“Let love be without hypocrisy. Abhor what is evil. Cling to what is good.” (Romans 12:9).
They were always watching him to catch him in a hypocrisy. An inconsistency. A dual standard.
Mister Rogers–i.e., Fred McFeely Rogers of TV fame–personified the command of Scripture to love thy neighbor and to “be kindly affectionate to one another with brotherly love” (Romans 12:10). An ordained minister, this creator of the television program “Mister Rogers Neighborhood” never preached his beliefs that I know of. But he certainly appears to have lived them.
I didn’t know him personally, other than through television, what I have read about him, and the recent movie about his life.
People who went to work for him on the show watched to see if he really lived in private the virtues of love and acceptance he taught. Reporters interviewed him relentlessly and constantly besieged staff workers looking for a chink in the armor, a crack in the façade. An evidence that he was less than he seemed to be.
The formula says: The more visible you are and the higher virtues you preach, the more you will be examined, questioned, pursued, and investigated. So, if you become well known to the public–whether as a political figure, a government appointee, a celebrity of any kind, or a minister in a church–you should expect it and prepare for it.