What those priest and religious who do not wear religious attire often fail to realize is that not only Catholics but also Protestants look up to them. I’ve have many non-Catholic friends express dismay when they met a priest or religious who was not dressed in the collar or the habit. What these religious fail to realize in that situation is that we the laity look up to them as our spiritual mothers and fathers and as such when company (Protestants) come we want to be able to show them off and brag about them, so to speak, just as we would our actual mothers and fathers. So when I bring a Protestant friend around to meet “Father,” and “Sister,” I am bursting with pride when they meet my Protestant friend dressed in full habit or the collar or the cossock. Such attire represents a total response to the call of God and it is something which the Protestant structure cannot duplicate.
Another thing that priest and religious have to realize is that the habit and the collar are potent weapons in winning the culture war. Our society influences by its emphasis on the visual. Notice the many young people who are deeply influenced by the dress of pop singers, rappers, sports figures and the like. These young people emulate their dress, so we see, for instance, young men with their pants hanging down, and young girls with ther navels showing. Such powerful visual images in our cultural need an equally potent counterpoint and what, pray tell, in our society can match such an image but the collar and the habit. If nuns, for instance, would hit the streets in full habit, they would unleash a powerful antidote to the sensual dressing which has become the norm for our young girls. Imagine the girls who would be influenced by the sight of holiness made manifest. Ditto for the priests. If young men actually saw priest openly professing their love for Christ by wearing the collar, it would make a profound statement.
To wear a collar and the full habit in our society today would actually be a radical, revolutionary act, one that would counter the weapons volleyed into the public square by our popular culture. It’s something that is long overdue, and it’s something that priest and religious really need to quickly reclaim