Quite an Evening

I preach occasionally at The Village Church, a wonderful post-evangelical congregation in Atlanta. My friend Ray Waters is the pastor. Ray and I have similar interests and backgrounds. We both worked as radio station announcers back in the day, and we sang and maintain a love for Southern Gospel music. Get us into a conversation about The Stamps, the Oak Ridge Boys during their Southern Gospel days, or any iteration of the Imperials, and we will talk until the cows come home.

I spoke at The Village Church earlier this month. When I got into town Ray said, “Ernie Haase and Signature Sound are in Gainesville tomorrow night, doing their Christmas show at a Baptist Church. Interested?”

When it comes to traditional Southern Gospel, they are one of my favorite groups. Since it was their Christmas show, I knew they’d be singing What Child Is This, so I figured, “I’m in.” Then it occurred to me, I’d be at a Southern Baptist Church in Gainesville, Georgia, not exactly the most welcoming environment for a transgender woman.

Unless people know of my circumstances before we meet, around 99.9 percent of the time I am identified by others as female. I am very rarely misgendered. But about nine million people have seen one of my TED Talks. I’ve been on Good Morning America, NBC, CBS and a host of other media likely viewed by Southern Baptists. I thought, “What if I am recognized?

Ray was good with whatever I decided. He understood the problem. I decided to go. We got to the church just as the concert was beginning and sat safely toward the back. I had to use the restroom as soon as I got there, which was a little surreal – using a women’s restroom at a Southern Baptist church in Georgia. Not something I do every day.

The vast majority of the people were very white and very old. Come to think of it, I am very white and very old. It’s been ten years and three months since I was in an evangelical church. The last one was a megachurch and I was preaching.

It felt unsettling to be in a place in which, had they known who I was, I most certainly would have been asked to leave. It felt especially ironic to know that all of that would likely happen even though I am still a Christian and still a pastor.

As it turned out, no one knew who I was, and all was well. As I expected, the concert was excellent. I thoroughly enjoyed myself and yes, they did sing What Child Is This. I waited around afterwards as people quickly filed out. Not many CDs were being sold. Turns out even old people download their music nowadays.

Ray knows Ernie Haase, so I waited until they had a chance to talk. I took a picture of Ray, his wife and mother-in-law standing with Ernie. He wanted me to join them, but that didn’t feel right. We went to Cracker Barrel afterwards, because, well, we had just attended a Southern Gospel concert, and that’s where you go to eat after a Southern Gospel concert.

Evangelicalism is very removed from my current existence. It has been a long time since I’ve been in a big traditional Southern Baptist church building with very Southern Baptist people. I grew up on Southern Gospel music. I started my own group when I was 17. I joined another at 18, and started yet another at 21. We made five albums and managed to earn a living singing for the better part of a decade.

I do not read music well, but I do hear parts. I did vocal arrangements for all of the bands of which I was a part. I could have sung pretty much every part at the concert that night, though the tenor and bass lines might have been a stretch every now and again. I would love to sing that kind of music again, but since pretty much everyone singing it is a fundamentalist Christian, I’m thinking my chances are pretty slim.

When I transitioned I lost a lot. At the concert I was reminded I have lost the ability to feel comfortable in a church building where I once would have been very much at home. I would not be allowed through the door of any of the churches I attended as a child, or those I served before my transition.

Sometimes I wonder why I keep writing about this stuff. Maybe I’m gonna be working through these losses until the cows come home.

And there it is. I managed to work in the line, “until the cows come home” twice in a single post. I mean, I spent a good bit of my growing up years in the rural south. Those metaphors stay with you.

And so it goes.

8 thoughts on “Quite an Evening

  1. Keep writing Paula. There is healing in words, releasing words to move out from you so that the thoughts don’t contain, condemn or capture your heart, your love for humanity and the Christ in us all.

    My life and its paths and hills and valleys arr released in my journaling and quite sits. May the mysticisme that is ours bring you much love and joy this holiday season. Peace and all good Tim Biscaye 🙏🏾✨️

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  2. As one who lives a double life, and has to remember which restroom to use where, I understand. I have reasons for not making the final break with my conservative Stone-Campbell heritage and my family, but sometimes I wonder if I’m tearing myself apart. But for now, I feel like that’s how it needs to be, until the cows come home.

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  3. I am maddened and saddened that you will be welcomed in heaven, but are not so welcome in some churches….. I look forward to meeting you there.

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  4. Southern Gospel is in our roots. There were many concerts at our alma mater and in Grayson back then. We often went to Ashland to see various groups. I have a signed copy of an Oak Ridge album when Noel sang bass for them. I still love listening to these groups. Sue loves the Gaither Vocal band, though she attended many of this concerts in the 60’s and 70’s as well.

    Thanks for a reminder of the power of song in our lives.

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  5. Paula, having been grounded in the SBC for my first 12 years, the UMC for 42 years before I became a UCC Pastor, I am often chagrined that I too, would not be welcomed into the church of my spiritual formation. I am also chagrined it has cost me lots of my relatives. Being a southerner by birth and growing up on Southern Gospel music (lots of my family sang in local quartets) I know how important those connections were and some, still are. It’s been 20 years since I’ve been to a Southern Gospel fest (impromptu before my 97 y.o. grandfather’s funeral–all the old songs came rushing in. My then- atheist former daughter-in-law told me she felt like THAT was church–and so it was.

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