Random Post: This Little Light Of Mine

Protection

The doorbell jingles as two men in dark suits briskly enter the small restaurant. Wasting no time, they head right for the counter. Mr. Campello, the proprietor, tries to ignore the icicles forming in his gut and greets them with a forced smile.

“Tony, Jimmy, what can I do for you today?”

“We’re just out visiting some of our folks in the neighborhood,” says Jimmy easily. “Just seeing how folks are doing.”

“We’re fine here, fellas. Everybody is getting by.”

“That’s good to know” answers Jimmy. “Because accidents can happen so easily in places like this. You know what I mean?”

“What?”

“You know how this works,” says Tony. “You just make a ‘donation’ of ten percent and it saves a lot of unpleasantness. If you don’t contribute then the Boss sees to it that things break and your people run into trouble. It will cost you a whole lot more than a measly ten.”

“I already give what I can. Business hasn’t been great….”

“It’s either ten percent up front or you’ll find that things are going to get ugly in mysterious ways. We’ll be seeing you soon.”

The doorbell jingles again as the two make their way outside.

“Who were those guys?” asks a customer  seated at the lunch counter. “Mafioso types?”

“Worse,” groans Mr. Campello holding his face in his hands “deacons from my church. The mob hasn’t got anything on the protection racket that the Baptists have going. God is their Enforcer.”


Posted by Darrell

22 comments...What do you think?

  1. Posted by Jordan M. Poss 5th March, 2010 at 11:44 am

    Hilarious. Genius worthy of Mr. Swift.

  2. Posted by J Leslie 5th March, 2010 at 12:06 pm

    If God be for us…

    Its good to be in the “family” of God.

  3. Posted by Mark Thomas 5th March, 2010 at 1:00 pm

    An instant classic. You should publish a book.

  4. Posted by Amanda 5th March, 2010 at 1:11 pm

    I’m with J Leslie; that gives a whole other meaning to being a member of the “family” of God, and the metaphor can (accurately) be extended a bit further, too…

  5. Posted by Richard Sullivan 5th March, 2010 at 2:25 pm

    I love it! A lot of fundy churches have a “member in good standing” clause in their church constitutions. Basically, you can’t hold an office or be in any leadership positions if you don’t tithe. Of course, it’s always from the gross and not the net income.

  6. Posted by Sister Marie 5th March, 2010 at 3:08 pm

    Writing here as one who has always had questions about this, how can “they” tell if you’re tithing from the net or the gross? And how private is the information? In other words, how much exposure does the list get?

  7. Posted by PJ 5th March, 2010 at 3:15 pm

    This is awesome!! Very great portrayal.

  8. Posted by Stan 5th March, 2010 at 3:32 pm

    Would Tony and Jimmy be the Malachi brothers?

    Awesome post…this may end up being your best one of 2010.

  9. Posted by Darrell 5th March, 2010 at 3:44 pm

    Malachi Brothers….I like it!

  10. Posted by JimE 5th March, 2010 at 3:48 pm

    LOL, well done.

  11. Posted by Stan 5th March, 2010 at 3:54 pm

    The story could go even further. Mr. Campello could try to reason with them by saying he fed several homeless people in his restaurant that day. Or that he provided the food for the city mission shelter that week. That’s all well and good they would say, but you know the rules, your first priority is cash and it must be put into the storehouse. And even if Mr. Campello did hand over the money, but they would still want offerings and faith promise on top the 10 percent.

  12. Posted by J Leslie 5th March, 2010 at 6:27 pm

    Hmmm…that explains the horse-head I found in my bed the last time I forgot to tithe.

  13. Posted by Thomas 5th March, 2010 at 6:48 pm

    I’d thought that the ten percent tithe was a spook story told to atheists to demonstrate how crazy fundies were, until my job forced me to spend three weeks in a fundie church. They actually had forms on the bulletin board that new members were required to sign giving the church access to their bank accounts and tax records.

    Blows my fucking mind.

  14. Posted by Nathan 5th March, 2010 at 8:20 pm

    Nice nice nice. The picture adds a lot of effect!
    Stan’s addition is quite swell too!

    @Thomas. Wow…Never heard of that. You would think the new members would, ya know, NOT go there if they were required to hand over their bank accounts or tax records. (Who in their right mind would!?)

  15. Posted by Mark Thomas 5th March, 2010 at 10:03 pm

    I’ve seriously never heard of something quite as whacked as a church that requires access to your bank account. Maybe my fundy creds aren’t what I thought they were…

  16. Posted by Stephen Bean 5th March, 2010 at 11:01 pm

    I’ve never heard of access to bank accounts either, and my fundy creds were quite solid.

  17. Posted by Ron Bean 6th March, 2010 at 9:07 am

    I think Thomas is exaggerating. And I also think that vulgarity is the vocabulary of the unintelligent and diminishes one’s credibility.

  18. Posted by Camille 6th March, 2010 at 6:29 pm

    I think the vocabulary actually fits in this case. The other option is to get out the whips and start doing the Jesus-thing in the courtyard.

    My church growing up wouldn’t let you “serve” if you didn’t tithe. I heard about it as a Junior-Higher and was appalled. I still am.

    I was always a bad ass.

  19. Posted by Josh 7th March, 2010 at 12:22 am

    I’d give them the bank account number for the checking account in which I only deposit 1/4th of my paycheck (it’s not terribly large anyway, but that’s not the point). Of course, I have been known to be a sneaky little [insert choice word here]. Nah, forget that, you know I’m lying. If they asked for that info, I’d run like hades – after shaking the dust off my proverbial sandals!

  20. Posted by charlene 10th March, 2010 at 11:03 am

    What’s sad about this story is that I went to an IFB church, where the people who recorded the tithe would gossip about who gave and who didn’t. It was a really small church so every one knew everything.

  21. Posted by Michelle 11th March, 2010 at 9:54 am

    LOVE it!

  22. Posted by Gr0g 11th March, 2010 at 4:16 pm

    Love the site, Darrell. IFB bible college student that I am, I figured this ‘protection’ was referring to the hedge about Job.
    e.g.,
    “God allus protects them what submit to Preacher’s authority and follow the rules. When you don’t, you step out of the Hedge, and a bus runs you over.”

    @Ron Bean- I’m stealing your quote.

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