S
Sarabande
Guest
Oh, definitely. I and a couple others have mentioned something similar in previous posts. My attire for mass will change depending on where I attend mass. Whenever I am In the rural, farming community where I have attended mass from the time I was a baby till now, my clothing is more casual, although always clean, pressed and modest. If I wore anything more than that, it would make me stand out. The only times I have ever seen people up there wear “nicer” clothing (such as dress pants/ties or suits or nicer dresses) were for baptisms and weddings. (I don’t know about funerals, as I have never attended one up there.)As I sat yesterday in church in my jeans and sneakers I had a question… now it wasn’t for Mass but for our Oktoberfest…
Does anyone else see that what you wear to Mass might also be influenced by your location?
For example, in New York where people seem to dress up more or you do have work that may require a suit and tie and where you have beautiful churches like St. Patricks Cathedral. They may dress up more because they already have clothes like that in their wardrobe and they won’t stick out and call undue attention on themselves.
Where I live which is a network of small farming communities, someone wearing a suit or even a dress shirt AND tie would really stick out and call undue attention on themselves.
That being said…at daily Mass at my other parish…I once saw a lady with a veil on her head wearing a miniskirt…still confused about that one:shrug: You want to cover your head but you don’t want to cover![]()
In the city parishes and suburban parishes it’s a mixed bag. Some people dress up more, some people wear more casual clothing. Then there are younger people who sometimes look like their parents did everything they could to get them out of bed and come to mass or others who put work into their outfits, but are less than ideal in terms of modesty (tight, lowcut outfits, or very short skirts/dresses).
I think it’s a rare thing if people are dressed to the nines or sloppily for mass, and I think most people do dress cleanly and modestly with different levels of what they consider as their Sunday best. I also am of the belief to think the best of people and believe that most dress the way they do because that is just how they dress. No particular, heavy, intellectual, or spiritual thought goes into it. Most, I believe, don’t do it to make a point or to impress on either side of the “debate”. Those clothes are just what are in their closets. We are also all products of our environment. If we were raised to dress a certain way for mass or for other particular occasions, most of the time we will continue to dress that way when we grow up. If we live in an area where it was expected to dress more casually or nicer for mass, we would.