View Mobile Site
  • Bookmark and Share

The advantages of looking like a preacher

POSTED: October 18, 2012 9:43 p.m.

Somebody once told my associate pastor that I “don’t look like a preacher.” I’m not sure what that means. Did she say that because I have a beard or because I like to wear my blue jeans and baseball cap around town on my day off? Did she say that because I don’t have some stereotypical kind of stern or “holy” expression? I don’t know. I wasn’t sure that I wanted to look like a preacher. At least not until I heard Dr. Laurence White.


Dr. Laurence L. White, Senior Pastor of Our Savior Lutheran Church in Houston, Texas, was speaking to the Washington Briefing for Pastors, sponsored by the Family Research Council. He stood up in his black clothes and white clerical collar, and looked over the crowd, most of whom were wearing business suits, and said, “I want to say something to you Baptists who have forsaken the traditional garb of the clergy, that there are some advantages to looking like clergy.” Then he told this story:


Rev. White was late for a speaking engagement in Georgia, and was driving way too fast, when he saw blue lights flashing in his rear-view mirror. He pulled over, and the state trooper pulled in behind him. A big man got out of the patrol car, pulled his belt up around his waist, and walked toward Rev. White’s car, his hand on his gun.


When the trooper looked in the car and saw Rev. White, with his black coat and shirt, and white clerical collar, he started to laugh. Rev. White thought, “Oh, no. He’s a Baptist deacon. I’m going to jail.”


But instead, the trooper leaned in, pointed his finger in Rev. White’s face, and said, “Forgive me, father, but you have sinned!” Then he gestured down the road with his hands wide open, and said, “Now go, and sin no more!”


So there can be advantages to looking like a preacher (or priest).


The Bible says there is a clothing that all of us can wear that is greatly to our advantage. Job said, “I clothed myself in righteousness” (Job 29:14, HCSB). The apostle Paul tells us what that should look like: “Therefore, God’s chosen ones, holy and loved, put on heartfelt compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience, accepting one another and forgiving one another if anyone has a complaint against another. Just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you must also forgive. Above all, put on love – the perfect bond of unity.” (Colossians 3:12-14, HCSB).


So a clerical collar can be good and useful, but righteousness is even better.


(Copyright 2012 by Bob Rogers. Email: brogers@fbcrincon.com. Read this column each Friday in the Herald. Visit my blog at www.bobrogers.me.)

Oct. 18, 2012 09:45p.m. EDT The advantages of looking like a preacher Effingham Herald

Somebody once told my associate pastor that I “don’t look like a preacher.” I’m not sure what that means. Did she say that because I have a beard or because I like to wear my blue jeans and baseball cap around town on my day off? Did she say that because I don’t have some stereotypical kind of stern or “holy” expression? I don’t know. I wasn’t sure that I wanted to look like a preacher. At least not until I heard Dr. Laurence White.


Dr. Laurence L. White, Senior Pastor of Our Savior Lutheran Church in Houston, Texas, was speaking to the Washington Briefing for Pastors, sponsored by the Family Research Council. He stood up in his black clothes and white clerical collar, and looked over the crowd, most of whom were wearing business suits, and said, “I want to say something to you Baptists who have forsaken the traditional garb of the clergy, that there are some advantages to looking like clergy.” Then he told this story:


Rev. White was late for a speaking engagement in Georgia, and was driving way too fast, when he saw blue lights flashing in his rear-view mirror. He pulled over, and the state trooper pulled in behind him. A big man got out of the patrol car, pulled his belt up around his waist, and walked toward Rev. White’s car, his hand on his gun.


When the trooper looked in the car and saw Rev. White, with his black coat and shirt, and white clerical collar, he started to laugh. Rev. White thought, “Oh, no. He’s a Baptist deacon. I’m going to jail.”


But instead, the trooper leaned in, pointed his finger in Rev. White’s face, and said, “Forgive me, father, but you have sinned!” Then he gestured down the road with his hands wide open, and said, “Now go, and sin no more!”


So there can be advantages to looking like a preacher (or priest).


The Bible says there is a clothing that all of us can wear that is greatly to our advantage. Job said, “I clothed myself in righteousness” (Job 29:14, HCSB). The apostle Paul tells us what that should look like: “Therefore, God’s chosen ones, holy and loved, put on heartfelt compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience, accepting one another and forgiving one another if anyone has a complaint against another. Just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you must also forgive. Above all, put on love – the perfect bond of unity.” (Colossians 3:12-14, HCSB).


So a clerical collar can be good and useful, but righteousness is even better.


(Copyright 2012 by Bob Rogers. Email: brogers@fbcrincon.com. Read this column each Friday in the Herald. Visit my blog at www.bobrogers.me.)

Copyright 2011 MorrisMultimedia . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

COMMENTS

  • Bookmark and Share

No comments have been posted.

Login to post a comment

http://www.effinghamherald.net/ encourages readers to interact with one another. We will not edit your comments, but we reserve the right to delete any inappropriate responses.

To report offensive or inappropriate comments, contact our editor.

The comments below are from readers of http://www.effinghamherald.net/ and do not necessarily represent the views of The Newspaper or Morris Multimedia.
You must be logged in to post comments. Login ›

 


© Copyright 2010 Morris Multimedia All rights reserved. Privacy policy and Terms of service

Powered by
Morris Technology
Please wait ...