Friday, April 6, 2007

Growing Up Catholic (as a Protestant)


Given that it is Good Friday, a childhood story comes flooding through the seas of my cranium. It is vintage Martin Luther and probably why he nailed those things to the doors a couple of centuries ago.

I grew up in a neighborhood that was predominantly Italian, which meant that it was also predominantly Catholic. In fact, I was the lone Protestant on the block as well as the only one of my group that attended public school. That made me instantly out of sync. When they all had days off for All Saints Day and the Assumption, I was off for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. The public school students weren't necessarily Jewish, but the faculty sure as heck was. At an early age, I realized the upside and the downside of being Lutheran. There were never any real eating restrictions---thumbs up. But, you got major league gypped on holidays---thumbs down. When was the last time you got to stay home from school for Pentecost?

Being the religious outsider, I lost out on participating in all active arguments on saints. I could tell you the line-ups of every major league baseball team, but couldn't tell the difference between an Ignatius or a Basil. I also never got to chime in on the unified hatred all my friends had for some teacher like Sister Mary RiteAid, who allegedly wielded a mean ruler full of 2 inch nails.

And, apparently, I was missing out on something else in those schools. So said my next door neighbor Monte. Monte was an A+ student at one of the Catholic schools, one of those places where all the kids were forced to wear chocolate-colored pants with chocolate-colored jackets and chocolate-colored ties. I used to get to eat over his house from time to time. One night after dinner, instead of tuning into "Get Smart," Monte pulled out a school workbook and proceeded to instruct me in the Catholic faith. Per his teacher, Sister Margaret Advil, I, as a Protestant, was going to Hell. I was not to pass Go. I was not to collect 200 dollars. A one way ticket, all expenses paid and no questions asked, to H E Double Hockey Sticks. 

To further explain my impending peril, he turned to the page in his religious schoolbook where they apparently segregated the Protestants. There was a cartoon of a small boy. That was me, Monte said. In the center of the boy's chest was a black circle. That was the dirt on my inner soul for being a Protestant. I began to rub my chest. Could I feel this stain growing inside of me? Was that cough I was getting a result of this or just a second hand by-product from my mother's cigarettes? I wondered if my parents or my grandparents at home knew if they were doomed as well. 

Monte also let me in on a little more magic he learned from his school. On Good Friday every year, between the hours of 12 Noon and 3PM, the skies around the world get dark, as God weeps over the crucifixion of Jesus. When my nine-year-old logic tried to challenge Monte on this, I was rebuffed. It's impossible that it gets darker all over the world, I contended. But, no, I was wrong, according to Monte who studied at the feet of Sister Alice SpicNSpan. 

Good Friday came a few weeks later. And wouldn't you know it? The darkest clouds ever blanketed the sky right between 12 Noon and 3PM. Amazing! Monte was a genius. Obviously, that Martin Luther was a real snake oil salesman. 

Where do I sign up to be a Catholic? How fast can I get my soul cleaned and can they hem my new chocolate-colored pants at the same time?

Well, I noticed that nobody else really talked about the fact that the skies got dark that afternoon. My parents didn't mention it. My grandmother said nothing. Walter Cronkite did not make it a lead story on the nightly news. Monte and his teachings were exposed even further when subsequent Good Fridays turned out to be totally lovely days. 

And, when my grandfather died a few years later, nobody at the funeral talked about his black hole or the fact that he was in Hell as we spoke.Over time, I came to learn about the intricacies of all religions and made my own choices as wisely as my knowledge could sustain. Hopefully, Monte's school workbook has been discontinued at Sacred Heart School. I can only imagine what else was included in the curriculum back then. Dick and Jane Stone a Presbyterian?

As for Monte himself, the A plus student hit the skids big time in high school. He went a little crazy via drugs, etc.. He still lives in the same house he grew up in. He buried his parents (probably in the backyard). And he looks like somebody on an open call for "Helter Skelter: The Musical" with wardrobe from the Charles Manson collection. 

Usually once a year on one of my NY trips, I take a drive down the old block. It has turned over several times economically and ethnically. All the homes look like liquor storefronts in the worst areas of the Bronx. On my last trip, I noticed Monte's house painted lime green. The front yard is covered in weeds. It is a complete eyesore. And there in the front stood Mountainman Monte. A homeless man with an address. 

I thought about stopping for a second. But I drove on. The blackness of my Protestant soul was nothing compared to the hell his life has been.

Dinner last night: Chinese Chicken Salad.

4 comments:

Bob P said...

I'm glad you got off Rosie (so to speak) but Martin Luther kinda looks like her.

Anonymous said...

Good piece. I remember that Good Friday. Dark at 3 pm just like in a De Mille epic.

Catholics were very un-Christ-like to Protestants in our youth. Those were the days of "one true religion" as the nuns and priests taught us.

It's to your credit that you befriended quite a few Catholics and ex-Catholics.

Did you ever have reservations about attending a Catholic college?

What will Her Majesty make of your tale?

Anonymous said...

There is a double bind in making a comment. If someone says that the story is in some way untrue, then he/she is an unthinking apologist. If he/she says that it is true, then there really is nothing to say to provide any meaningful mitigation if someone's mind is made up about Catholicism.

Catholics are no more, nor less, Christ-like than any other Christian. We are a Church of sinners struggling mightily against our own frailties, both privately, and publicly. That was true then. It is true now. It has been true for the 2,000 years plus of the Church's existence.

Catholics have been called, and still are called in some quarters, "Papists". Nuns were called "penguins". Those who say grace in public or cross themselves when they pass a Church are "crazy". The Consecrated host, which we believe to be the Body and Blood of the Risen Christ truly present, is called a "wafer". People have been known to desecrate it or take it away with them as if it were some kind of funny souvenir, if the priest did not catch them. Activists have had sex in St. Patrick's or chained themselves to pews in protest at Mass. There are jokes about the Virgin Birth and the Immaculate Conception. Popes and priests are portrayed as buffoons in TV and movies.

I guess my point in making this litany is that there has been, and is, and will be, more than enough cruelty to go around. Human beings are complex, and there are many stories for many people, about many hurts.

All this Catholic can try to do is to follow Him as best I can and recognize that I will fall, and often.

Anonymous said...

I find it interesting that our correspondent for the Vatican implies that your story may not be true. I'm 100% convinced it's true because you're honest and your story agrees completely with my own experience as a little Catholic taught that Protestants ain't goin' to heaven.