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The Rural Voice, 1992-03, Page 23community and the school is the heart. The general store and black- smith shops were the social centres," said John Brown who, for 75 years, has clung to his small Presbyterian church at the tiny riverbank hamlet of Motherwell in Perth County. He has performed practically every duty in the church except to preach. He wit- nessed the congregation divide — in 1925 when the United Church was formed — and then come back to- gether years later, just to be able to financially support a building in which to meet. The church minutes were like the law of the community, recalled John, who now rents out his 350 acres on a share crop basis. For example, "The church said you weren't supposed to race your horses to see who had the best horse." And there were many other rules to obey in order to keep an upstanding position in the church and thereby the community. Banishment from the church was something to be feared, and confessing of sins was ex- pected lest they found you out. A lot of people walked to church in those days, so there was a need to have one close by, John continued. "It was where you went to meet your neighbours, your friends and your relatives." Not surprisingly, it was often the place a young man could meet his future wife. "Usually, you married the girl next door or from just across the river," said John, who has remain- ed a bachelor all his life. Because they were the first public buildings people were willing to pay for after their own homes were erect- ed, churches served as community centres. It was a place for comrade- ship at church socials, stimulation at debating parties or just plain fun watching some of the "outstanding entertainment of the day" who often turned out to be next-door neighbours or their children. Most importantly, it was a place to be with God and gather strength for the tasks in the week ahead. Sports were not as popular on Sundays then as they are now, John commented. The availability of day- long sports programming on televi- sion, combined with better transporta- tion to take part in sporting events, has changed that aspect. Automobiles have also made it possible for people to attend church outside their community. This has al- lowed the combining of churches, as the expanse of empty rows between the minister standing at the front and the congregation seated at the back of many church auditoriums has widen- ed. John is the only one of his seven brothers and sisters still attending the church just three miles from the home farm he operates alone. "Rural kids are all trained to leave the farm now," said John, and leaving rural churches behind is a by-product of this trend. With the emergence of general farm organizations and commodity photo by Daniel Holm groups to deal with volatile farm is- sues, the church has become increas- ingly restricted to spiritual matters. And while young people may still return there to get married, they more often than not find their mates some- . where other than at church. Pillars of the community are now serving as presidents and directors on corn, dairy, wheat or hog boards or the Ontario Federation of Agriculture and Christian Farmers' Federation. "There are many more group meetings for farmers to go to now," said Neil Lackey, minister at the United Church in Milverton, adding that farmers just might be tired of seeing one another again by the time Sunday rolls around. There is cer- tainly less need for the hour-long summit meeting on the church steps following the service. Churches are realizing they must be more assertive if they arc to take part in the make -over of rural On- tario. Both the Catholic and United Churches have formed organizations to release statements on what direc- tion they feel agriculture should take in southwestern Ontario; the former through the Catholic Rural Life Con- ference (CRLC) formed in 1981 and the latter through the Rural Life Com- mittee formed in 1984. At the risk of mixing religion with politics, they have issued statements supporting marketing boards, preservation of farmland and the family farm. "To be human is to be political in some way," said Rev. Lackey who, in 1987, arranged meetings through the church for farmers to deal with the economic crisis in agriculture. This led to a series of "concession meet- ings" held in the kitchens of farm- houses in the area surrounding Mil- verton, a community of 1,500 where Rev. Lackey has been pastor since 1983. More recently, the church has been involved with community revi- talization after the closing of a furni- ture plant — the village's largest em- ployer and source of off -farm income for many local families. "The church is [moving] from the centre to where the people are," re- marked Rev. Lackey. He thinks this trend might help solve the tremendous financial burden felt by shrinking congregations strug- gling to maintain huge church struc- tures. People will meet in small groups in their homes, bringing the church full circle to how worship was conducted in pioneer communities before they could afford a church. These days, suggested Rev. Lac- key, "there is not the same commit- ment to the church," because it is not a convenient thing to do. Rural com- munities were built on a "we society" but that has changed to a "me socie- ty." Farmers have become more in- dependent and at the same time more MARCH 1992 19