When I was in high school I went to a small church tucked inside the confines of a tiny Indiana village. I say village because it was too small to warrant a town; it had only three streets.
General store next door |
I went there by invitation from a friend. I knew no one on the first Sunday that I joined them, but by the time I moved to Purdue I knew nearly everyone. I'm not saying that to brag; there were maybe 20 people in the congregation. They taught me not only the words to, but to believe the message in, Because He Lives.
Alabama sings Because He Lives
Though I haven't been to that church in more than fifteen years, there is one woman I remember well.
Her name was Kitty.
Kitty would always come in on two wheels on Sunday morning, barely beating the clock that hung at the back of the church. She played the organ beautifully and took full advantage of the acoustics in the tiny rural church. She sang loud as she played, and rarely seemed to look at any kind of music book in front of her. When the service was over, Kitty seemed to leave as quickly as she'd arrived.
Often we would have "special music" by Kitty. The minister would actually say it that way:
"This morning we'll now have special music from Kitty."
Kitty didn't need a microphone. She was quite small but her voice was large. And high pitched, with a hint of scratch in it? Is scratch a musical term? It is hard for me to explain in writing, but some how Kitty's singing actually reminded me of a cat.
Kitty's music was special, indeed.
I admired Kitty for standing in front of a group and belting out her love for Jesus. It was true. And real. And quite loud.
I was reading the paper last week and saw a face I hadn't seen in years.
In the obituary section was Kitty.
I read about her life and dedication to her family, community and church. She was an organist at church for 47 years, but not the one I went to. She was an organist at the tiny church I write about for 20 years. Finally, I understood why she'd rush into our church service then leave so quickly; the woman served in many capacities on Sunday morning. She also created and directed a community choir. She was in charge of Good Friday services. Kitty was a faithful servant through music.
I sat back in my chair after reading about her life, and thought about my short association with her.
I felt shame that I giggled at Kitty's special music. Because Kitty's special music was how she used her God given talents to to serve and love the Lord. Her special music was how she shared her gift. Who was I, at 16 and barely able to tap out Mary Had a Little Lamb on a keyboard, to smirk each time she sang? If I could go back in time, I would rewind seventeen years and stop Kitty after church to thank her for her special music.
I learned from Kitty last week, by reading her obituary.
God gives us certain talents, gifts. Things we can do, create,
extend or give away to others that no one
else can. Edwin Elliot once said, “By being yourself, you put something
wonderful in the world that was not there before.” I believe that very much. There will never again be music in that church like Kitty's.
Use up those talents and gifts. Every single one of them. Wring them out and get every last drop. Find
those things that make you uniquely you and extend them to the best of your
ability. Worry not what others may think of your volume or boldness or the ways
in which you give. Sing it, live it and scream it to the rafters.
I've heard that the meaning of life is to find your gift, and the purpose of life is to give it away.
Kitty did, every Sunday.