M
markomalley
Guest
(Let me caveat this by saying that my personal dress code is business attire when I am reading at Mass and business attire or business casual when I am in the congregation)In looking through the postings on this and other threads like it, it seems to me that some of the “resistance” to wearing our best clothes to Mass (excluding slipping in from work, extreme poverty and everyone agrees on modesty mostly) have to do with our ideas of God as either transcendent or immanent (or of course, my personal favorite, both). Is that what you see, also?
My primary issue is not an effort to justify slovenliness in any way, shape, or form. However, too often, I see where “Sunday best” becomes a point of pride with people as opposed to a point of humility. We are approaching the “holy of holies” and we are witnessing heaven come down to earth on the altar, seeing the re-presentation of the eternal and ultimate sacrifice of the Lamb of God, in propitiation for **our **sins. (cf Apoc 5)
We are NOT going to a party. We are NOT going to a parade. We are witnessing God’s ultimate sacrifice for us, done once for ever. Then we are given the incredible privilege of being able to eat from the Pasch. We should approach the altar rail with an incredible sense of awe for the incredible mercy that God has poured out for us.
While the non-verbal that the slobs and sl*ts send when they come to the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is that they couldn’t care less; the non-verbal I (often) see with folks coming dressed to impress, those dressed with the latest fashions from (fill in the blank), is that they somehow feel worthy to receive the bread of life. (Yes, I realize that in many cases this may not be the case…but non-verbal signals get sent nonetheless).