I think this is rediculous. Should we make the Pope, the bishops, priests etc. all just wear sackcloth so they can get back to how the “early Church did it”? **This betrays a very poor and ill-informed understanding of the liturgical history of the Church. When in the early Church did our priests and bishops, in their liturgical offices, ever wear sackcloth? Some of them wore hair shirts *under ***their regular clothes and vestments, but they didn’t wear sackcloth AS vestments. Penitents wore sackcloth, stood at the doors of the churches, etc., but not the clergy as officiating priests.
All the splendor and art gives glory to God. Remember when the woman annointed Christ with expensive perfume? Did he agree with the Apostles that it should have been sold and the money given to the poor? Nope. I don’t think that many people here arguing against the use of the triregnum by the Holy Father are stating that we should beggar our sanctuaries in order to help the poor. The glory of God deserves our reasonable best (though taste sometimes comes into play: I personally do not care for the chapel that Mother Angelica built for her community, may God continue to restore her to health) and those things with which we beautify our churches serve to elevate our minds to Him. I don’t think anyone is advocating that the Holy Father or any other bishop or priest come to the Altar in a black Brooks Bros. suit. The triregnum represents something ELSE and we don’t need it anymore. AND the last three popes seem to have agreed. Their Master’s Kingdom is not of this world and they and we can wait until HE hands the crowns out.
The papal tiara doesn’t honor the man, it honors the office. So do the other vestments. All the money and effort we put (or should put) into beautiful Churches and nice vestments are for God’s glory. We also should be getting back into the practice of kissing the bishop’s ring, and rising when a priest enters the room. Not just to honor the person, but give due honor to the office.