i grew up going to church every sunday, pretty much out of the womb. that's not different from the experience of a lot of people, but not only was i in church every sunday, i watched church on tv every sunday before we actually left to go sit in church for a couple or three hours.
just as well i guess, until i was about seven, we went to a church that was spanish-speaking and my spanish wasn't as awesome then as it is now, so i probably got more out of watching church on tv in english than i did actually being there and listening to it in spanish. so in the story here, i was four and my parents, my mom specifically, were huge fans of a guy named jimmy swaggart. at the time, the guy was the biggest preacher going, no doubt a household name all over the country and likely the world, i don't really remember mostly on account of i was four. my mom even had designs on sending me to JSBC, jimmy swaggart bible college in shreveport, la. for real. it was nuts.
so anyways, it's some sunday morning and we're about to go to church. my parents had gotten me ready first and sat me on the couch to watch jimmy swaggart while they got dressed for church themselves. so i'm watching, mesmerized, cause the guy was absolutely captivating and he starts talking about how people better come to Jesus cause we're all sinners and there's room at the cross and all kinda stuff like that and somewhere in my four-year-old brain i get to thinking "this swaggart clown is right, i better come to Jesus." so he starts to say the sinner's prayer and i figure i better say it too if i want to go to heaven and stuff, so i get down on my knees in front of the tv and repeated the sinner's prayer after jimmy swaggart. i didn't have a choice, i was a sinner, a dirty, filthy, four-year-old sinner.
looking back on the whole thing is funny, because i'm not at all diminishing what happened, the theological nuts and bolts or a relationship with Jesus in any way, that'd sort of be silly given that i've stuck with the whole deal since then. in fact, i used the story for my application essay to wheaton and i'm pretty sure it put me over the top and cinched my spot. but if you know anything about the story of jimmy swaggart's life and ministry after that point, you know that he ended up being disgraced as a hypocrite who enjoyed the company of women who had sex for money, a pretty significant occupational hazard when you're trying to lead people in the paths of righteousness, i'd say.
it'd be a hell of an excuse to give up on the whole thing, but that's another entry entirely.
