Some people wear their faith on the sleeve, others on their feet, which is hardly sacrilegious. It is in fact, Sock Religious.
Catholic socks are a rarity but images like Mary, Pope Francis, St. Teresa of Kolkata and St. Joseph can be found at sockreligious.com. The Diocese of Little Rock also sells socks with the diocesan crest to benefit seminarian education, created by Sock Religious.
“We always knew this would be a way to outwardly to express our faith,” said Scott Williams, who founded Sock Religious based in Indianapolis with his wife Elisabeth last year. “The most difficult thing that comes with evangelization is starting the conversation and these definitely will start a conversation.”
Express your faith
Scott Williams, who has worked in youth ministry for about eight years, said creating Sock Religious was a “whim,” brought on by his love for fun socks in his suit-and-tie job.
“If I’m going to be matching socks to national holidays or to National Doughnut Day or Flag Day, how cool would it be to have socks to match up with feast days?” said the cradle Catholic. Soon, the Williams along with graphic designer Madison Kinast, were selling Pope Francis’ smiling face on a pair of socks at the National Catholic Youth Conference, selling about a pair a minute for eight hours.
Today, they still travel to various Catholic conferences and events to share their product line, which now includes Our Lady of Grace, St. Joseph, St. John Paul II, St. Michael, St. Teresa of Kolkata, St. Thérèse of Lisieux and more subtle designs, including rosary socks and Keys to the Kingdom socks. In November and December, they launched St. Nicholas and Our Lady of Guadalupe socks and often add more designs to their catalog.
“It’s a way to express your personality without being way over the top or distracting,” he said.
Williams’ favorite sock, St. Joseph, has “a lot of personality” woven in the design.
“On the bottom of the sock, it has St. Joseph’s most famous quote, so empty quotations because he was never quoted in the Bible,” he said, adding the carpenter’s square designs and the image of him holding the Baby Jesus are symbols “of hard work and dedication and dedication to family; so that’s what I try to emulate in my life.”
But the socks are more than just fun. Elisabeth Williams, a nurse at Franciscan Hospice House, said her favorite St. Teresa of Kolkata socks, with the saint’s image and quote “small things, great love” on the bottom are “hard to miss.”
“I love the simple design and the simple message, which I think our world needs right now … just to have that tangible reminder daily to offer the small things,” she said, adding her coworkers enjoy wearing the socks. A pair was also donated to a patient who “really loved Mother Teresa.”
Scott Williams said he’s heard from customers about the unexpected impact the socks have had in their life. One man, he said, wore his St. John Paul II socks on an airplane. After the flight, an airline attendant ran to catch him to share her story.
“She said ‘you’re not going to believe this, but I’ve been struggling in my relationship with God recently’,” and whether or not to go back to church,” he said. “‘I asked him to show me the pope’ and he was wearing the pope socks.”
Comfort and support
Office of Vocations executive assistant Maria Izquierdo said diocesan-crested socks made their debut this summer at the Taste of Faith dinner in Mountain Home.
The idea started out as a potential Christmas gift for the seminarians, thought up by vocations director Msgr. Scott Friend.
“Guys have pride in their diocese so it was a way for them to show off where they’re from. It’s part of their special love for the diocese,” he said.
They reached out to Sock Religious to design two types: Black and gray checkers with yellow accents and blue and gray with St. Peter crosses. Both include the Diocese of Little Rock crest. While the Vocations Office purchased the socks from the company, all sale proceeds go toward seminarian education.
“It was something new,” Izquierdo said. “People were buying them not only for their spouses, but for their sons or relatives but they were thinking of Christmas gifts as well.”
Msgr. Friend said the socks are “a nice way to start a conversation.”
“If someone sees the socks they can say, ‘Well, I did this to help vocations,’” he said. “… We’re always kind of inviting people to help support vocations and all that and it’s an easy way to do it, a fun way to do it. The important part of it is getting people to pray for vocations and to remember to spread the message and encourage vocations.”
A little more than $3,000 has been raised from sock sales and has spread pride in the diocese, support for vocations — and comfort.
“It’s a good way to help the seminarians and keep (your) feet warm at the same time,” Msgr. Friend said.