If everything works out (and I see no reason that it wouldn’t) I’ll be entering the seminary this fall.
If I get ordained, you bet I will wear clerical garb at every moment I am in public or around the church. Also, I’ll probably just wear a cassock and not the usual suit. Why? Because I think that a vocation like the priesthood puts you into a whole different life. Sure, you do need a little personal time, but I think it is a bad idea to put the vocation aside to have it. I want to stand out like a sore thumb because I have given my life to the Church and to Christ and I have a duty to serve my fellow Catholics and more generally my fellow Man as a priest.
If I am ordained, I want people to be able to tell that I’m a priest a mile away. Not because I want any breaks or pharasiacal honor given to be, but rather because I want to be a witness to the priesthood, to the Church and of course to Christ. I want to make myself available to my parishoners or other Catholics who may want to confess or to have something blessed or want to ask about something dealing with theology or whatever.
I also want to make myself visible to the enemies of the Church. I don’t want to hide my collar in shame of the Church and its teachings because it is either too “old fashioned” or we “worship” Mary etc.
Also, I don’t want to take on secular garb out of a false sense of “humility” as some folks like to think of it as. I think this opinon is the most disgusting and insulting of all of them for not wearing clerical garb. We do not wear clerical garb (cassock or suit) or habit for religious out of pride-one reason for this distinctive dress was to get rid of the vanity of wearing fancy clothes and put on something that isn’t popular or stylish.
In ending, I think a priest (or religious men and women) should always wear their garb out in public and in their respective rectories, abbeys, or convents. Canon law demands it (except for extreme circumstances) and respect for the office demands it.