Thank you so very much for this wonderful post, stccp. When I realized I could not find modest professional clothing in stores, I began to sew my own. It is very difficult to find skirt suits that are a proper length (several inches below the knee at the very least), and don’t even get me started about the walking vents which open up to the middle of the thigh. It embarrasses me to even type it knowing that men may be viewing this thread.
Several years ago, I began praying earnestly about Deuteronomy 22:5, a Scripture that prohibits the wearing of men’s clothing by women, and reading Cardinal Siri’s “Notification concerning Men’s Dress Worn By Women”, here is a link:
catholicmodesty.com/Mens_Dress.html
Deuteronomy 22:5 states the matter quite succinctly: “A woman shall not be clothed with man’s apparel, neither shall a man use woman’s apparel : for he that doeth these things is abominable before God.”
I began to realize how very inappropriate this attire is for a woman. Once again, God’s Word and the teachings of the Church were right!
Here is a brief excerpt from Cardinal Siri’s article that particularly struck me: “Male dress is the visible aid to bringing about a mental attitude of being “like a man.” Secondly, ever since men have been men, the clothing a person wears, demands, imposes and modifies that person’s gestures, attitudes and behavior, such that from merely being worn outside, clothing comes to impose a particular frame of mind inside.”
I take care with my appearance, so that any time I step outside my door I am neat, well-groomed and dressed with dignity. Even when I go out to wash my car I wear a pressed button-down blouse and an ankle-length denim skirt. Because this is my “work skirt”, worn when I am washing my car, or cleaning out the garage, or moving, or doing any sort of physical work, the longer length ensures modesty whether I am bending down or reaching up, or climbing a ladder. Frankly, wearing a skirt offers much more freedom of movement and is much cooler than encasing my legs in denim pants.
I work in a very professional office environment, and I am frequently complimented on my professional attire. My skirts are, for the most part, column skirts that are ankle-length or a couple of inches above ankle-length. I wear jackets with blouses that reach my throat and long sleeves. I have heard some women complain that the warm weather where they live prevents them from dressing modestly. I live in a very warm region, where summer temperatures reach 115 or higher on a regular basis. This is not an appropriate excuse to relax the standards of modesty.
Women are daughters of the Most High, infused with the dignity and graces appropriate to her gender and station. I believe so very strongly that modest dress and demeanor are virtues that, as the original poster stated, should be cultivated from a young age. The womanly virtues of gentleness, meekness and quietness as described by St. Peter (I Peter 3:4-6) were the virtues that the “holy women of old” used to adorn themselves. These virtues are considered “of great price in the sight of God”.
There was an age when women dressed with modesty and dignity, and the culture reflected the importance of those virtues. As Catholics, I believe we are called to live apart from the world and to separate ourselves both in dress and demeanor from the “nations around us”. Allowing our dress and behavior to be governed by the Scriptures and the teachings of the Church clearly sets us apart from the age in which we live, where self-discipline and respect for others, and a sense of our duty to God and those around us has been sadly lost.