This story was presented about three years ago. As I was thinking about the Sunday post I read this tale again. It amused me. Again. Here it is again.
Margot Goes to Sunday School
Somewhere, Indiana was a quiet not to say bucolic village of some
five or six thousand souls. And as to the tending of souls, the
community was well-supplied with churches. There were by most accounts
twenty-three churches in the immediate environs of the community. One
was Roman Catholic, eleven were Baptist, and the remaining ones were
protestant churches of various stripes. These twenty-three do not
include a Kingdom Hall and an LDS facility, both well outside the town
proper, and outside the consideration of the citizenry with the
exception of the adherents and devotees of those respective faiths.
This
seems an awfully ponderous introduction to a light-hearted tale about a
little girl and her Sunday School experience. Yet it is somewhat
germane in that it clearly points out that Somewhere was if not a
religious place at least a place where the citizens respected or at
least supported religious institutions. And Margot's parents were
considered to be heathens by the social standards thereabouts. Oh, Tad
and Marsha were nice enough people, good moral people. They were
well-educated and successful in their chosen fields of endeavor. But
they cheerily and cheerfully ignored all attempts by friends or
neighbors, laity or clerical, to entice them into participation in
religious services.
But seven-year old Margot, while
not a social butterfly, had developed a friendship with Luanne. Lu's
parents were staunch Methodists, pillars of Brookside UMC one might
say. Inevitably Luanne prevailed upon her friend Margot to attend
Sunday school with her. And Margot presented the case to her mother.
Mother was open-minded and not averse to the idea that her pride and joy
be exposed to the other side of things, and gladly agreed that Margot
might go to Sunday school.
Sunday morning Margot
skipped down her front steps, blue dress, white bonnet with a broad blue
ribbon and blue bow tied just above the brim. Her Mary Janes were new
and white stockings completed the ensemble. The child skipped along the
sidewalk and up the steps to the house next-door but one. Presently
Luanne joined Margot and the two skipped merrily along the walk, a
bluebell and a jonquil bobbing along side by side to the Methodist
Church a mere block away.
Mrs. Leffler was
enthusiastically explaining to the children how God formed Adam from the
dust of the earth, then deciding the man should have a companion put
him to sleep, removed a rib and formed a woman. "Oh," exclaimed Margot,
"that's disgusting!"
Startled, Mrs. Leffler said, "Excuse me?"
"First
God made a man out of mud then he cut him open and took a bone to make a
woman? Mud and blood and bone? That is disgusting."
"But,
Honey, this is God's word. It is completely true and this creation
story reminds us that we are not all that high and mighty."
"Whatever. My Mama says I am made of sugar and spice and everything nice!"
"That is a pretty thing for your mother to say, but we must take God at his word."
,
"Well, I am going with my Mama on this one."
Sunday
school was over and the girls met Luanne's parents in the foyer. Mrs.
Jarrett said, "Won't you join us for the worship service, Margot?"
"Oh, no, thank you Mrs. Jarrett. I gotta get on home now."
Up the front steps, in the front door. Mama called, "Is that you, Muffin?"
"Yes, Mama."
"How was Sunday school?"
"It was fine, Mama."
"What did you learn?"
"You wouldn't believe me if I told you," Margot said as she closed the bathroom door behind her.
And on that issue Margot was completely right.
Word of the day: ponderous
7 comments:
If memory serves, there were several Margot stories, and they were all delightful!
Grace, your memory serves you correctly,
and thank you.
Interesting child's-eye" view. Our kids sometimes "fixed" SS stories when asked what they learned. According to a three-year-old daughter, Jesus served cookies and punch in the upper room.
Vee, I suspect the child would have enjoyed punch and cookies, so . . .
Margot's response reminds me of the lad who went to SS and was taught about the crossing of the Red Sea in the exodus. When asked, he told his mom about fighters flying cover overhead and a fleet of LSTs with destroyer escorts and a battleship. Mom asked if that's what the teacher said. The young fellow said, "No, but you'd never believe her story."
Chuck, kid improvement on the original.
Cute story.
Post a Comment