Hananiah:
Are you incapable of reading? Either you are being willfully ignorant or you are just being lazy and not taking the time to read what I write.
.
Let’s not get this thread closed.
Now, back to the issue.
Apparently I, Cassman, DID incorrectly interpret/read your earlier post re: Canon 6. However, I STILL disagree with you once you clarified your position.
A custom CAN have the force of law. I agree. However, what law? If the veil was a requirement because it had the effect of law, would it not still be an abolished law now, because of 1983 Code? 1983 Code abolished 1917 (we all agree on this). It also abolished anything that contradicts it (we still agree). What about those things that rely on 1917 Code? Are they abolished now?
Secondly, wearing the veil was a custom. This cannot be refuted. It was not a dogma, not a doctrine. And customs CAN be changed. They are changed all the time. In 1Cor 11, the section that is being addressed here, Paul is talking about several CUSTOMS. One of them is veil. Paul relates unveiled women to women with shaven heads. Why? Shaven heads was apparently negative BACK THEN. Is it negative now? No. So Paul could not make this same analogy now. In verse 6 Pauls says “For if a woman will not veil herself, then she should cut off her hair; but if it is disgraceful for a woman to be shorn or shaven, let her wear a veil”. Take a look at that second part : “…
if it is disgraceful for a woman to be shorn or shaven, let her wear a veil”. Is it disgraceful for a woman to be shaven now?
Maybe, maybe not. Female Marines are a good example.
Now look at verse 13-15: “Judge for yourselves; is it proper for a woman to pray to God with her head uncovered? Does not nature itself teach you that for a man to wear long hair is degrading to him, but if a woman has long hair, it is her pride?”
So, is it currently degrading for a man to have long hair? I contend that it is not. What if a woman has short hair, is she lacking pride? Again, I say not.
I further posit that customs are dependent on the culture and time they are practiced in. It is not the American custom to have females covered from head to foot as it is in the Middle East. This would be an example of culture. It used to be customary for a young man to ask permission from the girlfriend’s father to marry her. This has decreased in occurrence. This is an example of how time may effect custom.
So it comes down to this: Can custom be changed? I think I have shown that custom changes frequently through society and cultures. I believe the Church can change custom as well.
Think about it this way, do women wear veils in Church anymore? No, not really. Then it is not much of a custom anymore.
Here is an exerpt from* Inter Insigniores:*
“But it must be noted that these ordinances, probably inspired by the customs of the period, concern scarcely more than disciplinary practices of minor importance, such as the obligation imposed upon women to wear a veil on the head (1 Cor 11:2-6); such requirements no longer have a normative value.” (Section 4)
The link to it:
ewtn.com/library/CURIA/CDFINSIG.HTM
Can you site a current Church OFFICIAL who requires veils for the Roman rite?