Point to ponder…

One Sunday morning, an old cowboy entered a church just before services were to begin. Although the old man and his clothes were spotlessly clean, he wore jeans, a denim shirt and boots that were worn and ragged. In his hand he carried a worn-out old hat and an equally worn, dog-eared Bible.

The church he entered was in a very upscale and exclusive part of the city. It was the largest and most beautiful church the old cowboy had ever seen. The people of the congregation were all dressed with expensive clothes and fine jewelry. As the cowboy took a seat, the others moved away from him. No one greeted, spoke to, or welcomed him. They were all appalled by his appearance and did not attempt to hide it.

As the old cowboy was leaving the church, the preacher approached him and asked the cowboy to do him a favor. “Before you come back in here again, have a talk with God and ask him what he thinks would be appropriate attire for worship in church.” The old cowboy assured the preacher he would.

The next Sunday, he showed back up for the services wearing the same ragged jeans, shirt, boots, and hat. Once again he was completely shunned and ignored. The preacher approached the cowboy and said, “I thought I asked you to speak to God before you came back to our church.”

“I did,” replied the old cowboy.

“And what was his reply?” asked the preacher.

“Well, sir, God told me that he didn’t have a clue what I should wear. He said he’d never been in this church.”

Comments

Point to ponder… — 9 Comments

  1. Hey Old NFO;

    THere is truth in this parable?, God sees what is in a mans heart, not what he wears.

  2. Heh. Not a church I would return to. The old boy has the right of it.

    The dog eared Bible should’ve been a clue to the preacher.

  3. God is no respecter of persons” is found in Acts 10:34 and also in Romans 2:11. That concept has fallen on deaf ears in most churches.

  4. Actually part of a discussion we had in Sunday School yesterday regarding the wedding feast and the guest that didn’t dress right.
    Wailing and gnashing of teeth resulted.
    But in that parable, I was told that the guests were provided attire to wear. Jesus gives us a robe of righteousness.
    That aside,
    I’m tired of preachers wearing t-shirts and tennies and jeans with rips as a fashion statement.
    Not a lot of respect there.
    But suits and ties? A bit much these days.
    Maybe business casual, how you’d dress for the Boss.
    And James talks about how you should not look down on people of lower estate.
    There’s a balance there.
    You don’t shun the guy. You love him.

  5. The church where I sing has everything from suit and tie and Sunday dresses to cleanest tee-shirt and jeans. And everyone gets along fine. The point is to show respect for the Lord, not win fashion prizes.