If you were the only one dressed in shorts and flip flops at mass and if everyone else was dressed in a suite and tie, would your dress affect how you felt?
No, because I care about what I know is right, not what other people think. If I felt that they deserved to feel respected and that I was doing something disrespectful, I would alter that behavior. For that reason, I would wear nice clothes to someone’s house. But the Mass is about our worship of God, not our judgment of the clothing choices of others.
In addition, are you telling me that you don’t have any different feeling or sense whatsoever when you are dressed in a nice suit, perhaps feeling more professional whereas when you are wearing sandals you feel more relaxed since you are in beach attire? I think pretty much anyone would admit to this unless you don’t “feel” anything?
What difference does it make? Does my intellect, however insignificant, change? Am I a nicer person? You are correct, though, I do feel something: hot! I cannot bear to wear long sleeves, and certainly not to wear a jacket over a shirt.
While a specific unfaithful Catholic is not suddenly going to become a faithful one if he dresses up one Sunday, if the overall culture at the liturgy is one that takes it very seriously, as did the saints throughout history, then we are in a better position to create more saints through the overall culture, and dress is a part of this overall reform and approach.
That should not be the reason. Either something is a moral imperative, or it is not. There must be a theological argument if we are considering dress a moral requirement, even if that argument applies to a pragmatic situation. Furthermore, dress does not change theology. We should focus on getting people on the same page theologically and then worry about dress code if the situation does not address itself automatically.
In addition, that unfaithful Catholic you described had to be formed that way somehow right? Whether through heretical teachings, a generally lax approach to the faith, or perhaps–as is often the case–he learned by observation and imitation as a good chunk of the general population does.
Again, those are all extenuating circumstances that I do not wish to discuss.
My question is simple: Is a person who was not necessarily formed in that way morally permitted to choose the path of casual clothing? Your diction, e.g. “heretical,” “lax,” etc. suggests that the answer is no, and yet you claim that your statement is “general.”
Let us know settle what “general” means, and whether you are judging individuals or not. That will happen when you answer my question.
If people observe others taking the faith very seriously, they are more inclined to do the same. This is a sociological fact of behavioral adaptation. In some cases, faith can follow behavior, and in many cases, faith is contagious.
**Does Latin foster a sense of reverence and mystery in the liturgy? **
Does the language inherently do that? No. Does it circumstantially do that? I am not qualified to answer that question, so perhaps.