On Growing Up in a Pentecostal Church
I grew up on
an orange pew in a small Pentecostal church.
I grew up
with tongues-speaking and large women running aisles whenever the Spirit fell.
We called each other brother and sister. I looked forward to my weekly welcome
from Brother Sid who always had a smile and a Werther’s Original to share.
My mom made
sure we were at church every time the doors were open which happened to be
twice on Sunday, Wednesday evening, and Tuesday mornings for prayer.
My pastor
was a gentle man. He was a Missouri boy who loved down-home cooking and
blue-grass music. Everyone knew biscuits and gravy was his favorite meal. He frequently mentioned his favorite singer:
his wife. I think I heard the story of how he met her at church and how he kept
going to that church so he could date her no less than 198 times in my
childhood. If I am honest, I don’t think I remember a single one of his
sermons, but I do remember how he would tell me every chance he got: “Amanda,
you know God loves you? There isn’t anyone that He loves more than you.”
My pastor’s
wife was an adamant woman. She was adamant about my worth, she was adamant
about purity, she was adamant about making a way for me. I remember her
confessing to me that she had a sharp-tongue, and maybe it was true, but she
also knew how to wield her words as a sharp sword against the enemy. I probably
had a healthy dose of the holy fear of God and of my pastor’s wife. She played
the piano and sang with a big voice that could fill a room all by itself. She
battled her weight and lost it and gained it a few times, and maybe this sounds
funny, but I can’t even tell you how much I appreciated that she gave the
softest hugs… I probably couldn’t count how many times I buried my face right
into her shoulder and cried. I might not have been her daughter, but I always
felt important to her.
I remember
being 10 and desperate to go to summer camp. My pastor’s wife might not have
wanted to sleep in an un-insulated cabin on a cot, but she wanted to be there
for “her kids.” So she volunteered to run the camp store. I remember being shy, not knowing anyone, not
quite fitting… but I could always escape to the camp store. She was a
safe place. She went every year that our church sent kids up.
One night at
that camp when I was 14 or so, I had a really bad asthma attack that led to a
really bad panic attack. I started to go into shock. I was laid out on a bench,
head in my pastor’s wife’s lap, terrified, tears streaming and the talk of calling
for a helicopter to fly me to the hospital in the background. My pastor’s wife prayed down the heavens.
Her voice was loud and full of authority. She fought for me till the airways
opened. Honestly, if I was asthma, or even God for that matter, I don’t think I’d
bother with contradicting her.
I remember
having church in a tent for almost a year. I had wanted to sing so badly. The
first night in that tent, she called me to the front before service started and
told me and another girl she wanted us to stand next to her and sing. We did
almost every week. Church shoes on a dirt floor, under canvas before metal
folding chairs, we learned to lead worship. She always made a way for people. I
remember going and visiting that church years later and enduring a sweet
older lady doing a special song. I don’t know how else to put this other than
to say it was terrible. My pastor’s wife smiled big and warm the whole time.
She knew it was worship.
(And for the
record, there is a very strong possibility I sang that terrible.)
In my adult
years I can say that I am really glad God has been bringing down denominational
walls in my heart. If you believe Jesus Christ is the Son of God who came and
died on the cross for our sins and rose again… you are my brother and my sister—Pentecostal
or not, Baptist, Evangelical, Episcopalian, Catholic, or Seventh Day Adventist… Really, all other matters pale in comparison to the salvation we have been
freely offered.
But still, I
am proud of my Pentecostal upbringing. This woman, now the wife of a cop, knows
spiritual warfare. I know how to pray down the heavens. I desired to speak in
tongues before I knew how weird or controversial it was. I’m glad. I love my
prayer language, and like Paul, I use it daily. I know what it is to have the
joy of the Lord bubble up and out uncontainable, to be undignified and dance
before my God… before I knew about things like “order in service.”
My church
might be a good deal more "conservative" now, but I can’t even put into words how
grateful I am for that small Pentecostal church and the pastors that served it.
I so appreciate you, Pastor and
Sister (we’ll keep your last name between us, but you know who you are).
Thank you
for giving and giving, for making a way and a place for me, for praying, for
loving.
You are so
dear to me and so very loved.
By Grace,
Amanda
Conquers
I'd love to hear if you grew up in church? What was one outstanding memory from it?
Since I brought up some Christian topics that have historically
brought controversy (and no doubt, still do), I would just like to make mention
of Shawn Grove’s article. It gives an analogy about similarities and differences between Christians that I do believe encourages unity in spite of doctrinal
difference.
Oh and here's another hint of what's coming next week:
I am really excited for Monday's kick-off post. I do believe it is a message God is burning on my heart for me and women everywhere. Maybe grab your girlfriends?
Sharing in Community:
Sharing in Community: