by Jonathan Merritt, The Atlantic
Mister Rogers, the iconic television host, was a Presbyterian minister—but his show touched people of all faiths.
After Amy Melder became a Christian at the age of six, she set out to evangelize everyone she cared about. One of the names on the top of her list was a person whom she’d never actually met: Fred Rogers.
Amy was a frequent viewer of PBS’s “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” and had formed a deep connection to the gentle host who made her feel “safe and accepted in his tiny staged living room.” So she penned Rogers a letter to “make sure he knew he was going to heaven.” Within weeks, she received a lengthy response from a man who personally answered every piece of fan mail he received.
He thanked her for the colorful drawing she sent him, which “is special because you made it for me.” And then he addressed the matter that most concerned Amy:
You told me that you have accepted Jesus as your Savior. It means a lot to me to know that. And, I appreciated the scripture verse that you sent. I am an ordained Presbyterian minister, and I want you to know that Jesus is important to me, too. I hope that God’s love and peace come through my work on MISTER ROGERS’ NEIGHBORHOOD.
Fred Rogers was an ordained minister, but he was no televangelist, and he never tried to impose his beliefs on anyone. Behind the cardigans, though, was a man of deep faith. Using puppets rather than a pulpit, he preached a message of inherent worth and unconditional lovability to young viewers, encouraging them to express their emotions with honesty. The effects were darn near supernatural.
When Rogers decided to pursue a career in television, it wasn’t fame he sought. While watching TV during seminary, he “saw people throwing pies at each others faces,” which he believed was both “demeaning behavior” and a missed opportunity. In the wake of World War II, thousands of veterans returned from battle and started families. These shell-shocked heroes risked creating a generation of emotionally stunted children. Television was a perfect vehicle for teaching kids to cope with life’s difficulties and express their feelings, but it was used mostly for mindless entertainment.
“After graduating from seminary, the Presbyterian Church didn’t know what to do with Fred,” says Amy Hollingsworth, author of The Simple Faith of Mister Rogers. “So the presbytery gave him a special commission to be an evangelist to children through the media.”
Fred’s faith surfaced in subtle, indirect ways that most viewers might miss, but it infused all he did. He believed “the space between the television set and the viewer is holy ground,” but he trusted God to do the heavy lifting. The wall of his office featured a framed picture of the Greek word for “grace,” a constant reminder of his belief that he could use television “for the broadcasting of grace through the land.” Before entering that office each day, Rogers would pray, “Dear God, let some word that is heard be yours.”
“The world is not always a kind place,” Rogers once said. “That’s something all children learn for themselves, whether we want them to or not, but it’s something they really need our help to understand.”
“Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” helped young viewers process stress incurred during intense periods of cultural upheaval. When it would have been easy to demonize villains, Rogers instead forced viewers to tussle with a question Jesus himself was asked in the gospel of Luke: “Who is my neighbor?” While the question felt different depending on the circumstances, Rogers’ answer never wavered.
“His definition of ‘neighbor’ was whomever you happen to be with at the moment, especially if they are in need,” Hollingsworth said.
Rogers took an artisan’s approach to television production. Each show was designed to meet the psychological needs of children by giving them “a neighborhood expression of care,” in consultation with a team of experts. Rogers thought of himself as something of a surrogate parent, which is why he often utilized puppets and rarely featured other children—he didn’t want to create a sense of “sibling rivalry.”
His hard work helped his show hold its own against flashier, more expensive children’s programs in competing time slots. “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” pushed beyond surface-level entertainment and instilled children with a sense of joy, peace, and kindness. Researchers who compared viewers of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” with viewers of Sesame Street even found that Fred’s fans developed a greater level of patience.
In 1969, The Atlantic documented how the dialogue on “Mister Rogers Neighborhood” often felt so personal that it would trigger a “byplay” from young viewers, in which they “may respond vocally to a question and Rogers, anticipating the reply, may follow through to his next point.”
But for some viewers, the connections went even deeper.
Lauren Tewes, the actress who played the cruise director on the television show “Love Boat,” left the show in 1984 while struggling with a cocaine addiction. One particularly dark morning, the actress says she glanced at her television screen and saw the signature opening of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.” Something inexplicable happened inside of her, which Tewes later attributed to “God speaking to me through the instrument of Mister Rogers.” She spent the next several decades sober.
Later in Rogers’s life, he recounted the story of a child who was being abused by his biological parents, who reportedly “wouldn’t even give him a winter blanket and wouldn’t give him a bed to sleep in.” Through encountering “Mister Rogers’s Neighborhood,” the child began to hope that there were kind people in the world and became convinced that he too should be treated with respect. The child called an abuse hotline and was rescued. If the story doesn’t seem exceptional enough, consider that the hotline operator who answered the phone adopted the boy.
Rogers affected the lives of millions of children, and I count myself among them. On many afternoons, I sat in front of a television screen where Mister Rogers told me that I was lovable and I was enough. He said he was my friend, and I believed him. My life still bears the fingerprints of his influence.
Read the full article here –
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/11/mister-rogers-saint/416838/
4 Comments. Leave new
Fred Rogers was, without a doubt, a very nice person who cared about children. This is something for which all of us can be thankful because this world of ours needs as many very nice people who care about children as possible.
However my primary memory of Mister Rogers will always be that of my wife trying to get our young son to watch the program, and our son actively resisting. After a couple of times, he simply did not want to watch the show anymore.
Since that time I have run into a lot of women who remember Mister Rogers fondly from their childhood, but very few men. When they were boys, most of them simply didn’t like the program. It didn’t appeal to them or interest them.
I suspect that the reason for this is that Fred Rogers himself was just too nice, sweet, gentle, soft-spoken, prim and proper for typical rambunctious little boys. They wanted more action, and more rolling around on the floor.
Maybe one day a graduate student somewhere will decide to write a dissertation on Mister Rogers Neighborhood and why boys and girls reacted so differently to it. That is one dissertation that I would be very interested to read.
Having been at Pittsburgh in the late 70’s/early 80’s I got to know the man, both by association in terms of the seminary class he taught on the theology of children, and on a more personal level in the community.
There was no guile or falsehood in the man, in that the man you saw on TV was the same man in both public and private. In that sense he was the most sincere and honest man I have ever encountered. But that said, yes, I think if you asked him, which we did at PTS, he would describe himself as a pacifist in outlook and philosophy, and non-physical in both his philosophies of “play” and child rearing. I would not call him radical in terms of the contemporary understanding of the term, but he was in the mainstream of the mainline protestant church in a mid-century understanding.
The sadness of his life was of course it was cut far too short by cancer, he never really wrote much on the matters we obsess about, LGBT/sex/church in decline or crises. But I think if he was alive he would affirm much of the contemporary PCUSA in deed and thought. And he would remain a man of my admiration and deep respect.
He was a great christian man and a pastor. I heard his sermon about “LOVE”
When I was a small kid in the 70’s I was allowed to watch two shows, Mister Rogers Neighborhood and Sesame Street, I was not allowed to watch the Electric Company because my late Mother thought it had much yelling, as I look back now he would be considered liberal (given his congregations stance on things),however the World is a much better place because of Fred Rogers, and the cardigan sweaters…….. well I have a few.