J
Jen95
Guest
Okay just Google ripped tights fashion. You’ll see what a classy look it is.
Haven’t read the thread yet, but I will. In the meantime, if this sort of thing is upsetting to you, a college campus isn’t probably the best place for you to attend mass.The Mass I attend is at a college campus and this occurs daily.
By whom? An usher? Should they stop people from entering?Daisy Duke shorts, tube tops, sleeveless T-shirts, and jeans sagging below the underwear could be dealt with on a case-by-case basis.
Yes only online via anonymous profiles! Never in person!You don’t “fraternally correct” strangers.
Yes. Dealt with quietly, discreetly, and respectfully. I wouldn’t expect (or want) the priest to “call them out” from the pulpit. Extreme cases would justify denying entry.Daisy Duke shorts, tube tops, sleeveless T-shirts, and jeans sagging below the underwear could be dealt with on a case-by-case basis.
By allowing leeway for first-timers, I had in mind more common, less flagrant things such as fully bare shoulders on women, shorts for men where the weather doesn’t mandate it, too-tight jeans that are perceived more as a fashion norm than as a sexually revealing cut, and so on.
Sorry you feel that way. I have in mind people who might be given the grace to come to Mass, but could be turned off for life by being made feel bad because they didn’t comprehend that this article of clothing, or that, isn’t acceptable for Catholic worship. I’d rather err on the side of charity, than to turn away someone who is clueless about proper dress.I think that quote is silly, I can hear Padre Pio say he’d much rather you be reverant so come back when you are. He turned people away. Earlier in the thread a priest refused to give communion to a woman exposing her cleavage. I know your quote sounds more welcoming and you make it sound holier and better but it may not necessarily make it so.