Today's Scripture Reading (July 10, 2026): Jeremiah 13
It was a
Christmas skit to be performed at the Annual Christmas banquet. At the time, I
was the Associate Pastor for the church, but I was also very new at the
position. The skit called for me to wear a pink, frilly tutu. (How they found
one that I could fit into is still a bit of a mystery to me.) They gave me the
tutu the night of the performance, and I remember squeezing myself into it
before I had to take the stage. And yes, I looked ridiculous. But then, that
was the point.
I remember
the tutu, although I don't remember much else about the skit. I remember my
boss had a role in the skit, although his mode of dress was much more dignified
than mine. The skit was humorous, but much of the humor was me in the tutu.
If Jeremiah
wore the traditional dress of a prophet, he would have been wearing a fairly
tight-fitting tunic made out of a coarse material. Over top of this tunic, he
would have worn a hair cloak. On the other side of the coin, the priests and
the wealthy would wear a linen girdle or decorative belt around their waist,
along with the finery that they could afford. God's instructions would have
been to take the linen girdle that the more elite members of society might wear
and place it around his waist, on top of the prophetic dress Jeremiah would
normally wear. Combining the two would have made Jeremiah look as ridiculous as
I did in a pink tutu that Christmas. But again, the spectacle was the point.
As Jeremiah
appeared in Jerusalem, everyone would notice what the Prophet was wearing. But
even more importantly, they would remember what Jeremiah was wearing. It would
have been hard to forget. Likely, there was some good-natured, or maybe not so
good-natured, ribbing over the way that Jeremiah looked. (Trust me, I remember
the jokes I took over the tutu.) But all of this was the point.
The Prophet's
ridiculous look was the beginning of a message, and if nobody noticed how
Jeremiah was dressed, the message might have been missed. Sometimes, Prophets
were more like that guy who stood on the cafeteria table with French fries up
his nose than we might imagine. But somehow, they had to gain the attention of
those around them before they could deliver the message God had placed on their
hearts.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Jeremiah 14