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How To Address A Pastor With A Doctorate

It’s always a good idea to address your pastor with the utmost respect. They’ve chosen to dedicate their lives to serving God and others, so it’s important that we do what we can to show them how much their service means to us.

If you’re addressing a pastor who also holds a doctorate degree, it can be hard to know how best to address them in writing or in conversation. Here are some tips on how to best express your appreciation for the work they do.

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How To Address A Pastor With A Doctorate

Identification

“Reverend” and “pastor” are names that are used to address ordained pastors in a variety of denominations, including Episcopal, Lutheran, Presbyterian, and Methodist. The title of pastor is considered to be a prestigious title, but the term “reverend” is used as a respectful approach. The minister may choose to address him in one of these two ways, depending on his personal taste. There are some people who prefer to go by their first names, such as “Reverend Bob” or “Pastor Bob,” while others prefer to go by their last names, such as “Reverend Smith” or “Pastor Smith.”

Significance

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=twyCvHCqUTk

When speaking to a minister who holds a doctorate degree, it is appropriate to use the title reverend or pastor in front of the minister’s name. A person who has devoted his life to the Church and who, as a result, ought to be recognized in place of the title of “doctor” should be addressed using this standard protocol, which is considered to be a respectful alternative.

Considerations

When sending written correspondence to a minister, the envelope should be addressed to “Reverend Smith” or “Pastor Smith.” The letter’s salutation should read, “Dear Dr. Smith.”

How To Address A Pastor In Writing

RELIGIONPOSITIONON ENVELOPESALUTATIONDIRECT ADDRESS
Afro-CarribbeanSpiritualities: VoudunManbo Asogwe(female)Hounjan (male)Manbo AsogweHounjanDear Manbo,Dear Houjan,Dear AsogweManbo Asogwe;Hounjan;
Afro-CaribbeanSpiritualities:Yoruba-LukumiBabalorisha (men)Iyalorisa (women)BabalorishaIyalorisaDear Babalorisha,Dear IyalorisaCustoms vary
Bahá’iNo clergy; the host of a Baha’i gathering should be addressed just as s/he would be addressed in theworkplace.
Buddhism: PurelandPriestThe ReverendDear Sensei ;Dear Rev.Sensei
Buddhism: TibetanAbbot; Lama;His EminenceHis HolinessDear RinpocheYour EminenceYour HolinessRinpoche
Buddhism: Tibetan:Gelug lineageLama (most lamasare also monks),Abbot Geshey(Doctor of BuddistPhilosophy),Dorampa,Tsogrampa,Lharampa (Doctor ofBuddhistPhilosophy of thehighest level)His Holiness GesheyDear RinpocheYour EminenceYour HolinessRinpoche
Buddhism: Tibetan: Kagyu lineageMonk; Abbot; Gyalwa Karmapa [head of this lineage]His Holiness the Gyalwa Karmapa [Abbot] The Venerable RinpocheYour Holiness Dear Ven.
Buddhism: Tibetan: Nyingma lineageMonk; Abbot; Rinpoche[Head] His Holiness RinpocheYour HolinessRinpoche
Buddhism: Tibetan: Sakya lineageMonk; Abbot/RinpocheHis EminenceHis HolinessYour HolinessRinpoche
Buddhism: TheravadaBhikku; MonkThe Venerable
Buddhism: ZenRoshiRoshiDear Roshi ; Dear RoshiRoshi; Sensei
Christianity: Anglican; EpiscopalianPriest (who may be functioning as a Rector; Curate; Vicar; Chaplain)The ReverendDear Fr.* When the priest is a woman, practice varies. Some prefer “Dear Mother Smith”; others prefer “Dear Elizabeth.” Beginning a letter simply “Greetings” might be easiest.Fr. ; Fr. ;*Mother (or, according to her preference, see left).
DeaconThe Reverend DeaconDear DeaconDeacon ; or, Deacon
BishopThe Right ReverendDear Bishop ; Your GraceBishop; or Your Grace
Dean (of a cathedral or seminary)The Very ReverendDear DeanDean
ArchdeaconThe Venerable FN LNDear Archdeacon LNArchdeaconFr. ; Fr.
Presiding BishopThe Most ReverendDear Bishop -or- Your GraceBishop -or-Bishop -or- Your Grace
Nun, MonkSister, OSH**Brother , BSG**(If also ordained, it would also be proper to write “The Reverend Ellen Francis, OSH”, and, “The Reverend Tobias Haller, BSG”)***OSH and BSG indicate the order to which these exemplars belongDear Sister ; Dear BrotherSisterSister BrotherBrother
Christianity: Church of Christ (not United Church of Christ)MinisterTitles are not used; leaders are addressed as would anyone in the workplace.
Christianity: Ethiopian OrthodoxBishop or ArchbishopHis Holiness AbunaYour Holiness AbunaYour Holiness
PriestQesDear QesQes
Chief CantorMarigetaDear MarigetaMarigeta
Religious Scribe or ScholarDabtarraDear DabtarraDabtarra
Christianity: Jehovah’s WitnessesWhile the term “minister” is used, Jehovah’s Witnesses believe that a clergy class and special titles are improperBrother Smith; Mr. Smith
Christianity: Latter-day Saints (Mormons)President (Apostle)President Gordon B. HinckleyDear President HinckleyPresident Hinckley
BishopBishopBishopBishop
Elder (includes male missionaries)ElderElderElder
Female missionariesSisterSisterSister
Christianity: OrthodoxThe hiearchy of each autocephalous Orthodox Church (and Middle Eastern and North African Catholic churches) has its own peculiar set of titles; there is no standard title for the head of a Church.
ArchbishopHis All Holiness Bartholomew, Archbishop of Constantinople and New Rome, Ecumenical PatriarchYour All Holiness
PatriarchHis Beatitude NAME #, Pope and Patriarch of LocationYour Eminence, Your HolinessYour Eminence, Your Holiness
ArchbishopHis Beatitude NAME, Archbishop of LOCATION, Metropolitan LOCATIONYour BeatitudeYour Beatitude
BishopThe Right ReverendNAME, Bishop of LocationYour GraceYour Grace
ArchimandriteThe Very Reverend Archimandrite -OR- ArchimandriteDear Fr.
Igumen; AbbotThe Very Reverend Igumen -OR- Igumen -OR- The Very Reverend Abbot -OR- AbbotDear Fr.
AbbessThe Very Reverend AbbessDear Mother
Hiermonk; Protopresbyter; ArchpriestThe ReverendDear Fr.
Christianity: Pentecostal, Holiness TraditionsMinister; some groups have an array of religious leaders with various titles, such as Apostle, Prophet, Evangelist, among others.The Reverend -OR- Rev.Dear PastorPastor“Reverend” is used frequently, but is technically incorrect. (Technically, “Reverend” is an adjective, not a noun.)ApostleProphetEvangelist
Christianity: Protestants, Free Church (including Lutheran, Adventist, Baptist, Congregational, Methodist, Presbyterian, Assemblies of God, Disciples of Christ, Mennonite, United Church of Christ; many others)MinisterThe Reverend -OR- Rev.Dear PastorPastor“Reverend” is used frequently, but is technically incorrect. (Technically, “Reverend” is an adjective, not a noun.)
BishopBishop -OR- The Rev. BishopDearBishopBishop
Christianity: Roman CatholicPopeHis Holiness, Pope John Paul II -OR- His Holiness, the PopeYour Holiness -OR- Most Holy FatherYour Holiness-OR- Most Holy Father
CardinalHis Eminence CardinalYour EminenceYour Eminence
ArchbishopMost ReverendYour ExcellencyYour Excellency
BishopMost ReverendYour ExcellencyYour Excellency
AbbotRight Reverend (add religious order initials)Dear FatherFather
Pronotary ApostolicRev. Msgr.Rev. Msgr.
PriestRev.Dear ReverendFather
Religious Order PriestRev. (add religious order initials)Dear Reverend FatherFather
DeaconRev. Mr.Dear DeaconDeacon
Brother (monk)BrotherDear BrotherBrother
Sister (nun)SisterDear SisterSister
Superior of SisterhoodReverend MotherFN (add religious order initials)Dear Reverend MotherReverend Mother
Christian ScienceNo ordained clergy
HinduismPriest (male)SwamiDear SwamiSwami
Priest (female)SwaminiDear SwaminiSwamini
Leaders very ‘high’ on the ladder of spiritualitySwamijiGurujiGuru MaharajGurudevMatajiDear SwamjiDear GurujiDear Guru MaharajDear GurudevDear MatajiSwamjiGurujiGuru MaharajGurudevMataji
Secular or semi-religious, theoretical or philosophical leaders, or highly respected priestsPanditji, Pandit, Acharyaji, Acharya, Shastriji, Shastri(same forms of use as above; word choice depends on region of India)
Common forms of address – always acceptable (male) (female)Shree, Shreeman, Shreeyut, SriShreemati, or Soubhagyavati
ALSOMr. or Mrs. will always be acceptable in an American context
Female renunciatesSadhviDear SadhviSadhvi
IslamImamImamDear ImamImamImam
JainNo official clergy. Serious believers become monks or nuns, called Sadhu (male) and Sadhvi (female). Non-initiates form the classes of laypersons. (Shravak and Shravika).
JudaismRabbiRabbiOriental Jews (from Near Eastern countries) may call their rabbis “Hakam,” “Gaon,” or “Mori.”Dear RabbiRabbiRabbi
CantorCantorDear CantorCantorCantor
Quaker/Society of FriendsNo clergy; a Quaker should be addressed just as he/she would be addressed in the workplace.
ScientologyMinisterReverendExecutive Director of the Church of Scientology of Los Angeles (or whatever the person’s position in the church hierarchy is)Dear ReverendReverendIf you are unsure of the person’s official title. Mr., Mrs., or Ms. is appropriate.
ShintoPriestThe Reverend -OR- SenseiDear Reverend; Dear SenseiSensei;
Sikhism (No ordained clergy)Since Sikhs do not have an ordained clergy or a priestly class, these titles are used for both religious leaders and laity.Males: SardarFemales: SardarniNote: Often for males, “Bhai” can be used in place of “Sardar”.If one wants to be extremely polite, as is the manner in Punjab, the Sikh homeland, then one would suffix the honorific “Ji” after the last name. This custom is observed most frequently in conversation.Generally, during normal conversation, the first or last names are not always used. Instead, one would use Sardar Sahib (for males) and Sardarani Sahiba (for females). Here one would not use “Ji” as a suffix since “Sahib” and “Sahiba” take its place instead.
Unitarian UniversalistThe ReverendDear Pastor ; DearPastor“Reverend” is used frequently, but is technically incorrect. (Technically, “Reverend” is an adjective, not a noun.)
ZoroastrianDastoor; DasturDastoor -OR-DastoorjiDear DastoorjiDastoorjiDastoorji

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