R
redrosetea
Guest
Emilio. I am proud of you, and I’ll bet you look wonderful…
Heck yeah!I dont know if they become outdated or not. Personally I’m a traditional catholic priest in the UK and I always wear full cassock, with cincture, shoulder cape, zuchetto and biretta.
As far as I’m concerned, I am proud to be a Priest and just like other vocations, it is my uniform and am proud to wear it. If other priests, ministers or vicars snear at it, it is not my problem.
In Christo
Emilio
Are you in perfect communion with the Pope of Rome?I dont know if they become outdated or not. Personally I’m a traditional catholic priest in the UK and I always wear full cassock, with cincture, shoulder cape, zuchetto and biretta.
As far as I’m concerned, I am proud to be a Priest and just like other vocations, it is my uniform and am proud to wear it. If other priests, ministers or vicars snear at it, it is not my problem.
In Christo
Emilio
They tend to be very heavy. When we were in the missions the secular priests wore very light weight white cassocks,they looked like what Arabs wear. They said that it helped keep the sun off them.An older priest in our parish recently started wearing his Cassock regularly. I asked him about it, and he said something to the effect that he rather “rediscovered” it. I teased that I was jealous–How come the rest of us don’t get to wear a Cassock and don’t get to look so sharp?
A priest in a collar and suit still looks like a priest to me, so to me it’s really kind of a non-issue, except for preference. Father sure looks sharp in a cassock, but it’s probably pretty hot and “swishy,” particularly in summer.
Off the topic but interestingly enough, I met a priest in a shop wearing an off-black suit the other day. No doubt cooler!
To my mind, if I were a priest, I suppose I would rather wear the suit on a day to day basis and save the Cassock for Church or other special occasions. I can imagine there are difficulties with a Cassock, and I’d hate to get a hem stuck in a door or something!
It the same with the friars in our parish. They wear the habit when inside where it’s AC, but when they have to go out into the hot Florida sun of summer, they wear collars or secular clothes. The constitution of the friars allows for such clothing if the conditions are more appropriate.I don’t think that they become outdated, but they do change over time. Clerical garb, as well as the habits worn by religious, have changed (though cloistered religious retain their traditional habits).
I attended a university with secular priests who lived and worked on-campus. There were probably only…two that I ever saw wearing a cassock: the monsignor who’s the head of the major seminary on-campus (the minor seminary is off-campus, but nearby), and one priest. The latter, however, did not always wear the cassock–he wore just the long black cassock, not the cincture, shoulder cape, or biretta–and sometimes he would wear the Roman collar with black pants and a black suit jacket. Most of the secular priests dressed in the Roman collar, pants, and jacket, but I could always recognize them as clergy. The cassock, in my opinion, was not necessary to make them stand out to me.
Our friars usually wear their habits, though when they go out to run errands they will often wear the Roman collar or “civvies”. At the store where I work, occasionally older Felician Franciscan sisters will drop in to do some shopping, and they will wear the knee-length brown dress, short veil, and a cross around their neck. I attended a high school run by the Felician Franciscan sisters, so I was very familiar with how they dressed; however, because they wear these clothes they are identifiable as religious.
Most people assume that secular priests always wore cassocks or some distinctive garb. Such was not the case. They were and still are according to Church law, SECULAR men, not religious.Well, I learn something new every day. And today I learned about why the traditional secular priest’s cassock doesn’t have the shoulder cape and sash like those clergy of higher ranking. Thanks, JR. ^^
Though it’s only the head of the major seminary on the campus of the university whom I’ve seen wearing the Jesuit-style cassock and sash. Other monsignors, such as the president of the university, wear the collar and black suit instead.