C
chicago
Guest
Ok, I’m going to comment a tad more seriously on this portion:… and yet when it comes to God we just tell him…“eh, oh well, it’s just mass after all” or make excuses.
I think that a lot of our “dress standards” are really more about human respect than anything. A lot of the time, then, we dress to appease the sensibilities of others. But, somehow, I don’t see the Lord as being quite so petty.
“Oh, will you look at her? Can you believe that she actually wore that tacky blouse to OUR exclusive and oh so important event?”
Um, no.
I’m all for “dressing up” and think that people generally look better when they do. But I’m not going to get all stressed out about it, either. Honestly, who are you trying to impress at Mass? Your neighbor? The priest? God?
“Hey, look at me Lord, don’t I look sharp?”
And who is it that’s going to tsk tsk if you aren’t quite “all that”?
So I don’t think it is at all about “making excuses” (what’s there to excuse?) or playing down Mass as something insignifigant. Nor am I suggesting that we not make an effort to offer our entire selves. Rather, it’s a sensibility that suggests a focus on the essentials rather than the accidents. One of keeping priorities straight. One of a certain common sense of the everyman. For what the Lord cares about is the heart and He accepts everyman who comes to Him in humility, wherever he is.
That’s what Mass is about. Not who looks the best or whether you even look your best. For , ultimately, we’re all sinners; poor beggars; dourly clothed at the table of the Lord.
