R
reggieM
Guest
Yes, he said “many things” - like what?Stigmatized what for instance?
Yes, he said “many things” - like what?Stigmatized what for instance?
You equated “dressing down” with “something bad” - not me.I did not. You clearly stated that dressing down was part of the liturgical ethos when you attended the OF. The liturgy is integral to the Rite. Ergo, you put down the Rite
Culture and liturgy go together. The OF is open to a wider range of interpretations and this includes how the congregation is expected to dress and comport themselves. I leave this to the priests who are in charge of the liturgy. It’s not my place to say one OF is better than another - which it appeared you were doing by holding your own up as a standard. Should I take umbrage because you are denigrating the OF Masses I attend where we dress down? Because I didn’t claim they were “not as good” as EF Masses - you did.Had you said dressing down was part of the cultural ethos of the place where you attended the OF, then I wouldn’t have taken umbrage. But you clearly associated the dressing down to the liturgy, which is part of the rite.
Show me where I said it was “too casual”.So either you made a poor choice of words, or you meant what you said and you perceive the OF liturgy as too casual. Which is it?
I don’t think that there is any link at all between liturgical reform and casual attire during mass.You equated “dressing down” with “something bad” - not me.
Culture and liturgy go together. The OF is open to a wider range of interpretations and this includes how the congregation is expected to dress and comport themselves.
To pre-empt a comment that may arise above.The issue, let’s say it’s dressing too casually, is due to the social ethos of the world.
And, apparently, it’s because some traditionalists are arrogant and haughty? So traditionalists are to blame for the behaviors of people at the OF?
In the interest of having some peace among the good Catholics here and not just sniping at each other, I didn’t intend to put down the OF. If I offended you in some way, I apologize.Had you said dressing down was part of the cultural ethos of the place where you attended the OF, then I wouldn’t have taken umbrage.
It’s a chicken or the egg problem. Does the liturgy shape culture or does the culture shape the liturgy? It’s a little of both.I don’t think that there is any link at all between liturgical reform and casual attire during mass.
Our Pentecostal friends weren’t subject to V2 changes at all- but in the days of old, they’d be dressed sharply on Sunday morning. Today, they are very casual as well
The Mass itself is. The people, however, are just as casual as anywhere else, in particular in summer as the abbey is a well-known tourist attraction due to its prize-winning cheese factory, cider factory and in fall, apple orchards.Some OF Masses are quite formal, as OraLabora pointed out at his own.
You may be right - I don’t know for sure.The Mass itself is. The people, however, are just as casual as anywhere else, in particular in summer as the abbey is a well-known tourist attraction due to its prize-winning cheese factory, cider factory and in fall, apple orchards.
Which agains shows that there is no correlation, nor causative relationship, between the liturgy and the way people dress.
Accepted.In the interest of having some peace among the good Catholics here and not just sniping at each other, I didn’t intend to put down the OF. If I offended you in some way, I apologize.
With respect, ask anyone who was around for a long time before Vatican II and you’ll hear plenty about priests who had a very casual and laissez-faire attitude towards Mass: rushed Mass in 20 minutes, barely audible Masses, etc. Yet people dressed more formally then just the same. So I just don’t see the connection between dress code and liturgy.Here’s the way I view it.
The OF liturgy is both shaped by the culture and it shapes a culture. It allows more flexibility in style. It has more opportunities for inculturation. I’ll say also, the priest’s attitude, demeanor, comportment and intentions shape the congregation.
Most of the OF priests I know have no problem with how people dress down for Sunday Mass – I’ll say with the exception of how some women dress, but generally there is nothing said about this.
I don’t feel it is my place to impose my standards on those priests (or bishops where the bishop sets the standard).
It’s my belief that the EF has a different formative character on the faithful, as I said, the priests have more precise, fixed and formal ritual to observe – thus, this shapes the people to respond with more “dressing up” for Mass.
I prefer this approach for a number of reasons.
But I have not said that this is “better” in some absolute way, and I have not said that the EF is a “better rite” than any other in the church.
I actually don’t pay that much attention to how people dress at the OF. If there is no dress code (and I have never seen one published at OF liturgies except at the churches in Rome) and the priests offering the OF don’t care or encourage casual dress then people are not violating anything. Of course, I would think common sense would prevail in cases where people are dressed provocatively even by secular standards, but what am I going to do about it anyway? I’m not going to come on CAF and start complaining about what people do in other parishes.
If people violate the dress code in my parish, our priest deals with it. Nobody gets kicked out. I don’t even think people get frowned upon or shunned. It’s only newcomers who dress casually, and if they stay around for some weeks - that changes.
Ok, I don’t see it that way - but there’s no way to go back to the 1860s or whatever pre-Conciliar era you have in mind, so we’ll just have to leave it at that.It is my belief that if a priest is casual or careless about the liturgy today, he’d be just as much so if the pre-Conciliar rite was still the only rite, and people would dress down just as much for Mass if that were the case, as they do now because that’s where N. American culture is now.
I don’t follow that. It is inculturation to include African tribal liturgical dancing, but it’s not inculturation to include an American-cultural styles in the liturgy?This isn’t really inculturation of the Mass, nor does it flow from the liturgy. It flows from the general culture of the place. Inculturation in the liturgy is another matter and is more seen in the music, in some forms of African rituals (where very colourful dress is their idea of formality), etc.
At one time every one was a Solemn High.Not every Mass was a Missa Cantata or Solemn High Mass back in the day…
I disagree, but I guess you feel no hesitation in denigrating the work of good priests?Institutes like the FSSP and ICK are to the EF rite what museum curators are to steam engines.
EF communites are not attempting to return to 1953. It’s a living rite. I notice a similarity with Eastern Rite Catholic communities in my area that take a similarly non-casual approach by both priests and congregations.They allow the public to see their beloved rite, or engines, at their very best. It is not necessarily how the public saw it in 1953 in a backwater rural parish without an expert schola singing Gregorian chant and a low Mass with a small amateur choir singing vernacular hymns -technically before the formal start and after the formal end of the Mass.
Thank you for sharing that link. I loved the printable missal which might give the O.P. an opportunity to preview and pray before assisting.The Maternal Heart of Mary FSSP parish in Sydney has some Traditional Latin Mass resources on their website (maternalheart.org/resources.html). There is a missal that you can print out and they have propers for all the Sundays of the year to print as well.
Accepted.
With respect, ask anyone who was around for a long time before Vatican II and you’ll hear plenty about priests who had a very casual and laissez-faire attitude towards Mass: rushed Mass in 20 minutes, barely audible Masses, etc. Yet people dressed more formally then just the same. So I just don’t see the connection between dress code and liturgy.
It is true the OF has options. But it is not which penitential rite is used, or which EP is used, that determines the formality of the Mass. Our abbey uses every EP on a rotating basis (well, IV is the least used but it is used, and the Roman Canon is used frequently, even on ordinary weekdays). No matter which EP the abbey uses, the Mass is just as formal. The only difference is that a simpler chant tone is used on regular (non-feast) weekdays. This is very much in keeping with degrees of solemnity allowed in the liturgy that also existed in a more formal way in the 1962 Missal (low Mass, Missa Cantata, Solemn High Mass, etc.)
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I agree with your whole post but especially this part. For many of us who have worked for many years in business casual workplaces, “dressing up” beyond just wearing clean, modest business casual-type wear does not carry an extra holy or respectful connotation. If worn too often it could actually work against you by making you look too rigid in a workplace that’s supposed to be fostering innovation and teamwork.The idea of “wearing your Sunday best” is very agricultural and industrial. Farmers and blue collar workers would often have nicer clothes that they wore to Church and other special events. It was called their “Sunday best” because it was worn on Sundays.
- The invention of “Business Casual” – I honestly believe this is the number 1 reason of the “dress down” we see across North America.
Business people on the other hand, had to wear that all the time. They always wore “Sunday Clothes” to work and every day of the week. So farmers and blue collar people would simply buy and where whatever fashion was used by the professional class.
With the advent of “business casual” the clothing choices of the professional class has dramatically grown. For some people & companies, business causal even includes jeans.
So it’s no wonder, people are dressed down in Church today, because they are dressed down in everyday life. ** Furthermore, to some people, dressing up is viewed as vanity instead of respect.
**
I will acknowledge that some people are inspired to wear what the majority are wearing.
I too have attended Mass at a Benedictine monastery and I would again. It is certainly different than the local English or Spanish Masses.The Mass itself is. The people, however, are just as casual as anywhere else, in particular in summer as the abbey is a well-known tourist attraction due to its prize-winning cheese factory, cider factory and in fall, apple orchards.
Which agains shows that there is no correlation, nor causative relationship, between the liturgy and the way people dress. The liturgy at the abbey is as formal as you can get here.
I myself dress neatly, but simply. No suit, no ties. I believe in Benedictine simplicity and I have a very minimalist wardrobe.
Good questions and that sounds … weird.My question isn’t specifically about the TLM but about head coverings for women at Holy Mass. Some women in our parish wear veils, but I was wondering if it is still acceptable for women to wear other sort of head coverings such as hats or caps to church. At our school, neither women nor men can wear any sort of head coverings. I always find that odd, because traditionally only men should remove their head covering when they enter a building, and women can leave theirs on. At our school, the reason is that if we say men can’t, we also have to say women can’t. My response is, why not let them both if we want equality?
Thanks,
Jennifer
yes, women can wear other head coverings at Mass, like hats (i.e. the kinds of hats you see Queen Elizabeth II and the Duchess of Cambridge wearing)My question isn’t specifically about the TLM but about head coverings for women at Holy Mass. Some women in our parish wear veils, but I was wondering if it is still acceptable for women to wear other sort of head coverings such as hats or caps to church. At our school, neither women nor men can wear any sort of head coverings. I always find that odd, because traditionally only men should remove their head covering when they enter a building, and women can leave theirs on. At our school, the reason is that if we say men can’t, we also have to say women can’t. My response is, why not let them both if we want equality?
Thanks,
Jennifer
The “hats in school, should they be allowed?” debates have been around for decades and there are many, many news articles on the subject. The gist/ summary of the articles seems to be that hats cause a lot of distractions, attitude, horseplay, and sometimes cheating/ security concerns, so it’s easier to just ban them for both sexes and therefore have one less problem to deal with.At our school, neither women nor men can wear any sort of head coverings. I always find that odd, because traditionally only men should remove their head covering when they enter a building, and women can leave theirs on.
i would expect a lot of people with interest in the topic, either pro or con, to show upBut I’d think, here in the Traditional Catholic forum on CAF, we wouldn’t get many people who really don’t like the traditional Liturgy, right? It should be a place for those who like it or want to learn about it. Not for those who don’t like it and want to knock it down – wouldn’t you think?