Back when faith was a private matter
I didn’t have a very strong religious upbringing, though it didn’t
start out that way. My mother was a regular churchgoer and took me
with her every Sunday. My father was an agnostic who never set foot
near a church, but he didn’t interfere with my mother’s wishes, so I
went to Sunday school and learned the stories in the Bible.
Then one day, it was announced that we were to have a revival. We
were all going to be saved. That conjured up images of angels, and I
was very excited at the thought that I would have wings and be able
to fly, but when I said I wanted to go, my mother said I was too
young. I was 6 or 7 at the time.
The chance to get a pair of wings was too tempting, however, so I
disobeyed. Slipping out of the house, I ran -- probably for the last
time, since I would be flying in the future -- to the site of the
revival and sneaked into the tent.
The preacher was preaching, people were shouting “Amen!” and I was
getting more excited by the minute. And then, the grown woman next to
me fell on the ground and began writhing. Someone else began shouting
out gibberish. Within seconds, I was the only one in my seat, but not
for long. Terrified, I dashed out of the tent, and even though I
didn’t have my angel wings, I flew home, where I stammered a
description of what I’d seen.
My father’s jaw tightened. “Kate, there’ll be no more of that
nonsense,” he said, and that was pretty much the end of my
church-going.
Cut to World War II. As a new Naval officer, I was standing in
line with a bunch of other new Navy officers to get our nametags, the
little metal tags on which are punched the vital statistics the Navy
may need someday when you aren’t in a position to provide this
information personally. In other words, when you’re dead.
A crusty old chief petty officer was manning the little machine
that punched out the tags. He obviously took a dim view of this bunch
of guys, who were clearly going to screw up the Navy as he knew it.
Each tag had your name, serial number, blood type and religion. As
we came to the head of the line, the man ahead of me, when asked his
religion, said, “atheist.”
The chief didn’t even look up as he growled, “You gotta be a P for
Protestant, a C for Catholic, or a J for Jewish. We ain’t got no
A’s.”
The officer, a man disappointingly lacking in principle, shrugged
and said he would settle for P for Protestant.
My turn came. When the chief got to religion I said, “N.”
The chief scowled at me. “Whaddya mean, N?”
“N for none of the Navy’s business,” I answered.
His answer was predictable. “We ain’t got no N’s,” he said.
Trying to be agreeable, I suggested leaving it blank. “If the ship
goes down,” I pointed out, “there aren’t going to be any burial
ceremonies, anyway.”
The chief shook his head.
I had another idea. “How about -- “
But the chief had a long line of officers waiting, and he was
tired of this one. Slam went the machine and “P” appeared on my
nametag.
“I didn’t say I was a Protestant,” I complained.
“Hell,” said the chief. “That P don’t stand for Protestant. That
stands for Private. That means your religion is your own private
affair. The Navy won’t never know the difference.”
If only all religious discussions could be handled so
pragmatically.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.