picture: Christ at Gethsemane, or the Good Shepherd, or maybe a photo of our church. The opposite side has an ad for a funeral company.

Teenagers sitting nearby decide to edit the funeral ads. To air-conditioned chapel, they add, “Keeps the body from smelling.” Next to ambulance service they print, “Oops, too late,” and by 24-hour oxygen they write in, “Just when you don’t need it.” We spend most of Dr. DeHaan’s sermon vying to come up with the best slogans. My brother, Marshall, suggests an overall motto for the funeral home: “We always let you down.”

After the sermon, our pastor announces that we’ll be collecting a “love offering” for Dr. DeHaan. As the ushers spread throughout the sanctuary, one of the rowdier teenagers drops a couple of M&Ms onto the main floor below us. A few minutes later, he proposes dropping a straight pin on a bald man’s head. Just then, another teenager “accidentally” knocks an overflowing offering basket off the ledge. Paper bills float through the air, swept up and down by ceiling fans, and scores of coins roll around noisily on the slanted wooden floor below. Some coins find the heating grates and dive through with a loud plink! The pastor scowls mightily and deacons rush up the balcony stairs to restore order.

That’s the last time we sit in the balcony.

Church services usually end with an invitation. With every head bowed and every eye closed, we listen to the pastor or evangelist make a plea for the unsaved to accept Christ. “You don’t get to heaven by being good. Or even by going to church. There’s only one way, my friends, and you can do it right now. Maybe someone here today is not sure you’re going to heaven. Dear friend, now is the day of salvation. Raise your hand if you want it. Yes, yes, I see that hand. Bless you. Yes, all over this auditorium…God bless you, yes, yes.”

Like a circling mosquito, the speaker’s words seem to come closer and closer, and my guilt surges up. “Are you sure your sins have been washed away? Maybe you’re thinking, ‘Preacher, I will someday, but not yet. Let me have my fun for a while, let me sow my wild oats.’ Or you young people, ‘Maybe after school’s out this summer…’” Fear closes in around me, squeezing my heart and lungs.

The organ strikes up, and together we sing the invitation hymns, such as “Earnestly, tenderly, Jesus is calling, Calling, O sinner, come home!” Just like the Billy Graham crusades on the radio, these invitations end with “Just As I Am.” We sing all seven verses.

Nothing plagues me more than the question of whether I am really saved. I’ve said the sinner’s prayer so many times that I can spell it backwards. I go forward, and get prayed over by church elders while I keep my hands clasped together and my eyes squinched shut. I do it again, several times, afraid salvation is like a vaccination that might not take. Still, I can never silence the nagging questions. Do I really mean it? Is it genuine?

Finally, when I turn ten, Mother decides I am ready for baptism. I gloat around Marshall, who had to wait until his eleventh birthday. First, I have to sit through a nervous meeting with our pastor, Brother Paul Van Gorder, in his book-lined office. He leans back in his leather chair across the desk from me and asks, “What does baptism mean to you, Philip?”

I recite the correct answer that I’ve practiced. “I want to make public the change that happened inside me when I accepted Jesus into my heart.”

“I believe God has great things in store for you, Philip,” he says. “Baptism is sacred. It’s permanent, no turning back. Don’t do it unless you’re ready to commit yourself for life.” I swallow, and it feels like something is stuck in my throat. I pretend strength, nodding that I’m ready.

Our church schedules baptisms during the Sunday evening service. Behind the platform, curtains hide a baptistry inset in the center wall, and on baptism nights the curtains open to reveal a step-in tub with a painting of the Jordan River in the background.

Four of us get baptized the same night. After the sermon, the choir starts singing a hymn, and we four make our way to the dressing room. We are all barefoot, and the pastor gives us each a white robe. Though the room is not cold, I shiver as I pull the robe over my t-shirt and white pants.

Brother Paul reviews the instructions. “Grab hold of my hand and don’t let go. Don’t worry, I’ve got you. I’ll pull you up. Just relax.” I tell myself to relax, but I don’t know how.

The solemn ceremony begins. I watch from the side as two women disappear under water and come up with dripping hair and the thin robes plastered against their white clothes underneath. It’s strange to see grown women go limp in the pastor’s arms. One woman is crying, with black marks streaking down from her eyes.

I smell mold from the baptistry, and hear a buzzing in my ears. My heart is sliding around in my chest. What if people can see through my clothes? What if I lose my grip, and slip and drown? I keep thinking I have to go to the bathroom, even though I just went. I concentrate on holy thoughts instead.

Brother Paul nods to me, and I step into water that’s cold enough to make me suck in sharply. I try to hold my breath and control my chattering teeth. “In obedience to the command of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and upon the profession of your faith in him, Philip, I baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.”

Suddenly I am under water, my eyes shut tight, feeling a strong hand against my back and another pinching my nose, my own arms crossed in front of me. Then I break through the water and gulp in air. It’s over, just like that. I move toward the steps on legs that feel jointless.

“Now walk in newness of life,” the pastor says, and half-pushes me up the steps…

 

 

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Discussion

  1. Jeanette Kibler Avatar
    Jeanette Kibler

    I was dunked at the age of 14, and did not have a clue of what it meant. My clearest memory of that event is that I forgot to take dry underwear. I currently belong to a PC USA church where we are frequently urged to remember our baptism. Guess what comes to mind.

  2. Martin Hoffmann Avatar
    Martin Hoffmann

    Sprinkled into the body of believers as an infant and confirmed at 15 by a pastor who professed atheistic thoughts I became a believer at age 17 in one of those altar-call churches and was rebaptized at age 30 by immersion because I wanted to profess my faith in Jesus Christ publicly. My parents did not attend any church during my childhood so I missed out on such memories but also on some good biblical teaching. Praise the Lord for that congregation and the Holy Spirit pursuing me into adulthood!

  3. Jean Coombs Avatar
    Jean Coombs

    If C.S. Lewis said “We read to know we’re not alone” that is certainly the case when I read your books. Thank you so much, dear Philip, for articulating much of what some of us went through as teens and are, even now, experiencing from time to time. I can’t remember all the times I accepted Christ as my savior in case I didn’t “do it right” the other times. You are such an encouragement to me. Thank you. I can’t wait to read the book!!!

  4. Ann Morrison Avatar
    Ann Morrison

    I am looking forward to your book. Though the years my memories of church going and ritual are similar. My views have changed and I have grown thank God. I love how your stories bring on conversation and touch on eternal truths. You truly care for our culture as Makoto Fujimura states in his books on faith and culture.
    Thank you,
    Ann Morrison

  5. Nila Haug Avatar
    Nila Haug

    Since I was sprinkled as an infant, I never realized how traumatic the baptism custom might be for a young person. I have known of young persons who were “pushed”/encouraged by parents to be baptized even when they didn’t want to and I have known a young boy, age 9, who wanted to be baptized but was told he was too young. He is now 16, and refuses to go to church. So sad. I believe parents, not only pastors, ought to discuss at length what baptism really means, and not just talk about the process.

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28 thoughts on “Kids in Church”

  1. I was dunked at the age of 14, and did not have a clue of what it meant. My clearest memory of that event is that I forgot to take dry underwear. I currently belong to a PC USA church where we are frequently urged to remember our baptism. Guess what comes to mind.

    Reply
  2. Sprinkled into the body of believers as an infant and confirmed at 15 by a pastor who professed atheistic thoughts I became a believer at age 17 in one of those altar-call churches and was rebaptized at age 30 by immersion because I wanted to profess my faith in Jesus Christ publicly. My parents did not attend any church during my childhood so I missed out on such memories but also on some good biblical teaching. Praise the Lord for that congregation and the Holy Spirit pursuing me into adulthood!

    Reply
  3. If C.S. Lewis said “We read to know we’re not alone” that is certainly the case when I read your books. Thank you so much, dear Philip, for articulating much of what some of us went through as teens and are, even now, experiencing from time to time. I can’t remember all the times I accepted Christ as my savior in case I didn’t “do it right” the other times. You are such an encouragement to me. Thank you. I can’t wait to read the book!!!

    Reply
  4. I am looking forward to your book. Though the years my memories of church going and ritual are similar. My views have changed and I have grown thank God. I love how your stories bring on conversation and touch on eternal truths. You truly care for our culture as Makoto Fujimura states in his books on faith and culture.
    Thank you,
    Ann Morrison

    Reply
  5. Since I was sprinkled as an infant, I never realized how traumatic the baptism custom might be for a young person. I have known of young persons who were “pushed”/encouraged by parents to be baptized even when they didn’t want to and I have known a young boy, age 9, who wanted to be baptized but was told he was too young. He is now 16, and refuses to go to church. So sad. I believe parents, not only pastors, ought to discuss at length what baptism really means, and not just talk about the process.

    Reply

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