OutinChgoburbs:
No, sorry, you do not.
Your logic is poor, for one thing.
And for another, as it has been blungeoned to death in previous threads, the Church does not demand it, nor does She require it at this point in time.
Once again, without rancor: IF a woman chooses to cover head for whatever reason in church, then she should feel free to do so, without any harassment or embarassment. If a woman does not choose to do so, she is also free to do so without harassment or embarassment.
Why the harshness in attitude, my sister in Christ?
Are we not looking for common ground here, as we are all part of the same Body?
It seems that we do agree, since I never said that it was mandatory that a woman should wear a head covering. Is this my harassing you? How have I offended you?
My sister, I was even accused of lying on this site, of a “fabrication”. I thought this was a Catholic site! Where is the charity here?
For those of you who feel insulted by what I have written, I beg your forgiveness. Nothing I have written was meant to do harm to anyone, (especially those whose self-worth has given them to great sensitivity). I am nothing, and my opinion is nothing, I only looked to exhort every Catholic, and share my love for a worthwhile tradition of a woman wearing a head-covering whereever there is the Real Presence of Our Lord in the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar.
For those of you who feel you are in the right to insult, God bless you.
Although I do not normally justify ill-remarks with any kind of response, allow me to remind you, that without charity, we are nothing.
It makes no difference to me whether or not a woman wears a head-covering. I only have attested, and continue to attest, that it may be a pious act, even simply as it regards many years of tradition (there have been many more years where it was considered the cultural norm among Catholic woman than it has been otherwise). This, AGAIN, is not to be mistaken that I am saying that woman are WRONG for NOT wearing the veil, as I have no place to say so, and never have said so.
Here is also a little history for you:
During the Second Vatican Council, a mob of reporters waited for news after a council meeting. One of them asked Msgr. Annibale Bugnini, then secretary of the Vatican Congregation for Divine Worship, if women still had to wear a headcovering in church. He responded that the bishops were considering other issues, and women’s veils were not on the agenda.
The next day, the international press announced throughout the world that women did not have to keep their heads covered in church anymore. A few days later, Msgr. Bugnini told the press he was misquoted and women must still wear the veil. But the press did not retract the error, and many women stopped wearing the veil as out of confusion and because of pressure from feminist groups.
From an article from The Atlanta Journal (June 21, 1969) entitled, “Women Required to Cover Head, Vatican Insists”, it appears that Pope Paul VI instructed one of his officials to clarify the Church’s unchanged discipline regarding head coverings for women: “A Vatican official says there has been no change, as reported, in the Roman Catholic rule that women cover their head in church. The Rev. Annibale Bugnini, secretary of the New Congregation for Divine Worship, said the reports stemmed from a misunderstanding of a statement he made at a news conference in May. ‘The rule has not been changed,’ he said. ‘It is a matter of general discipline.’”
Code:
Before the revision in 1983, Canon Law had stated that women must cover their heads. "... especially when they approach the holy table" (can. 1262.2). But in order to reduce such a growing collection of books, the new version of Canon Law was subjected to concise changes. In the process, mention of head coverings was omitted.
In 1970, Pope Paul VI promulgated the new Roman Missal, ignoring mention of women's veils. But at the time the missal was published, it didn't seem necessary to keep mandatory such an obvious and universal practice.
And mention in Canon Law or the Roman Missal is not necessary to the continuation of the tradition, for it is rooted in Scripture and has been practiced ever since the early Church. Indeed, Pope John Paul II affirmed that the real sources of canon law are the Sacred Tradition, especially as reflected in the ecumenical councils, and Sacred Scripture (O.S.V. Catholic Encyclopedia, p. 169).