Hanover Township. Calvary EUB Church was a neat little church and I have fond memories of it. It was a good place to worship and make friends - it was my home away from home. Lots of people tell funny stories about the church building, like when the wind blew during worship an occasional piece of hay could be seen floating down from the ceiling. The universal and all-pervasive nugget of memory that everyone possesses about the place was how cold it was. Why? Because it was built on the former property of a Lenkerbrook Dairy farm in one of their old dairy barns. Everything in the church was an "add-on," including the heat. But for an old barn converted to a house of worship, it served its purpose well.

To me, the church was fascinating. In reality, it was not a large building but in my childhood memories it seemed like a huge, holy place. This was in the era where you wore dresses and behaved yourself in church. No running and screaming and playing because the sanctuary was a sanctuary - a place to honor God and be reverent, so that was how you were expected to act. I loved all the dark wood in the front of the sanctuary and to this day, I love dark wood. A friend told me in later years that the front of the church was actually constructed from the headboard of an antique bed. Oh, how reality can sometimes ruin the cherished memories of our youth! It had a basement that was broken up by large posts (it was a barn, remember?) so if you got behind one during a program, you couldn't see. They used simple folding chairs and folding screens to separate the space into Sunday school rooms, so if you didn't like what was being taught in yours you could simply listen in to the one next door. The floor was tile...and cold. The folding chairs were metal...and cold. The restrooms were dark, damp...and very cold. I hated going to the restroom there because I always thought I might freeze to the seat. I still think of it as a stall they forgot to renovate.

There were two buildings - the main church building and a smaller building where the children went for Sunday school. We had great teachers, all laity of course, who taught us the essentials of faith and made us memorize Bible verses. In the dead of winter the short trek was always cold and icy even though there was a covering between the buildings. It was always a mad dash in search of warmth and you always had to be wary of cars that might be coming down the hill between the buildings.

I also knew my father respected Rev. Miller. If Dad didn't like someone he said it, and Dad was and is not above stating his disagreements to someone or even getting into arguments if he feels he is right. Pastor Miller was the same, which could have led to huge rifts in any church at its worst, but they both seemed to respect each other and even when they disagreed, continued to work together and consider each other friends. If my Dad liked someone then they were okay in my book. I've always respected my father's insight into people's natures. Pastor Miller passed the father test, so it was another affirmation of who Pastor Miller was as a person, as if being God-like wasn't enough.

Pastor Miller was definitely an EUB pastor and maintained his dedication to the EUB even after we merged, liking many of the EUB rituals more than the newer Methodist versions. I have to admit, I still prefer the old EUB hymnbook over any United Methodist hymnbook I've ever used. This didn't mean that he cast aspersions on The United Methodist Church. He did not, nor did I ever heard him utter one word against the merger.


As the years have gone by and I think of Pastor Miller, I regret not having had the privilege of
knowing him in my adult life. I learned so much from him in my youth, from what he taught and the way he lived his life, and can only image what I could have learned from him in my adult life. He was an interesting man who grew up a twin, was a gunner in the Pacific during WWII, and then became a pastor. I would have loved to sit and play cards with him, like my father and other men in the church used to do, while exploring his past with him. He and his wife, Jean, who I also remember fondly, had three children whom they adopted. Mary and Kathy were twins, and John was the oldest. Of that family, only Kathy survives, and I know she misses her father, mother, brother and sister very much. I have no doubt that they are very proud of Kathy, pleased with what she does and who she has become, and are watching over her and her son very protectively.

THE BRIDGE BUILDER
An old man, going a lone highway,
Came at the evening cold and gray,
To a chasm, vast and deep and wide,
Through which was flowing a sullen tide.
The old man crossed in the twilight dim-
That sullen stream had no fears for him;
But he turned, when he reached the other side,
And built a bridge to span the tide.
"Old man," said a fellow pilgrim near,
"You are wasting strength in building here.
Your journey will end with the ending day;
You never again must pass this way.
You have crossed the chasm, deep and wide,
Why build you the bridge at the eventide?"
The builder lifted his old gray head.
"Good friend, in the path I have come," he said,
"There followeth after me today
A youth whose feet must pass this way.
This chasm that has been naught to me
To that fair-haired youth may a pitfall be.
He, too, must cross in the twilight dim;
Good friend, I am building the bridge for him."
-Will Allen Dromgoole
Lynn, this is a beautifully written piece. You and I have the same memories of Pastor Miller and I am very happy and proud to say that he officiated my wedding. Although he was not in the area anymore, my family kept in touch with him and he was so pleased that I had asked him after all those years. And as you did, I can remember that day when that church came down also...it's funny how when I read this all those memories came back! Thanks for the trip down memory lane....Bonnie Strauss Donmoyer
ReplyDelete