P
Phemie
Guest
Yes but there were lots of things in the 1917 Code that had already been abrogated by documents before the 1983 Code was promulgated. I remember being told, in church, that we no longer had to cover our heads.
Inter Insigniores, , paragraph 4, is the document usually cited (including by Catholic Answers apologist) as removing the requirement for women’s head coverings.I’m curious what document abrogated the wearing of veils? Would be interesting to find out, because to my knowledge there wasn’t one(doesn’t mean there wasn’t one). From research on the topic, no one mentions a document abrogating it.
Back in the late 60’s I was in Catholic school and our teacher had a box of pink kleenex on her desk. When we headed over to first friday mass, if a girl didn’t have her beanie the nun would bobby pin a pink kleenex on her head. LOLOL. Thanks for the memories!In Philly hats and headcoverings and mandatory beanies/chapel veils lasted until at least 1971 (the year I moved to New England) and in New England they were gone with the wind by then, sadly, although a lot of older women like my Nana continued wearing hats
Just by a bit.Women will be approached and required to wear, or else escorted out… it cuts against our current culture
Human rather than divine is more like it. We have those with the power to bind and loose in Holy Mother Church, and the ushers aren’t it. Obedience is for everybody.This feels…Protestant in its focus on making its own rules.
I thought not.I should be clear - where obligatory it is for non-approved TLMs. Not compliant with bishop.
I don’t think there are any churches that literally have no minimum amount of clothing required.I know to get into St Peter’s basilica you have to cover up your shoulders and your knees (I have been there in the past).
Ironically, yes.The correct term for this is “illicit.”
It means there isn’t any law about that any more.…even when the old code is replaced, it doesn’t just mean they cease to enforce a law.
May I ask what did they do to indicate their chagrin? That is a very wrong thing to do to anyone respectfully entering a Catholic Church.My wife attended a TLM some years ago, upon entering someone in the Narthex gave her a veil to borrow, but she did not accept or wear it, to their chagrin.