Country music draws worshippers to St. Augustine, Danville

Danville youth perform a Christmas pageant during the December 4 gospel hour at St. Augustine’s Anglican Church. Photo: Linda Hoy
Danville youth perform a Christmas pageant during the December 4 gospel hour at St. Augustine’s Anglican Church. Photo: Linda Hoy
By André Forget
Published January 27, 2017

On an average Sunday, attendance at St. Augustine’s Anglican Church in the small town of Danville, in Quebec’s Eastern Townships, will barely crack double digits.

But when, four times a year, the regular service is replaced by a gospel hour, it’s a different story. The most recent one, held at the beginning of December, brought around 100 people to church.

“The gospel hour, I do my very best to make it personal, and to make it that God isn’t something you read about in the Bible-he’s at work today,” says Mastine, a lay reader for the deanery of St. Francis, who usually leads services in Danville.

Marilyn Mastine believes the gospel hour provides a more "comfortable" form of worship for many members of her community. Photo: André Forget
Marilyn Mastine believes the gospel hour provides a more “comfortable” form of worship for many members of her community. Photo: André Forget

Mastine believes that major cultural changes that have occurred in Canadian society over the past two generations have left many feeling that traditional Anglican services are overly formal and hierarchical.

“We translate the Bible into different languages to make it comfortable for people,” she says, “so we should do the same with other aspects of the service.”

While Anglicans at the nearby university town of Lennoxville have an Evensong service that draws people looking to connect with a particular tradition of Anglican worship, Mastine’s community worships in a different idiom.

“Here, we grew up with country music. We didn’t grow up with an organ,” she says. “We do things that are easier to sing…my goal is to make church comfortable for people.”

Mastine has compiled a booklet of songs her community is familiar with, many of which would likely be recognized with a smile by rural Anglicans across the country, such as “Wings of the Dove” and “A Closer Walk With You.”

But the gospel hour is not simply an opportunity to sing. Mastine also delivers a message-though it, too, is designed to meet people where they are.

“It’s a testimonial,” she says. “It’s about God at work in people’s lives; he’s still alive and working and attainable.”

Author

  • André Forget

    André Forget was a staff writer for the Anglican Journal from 2014 to 2017.

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