Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Going to Church

 

                                                    St. Monica’s Church

                                                      Willows, California

                                             1950’s through into the 60’s

 

We would arrive about five minutes before the start of Sunday Mass at 10 am.   Our family would parade to the front of the church, since most of the back pews were filled to capacity.   There were eight of us in the family and we almost filled the entire pew from the center aisle.   I wished we could sit in the back pews, since those people were blessed with a quick exit at the end of the service.    It was always the same people that occupied the back pews.  They must have arrived an hour early to lay claim to those pews or maybe they had some kind of reservation on them.   Leaving church was the slowest process I can remember as a youngster.  It seemed like everybody would stop as they got to the doors and talked to the priest as he was there to greet everybody as they departed.   There was not even enough space to squeeze between people.  It was like trying to get through a defensive football line.   Maybe it was my punishment for not paying attention during the service and for just thinking on how fast I could make my exit. 

The service was scheduled for an hour, but then there was the sermon that sometimes lasted an hour itself.  It seemed like days.   The sermons covered many topics, some that I was too young to understand at the time.  There were discussions on church facilities, church functions, money, and people in need and of course the need to avoid sin.  There was a sermon on the subject of fornication which I had no idea what the priest was talking about due to my ignorance of that word at a young age.   Later at home I asked my mother what that meant and she said, “never mind”.   Years later I found the definition in the dictionary.    There were other sermons about how the young girls were leading young boys into sin by the way they dressed.  

After communion some of those people in the back pews started leaving early.   A good friend of mine with his two sisters and their dad would leave early as we could all hear the dad starting up their old 1949 Chevy truck parked in the back parking lot.   We could see an expression on the priest’s face that he was not impressed with those leaving early.

By the time we finally got out of the church many of the men would light up a cigarette, including my dad, who would get into a conversation with an older farmer by the name of George.    They would talk about how their crops were doing as George would roll his own cigarette as he got tobacco from a blue tin placing it on the paper and sealing it up by licking it.   I always found this fascinating.   My younger sisters would stare at the growth of hair shooting out from his ears and make comments later at home about it.   Finally at home mom and dad would make a big breakfast as we were all in the edge of starvation since eating before communion was not allowed in those days.    Then the thought would reoccur that in seven days we would have to go through all this again. 

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