
Submitted by Kentucky Today
Seymour Wattenbarger isn’t nearly the man he once was.
Physically speaking.
A year ago, Wattenbarger tipped the scales at 325 pounds, but a healthy diet has allowed the 76-year-old Baptist preacher to trim down significantly.
He’s shed 75 pounds — and counting.
“My clothes didn’t fit me,” he said. “My suits were too small. I felt terrible. My doctor informed me that I had crossed the line into diabetes. I made up my mind the weight had to come off.”
Now, Wattenbarger, director of missions for the Knox Association of Baptists in Gray, Ky., is warning other preachers that they need to be careful to avoid one of the chief occupational hazards of their jobs — overeating.
Facing schedules heavy on weekday luncheons, Sunday afternoon dinners and endless potluck meals, it can be easy to add inches to the waistband. Studies have found more than 75 percent of American preachers are overweight or downright obese.
Wattenbarger said Baptists often joke about their food consumption, but, he said, it’s no laughing matter.
“Our pastors are digging their graves with their teeth,” he said. “We tend to eat, eat, eat. I’ve been known to eat a whole pie myself in years past.”
Wattenbarger went on a low-carb diet when he walked out of his doctor’s office last year. Three months later, his blood sugar level was in the normal range. His blood pressure was down. His triglycerides and cholesterol plummeted.
“My energy level went up,” he said. “I feel so much better. Inch by inch, anything’s a cinch.”
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SOURCE: Baptist Press
Roger Alford/Kentucky Today