Monday, May 03, 2021

The Passing of the Lifesaver

This post started as one thing and morphed into another.
Please excuse the resultant, disjointed excursion into memory.

I found this graphic on FB; it is something else that, once again, takes me back to my childhood church days.


I never received lifesavers in my stocking, so I guess my childhood wasn't awesome. In fairness, it would have been hard to get them into my Christmas stocking for I didn't get a Christmas stocking. Later, in married life with Sue, the stuffed stocking did become part of my Christmas experience.

Back to the lifesavers: Mom would pop out one for me in church on Sunday mornings. I do mean pop; she would slide her thumbnail under one to lift it and make it easy for me to take.  I expect this occurred subsequent to the march-around [Jericho] offering and before the sermon. I liked the Wild Cherry best or Five Flavors if I could nab the red one, but I think I can remember mint and butterscotch too. Anything was fine, but some were finer than others.

This would have been once I graduated from Junior church at the age of 8 to be part of the adult service. I was not a squirmer, and even at that young age, I could listen to and understand the grown-ups sermons. So, I would have been fine without the sugary sop, but it was something that I did look forward to.

Speaking of sermons, I remember one illustrated sermon by Pastor Argue. The title was something like, Why Not, You've Got it Made. As memory serves, he would pull out props to make his point. I think one was probably a new car flyer. But also, if memory serves, one was a bottle of booze.

Now, this was a non-drinking, holiness type of church. My mother later told me that some folk were rather affronted by the presence of the bottle, which I expect was empty. He didn't leave it out long, quickly putting it away saying something like it was too odious (my word) to leave on display. That's the only sermon that I remember from those days, or any days really, although I do recall another when the same pastor visited our church in Toronto, perhaps 10 years later. He preached from Psalm 84:6: Who passing through the valley of Baca make it a well; the rain also filleth the pools. 

I recall that one because our church was going through troubled times, and he brought an appropriate message about digging deep in the faith in difficult times. How interesting that the only two actual sermons that  I seem to recall in my whole life were by the same preacher.

As my mind continues to wander disjointedly, I now I remember another pleasant passing of candy  related to our offering march that sometimes occurred. A man by the name of Danny Pazutto would, on occasion, offer me a treat when I marched by him as he sat adjacent to the centre aisle. 

Pazutto was a taxi driver and once drove us to our destination for a holiday week, so I had had a little extended contact with him. I was a nice boy, and he probably took to me. Who knows? He may have even felt sorry for me because we did not exactly live in the lap of luxury. 

Now another memory surfaces that involves Mr Pazutto.

One night he drove my parents and me to a little church on the Indian* reserve. Danny played the accordion, and my dad delivered the message, or started to. I can't remember if my mother did anything in particular although she sometimes tried to sing** a bit or even play the piano. While my dad was still in the middle of his sermon, a lady had a fit, and the evening was brought to a premature end. We piled back into My Pazutto's taxi cab and drove home.

I think that will probably be a wrap on my church recollections from those early days, but who knows for sure.

* In those times, we used the word, Indian, to refer to native or indigenous peoples.

** When we were in our little church, Mom sang one or two solos. I remember her voice breaking once, which embarrassed her. I think it was Stranger of Galilee. I once sang a solo at our little young people's meeting: When the Roll is Called Up Yonder. As an adult, I can appreciate how awful it was, especially unpractised and in any random key. They certainly didn't ask me again and were likely wishing that I would be called to yonder long before the trumpet of the Lord might sound..




 


20 comments:

Vicki Lane said...

I really enjoyed this little wander through your memories, inspired by the Lifesavers. Lifesavers were a constant in my childhood--Cherry, Pineapple, and Butterscotch were my favorites.

Patio Postcards said...

Sometimes wandering along with someone's memories jump starts your own memories. I remember Life Savers in my Mom's purse, the butter rum flavour usually. I wonder if any of Mr Pazutto's children/grandchildren read your blog - now wouldn't that be fun.

Barbara Rogers said...

Great church memories! I don't remember anything said in church, which was just readings rather than sermons in our church. But yes yes yes to the lifesavers! Cherry, butterscotch and those white peppermint or spearmint ones too. Thanks for shaaring your memories of childhood.

PipeTobacco said...

Life Savers! I liked all of them..... but lime and pineapple were my favorites!!! Sadly, they reconfigured the five flavor variety perhaps a dozen years ago and replaced delicious lime with wretched green apple! Actually, green apple is “ok” (barely), but it is such a lesser delight than was lime! :)

It is kind of interesting to me that I never took a taxi ride (or flew on a plane) until I was in graduate school.

PipeTobacco

MARY G said...

Oh, butterscotch Lifesavers. My childhood! My father always carried them. And I recall a pastor producing a head of corn during a sermon, topic now escapes me but there are a lot it could have been used to illustrate. I mean 'Indian' corn, our corn, not any grain. I am not sure pastor did though.
Yeah, childhood church memories. Not just my childhood. I recall watching my daughter and her best friend, age four, standing at the altar for their blessing before being marched out to Sunday School during the sermon. The two little, um, imps were kicking each other where the minister could not see them but the whole congregation could. Sigh.

Jenn Jilks said...

Butterscotch for me!
Fascinating memories. It's peculiar what pops into one's mind.
We used to drive to Lawrence Park United Church. My aunt started the choir, and mom and dad sang in it. We didn't really fit in, as it's a tony area. We were the poor relations!

gigi-hawaii said...

Oh my, you certainly have different memories of church from mine. I was raised a Roman Catholic with pomp and circumstance. Thanks for the chuckle.

Margaret said...

I remember the people from church and some of the words from the prayer book, but not many of the songs or sermons. And I didn't get any candy! I never received one of those Lifesaver books either, but my girls did (from my sister-in-law); unfortunately, they didn't like lifesavers, so I had to re-gift them.

Mage said...

You can wander around in your memories any old time. They are just as good as the red ones...George's favorite too.

Mara said...

Once the sermons started we would get a peppermint each. Nail under the mint and take it out easily. It must run in mothers' veins to do it like that.

DJan said...

Oh, this was really fun, wandering around in your old memories of church. My parents didn't attend church at all, so my first trip into a church was on my own, as a teenager. I was smitten by the pomp of the Episcopal Church. I like most Lifesaver flavors, especially butterscotch.

Red said...

Now that you remind me. I can't remember one thing from all the sermons I sat through. ...and I sat through a lot of sermons.

Marcia said...

What a memory jolt seeing that sign was for you. I sure don't remember many sermons.and most of them were given by my dad. No candies either.

Ed said...

Not sure when the last time was that I had a Lifesaver candy. I'm guessing 40+ years. My mom favored Jolly Ranchers which were probably the same thing but lasted a lot longer. I haven't had one of those though in probably 20+ years.

The Furry Gnome said...

I guess I'm awesome then, though they didn't fit in my stocking!

Joanne Noragon said...

I remember Life Savers; my grandmother dispensed hundreds of them. Hers were of the pepsid variety, for "digestion".

Marie Smith said...

Those Life Savers were a favourite at our house for sure.

You have quite a memory to remember any sermons. I only remember attending church.

PipeTobacco said...

Gigi-Hawaii..... I am asking out of curiosity..... because I too was raised in the Catholic Church.... but I am not sure what you are meaning by pomp and circumstance in your comment.

PipeTobacco

Rita said...

Cherry or any of the minty ones were my favorte Lifesavers.

I just remember that going through confirmation classes the pastor's daughter was the wildest of us all. I didn't like to sit in church so I volunteered to work in the nursery or with the younger kids. They piped in the sermon but we turned it down low--LOL! I had to spend plenty of time upstiars listening to the sermons, too, in order to be confirmed. (Methodist)

We didn't have stockings at Christmas when I was growing up, either! So, I made sure my son had a stocking Christmas morning. ;)

William Kendall said...

I remember peppermints at the start of a sermon.

I've never been fond of life savers.