Yes, women have a particular weight all their own in modesty…
Especially in these days.
Sigh.
At least I will say…
It is true also though that men have a particular weight all their own in purity… Thank God women do not have to bear it. It is part of the difference, one can be very thankful for.
There are many athletic activities which in and of themselves aren’t much of a problem if at all, but do become a problem in public, especially when fashion demands clothing that is completely morally unacceptable – which it so often does.
Public gymnastics would be one of these things, as long as men are present, the outfits and poses as a general rule make it impossible. If only schools had not moved to be co-ed.
Some say that if you wear large towels, and a large swimming suit you can get in and out of the water discretely with help. But no swimming suit of these times, alone, one piece or not, can be considered modest. It is not truly clothing at all.
One has to not walk on borderlines but stay well clear of them or one goes over, it’s pretty much inevitable.
We live in times of particular moral corruption in regards to matters of modesty.
Catholic schooling of course has completely fallen to pieces just like regular catechesis. Or we would not have cheerleaders at the schools – It’s hard to think of an role more immodest simply by nature, besides say joining the Rockettes.
But the sins that lead most people to Hell are as the little girl says, speaking of what she learned from Mary:
‘The sins that lead more souls to hell are the sins of the flesh.’ Bl. Jacinta
So it follows that matters of impurity and modesty are the ones we are most raised culturally blind to, and most prone to excuse, since these are the linked sins that send most souls to Hell.
When the saints speak of the fewness of the saved, and they speak on it over and over and endlessly, how can we hope to be among that few if we do not act like the few instead of the many? What the many do should be exactly what we should realize we should not be doing as a general rule.
Further material for reference:
‘A special danger to morals is represented by public bathing at beaches, in pool and river banks. . . Mixed bathing between men and women, which nearly always is a proximate occasion of sin and a scandal, must be avoided.’
Cardinal Pia y Daniel
‘These principles with due regard to time and place, must, in accordance with Christian prudence, be applied to all schools, particularly in the most delicate and decisive period of formation, that, namely, of adolescence; and in gymnastic exercises and deportment special care must be had of Christian modesty in young women and girls which is so gravely impaired by any kind of exhibition in public.’
Pope Pius XI, ‘Divini Illus Magistri’, 1929 A.D.
'We read also in Father Nieremberg that a noble lady, who was exceedingly pious, asked God to make known to her what displeased His Divine Majesty most in persons of her sex.
The Lord vouchsafed in a miraculous manner to hear her. He opened under her eyes the Eternal Abyss.
There she saw a woman a prey to cruel torments and in her recognized one of her friends, a short time before deceased. This sight caused her as much astonishment as grief: the person whom she saw damned did not seem to her to have lived badly.
Then that unhappy soul said to her: “It is true that I practiced religion, but I was a slave of vanity. Ruled by the passion to please, I was not afraid to adopt indecent fashions to attract attention, and I kindled the fire of impurity in more than one heart. Ah! If Christian women knew how much immodesty in dress displeases God!” At the same moment, this unhappy soul was pierced by two fiery lances, and plunged into a caldron of liquid lead.’
‘Louis of Granada speaks of a young woman whose damnation had no other source than vanity and the desire to please. She led a regular life, but her passion to attract attention by the charm of her beauty was the moving cause of her whole conduct. Having fallen sick, she died, having received all the Sacraments. While her confessor was praying for her soul, she appeared to him, saying that she was damned, and that the cause of her damnation was vanity. “I sought,” she added, “only to please the eyes of men. This passion caused me to commit a multitude of sins; it prevented me from receiving the Sacraments well, and it has led me to everlasting torments.”’
Rev. F.X. Schouppe, S.J.
‘In all your movements, let nothing be evident that would offend the eyes of another.’
St. Augustine, Father and Doctor of the Church
‘I urge you, therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God, your spiritual worship. Do not conform yourselves to this age but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and pleasing and perfect.’
Romans 12:1-2
‘Frequent not the company of immodest persons, especially if they be also impudent, as is generally the case; . . . these corrupted souls and infected hearts scarcely speak to any, either of the same or a different sex, without causing them to fall in some degree from purity; they have poison in their eyes and in their breath, like basilisks. On the contrary, keep company with the chaste and virtuous; often meditate upon and read holy things; for the word of God is chaste, and makes those also chaste that delight in it.’
St. Francis de Sales, Doctor of the Church
‘The purpose of clothing is to keep warm in winter and to cover your nakedness, not to serve your vanity.’
St. Cyril of Jerusalem, Father and Doctor of the Church
“Further we must speak as we dress, or dress as we speak. Why do we profess one thing and display another? The tongue talks of chastity, but the whole body reveals incontinence.”
St. Jerome, Father and Doctor of the Church