Stories from the pews

Last Sunday we attended church with our extended family.  My mother sat in the pew in front of me with my nephew and his girlfriend to her left.  Every now and then, when we stood to sing, the girlfriend placed her arm lightly around my nephew’s waist.  Each time this happened, Mom tapped the back of his girlfriend’s hand with her index finger, then turned and winked at me. 

I smiled watching the scene play itself out a couple of times—the arm around the waist, the tap, tap, tap, and the arm drop.  I’ve seen it all before.  My mother is not known for her good conduct at church. She tries to behave during the sermon; it’s the pre and post sermon parts that lead her astray. 

Aunt Elouise once said, “I don’t sit with your mother.  She shuts my hymnal in the middle of a song just for the fun of it.”  Mom also protests her least favorite hymns by choosing to sing a song she likes during the one she doesn’t. I admit I’ve caught myself doing the same thing. 

Hmmm…am I on my way to becoming my mother?

Kids love to sit near Mom.  They know her purse if filled with candy and she shares it with anyone in reach. My mother’s good humor goes to church with her, but she takes her faith seriously and taught us to prioritize from an early age. 

Growing up, skipping church was never an option for my brothers and me. Mom added an eleventh to the Ten Commandments: “If you’re too sick to go to church on Sunday, then you’re too sick to do anything else (fun) for the rest of the week.”  We had only to test her on this once to find out she wasn’t kidding.

The first church of my memory was an American Baptist in southern West Virginia.  The sanctuary was large, housing two sets of pews separated by a red-carpeted middle aisle.  Two narrow aisles ran up and along the exterior walls below stained glass windows.

At youth choir practice, the boys liked to jump under the furthest back pew and roll all the way to the altar. Our choir director Mrs. Murphy, chased up and down, fanning herself and pleading, “Now, boys, come out from under there. We need to begin.” 

Not that I was always innocent.  In those pews, my parents often attempted to reel in my brother John and me, nudging us with sharp elbows and locking their eyes on ours in a stern warning. John and I tried. We did.

When our five-year-old brother Donald belted Jesus Loves Me over the other Cherub Choir members, John and I held our breath, ducked our heads, but still fell to floor in front of our pew, unable to contain our laughter.

Once, for a reason Mom still cannot figure, Dad let us get a snack from the store around the corner between Sunday school and the worship service. During the opening prayer, the three of us strolled down the middle aisle, popping soda can tabs and ripping open bags of chips, while our parents wished themselves invisible.

From those pews my family watched my baptism. After, wet hair plastered to my cheeks, I walked outside and twirled under giant cottony snowflakes, before returning to sit with my family in the sanctuary.  

In those pews my mother often clasped my hand into hers and squeezed three times: “I… love…you.”  I returned four: “I…love…you…too.”  Then, Mom pressed my palm twice, asking wordlessly, “How…much?” 

I squeezed her hand with all my might.

Church provides a sanctuary for meditation and reflection, a place to rejoice in the gifts of love and life, and a pew to share a few winks and nods. In those pews, my mother taught me that God does have a sense of humor.

Mrs. Murphy

Some people come into our lives and stay for a while. Others dance and flicker among us for a brief moment, like a candle’s flame.

How long people have known us has little to do with the impression they leave on us. Sometimes, we don’t realize the extent of that imprint until much later.

That’s how it is for me with Mrs. Murphy.

Every now and then, Mrs. Murphy rises from my heart and into my consciousness. I can’t say what triggers the appearance of those memories, but I welcome them all the same.

She was the Music Director at the First Baptist Church of my childhood in southern West Virginia. I picture her tall with a solid frame, but then I was small and skinny.

Her close-cropped dark hair held a bit of wave or curl. Maybe a perm? She wore black framed eyeglasses with upswept corners (in cat-eye fashion)—or so, I thought.

Mrs. Murphy’s responsibilities included directing all choirs, Cherub, Youth, and Adult.

“Responsibilities.” I wrote that word with hesitancy. Mrs. Murphy exhibited so much joy in what she did that it never occurred to me it was part of a job.

She even made certain the kids’ choirs had holiday parties, Halloween, Easter, and Christmas.

When my friends and I were promoted to Youth Choir, we walked to the church every Wednesday after school for practice in the big sanctuary with an inclined floor.

Mrs. Murphy got a workout at those practices. She spent the first 15 minutes running up and down the middle aisle in her chunky heels, trying to get the boys to stop rolling under the pews and take their places in the choir loft.

“Now, boys, come out from under there,” she said with firm gentleness.

Then, she clapped her hands to coax a little stronger, “Come along, now, boys. It’s time to get started.”

My brother Donald, two years my junior, was born with a baritone, man-sized voice. He took his place in front of the church with the Cherub Choir, in his white robe and ginormous red bow, and belted “Jesus Loves Me” like a miniature Johnny Cash with a little added thunder. The rest of the cherubs were reduced to a tweet here and a tweet there.

I was a cherub alumnus by then. Donald’s “Jesus Loves Me” roar sent our brother John and me into titters, followed by giggles until we tumbled from the pew and tried to smother our howls into the deep red carpet. We hiccupped rising chortles, but that didn’t keep tears from laughing all the way down our cheeks.

Mrs. Murphy remained unfazed.

On Sunday mornings when the little ones took front and center, her hands and arms sang with the notes as she led her Cherub charges. The louder Donald’s voice, the bigger her smile.

When thoughts of Mrs. Murphy came to me last week, it occurred to me that I knew very little about this woman I admired. We lost touch after I moved away in 6th grade.

I emailed my very first best friend, Stilts, whose parents called her Nancy, but I never would.

“…I’ve been thinking about Mrs. Murphy, our choir director. I loved her! Do you know what happened to her? I can’t recall her first name. Ugh.”

Stilts wrote back, “…Her name was Florence Murphy and her husband, Eugene…they were the most fabulous couple at church and as neighbors.”

Lucky Stilts, to have had Mrs. Murphy for a neighbor.

I don’t know if Mrs. Murphy enjoyed gardening, if she had a dog, or liked to cook. I don’t know if she had children or how many. I don’t recall the color of her eyes.

I do know she brought music to the hearts of many. And she loved children.

Maybe, for me, that was enough.