April 27, 2024


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It's Tough Being The Only Painted Hussy At a Tent Revival Meeting

by Maggie Van Ostrand


When a sweet young thing saw an immense diamond glittering on the zaftig ring finger of the voluptuous star, Mae West, she cried, "Goodness!" to which the infamous West replied, "Dearie, goodness had nothin' to do with it."

Maybe not for Mae West, but it had a marked effect on another painted hussy. Me.

That particular Saturday morning wasn't the first time I had driven past one of those big revival tents frequently seen during the hot summer months. Every year I drove by, musing about how interesting it'd be to check out the celestial activities advertised on roadside signs: "DUSTY BIBLES LEAD TO DIRTY LIVES," "GOD IS ALWAYS ON TIME. TONIGHT HE'LL BE HERE AT 8," and "GOD IS EVERYWHERE. RIGHT NOW HE'S INSIDE."

This year, the tent appeared so close to home I couldn't ignore it. Maybe I'd get a story for my freelance writing. Maybe I'd find the Bible-thumpin', rip-roarin', hand-clappin', foot-stompin', prayer meetin' that Sinclair Lewis wrote about in "Elmer Gantry," later an Oscar winning Burt Lancaster movie. Maybe the Southern prayer meeting Alice Walker wrote about in "The Color Purple," where a redeemed and jubilant Shug Avery rocks on down the church aisle singing gospel, and at last falls into the arms of her previously unforgiving Preacher Father.

That was what I expected. It was not what I found.

Dressed in jeans and a New York Yankees T-shirt, I Jeeped into the dirt parking lot next to the village pond, scattering dust and ducks, patted my hip pocket confirming that I had enough of the cash they'd surely solicit, and psyched myself up as protection against their inevitable attempt to Gantrify me.

I expected to see wild-eyed fanatics inside the tent, and was certain they'd try to dunk me backwards into the pond in an effort to save yet another city slickin' sinner. I would outsmart them all by being both unrecruitable and circumspect.

I don't know why people even bother having expectations, since they're so rarely met. Instead of a religious fanatic, I was greeted at the tent entrance by a woman named Lena. She had no horns, no tail, no pitchfork. Her eyes were not wild. They were calm pools of blue which crinkled with kindness as she smiled.

She was wearing a floor-length dress and a beatific glow, the kind you see only on deeply happy people. A plain white headdress covered much of her short brown hair. Lena was sincerely friendly and had a splendid handshake, not the limp-fish kind, but the rare kind that actually connects you with another human being. I liked her right away.

Suddenly aware of blood-red toenails peeping from my sandals, I found myself rubbing one set of toes on the back of the other leg like you do with shoes when you need a quick shine. No one else had any makeup on and it's embarrassing to be the only painted hussy at a tent revival meeting.

Lena explained that the menfolk sat to the left of the aisle and the womenfolk to the right, and added, "No one will mind if you sit anywhere you want, we're just real glad you're here." I haven't felt that kind of warmth since the last hug my Mother ever gave me.

Having given the go-by to a large coffee urn inside the main entrance, I sat on the women's side. Soon several people approached and introduced themselves.

One bearded young man, grinning from ear to ear, joked that he was a Mennonite because he couldn't spell Presbyterian. Devoid of information about Mennonites except that there was some connection to the Amish, I still half expected Burt Lancaster to careen down the aisle and slide up to the podium, shouting, "I'm makin' a touchdown for Jesus!!" But he never showed up.

Another bearded young man introduced himself as Pastor Isaac Martin, Lena's husband. He ascended the makeshift podium and gave the hymn number to sing first, adding that folks should then just shout out whatever hymn they wanted to sing next. He mouthed a round pitch pipe just like grammar school teachers use: Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

It was easy to follow along, since hymnals had been placed on every other folding chair.

We sang on and, despite a valiant effort to remain the cynical self who had walked in, I was uplifted quite against my will.

The main speaker was soon introduced. Brother Doug was a clean shaven, Pennsylvania Dutch farmer-turned-Missionary, dressed in black trousers and a tieless white shirt buttoned to the neck.

He compared his lasting marriage, to the broken marriages of couples not focused on admirable ideals.

He sprinkled his talk with Dutch words used by his mother when he was a child. He explained that his mother used to say, "Take care of yourself," and wisely added, "See to it." I could understand how much more effective would be the first admonition, when followed by the second.

Brother Doug talked for two straight hours, with very little of the anticipated hellfire and brimstone, and lots of Praise The Lords. If you were attentive to his sermon, you could easily see how much there was to praise the Lord about.

The advice preached by Brother Doug was simple: Trust in God. Ask to know His Will, then do it. If you've done something wrong (guilt is how you'll know it), apologize because God will forgive you if you're sorry. Expect little and give much. Be grateful to God. Learn patience (which he defined as "the things a person's adoin' while he's awaitin' for somethin' else to happen"). And the big one: Acceptance.

No one asked for a dime or any donation whatsoever, nor did I see a place to leave one. These good people were not there to get, but to give.

I drove home feeling unusually light of heart, singing the last hymn, like a hit Broadway show when you can't get the songs out of your head for days.

I may never see Brother Doug again, for he returned to his home state of Pennsylvania after the tents were folded and they moved on, but I began to practice what he preached.

A fractious relationship with my daughter became calm when I accepted her as she is and not as I thought she should be. She followed my example and came to accept me in the same way, a small miracle.

One tends to forget that there are people in today's world who have been good their entire lives, simple people who walk as they talk.

Perhaps, from her gilded, swan-shaped bed in the Beyond, Mae West herself can see the memorable bumper sticker I once saw: The Meek Don't Want It.

©2013 Maggie Van Ostrand, all rights reserved.

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