Last night H and I watched a 1967 documentary about a snake handling
church. It was called "The Holy Ghost People," and apparently there is going
to be a movie of the same title coming out in 2013 sometime. I do not
know how much it will have in common with the documentary, which was
weird. It was partly weird because it was very low budget with extremely
poor quality cameras and cinematography, but that somehow lent an
eeriness to the filming that was an atmosphere all of it's own. It was
black and white and stilted and occasionally shaky. There was very
little commentary. A brief introduction as to what snake handling
churches even are was unemotionally narrated, while filmers in a car "snaked" through a small
town in the Appalachian mountains, on the way to the destined church
service. It was a small country church with about thirty people, maybe
less. Several old folks, several babies, there was quite a mix. There
were a few brief interviews and then the service got started.
It was the strangest blend of the familiar and the bizarre. The
country church, people engrossed in worship, the group energy (hysteria?)
that builds, "manifestations of the spirit", the peculiar little cliches
and catch phrases of charismatically spun fundamentalism-- these are
elements I've encountered in various combinations before. **spoilers** All together
in one room it seemed a bit much, and yet I sympathized somehow with
their purpose, feeling, and fervor. But I would not have felt at ease
there at all. When they started tossing snakes around as part of their
worship, it was as if the world tilted slightly, that blend of the
familiar and the bizarre I mentioned above. Still I found myself devoutly
hoping no one would be bitten. And someone was, the preacher himself, quite
spectacularly.
He was swinging a rattlesnake around saying that even if it bit him,
the Word of God still stands, even if he died (I think he said that, am
I embellishing now?) the Word of God would still stand. It bit him. On
the hand, quite suddenly and with a vicious hiss. He dropped it and his
hand was bleeding. Someone tried to clean up some of the blood that
spilled, but he said something to the effect of, "Leave that blood on
the floor sister, that's all right." He was obviously shaken and in
pain, but he bravely continued to address his congregation, swaying a
little. He said sometimes we ask ourselves why these things have to
happen, and that he just didn't know. He didn't know why these things
happened. There seems more
than a bit of ludicrousness in this assertion of ignorance under the
circumstances, but that was completely overshadowed by the pathos of a
man who thought to be following God beyond common sense, left alone
with the natural results of his folly.
It happens.
He kept talking, they kept praying, his hand kept swelling, the movie ended.
It was one of those moments that I think you don't forget, even if seen second hand. I wonder about the children that were there then, what they are like now, what they think of those things, how they have made sense of their experiences. A follow up on all that would be an interesting study.