Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gucci for God?

Instagramm­er questions expensive style

- SARAH PULLIAM BAILEY

From his couch in Dallas, Ben Kirby began asking questions about the lifestyles of the rich and famous pastors when he was watching some worship songs on YouTube on a Sunday morning in 2019. While listening to a song by Elevation Worship, a megachurch based in Charlotte, N.C., the evangelica­l churchgoer noticed the lead singer’s Yeezy sneakers were worth nearly the amount of his first rent check.

Kirby posted to his 400 followers on Instagram: “Hey Elevation Worship, how much you paying your musicians that they can afford $800 kicks? Let me get on the payroll!”

Plus, Kirby wondered, how could the church’s pastor, Steven Furtick, one of the most popular preachers in the country, afford a new designer outfit nearly every week?

With a friend’s encouragem­ent, Kirby started a new Ins tag ram account Preachers N Sneakers, posting screenshot­s of pastors next to price tags and the street value of shoes they were wearing. Within a month, the account had attracted 100,000 followers.

“At the beginning, it was easy for me to make jokes about it,” he said. “Some of the outfits are absurd, so it’s easy to laugh at some of the designer pieces. The price tags are outlandish.”

On his feed, Kirby has showcased Seattle pastor Judah Smith’s $3,600 Gucci jacket, Dallas pastor T.D. Jakes’ $1,250 Louboutin fanny pack and Miami pastor Guillermo Maldonado’s $2,541 Ricci crocodile belt. And he considers Paula White, former president Donald Trump’s most trusted pastoral adviser who is often photograph­ed in designer items, a Preachers N Sneakers“content goldmine,” posting a photo of her wearing $785 Stella McCartney sneakers.

As the Instagram account grew, Kirby started asking more serious questions about wealth, class and consumeris­m, including whether it’s appropriat­e to generate massive revenue from selling the gospel of Jesus.

“I began asking, how much is too much?” Kirby said. “Is it OK to get rich off of preaching about Jesus? Is it OK to be making twice as much as the median income of your congregati­on?”

The Washington Post tried to contact several ministers featured on the Instagram account for comment, including Carl Lentz, White and Jakes, but none of them replied.

For the past two years, Kirby has posted and podcast without sharing his real name, but recently he decided to share his real identity with The Washington Post with the release of his new book ,“Preachers N Sneakers: Authentici­ty in an Age of For-Profit Faith and (Wannabe) Celebritie­s.”

Kirby, 31, who grew up in a Christian home-schooling family in Ruston, La., holds a degree in marketing management and an MBA. Heat tends a nondenomin­ational church and considers himself an evangelica­l, he said, “not as in, ‘Trump is the chosen one,’ but I believe in sharing my faith.”

When Kirby began showcasing pastors’ high fashion, he was putting dollar signs on designer items for everyone to see just how expensive the clothing items were valued, said Whitney Bauck, a journalist who writes about ethically sourced fashion and who first wrote about the Instagram account.

“He is someone who gets Christiani­ty enough and gets fashion enough, but also has a really critical eye,” Bauck said. “He’s not a known profession­al in either space, so he was willing to say things that people in those spaces weren’t.”

Kirby’s father is a family-practice doctor, so he grew up in what he describes as a “comfortabl­e but modest lifestyle,” where his parents gave generously to their church. He remembers feeling confused when he saw his “Pastor Charles” driving a royal blue Harley Davidson cruiser, worth more than one year of his parents’ tithes. That’s when, he said, he realized that there was a connection between successful ministry and booming business.

Tim Gloege, a historian who wrote a book called “Guaranteed Pure” — about marketing in evangelica­lism — said fashion has always been important in religion. In Catholicis­m, dress was once simple and drawing on ancient Roman dress before liturgical dress became quite regal. The dress was so elaborate that it was the theme of the 2018 Met Gala.

During the Protestant Reformatio­n, Gloege said, clergy dress became more academic during a movement toward simplicity.

But in the early 20th century, an evangelist named D.L. Moody made a big splash by dressing in business attire instead of clerical dress. Moody’s business attire made a class statement by associatin­g himself with the respected leaders of his day, according to Gloege, and other pastors began to follow his example.

“Dress often reflects who people currently admire, and how you generate authority in society,” he said. “Do you trust the Koch brothers or George Clooney?”

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates the median salary for clergy was $53,180 in 2019, but Kirby’s Instagram feed showcases how a nationwide evangelica­l market has become lucrative for leaders with celebrity status. As with other social media influencer­s, sometimes these pastors are given the shoes and clothes they wear.

Since starting the Instagram account, Kirby has been dipping his own toes into the evangelica­l marketplac­e, entering a world that he has so openly critiqued. Like church leaders, his income is partially dependent on his podcast advertisin­g and book sales, and he sells merchandis­e based off the brand. He has had his own brushes with fame, texting with people such as once-major megachurch preacher Lentz, befriendin­g Joel McHale of the TV show “Community” and attending a Super Bowl party at NBA star Carmelo Anthony’s home.

Kirby doesn’t want Christians to abandon fashion or celebritie­s, but he does want more transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

“I’m getting people to question the status quo within the church and hopefully push for a reevaluati­on of what we value,” he said. “People aren’t going to reach God without this guy wearing Yeezys? Come on.”

 ?? (The New York Times/Andrew White) ?? Carl Lentz, a pastor who once ministered to pop stars and profession­al athletes, speaks onstage at Hillsong NYC, at the Manhattan Center’s Hammerstei­n Ballroom in 2017. Lentz is among the ministers featured on the PreachersN­Sneakers Instagram account, which showcases pastors’ high fashion choices alongside their high dollar amounts.
(The New York Times/Andrew White) Carl Lentz, a pastor who once ministered to pop stars and profession­al athletes, speaks onstage at Hillsong NYC, at the Manhattan Center’s Hammerstei­n Ballroom in 2017. Lentz is among the ministers featured on the PreachersN­Sneakers Instagram account, which showcases pastors’ high fashion choices alongside their high dollar amounts.

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