Chapter 1 And So Began My Life of Doubt My Baptist father married my Catholic mother in 1955. Ecumenism hadn''t been invented yet, so both families were horrified, each certain the other family would roast in hell. Over his parents'' objections, my father signed a document promising to raise my siblings and me in the Catholic Church. I was baptized before my father changed his mind; water was sprinkled on me, words were said over me, and I was saved, just like that, a member of the One True Church, destined for heaven, along with my family, except my father, which is why I cried when the priest sprinkled me with water, sensing even then my dad was screwed. The nuns urged me to pray for my father, in the hope he would see the error of his way, dispense with heresy, and embrace the true faith of St. Peter, the first pope and Jesus''s best friend. I ran the idea past my father, who seemed curiously uninterested in joining the One True Church. Since there was only so much I could do, I handed the problem over to God and let him worry about it.
1 The One True Church swarmed with children, roomfuls of kids of all ages. Families with eight, nine, and ten kids. Families so large the parents stopped naming their children and assigned them numbers. Church services were held every morning, and twice on Saturdays and Sundays, to accommodate everyone. A dozen people would cram in a pew that comfortably seated six. Kids stacked two and three deep. In terms of sheer numbers, we beat every church in town. Two nuns ran the show.
Fifty kids jammed in a room learning the Catechism, the nuns circling us, rendering us mute with fear. This was back in the days when nuns wore habits, before they got sneaky and went undercover, dressing like the rest of us to blend in and catch us sinning. It now seems ironic that the priests and nuns populating my childhood wore black and white. I''m not sure which ancient cleric picked the colors, but I wonder now if it were intentional, even sacramental, an outward sign of an inward reality. Black and white. True and false. Good and evil. Heaven and hell.
In or out. No in between. No shades of gray. No dash of color. No nuance. No straying from the reservation. So my father was out, as were the billions of people not fortunate enough to be Catholic. It wasn''t just the Catholics with the lock on heaven.
The Protestants were also sending one another to hell in record numbers. I would later become a Quaker, one of the most peaceable denominations in the history of Christianity, and even some of them cheerfully sentenced certain people to hell. But when one''s own father is condemned to hell, it''s hard to think well of the institution sending him there. Not only hard to think well of the institution but hard to take it seriously when it spoke about God and Jesus and love. I wanted to believe in Jesus, in God, in the One True Church, but the One True Church made that nearly impossible. I was eight years old, maybe nine, and a nun, I can''t remember her name, told me if I hated God, I would die. "How soon?" I asked. I was a stickler for details.
"God will strike you down that very moment," she said. So that night I put her to the test, under my blankets, whispering, "I hate God, I hate God, I hate God." Three times, one for each person of the Trinity. I whispered because I shared a bedroom with my brother David and didn''t want him to hear me and tell our parents, who would most certainly have done something, even if God didn''t. Besides, if God knew our every thought, as I had been taught, then God could certainly hear my whispers. Or not, because I wasn''t struck down that very moment, which left me to conclude that either God didn''t strike down people who hated him or God couldn''t know our every thought, which meant the nun was full of beans. And so began my life of doubt. My words seem evil now, when I see them in black and white, like something the bratty girl in The Exorcist might say, and I''m surprised my head didn''t spin 360 degrees and I didn''t vomit green goop.
Instead, I went to sleep and woke up the next morning blessedly alive. Maybe God knew I didn''t mean it, that I was testing the nun, so in a moment of grace, as is God''s habit, elected not to smite me. And I didn''t mean it. Given my inexperience, I neither loved nor hated God. Mostly, God mystified me. Did he live up in the clouds or inside me? Did I disgust him or please him? Did God love everyone, or love some and hate others? Was God a capitalist or a communist? A Republican or a Democrat? A Catholic or a Protestant? A him or a her? And the biggest question of all--did God even exist? Yes, God existed, my parents said, and was a Republican, my father assured me. And a Catholic, my mother said. And a male, our priest, Father McLaughlin, said.
Though I no longer trusted the nun, I was hoping God was a Catholic and looking down from heaven every Sunday morning to see me kneeling at St. Mary''s Queen of Peace Catholic Church and thinking well of me. I had since confessed to hating God to our priest, who took it in stride, and told me to say three Hail Marys and two Our Fathers and I would be forgiven, which I did, to be on the safe side. The safe side defined my early spirituality. After testing God once and surviving the encounter, I decided not to push my luck, so I went through first communion and became an altar boy, waking up early on Saturday mornings to serve the Mass, hoping God noticed that, too. It was an era of détente. I no longer tested God, and in exchange, God didn''t strike me dead. If Richard Nixon could strike a deal with China, I figured I could strike one with God.
God apparently loved deals. If I belonged to the One True Church and went to Mass every Sunday, I''d go to heaven when I died. Or so the nuns told me. Then after the deal was inked, I read the fine print. No eating meat on Fridays, no skipping confession on Saturday night, no attending the Baptist church with my sister, who had jumped the Catholic ship, hooked up with the Baptists, and was headed straight to hell. The nun had mentioned none of this when I joined. I had been hoodwinked, taken for a ride, falling for the oldest trick in the book, one hand moving the walnut shells, the other hand hiding the pea. "What if I ever leave the One True Church?" I asked the nun.
"When you die, you will spend eternity apart from God, in eternal torment," she said. "How do you know?" "Because I''m a nun," she said. Then she warned Father McLaughlin I bore watching and he caught me alone in the altar boy room and told me I had disappointed God. "How do you know?" I asked. "Because I''m a priest," he said. This was back in the days when religious authorities were widely admired and generally believed, so I prayed every Sunday for God to forgive me and vowed to walk the straight and narrow and become a priest when I was older so I, too, could scare small children and get them right with God. I told no one except Father McLaughlin, one Sunday morning while preparing for Mass, who seemed elated with the notion but failed to mention I wouldn''t be able to marry and would have to sit alone in my house each night trying not to think of girls, which I was just then starting to do. I decided to talk it over with the nun.
"What happens if I become a priest, then fall in love and leave the Church to get married?" "When you die, you will spend eternity apart from God, in eternal torment," she said. The Church was nothing if not consistent. But I wondered how they knew these things. How could they speak with such certainty? Certainty seemed the highest value of every religious person I knew. Their church had the Truth, capital T, and no one else. Joe, my best friend in the fourth grade, was a Jehovah''s Witness and just as certain his church was the One True Church. He gave me pamphlets to read at recess, urging me toward Jehovah, who apparently was opposed to birthdays, Christmas, and Halloween, which I took as a sign I shouldn''t join. But what if the Jehovah''s Witnesses were right, and the Catholic Church was wrong? What if the Baptists were right? Or the half dozen folks who had started up a new church, meeting every Sunday morning in a dinky house on the main street in our town? What if out of all the churches in the world, those half dozen people had nailed it on the head and were the One True Church, the culmination of God''s great plan to save the world? I went to school with one of them, so buddied up to her on the off chance the world ended and I could ride her coattails into heaven.
Then the next year the pastor went crazy, the church disbanded, and a lawyer bought the house and set out his shingle. To the best of my knowledge, there were no lawyers at St. Mary''s Queen of Peace, the lawyers in our town having money and the Catholics tending not to. We were the church of labor. One did not join the Catholic Church to get ahead in the community. We had ceded that territory to the Methodists and Episcopalians, both of whom worshipped in new buildings. We met in a flat-roofed building on Main Street next to Pleas Lilly''s Citgo gas station. It appeared we had run out of money while building the church so stopped after one story.
It wasn''t the kind of structure to inspire meditation and high thoughts. The windows were painted shut, it didn''t have air-conditioning, and in the summertime we dropped like flies, fainting from the heat, our heads thumping the pews like watermelons. What we Catholics did have going for us was longevity, which we believed to be an indication of God''s favor. We were the first church, instituted by Jesus, the Bride of Christ, launched by St. Peter, the first pope. What we lacked in build.