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  • Michael Duduit
    March 1988
    Young people coming of age in these days of self-service stations may have never heard those words familiar to drivers of an earlier...
  • Michael Duduit
    January 1988
    Preachers have been in the news a lot recently. Most of the stories are ones we would rather not have read, but one news item in November...
  • Michael Duduit
    November 1987
    While thousands of Americans converged on Philadelpha this summer to celebrate the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution, my wife and...
  • Michael Duduit
    September 1987
    An article in this issue -- "Preaching: Antidote for Trivial Pursuit" by James Means -- got me to -- thinking about ways in which that...
  • Michael Duduit
    July 1987
    "This isn't a 'preacher story.' This really happened!"It may be the punchline of an old joke, but it's still enough to make many of...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 1987
    Any minister who has ever moved from one home or office to another knows the scourge of every ministerial move: packing and unpacking...
  • Michael Duduit
    March 1987
    A few years ago Henry Ward Beecher became a good friend of mine.Over a year-long period when I was researching Henry's preaching and...
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The Preacher's Diet
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The Preacher's Diet
By Michael Duduit
One author observed, "A pastor needs the tact of a diplomat, the strength of Samson, the patience of Job, the wisdom of Solomon -- and a cast-iron stomach."

It was the stomach comment that sparked a thought. These days, there are all kinds of diets -- the Beverly Hills Diet, the Grapefruit Diet, the Liquid Diet and so on. At any one point, half the books listed on the New York Times' best-seller list are probably diet books.

Yet no one has produced the most obvious diet of all: the Preacher's Diet. Think of the possibilities: there are more than a quarter-million of us, and fully two-thirds of that number are probably overweight. Years of fried chicken and homemade biscuits have taken their toll on God's messengers.
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With that in mind, I hasten to put forward (and claim all rights to) the Preacher's Diet. Publishers, just send your advance royalty checks to my attention.

Breakfast

Everyone knows you can't preach on an empty stomach. (I'm almost certain I read that in the Bible somewhere.) So a nutritious, balanced breakfast is a must.

A bit of orange juice is essential; a case of gout can cost you mobility in the pulpit. Then you'll need a couple of eggs (protein, for strength to shout during weak points of the sermon), some ham (you are what you eat, preacher), and a biscuit -- but only half the normal butter and jam. (Can't you feel those pounds dropping off already?)

These days the doctors advise us to get plenty of fiber, so top off your breakfast with a well-chewed toothpick.

Lunch

After a long, hard morning of Greek word studies and thumbing through collections of illustrations, you'll need a hearty lunch.

I suggest 2-3 ounces of lean chicken, one cup of green beans, and a slice of melba toast. Of course, I only suggest this to deacons who are giving me problems.

Preachers, on the other hand, may choose one item from Column A (a Wendy's Single, a Big Mac or a 3-piece dinner from Kentucky Fried Chicken), two items from Column B (french fries, baked beans, cole slaw, onion rings), and one item from Column C (Alka-Seltzer, Turns, Pepto-Bismol).

Sure, you may not lose pounds as quickly on this diet -- but I guarantee you the preacher's diet is easier to stick to!

Dinner

With an extended afternoon of sermon preparation, many preachers find it impossible to make it to dinner without a mid-afternoon snack. For them, I suggest a package of M & M's (plain only -- no need to add calories with those peanuts). Most nutritionists I've consulted (you can just imagine how long that list is) are impressed with the healthy balance of chocolate and preservatives found in just one package of M & M's.

When dinner time rolls around, I'd encourage you to let up on the discipline a bit and enjoy yourself. After all, you can't diet all the time!

I'd like to hear from preachers who try this diet. We hope to publish testimonials on the dust cover of our next project: the Preacher's Exercise Book. If you think the diet was tough, just wait till you've done a bench-press with Strong's Concordance (unabridged)!

Like they say: no pain, no gain.
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