Atlanta
Constitution Magazine
June 9, 1968 pg.
24 (note the wonderful Southern author)
The Twelfth
Gate is a church for turned-on types.

THERE'LL be a
preach-in and love feast at Piedmont Park this afternoon if it doesn't rain.
The crowd will gather at 12:30, as usual on Sundays, at The
Twelfth Gate, 36 Tenth St. NW, an old two-story green house with red, gold, blue,
pink and tan trim, like straight out of a storybook, man.
If we have a great big beautiful day, the community of
worshippersÑmany of them as bearded as the early ChristiansÑwill walk eight
blocks together to Piedmont Park for a be-in by the lake. In full view of the
park's usual Sunday population of ballplayers, bird watchers, lovers and
picnickers, The Coffeehouse Church will begin its celebration of worship by
reading aloud:

"We gather as we live, in the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit . . .. 0 Lord, we confess our slowness to see the good in our brothers, the
evil in ourselves.
And this is the one objective and ever lasting truthÑin Jesus
Christ our sins are forgiven. May we receive the gift and live . .
..Ó
A handsome, dark-eyed young Methodist minister will preach the
sermonÑthe Rev. Bruce Donnelly, who speaks straight from the hip about the fact
that for thousands years "turned-on types have experienced religious
highsÑvisions and trips evenÑwithout the aid of mind-expanding drugs." He
talks about what's wrong with straight society and what's wrong with hippies,
about what it means to be free: Free to love God, free to give, free to be
sincere, not hung-up in guilts, fears or prejudices.
Even without a tie, the Rev. Donne looks like a product of straight
society, which he is. He grew up as a Methodist Youth Fellowship leader at
Peachtree Road Methodist Church in Buckhead, was president of his fraternity at
Emory University and three years ago married a lovely straight-type Agnes Scott
College graduate named Barbara Chambers. But he digs the needs of the artsy,
folksy, craftsy types among the 25,000 unmarried young adults who live in
AtlantaÕs 10th Street area.
Bruce's thing is The Twelfth Gate: On Sundays a religious
community, the rest of the week a coffeehouse A place to talk play chess, buy a
girl a gift. take a free courseÑin ESP or
leathercraft, yogi-style meditating or the parables of JesusÑor sit over coffee
and salami in rapt silence while the folk singers do their thing with songs
like "Saturday Night and Sunday Morning' or "Isn't It a Drag That
People Take Tranquilizers "
THE house opens every night at 8. The music starts at 9 Cover
charge 50 cents or a dollar. No LSD. no pot, no beer, no whisky, no crash-pad,
no nightclub-types jokes, no go-go. You could take visiting preachers,
fifth-grade Girl Scouts or sheltered teen-agers there for the music and find
nothing objectionableÑunless you object to beards, candle light, red walls,
satirical posters, a heavy fog of cigarette smoke or jokes about Òkids on pot
today, speed yesterday and acid the day before, but if you mention a cocktail,
man, they wouldn't touch the stuff, and that's what I call hip-pocrisy. Ò
Unlike some other coffeehouses, the only pot available at The Gate
is the kind that holds 50 cents worth of exotic coffee or tea. Jasmine and Himalayan Darjeeling
have to compete with Georgia sassafras, brewed for the coffeehouse by a
red-bearded folk singer who was once an Eagle Scout and got expelled from
college for joining the march on Selma.

THE upstairs Head Shop sells no water pipes, roll-your-own
cigarette papers or other equipment for smoking pot. It merely has folk
records, books, posters, horoscopes, and lapel buttons that say, "God Is
Alive and Well in Mexico City" or "Keep the X in Xmas." In the
Flower Shop, also upstairs, you can buy trappings of the hippie
subcultureÑcandles, beads. Incense (10 cents a stick), metal crosses hung on
thongs, psychedelic sunglasses, and paper flowers. But there's nothing weirdo
about paper flowers when you find out they were made by student nurses at
Georgia Baptist Hospital.
What's so great about flowers'' "They're a symbol of beauty
and peace, you never see one flower fighting another flower." explained
Brenda Brantly, the 23-year-old very unhippie engineering data clerk who is
chairman of The Coffeehouse Church's official board. Brenda came to Atlanta from
Milner, Ga., and has surely seen a honeysuckle vine smothering a rose bush, but
that's what she said.
Despite all the beards, beads and sandals. The Twelfth Gate is too straight for
most hippies. "I think I've finally convinced my father," said
Brenda. "that the kids here just aren't interested in freaking out."
The working girls and boys, the college and trade-school kids and student
nurses who patronize The Gate turn on with poetry, folk songs, art or religion,
not with drugs.
Yet a -Georgia Tech sorority refused to initiate a pledge when the
members learned she'd been going there, and a lot of parents can't believe any
coffeehouse on 10th Street could really be nice.
"Part of the problem." said Bruce. "is newspaper articles that
call this a hippie house and label me as a minister to mixed-up kids. Also
there's the public notion that anybody who has a chin growth or long hair or
sings folk songs is a hippie. This is just not a hippie thing. We've had no
trouble with kids trying to take drugs here. Those who come are bright, turned
on to life, with a great depth and capacity for enjoyment. But most of them
have too much sense to risk damage from LSD or a police record from marijuana.
If you say the sun is beautiful today, they don't automatically think, ÒYeah,
but it would be really great under grass.Ó

"Sure. some of the kids have problems, especially with money.
Most of those who left home because of family conflictsÑor to be on their own
were told by mommy and daddy, ÒOkay, you won't live with us, we won't send .you
to college or pay your rent.Ó But
they're working out their problems in responsible ways. And they run this place
responsibly. It's the only church of 18 to 25-year-olds anywhere, that I know
of, and we've never been late with a bill. Out of coffeehouse profits we pay
me, we pay rent and overhead. We spent $2,500 this year sending three students
to art school, and we'll do that again next year. We'll also give $3,300 to the
Methodist inner-city ministry here. This inter-city program will pay my salary
beginning in July, but the kids will then pay a managerÑa soldier at Ft Mac
named Pete Schoen. He's getting out of service soon and will take over buying
groceries, booking folk singers -and-running the staff, so I can have more time
for running the church and counseling."
MOST of the kids who come to The Twelfth Gate are between 18 and
25. (Bruce is 26.) Most of Atlanta's hippies are just 13 to 17.
"There are only about 250 of these bubble-gum hippies and teeny-boppers
in the 10th Street area," said the young minister, "I'm talking about
the ones whose life-style includes philosophizing, sharing what they have, not
working at regular jobs. I'm talking about resident hippies, right? I don't
mean the 2,000 kids under 18 who hit Atlanta last summer.
"The vacation hippies fell in three categories: Those having
trouble at home, those who wanted to see what it's like to be on their own, and
a minority who came for thrillsÑfor sex and drugs
and the glamour of running away.
"They came from all over the South, but a lot of the summer
kids. were runaways from $50,000 homes in the Atlanta suburbs. Some stopped
shaving, mussed their hair, went dirty, wore beads swiped from mom, stood on
the corner of 14th and Peachtree to get stared at and learned to say would you
be-in to a cup of coffee. To them everything was psychedelic, man, meaning
colored lights, not consciousness-expanding. But most of them went back home
after two or three weeksÑwhen they got sick or real hungry, or maybe it was
time for school to start. Unfortunately, a lot of the thrill-seekers went home
really messed up on LSDÑor VD."
According to Brace, the word is out that Atlanta is where it's at
this summer, man, the place to be: "Some think we can expect 16,000 to
18,000 between 13 and 15 years old. The out of-towners think
Atlanta won't lock up or run out that many. Well, Atlanta will. If 18,000 come, 16, 000
will soon leave. The problems of runaways aren't solved by police
harassment, but this city is just not equipped to take care of a big migration of
teen-agers."
A lot of parents and policemen call The Gate about runaways, from
as far away as California and Idaho. One month Bruce located 20 kids out of 90
calls. "But I don't really have much time. I often drop by the crash-pads or apartments
where hippies live when the coffeehouse closes at midnight, and some hippies come to our
church service on Sunday. But the heartache is that I'm not really helping these
younger kids and nobody else in Atlanta is. A
lot of them are
real sharp and talk about real gutty issues, but The Gate doesn't attract them. Young
teen-agers aren't interested in sitting around listening to folk singers. What
they want is a
rock houseÑa nice dance place. All we'd need to start one is an empty
warehouse or auditorium with a jukebox and soft-drink machine. No chairs, no tables. no overhead.
Psychedelic light shows maybe, and let them rock out. Young kids have a lot of
stored-up tension and dancing is still the safest way they can work it off. But churches
tend to back away from this fact."
BRUCE got up to greet the red-bearded folk singer, who had walked
in with a gallon jug of clear red sassafras tea hanging from each forefinger. The minister
wrote him out a check for it, and they talked for a few minutes Ñ debating whether it
was anger or hate that Christ felt for the money changers when He drove them out of the
temple. The bearded man said he thought what's wrong with most Christians is "they
won't decide what they're against and then take a public stand against it." Bruce said,
"I'm just not as much of a revolutionary as you are, but I do believe in Christian
action."
Then he was called to the phone I couldn't help listening:
"You want a real hippie or somebody who looks like one" . . . Right.
The Marietta YMCA, next Sunday night. IÕll see what I can do for you.Ó
He hung up and grinned. "It's gotten so part of my job is
booking hippies or bearded folk singers for churches, schools and civic groups.
I'm a sort of rent-a-hippie agency except I don't get paid. If an MYF group
asks for somebody to perform and tell about our ministry; I send one of The
Gate's folk singers, or an art student who puts on light shows he films
himself, or this kid who makes and plays vagabond instruments. But if they want
a real hippie, I go out to the crash-pads and find them one. Hippies like to
talk about their thing. Besides, they're usually hungry, and churches have good
suppers. Anyway, I went to look for this certain kid a few weeks ago and he'd
just cut his hair. I said, 'Look, they want a hippie in full costume, right''
What kind of impression you gonna make, man, with that short hair?' He said he
could borrow a wig. When his audience got to asking why he had long hair, he
took off the wig and said, "What's that again?' "
ONE thing you learn at The Twelfth Gate is that it takes more than
long hair or a beard to be a hippie. A folk singer said he wears one
"because I happen to have a very fat face and besides it's easier to get a
singing job if you have a good growth." A Gate waitress said some of the
guys are just too lazy to shave, or want something to hide behind Roger
Swanson, who looks like straight out of the Bible, has just always liked beards.

"I got out of the Marine Corps on Nov. 6 last year," he said, "and Nov. 6 was the last day I shaved. At first I was very paranoid about the beard. I didn't like being considered a hippie and it was hard to get an apartment. Some of the hippies do skip out on rent. You can't blame the landladies. But it's not hard to get a job with a beard, by the wayÑnot in Atlanta, not if you do good work. I'm a carpenterÕs helper. I also write poetry. I went to college for five years before the Marine Corps. But IÕve just gotten interested in this writing thing, also in photography.Ó
Roger often emcees at the coffeehouse Ð introducing the poets and
folk singers, reminding patrons that the waitresses work for nothing except
maybe $2 a night in tips, Òso please cross their palms with silver when you say
thanks and we have church here on Sunday afternoons at 12:30. Church does take
the drag out of Sunday, so come on over.Ó
The Coffeehouse Church is called a ÒministryÓ by the MethodistÕs
North Georgia Conference. ItÕs not a full-fledged church yet in the sense of a
membership roll, but the kids are hoping it soon will be. Besides Sunday
services, it has all the Methodist trappings, including a budget ($27,500 for
next year), an official board and committees for finance, worship,
programs and social concerns.
The social concerns committee ran a tutoring service for children
in Vine City last summer. Two boys go to East Lake Methodist every Saturday to
help with a recreation program for 270 colored children. Four of The Gate's
folk singers go on tour, booked for Methodist Youth Fellowship meetings and
openings of church coffeehouses. The kids have now started a fellowship supper
on Sunday nights, with ministers, politicians, city planners, lawyers, doctors,
sociologists and other specialists who discuss the needs of the young people in
the 10th Street area and help decide The gateÕs best course of
action.
As a result, the coffeehouse now has an employment agency and a
free medical clinic.
ÒOur kids man the waiting room and screen all the patients,Ó said
Bruce. ÒThe clinic is now open every Monday and Thursday night at First
Presbyterian Church with psychologists for counseling and doctors and nurses
supplied by the Fulton County Medical Association. We had a clinic last summer
in my office at the coffeehouse, with just one doctor, man, and we couldnÕt
take care of all the patients here.Ó
The Twelfth Gate began a year and a half ago at Grace Methodist
Church, when Bruce was an assistant pastor there. It was Grace's effort to "do something"
for the non-churched young people in the downtown community.
Diane Smith, a beautiful girl with hair to her waist, had sat
listening while Bruce talked. "I was one of the original weirdos who came to The
Gate when it was at Grace," she said. "In those days
none of us kids worked. We talked all night and slept till 3 in the afternoon, and if you
worked, you missed out, right? I got in a real bind with money.
I've been through the starvation bit, the having-your-gas-turned-off bit, the corn-meal
boiled in water, you know, with days of nothing. and then one of the boys would earn $5
singing folk songs or a girl would wait tables for a night, and then we'd buy
potatoes and a cheap roast and cook it at my apartment. I've had a straight job for some time
now and I'm out of debt.
"But back to our weirdo days. We used to wish so much,Ó
said Diane. "that we had a nice place to go. One night somebody said a minister
had opened a coffeehouse over on Charles Alien Drive.
Oh, right, a minister has opened a coffeehouse. We shrugged it
off. Then a handful of us went over to see. It was just a six-room old house with
no atmosphere, and the folk singers weren't hired. Mostly they were those of us who could
sing. But Bruce was marvelous. Just nice. We kept going back and taking our friends, and
after the place closed at midnight, Bruce and his wife would come to our apartment
and 30 or 40 of us would talk all night.
AT Grace they all assumed we were hippies on drugs, of
course. I don't say to the potheads, hey, I'm going to hate you for taking the stuff, but I don't
want to be around them. What's so great about watching a kid on LSD giggling like a
maniac while he crawls around on the floor, talking to dust, and then going wild
remembering the awful things people have done to him, and getting crazy for revenge. It's horrible and
repulsive. And what's so great about seeing a girl who has everything going for
her get so messed up on drugs she loses her job and her friends and all she's got left are
hippies like herself. Last time I saw her she was under acid and could see her self
down in a soft-drink can just a tiny little person down in a can.
"Anyway, at Grace they put out all this effort to get us and then they
didn't know what to do with us. The coffeehouse was so successful we were spilling out
into the yard Ñ maybe 300 kids a night, and some of the neighbors were complaining.
We got the idea we were less welcome and Bruce was getting more and more
criticized, right? We thought, if the kids went to church it would show the members
that Bruce was doing some good, you know, so about 20 or 30 us went to a pre-Easter
service last year. Catholics, Jews, Baptists, Methodists. nothings. The guys
were clean and
dressed up in suits and had their beards trimmed, and the girls put on dresses, right? We
sat in the back, you know, and everybody was nice to us. but like we had this feeling we'd
made everybody uncomfortable. Maybe the embarrassment was all on our part, but we
could see them thinking if a bearded long haired type joined the church or the
choir, and that TV camera zoomed in on him, people watching television would
say,Ó Goodness, look at Grace'' Right?"
ÒFOR just this reason.Ó said Bruce. "I get more and more
convinced that churches need to specialize. A minister who invites everyone in
the TV audience to 'come worship with us next Sunday' might get a shock if they
all did. It wouldn't work, not because of snobbery or prejudice or hypocrisy.
but because people who look or feel different aren't comfortable. Everybody has
a label in straight society. A boy holds a cigarette in an effeminate manner,
he's called a homo. Maybe he is, maybe he isn't, he's branded all the same. A
guy has a beard. He's branded a hippie, though he may have a very straight job.
A girl has her "hair long and wears levis and paints pictures, she's a
weirdo. Eggheads may be respected these days, but a boy who'd rather write
poetry than play or watch football is looked upon with suspicion. And there are
some young people who, let's face it, just aren't very attractive on the
surface, though they may have a depth and sincerity and loyalty you rarely find
in the typical frat house or MYF group.
"The beauty of a coffeehouse is that you can expose people of
all types and backgrounds to each other. With the candle light and music and
coffee they relax, open up and be come themselves. Things seem more real. They
donÕt have to wear masks, or pretend what they donÕt believe. They share a
sense of belonging, and I am absolutely convinced that the need to belong to
somebody is the most basic need of human beings, more basic than the need for
food or sex or creativeness.Ó
"The kids who came to The Twelfth Gate when it was at Grace
were so hungry for deep friendships they could forget food. The strange thing
that happened there was the way all of a sudden, after four or five months,
without my giving them any lectures about loafing, those 30 or 40 self styled
weirdos started hunting jobs. They had begun to see that life is more than
having friends and talking all night, that it matters to have some reason to get
up in the morning. Some cut their hair and beards some didnÕt. Nearly all went
to work.Ó
Most of them were committed Christians and felt that Christ was
alive in their lives says Bruce. "but they didn't feel they had found a way to
live for others. Then the kids decided to start a coffeehouse right on 10th
Street, so others cotild have the chance to find themselvesÑthe way they had at
the Grace coffeehouse. The Methodist North Georgia Conference gave me the
assignment, provided we'd held regular worship services.Ó
So The Twelfth Gate opens its door every Sunday as The Coffeehouse
Church, when they aren't having a preach-in at Piedmont Park. The kids sit in twos and fours
around the tables for the sermonÑdrinking their coffee and smoking their cigarettes,
dressed more like guests at a costume party or a come-as-you-are than like a congregation.
The Sunday I went, what made me feel "at church" was the rapt silence,
the atmosphere of spiritual seeking. All eyes fastened on the Rev. Donnelly as he talked
about Christ having to hang on the cross because of people's hang ups, or quoted
a priest who once asked, "Who can look up at the crucifix and say, 'All this you have done for
me and I don't care?"
Not many churches could advertise a Sunday service that lasts three or
four hours and hope to have anybody come, but that's the way it is at The Twelfth Gate.
Always after The Word comes what they call The Word SharedÑ something like a bull
session, something like old-time Methodist testifying.
When I was there, as soon as Bruce got through with the sermon and the final
folk hymn was sung, a girl at a back table said, "I've sinned, and I know it, and I've
asked God's forgiveness, right? But maybe God is like my father. I respect my
father and I love him and I've hurt him so much. But I just can't tell him. I
justÑ-" She struggled for self-control. She had arrived in Atlanta the week be
fore from Massachusetts. "I mean he thinks I want some thingÑfood or
clothes or money. What I want is his love and understanding? But he just says you've done what,
you
pleaseÑand
I haveÑso don't come asking me for forgive ness now."
"I guess your dad has hang ups of his own," somebody commented.
"I know how you feelÑI'd never ask my father's forgiveness," said
a student type in suit, white shirt and tie. "I'm sure he'd just say go to hell. Let's face it, parents
really suffer when we do wrong, and it would be the right thing to apologize, even if the
apology gets thrown in your face. But it's hard to be glad about doing the right thing
if you're crying."
"Every time I come here," a girl near me muttered to her friend, "we
get hung-up on forgiveness and the generation gap. No matter what Bruce has talked
about."
THE next speaker was at dashing young pirate. His beard had a sort of Sir Walter Raleigh
trim, he wore one gold earring, his long hair was held neatly in place with sun glasses, pushed
up from the forehead, and I tried hard not to assume he was a hippie just for looking like
one.
"If there is this God that's so Almighty and can do anything,"
he began, "why doesn't He answer when I ask forgiveness? If I offend her" Ñ
he
nodded to
the girl beside himÑ "she'll forgive me the minute I ask her to and then every thing's all
right again. God is a lot greater than she is, but all I get from Him is silence."
He was answered by a rather small young man with a hearing aid. wire rimmed granny glasses, cowboy
boots and a mild manner. He spoke
calmly: "What do you expect? Is God supposed to put on a light-show in your
brain or send a message fluttering down from Heaven? When you're not feeling holy, when
you're restless and incomplete, when the day is not beautiful, when somebody smiles and
you say. 'Go away, you bother me,' that's what it's like to be unforgiven and
separated from God.
"God to me is love," he said. "I know I'm
forgiven when I feel turned-on to Him, holy, with no hang-ups. It's just a total sense of peace
and relief and release from guilt."
Not all ministers think a coffeehouse like The Gate is a valid way of reaching
out to those not attracted by the established church. Though many in the Methodist
clergy are enthusiastic about what Bruce Donnelly is doing, at least a few doubt that it is
valid even as an experiment. They think church coffeehouses are a passing fad, like the
hippie thing, and too far out from "the true vine" to change any lives.
MAYBE, maybe not. The doubters should go see for themselves.
All I know is that I like the picture of 40 or 50 young people working their
hearts out for a dream, most of them without any pay, and then freely giving away
thousands of hard-earned dollars in the name of the Lord.
I know I was deeply moved by the folk singers at the Sun day service,
impressed by the young minister's sincerity and positively electrified when that young man told what
it's like to feel holy.
