ECHURCH-USA Archives

The Electronic Church

ECHURCH-USA@LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Vinny Samarco <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Echurch-USA The Electronic Church <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 7 Jul 2005 22:03:29 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (371 lines)
Hi Phil,
Jamie Buckingham wrote a whole book of those kind of essays called, " The
truth will set you free, but first it will make you miserable.  That is
where that story came from.
It was also his last book before he went to be with the Lord.
Vinny
----- Original Message -----
From: "Phil Scovell" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2005 7:24 PM
Subject: Fw: My Washing Machine has a Demon


> A friend recently emailed this to me.  I've read things like it before but
> this one is pretty good.
>
> Phil.
>
> > My Washing Machine Has a Demon
> > by Jamie Buckingham
> > After years of theological debate, I finally discerned why our
> > thirteen-year-old Ripmore washing machine has been losing socks. It's
> > possessed. I mean,
> > possessed as in demons. In short, I am convinced we have a sock-gobbling
> > demon in our washing machine.
> > Now every kingdom person knows that mere recognition of the fact that
you
> > have a demon is ninety percent of the deliverance process. Most folks
> would
> > rather
> > have cancer than have a demon. My Ripmore has that, too, but it's the
> > sock-gobbler that really got my attention. My wife disagrees. She comes
> from
> > the
> > theological school that says Christians (or washing machines owned by
> > Christians) can't have demons. I, on the other hand, believe a washing
> > machine can
> > have anything it wants to have.
> > "If there really is a sock-gobbler," Jackie asked, "why does he eat only
> one
> > sock out of a pair? If one sock fills him, why doesn't he eat the spare
> sock
> > his next meal?"
> > I had no answer. I only knew he was there. To prove it I went up to my
> > dresser, opened my sock drawer and pulled out the seventeen unmatched
> socks
> > that
> > I've been saving-widowed victims of the sock-gobbler. And that's just
> > today's count. Each month or so I take a census. Like our church in
> Florida,
> > the
> > widows seem to be increasing in number. In fact, looking out over our
> > congregation Sunday after Sunday, it seems we're producing more widows
> than
> > new babies,
> > but maybe that's because the new babies are always in the nursery and
> widows
> > seem to bunch together, like raisins stuck in the bottom of the box or
> socks
> > in the back of my sock drawer. That's the reason I hate to throw away
the
> > singles. Every time I start to do it I think, "Now if you were left
> without
> > a
> > mate, would you want someone to throw you away?" And I think about the
> > running dialogue on worthlessness I used to have with Jackie during her
> > monthly
> > three-day, nobody-loves-me period.
> > "The only reason anyone tolerates me is because I'm married to you. If
you
> > were to drop dead-people would forget I even exist."
> > I kept reminding her I planned to live to be 100. Facts, however, never
> faze
> > a woman during her monthly three-day, nobody-loves-me period. And that's
> the
> > reason  I can't ever bring myself to throw away any of those widowed
socks
> > which keep increasing after every wash. In fact, I've been thinking
> recently
> > of putting my  underwear in the same drawer with the knit shirts I can't
> > wear any more since our Ripmore shrank them all to grandchild size and
> then
> > of
> > setting up an entire  drawer for single socks. I mean, churches used to
> have
> > widows' pews, and we have a singles' group that meets on Tuesday nights,
> so
> > why not a separate drawer  for my recently bereaved socks?
> > The real reason I keep my unmatched singled, however, is that I keep
> hoping
> > their mates will somehow reappear. It never happen. each month or so I
> take
> > them  out of the drawer and sadly line them up across the bed, looking
> > vainly to see if I can match any of them with each other. I never can.
> > Expensive
> > racquetball socks, formal blacks, blues, greens, grays, fuzzies- all
were
> > favorites, but without mates they're useless.
> > So I gently stuff them into the back of my sock drawer and wonder if I
> > should form a club: Socks Without Partners.
> > At first I thought it was Jackie's careless washing procedures.
> > " The reason my socks don't come out even is you don't put them in
even!"
> I
> > howled when my most expensive and favorite pair of socks become a
single.
> > "Not
> > so,"  she argued. "I gathered them two by two. Believe me, Noah didn't
do
> a
> > more complete job. I took two pairs from your shoes under the bed, a
pair
> of
> > wet ones out of your boots, a stiff pair from the ceiling of the closet
> > where you had kicked them when you came in from racquetball, a mud-caked
> > pair from
> > under the front seat of your pickup, a moldy pair from under the dryer-"
> > A-ha!" I screamed. "I bet the rest of the mates are under the washing
> > machine." However, my search turned up nothing but a bucketful of lint,
> > three green
> > pennies, two rusty washers, a twelve-year-old skate key and a flea
collar
> > from our cat, Mrs. Robinson, who preferred to scratch rather than be in
> > legalistic
> > bondage.
> > "Inside this washer is a little trap door that pulls in one sock from
each
> > pair and holds them captive," I concluded. "Somewhere in this machine is
a
> > secret
> > treasure chest of mismated sock."
> > Several years ago I was greatly embarrassed when I stepped off the plane
> in
> > Washington, D.C., for a book editorial meeting and discovered I was
> wearing
> > one blue sock and one gray one. I explained to my snickering friends
that
> > these were the only ones in my drawer when I got up that morning to
catch
> > the
> > early flight.
> > A week later I received a package in the mail from my friend John
> Sherrill,
> > who had been at the editorial meeting. It contained a little mesh nylon
> bag
> > with a zipper across the top. "Put your socks in this before you put
them
> in
> > the machine," John wrote. "Then the sock-gobbler can't get at them."
> (John,
> > you see, agrees that
> > washing machines can have demons.)
> > But he misjudged. The sock-gobbler not only ate my socks, but it also
ate
> > the bag. "The machine is possessed!" I screamed at Jackie.
> > "Oppressed," she said, trying to straighten out my theology, "not
> possessed.
> > See, your maroon socks always come out perfectly."
> > She's right. I hate the maroon pair. The elastic is stretched out and
they
> > have a big crease across the top, so every time I put them on they rub a
> > blister
> > on the toe next to my big toe. They come out of the washer even when you
> > don't put them in. In fact, I distinctly remember dropping them in the
> trash
> > one
> > night after my wife had gone to bed. The next evening I was in the den
> > watching the news on television when Jackie came out of the utility room
> > with an
> > armload of clothes. I couldn't believe my eyes. On top of the stack were
> > those ugly maroon socks. I knew then I was dealing with something more
> than
> > trap
> > doors. Oppressed, possessed-this was no time to get hung up on
theological
> > semantics. The machine had a demon and needed deliverance.
> > The next morning, after Jackie had gone to a Bible study, I went
upstairs
> > and pulled out my mismatched socks. I laid them on the bed. The only
socks
> > left
> > in my drawer were some black fuzzy ones that had shrunk up until they
> looked
> > like those little things golfers pull over the heads of their clubs, two
> > pairs
> > of racquetball socks with the tops stretched out so they looked like
> > shopping bags and, of course, the maroon pair.
> > I went out the next day and bought ten pairs of new socks, all the same
> size
> > and color. Then I stopped by the church office to see if someone with a
> > deliverance
> > ministry would come out to the house. The church secretary suggested I
> > switch to a Maytag. She grew up in the Church of God and doesn't believe
a
> > washing
> > machine can have a demon either, especially a born-again Ripmore with a
> > sanctified lint-trap. She told me frankly that, if I wanted the demon
out
> > (assuming
> > there could be a demon, of course), I would have to exorcise it myself.
> > I was reminded of the British statesman who, on his deathbed, was
> counseled
> > by his priest to "renounce the devil."
> > "Sir," the dignified old sinner answered, "when you're in my position
you
> > can't afford to agitate anyone."
> > I decided to leave the Ripmore alone-it just might start in on my
> underwear.
> > Since Sears doesn't make the kind I like any more, I can ill afford to
> lose
> > any underwear.
> > Not long ago Ann Landers wrote about sock-gobblers. Nearly 8,000 readers
> > wrote back saying they had the same problems. One fellow from Nyack, New
> > York,
> > wrote that the socks die and are reincarnated as wire coat hangers. If
you
> > don't believe it, just go look in your closet.
> > Another said it had bothered him for years because he was sure his wife
> had
> > a lover with one leg. He finally determined it was UFOs with magnets
that
> > drew
> > his socks into outer space. No one, so far, has been able to disprove
his
> > theory.
> > A woman from Billings, Montana, said she called the repairman and he
found
> > twenty socks wrapped around the motor of her Ripmore-a discovery which
> saved
> > her sanity since she felt for years she had been going slowly nuts.
> > When I got brave enough to expose the sock-gobbler in one of my magazine
> > columns, people from all over the nation were set free. Most of those
who
> > wrote
> > said that they had been in bondage for years to the false theology that
> > washing machines can't have demons. Scores told me that, armed with the
> > truth I
> > had given them, they went boldly into their utility rooms and cast the
> demon
> > out of the machine. Several said they distinctly heard it leave the
> machine
> > and go down the drainpipe.
> > Not all were so spiritual, however. About half a dozen-humanists, no
> > doubt-said it was simply a matter of the socks getting separated and
being
> > swept away
> > in the spin cycle. Two of those, who I assume were Roman Catholics, said
> the
> > missing socks were now abiding in sock purgatory in my backyard septic
> tank.
> > Three others sent me packages of little plastic rings that were made
> > specifically to keep socks from being separated in the washing machine.
> You
> > pull the
> > toes of your socks through the little teeth inside the rings and drop
them
> > into your Ripmore. I tried it. The rings came off and got down inside
the
> > whirling
> > mechanism of my machine. I was upstairs when it happened but heard the
> house
> > beginning to vibrate. By the time I got downstairs to the utility room,
> the
> > washing machine had come off its rubber feet and had clunked its way
over
> to
> > the fiberglass sink on the other side of the room, bashing all the
> plumbing
> > out from under it. There was water everywhere. The washer was making a
> > horrible noise and it smelled like burnt rubber. I was ashamed to tell
the
> > nice
> > Ripmore repairman, who arrived nine days later, what had happened. But I
> did
> > determine that the cure was worse than the disease--which is what I now
> call
> > the sock-gobbling demon since my mother-in-law moved in. She's a
Primitive
> > Baptist who doesn't believe in demons at all. (It's far more
respectable,
> > I've
> > discovered, to have a disease than it is to have a demon.)
> > Of Course, the sock-gobbler hasn't touched the plastic rings. (Maybe it
> was
> > because he couldn't chew them up.)
> > Many sympathetic people, hearing of my need, have written helpful notes
> > advising me how to solve my problem. Some say I should pin my socks
> > together, others
> > say tie them together, and one woman said she always stuffs them into
the
> > pockets of her husband's pants. One woman from Hendersonville, North
> > Carolina,
> > even wrote a poem entitled "Oh, Where, Oh, Where Is the Other Sock?"
> > (Sung--at least every other line or so--to the tune of "Oh, Where, Oh,
> Where
> > Has My
> > Little Dog Gone?")
> > They're under the bed or caught in the casters,
> > Or clinging to the basement rafter.
> > Trapped in the plumbing, stuffed in a shoe;
> > In darkened corners hiding from you.
> > They've gone to the camp, returned alone,
> > Been kicked off by the telephone.
> > An argyle lined a starling's home,
> > A striped sock found its way to Rome.
> > Perhaps there is an "odd sock" elf,
> > Who takes them to some woodsy shelf.
> > But truthfully I know their fate,
> > The dirty ones disintegrate.
> > I'm grateful for all the people who across the years have shown concern
> for
> > me in my affliction. I am now convinced that Paul's mysterious "thorn in
> the
> > flesh" was in actuality a sock-gobbling demon that accompanied him on
all
> > his missionary travels, causing him to be the laughingstock of churches
> > throughout
> > Asia Minor.  It's embarrassing, you know, to show up for a catacomb
> meeting
> > wearing one brown sock and one blue one. And when all your shoes are
open
> > sandals,
> > there's no way to hide the fact that, while your preaching may be
saintly,
> > your washing machine is definitely possessed.
> > It is doubtless for this reason Paul began washing out his socks by
hand.
> > This was especially important after he arrived in Macedonia because the
> > Greeks
> > would never have submitted themselves for deliverance to a man who
> obviously
> > could not exorcise the demons from his own washing machine. (Several
> > renowned
> > theologians interpret Acts 16:13, which in most Bibles reads, "On the
> > Sabbath day we [Paul and Luke] went outside the city gate to the river,
> > where we
> > expected to find a place of prayer, " more accurately to mean "where we
> > expected to find a place to wash our socks.")
> > Recently I've decided to follow Paul's example, washing my socks out by
> hand
> > and hanging them on the shower rod. However, our oldest son, who lives
> with
> > us, wears socks the same size as mine. Each time he wears them they
> > disappear completely. Not just one, but both of them--before they even
get
> > to the machine.
> > Early in the morning he comes in and gets mine off the shower rod,
> stretches
> > out the tops, tears holes in the toes and leaves them on the back porch
> > stuffed
> > into his shoes when he comes in from work.
> > Like the folks in my church in Florida, old socks never die; they just
> fade
> > away.
> >
> >
> >
> > "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then...find the
way."
> > Abraham Lincoln
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > No virus found in this incoming message.
> > Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
> > Version: 7.0.323 / Virus Database: 267.8.10/43 - Release Date: 7/6/05
> >
> >

ATOM RSS1 RSS2