B
Big_Dummy
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I see this as a romans 14 thing, if you know it will cause a person to sin, then yes.
If you can wear on to the glory of God, then no.
If you can wear on to the glory of God, then no.
Amen, KBernadette!The Church has no fashions and will not conform her sense of modesty to what the world deems acceptable. The last official decree on the subject set the standards for female modesty to be tops that go no further than 2 fingers width from the collar bone all the way around the neck. Sleeves to the elbow. And skirts covering the knees whilst standing or sitting.
Those are your standards as Catholics ladies, until otherwise noted.
And I think that rules out 1 piece suits too!
All I the posts I see from the angry bikini defending women may as well just say, “Whatever! I do what I want!” Or, “I will not serve.”
Yes, some men are weak, and some men have no sense of sin at all. So be charitable in your dress!
Dear Ed,It is unfortunate that people ignore Church teaching and accuse people of only having opinions. This is wrong. Yes, some so-called bikinis are little more than a few pieces of string and less than a handkerchief worth of material.
I was there when the mini-skirt was introduced (1960s). It was a scandal. Period. Got that? People complained but the intelligentsia, the fashion designers, and champions of what they claim about the First Amendment were all against us.
Freedom of Expression was the Same Excuse they used to say TOPLESS GO-GO BARS were OK. Freedom of expression. That’s why STRIPPER quietly changed to EXOTIC DANCER over the last 10 years.
It is very important for people to realize that the Playboy Philosophy was designed to make people think that casual nudity and casual sex were all OK. And they ran a lot of high-brow articles, and interviews with “important” people to let people know that the modern man (back in the 1960s) should embrace the Playboy Philosophy, and Here We Are Today.
So - should women walk around on public beaches mostly naked? The answer is no.
God bless,
Ed
This is Catholic Answers not ExtremistAnswers. Please. Less emotion.It is this type of thinking that led to the Burka. If you cant look at a woman in a Bikini without thinking lusftful thought thats your problem-not hers.
Thank you, Portrait. I have watched, personally, from 1968 with the beginning of the sexual revolution. I knew Hippies that acted as if they were part of a strict, ultra-orthodox religious sect. They had regulation hair, regulation clothing, regulation Peace symbols (patch on jackets and necklace), and regulation behavior. Fornication became “natural acts.” A Hippie friend of mine told me, “I don’t need no piece of paper to live with my old lady.”Dear Ed,
Cordial greetings and I heartly concur with all that you have said above. It is a sad reflection of the morally degenerate times in which our lot is cast that we have to try to convince Catholics about immodest attire. This would not have been an issue of debate prior to the 1960’s.
Western culture is exceedingly decadent nowadays and indeed has been since the moral revolution of the 1960’s. The things which once offended tender Christian consciences, and non-Christian consciences for that matter, sadly offend no more, as some of the contributions to this thread have made all to clear. Are we not in awful danger of becoming deadened to decadence and all forms of unbefitting conduct that should not once be named among us as Catholics?
If I have understood our Catechism correctly then our Church has spoken quite plainly on this issue of modesty in our clothing (CCC, paras. 2521-2523). Moreover, St. Paul in one of the Pastoral epistle’s says to young Timothy, “women should adorn themselves *modestly *and sensibly in seemly apparel” (I Tim. 2: 9). If Sacred Scripture and the Church have spoken unequivocally, why are we having this debate? Incidently, the word “modesty” here in I Tim. 2: 9 denotes a sense of shame and a recoiling from trespassing the boundaries of propriety. This is not to say that women should balk at all fashion, only fashion that is decidedly indecent and not in good taste, such as the bikini and mini skirt. It is so very important that a woman’s attire is expressive of an inner modesty and of a sober outlook on life. Low cut garments revealing cleavage, mini skirts and bikini’s just do not fit the bill for the Catholic woman and are a very bad testimony for our most holy Faith.
Finally, it is one thing for a woman to make herself attractive, but quite another thing to make herself seductive; woman do know the difference and so do we men.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
I love it how when someone has a different opinion on an issue, the other side always says the different opinion is full of emotion and anger… There is nothing in that response that is extreme or overly emotional.This is Catholic Answers not ExtremistAnswers. Please. Less emotion.
Regards,
Ed
So by your definition of that standard, a Catholic lady wouldn’t be able to compete as a swimmer in the Olympics? And the last time I checked, that standard was for proper mass attire. Not swimming attire.The Church has no fashions and will not conform her sense of modesty to what the world deems acceptable. The last official decree on the subject set the standards for female modesty to be tops that go no further than 2 fingers width from the collar bone all the way around the neck. Sleeves to the elbow. And skirts covering the knees whilst standing or sitting.
Those are your standards as Catholics ladies, until otherwise noted.
And I think that rules out 1 piece suits too!
All I the posts I see from the angry bikini defending women may as well just say, “Whatever! I do what I want!” Or, “I will not serve.”
Yes, some men are weak, and some men have no sense of sin at all. So be charitable in your dress!
PatriceA, the Imprimatur issued September 24, 1956 by the Cardinal Vicar of Pius XII was the standard of modest for dress at all times, not merely for attending Mass:And the last time I checked, that standard was for proper mass attire. Not swimming attire.
“A dress cannot be called decent which is cut deeper than two fingers breath under the pit of the throat; which does not cover the arms at least to the elbows; and scarcely reaches a bit beyond the knees. Furthermore, dresses of transparent materials are improper.”
Which would have been considered a very immodest standard 100 years before;PatriceA, the Imprimatur issued September 24, 1956 by the Cardinal Vicar of Pius XII was the standard of modest for dress at all times, not merely for attending Mass.
2521 Purity requires modesty, an integral part of temperance. Modesty protects the intimate center of the person. It means refusing to unveil what should remain hidden. It is ordered to chastity to whose sensitivity it bears witness. It guides how one looks at others and behaves toward them in conformity with the dignity of persons and their solidarity.
Then don’t swim. Ever. Because that’s a totally reasonable position to have.I just do not see how wearing a bathing suit falls in line with that.
Then don’t swim. Ever. Because that’s a totally reasonable position to have.
Actually, I don’t swim. Ever. But I do exercise–in my own home.
The Bucket;6745114:
Then don’t swim. Ever. Because that’s a totally reasonable position to have.
I can not imagine NOT going swimming. It is one of the best forms of exercise out there. Not to mention a life saving skill to learn.Actually, I don’t swim. Ever. But I do exercise–in my own home.
And I can not imagine trying to follow those guidelines everywhere I go.
“Times change.”? No they don’t. People allow, or don’t allow themselves to be affected by what outsiders call fashion or trends.And women wearing pants was also considered immodest; and if you subscribe to that idiot Ron Conte’s viewpoint, it’s mortally sinful and worse than wearing a tiny miniskirt since it’s an affront to gender.
Times change. Public definitions of fashion, modesty, morality, etc. change. The Church’s has not, but she has never given us a checklist of what we can and cannot wear and for good reason. After all, women being barechested or nearly so in central Africa is certainly fine. Not so much in the West.
Modesty of heart is far more important than of dress. Certainly there are lines that you can’t cross in action and argue that your mind is pure… like wearing a string bikini/thong and sauntering around. As I wrote in the other thread on this, that’s just screaming “LOOK AT WHAT I’M NOT WEARING.” But wearing a simple one piece or even a two-piece that blends you right in with everyone? I’d think that to hit the exact definition of modesty; you’re blending in with the societal norms of fashion without crossing a line.
Wearing something ridiculous like those insane swim/workout long skirts and all that business screams “LOOK AT WHAT I’M WEARING.” Is it more modest than the bikinis? Well yeah. But it’s also less modest than a decently fashionable one piece or two piece tankini type because you’re trying to attract attention to yourself, no matter how much you try to argue “well no I’m not, I’m just trying to wear what God wants me to wear” you know darn well that people are going to talk and stare.
Look, it’s like unmarried people who shout from the rooftops, “I’m a virgin and I’m proud of it” and define themselves by it. That too is immodest, though obviously to a much lesser degree than those who are dressing and acting slutty or being cads. If you’re single/unmarried and chaste, good for you because that’s hard in this day and age, though it is what God calls you to do. Defend and extol that position if someone inquires privately, but demur and say that such discussion is not appropriate if asked in public.
The same goes for dress. If you have a problem with short shorts, short skirts, any kind of pants for women, then don’t wear them! But don’t wear stuff that is going to draw attention the other way around either by opting for Christian-style burqas, Amish dress or something like that. And certainly don’t argue that men are incapable of not lusting, women are responsible for men’s lust, etc. That’s a very Islamic mindset; don’t intentionally be an object of sexual desire, unless you’re a spouse, but don’t be insane about it either.
Modesty is about simplicity of act and dress, right? So don’t overcomplicate it so much with threads like this!
The Catechism speaks to this too:There’s nothing complicated about it - women were convinced to show 90+ % of their bodies on public beaches because a handful of people decided to make it “normal.” It took time, but by constant advertising, depictions in movies and other ways, they said it’s OK. They were wrong.
2523 There is a modesty of the feelings as well as of the body. It protests, for example, against the voyeuristic explorations of the human body in certain advertisements, or against the solicitations of certain media that go too far in the exhibition of intimate things. Modesty inspires a way of life which makes it possible to resist the allurements of fashion and the pressures of prevailing ideologies.
upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/62/Old_Time_Swimming_Photograph.jpg“Times change.”? No they don’t. People allow, or don’t allow themselves to be affected by what outsiders call fashion or trends.
As a Catholic, I’m sick and tired of references to other time periods, what might be acceptable in Africa or using the Muslim card as some sort of argument.
There’s nothing complicated about it - women were convinced to show 90+ % of their bodies on public beaches because a handful of people decided to make it “normal.” It took time, but by constant advertising, depictions in movies and other ways, they said it’s OK. They were wrong.
Its just not because of the fashion industry. The swimsuit has also evolved for safety reasons and for competition. Some of the extreme examples that people have posted in this thread are not allowed at my local YMCA because they can endanger a swimmer that may not be the most skilled swimmer.“Times change.”? No they don’t. People allow, or don’t allow themselves to be affected by what outsiders call fashion or trends.
As a Catholic, I’m sick and tired of references to other time periods, what might be acceptable in Africa or using the Muslim card as some sort of argument.
There’s nothing complicated about it - women were convinced to show 90+ % of their bodies on public beaches because a handful of people decided to make it “normal.” It took time, but by constant advertising, depictions in movies and other ways, they said it’s OK. They were wrong.
God bless,
Ed