L
Lissla_Lissar
Guest
It’s a different messageboard that we’ve both belonged to.
Sorry for the hijack.
Sorry for the hijack.
Well, it’s like this.Hi Mango,
May I ask why you feel that you need to cover up? I don’t mean to sound nosy but is it embarrassment or what?
Aside from the fact that God and all those up there with Him can see us the way we were born, you might want to consider that to cover yourself might be a sign of disrespect. Consider, God made you in the body which he gave Eve. He called that specifically good. Now, couldn’t it be considered disrespectful to cover His own handiwork with our pitiful clothing because we don’t want him to see us? Maybe, like St. Francis, we should every once and a while throw off our garments, cast off the world’s trappings, and pray to God in the way he made us. Furthermore, didn’t Moses and various other prophets actually remove clothing or go naked when in the presence of God? Its just something to consider in today’s possession driven society.
Your actions are cute, definitely; but in the long run, wholly unnecessary. Peace in Christ, gw
You’ve got it a little wrong - GOD created clothes for Adam and Eve to cover up with after the fall, when they finally learned a proper sense of modesty and realised that they were naked and that public nudity wasn’t on.Aside from the fact that God and all those up there with Him can see us the way we were born, you might want to consider that to cover yourself might be a sign of disrespect. Consider, God made you in the body which he gave Eve. He called that specifically good. Now, couldn’t it be considered disrespectful to cover His own handiwork with our pitiful clothing because we don’t want him to see us? Maybe, like St. Francis, we should every once and a while throw off our garments, cast off the world’s trappings, and pray to God in the way he made us. Furthermore, didn’t Moses and various other prophets actually remove clothing or go naked when in the presence of God? Its just something to consider in today’s possession driven society.
Your actions are cute, definitely; but in the long run, wholly unnecessary. Peace in Christ, gw
Christopher West writes well about this in The Theology of the Body for Beginners. God created Adam and Eve naked and “saw that it was good”. The sense of shame only came with the Fall - because suddenly, people felt that they could be seen as objects - objects of sexual desire.Well, it’s like this.
The saints, last time I checked, were people. The angels (I just added the Guardian Angel and St. Raphael to the “crew”) are persons. The icons are windows to Heaven.
So, I basically feel that I’m in the altogether in front of a window where people can see me.
Interestingly, I have been known to pray the rosary whilst soaking in the bathtub.
I don’t know, I’m just weird, I guess.
I hate to disagree, but Adam and Eve made their own clothes out of the leaves first. Then after God banished them into the harsh, barren world, He gave them better clothes so they could be protected from the elements. And lets not forget that God created them nude, thus, it would be hypocritical to believe that a good and loving God would create them in an immodest and sinful condition.You’ve got it a little wrong - GOD created clothes for Adam and Eve to cover up with after the fall, when they finally learned a proper sense of modesty and realised that they were naked and that public nudity wasn’t on.
I heard he went nude quite often while praying and meditating. And even in the instances you suggest, he is still stripping nude before others and God. A penitential act is worth little if you don’t believe that God is there to see it.As for St Francis - he hardly made a habit of going around in the altogether on a regular basis, not to the best of my knowledge. He did so a few times, to make very specific points - to his father about the importance of serving God regardless of family ties, to everyone else about the usefulness of bodily penance in overcoming sins of lust and so on.
Did I suggest that or are you editorializing?He didn’t do it as some sort of naturist feel-good hippy-trip!
He also did it as a sign of poverty and humility. These are qualities we all should seek to possess. That was what I was saying; if a man like St. Francis of Assisi was able to go nude in front of man and God in prayer and life and still be named a saint, then he must have been doing something right. Therefore, if we are to imitate the lives of the saints, what better, and might I add easier, way is there for us to show our reliance and trust in God than for us to present ourselves before Him as the vulnerable, helpless creatures we became after the fall?Remember this was hundreds of years before the term and the concept of hippies were invented. He used to jump into rose bushes to get gashed with thorns, or roll around in the snow, to MORTIFY his body, not glorify it.
I agree with this application of the theology of the body… the icons cannot really see, but if it helps… if there is anybody before whom you can be seen “naked without shame”… it is the saints in heaven. A similar question would be, should one cover up an image of the Blessed Virgin Mary or a crucifix when a married couple engages in the nuptual act? No… because in that case, the act (and the nudity) is not sordid, but is a sacred act, a renewing of the sacrament. So, in and of itself, the human body is a creation of God and is beautiful.Christopher West writes well about this in The Theology of the Body for Beginners. God created Adam and Eve naked and “saw that it was good”. The sense of shame only came with the Fall - because suddenly, people felt that they could be seen as objects - objects of sexual desire.
But as the saints are cleansed of Original Sin and also don’t harbor Concupiscence anymore in Heaven, you may rest well assured that they are not “objectifying” you when they see you naked, but possibly rather rejoice in the body God has given you…
Maybe that’ll help.