veiling

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sounds about right… that time period in the Church is know to have been very focused on minute details and imposing rubrics
If we can questions the Church on its motive requiring the covering of ones head, we can do so also in the topics of homosexual ‘marriage’ and abortion. After all, if they were wrong about that, why can’t they be wrong about these other things?
 
If we can questions the Church on its motive requiring the covering of ones head, we can do so also in the topics of homosexual ‘marriage’ and abortion. After all, if they were wrong about that, why can’t they be wrong about these other things?
Because the covering of one’s head at Mass was/is a matter of devotion and discipline- not a breaking of any of the 10 Commandments.

Comparing the change in the code of canon law regarding the wearing of a headcovering at Mass to abortion or gay marriage is taking absurdity to a whole new level.

No wonder threads on “veiling” get closed down rather quickly. Here’s hoping this one will be locked very soon.
 
About 99% of the time I attend mass, I never see women wearing veils. It could be a Quebec thing but as a general rule, I never see women wearing them. I don’t wear one ever. As a result, I think you do what you feel is best. Veil or no veil- you are still following Christ. It’s important to follow your heart and listen to what God is calling you to do.
 
If we can questions the Church on its motive requiring the covering of ones head, we can do so also in the topics of homosexual ‘marriage’ and abortion. After all, if they were wrong about that, why can’t they be wrong about these other things?

Covering the head – was just a disciplinary practice-- and as the Catholic Church says – one of minor importance-- that no longer has normative value.
 
If we can questions the Church on its motive requiring the covering of ones head, we can do so also in the topics of homosexual ‘marriage’ and abortion. After all, if they were wrong about that, why can’t they be wrong about these other things?
I sincerely hope you are joking. If not, comparing the change in the code of canon law regarding the wearing of a headcovering at Mass to abortion or gay marriage is taking absurdity to a whole new level.

No wonder threads on “veiling” get closed down rather quickly. Here’s hoping this one will be locked very soon.
 

Covering the head – was just a disciplinary practice-- and as the Catholic Church says – one of minor importance-- that no longer has normative value.
It is no longer required and it was a disciplinary matter, not a doctrinal one, however it was in place for most of Church history. St. Paul himself, in Sacred Scripture, commands women to cover their heads - this is the basis of the long standing tradition.
 
It is no longer required and it was a disciplinary matter, not a doctrinal one, however it was in place for most of Church history. St. Paul himself, in Sacred Scripture, commands women to cover their heads - this is the basis of the long standing tradition.

Right – a disciplinary matter – and as the Catholic Church interprets it – one of minor importance.
 
Perhaps by saying that she knows veiling is “right”, the OP merely meant that she knows veiling is “okay” or “acceptable.” Nothing controversial about that.

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If we can questions the Church on its motive requiring the covering of ones head, we can do so also in the topics of homosexual ‘marriage’ and abortion. After all, if they were wrong about that, why can’t they be wrong about these other things?
No derailing, please.
 
If we can questions the Church on its motive requiring the covering of ones head, we can do so also in the topics of homosexual ‘marriage’ and abortion. After all, if they were wrong about that, why can’t they be wrong about these other things?
covering your head = discipline

abortion and same sex marriage = doctrine

Discipline = changeable

Doctrine = not changeable

It isn’t a matter of *right or wrong *regarding covering the head, because it’s not an article of faith-- it was a discipline of the Church and it is not any longer.
 
Veiling is not Catholic? LOL
I guess Holy Mother Church was wrong in making veiling a requirement for women with Canon 1262 in 1917.
The requirement to cover one’s head, which is now abrogated, was never called “veiling.” References to veils were usually used along the lines of “taking the veil,” which was a term for becoming a nun or religious sister.

Most women in the United States wore hats to church on Sunday; Jackie Kennedy made the mantilla more fashionable, so you began to see more of those. I think that’s what’s responsible for the term “veiling” that we seem to hear so often on these boards.
 
It’s a good time of year to start. Nobody looks at you funny for having a cold head in the wintertime.
No one should be looking at anyone funny to begin with. I don’t hold that veiling is necessary, but I wouldn’t support someone being singled out or viewed differently for doing so.
 
The requirement to cover one’s head, which is now abrogated, was never called “veiling.” References to veils were usually used along the lines of “taking the veil,” which was a term for becoming a nun or religious sister.

Most women in the United States wore hats to church on Sunday; Jackie Kennedy made the mantilla more fashionable, so you began to see more of those. I think that’s what’s responsible for the term “veiling” that we seem to hear so often on these boards.
Thank you. I knew that there was a more historical definition to the term, but I couldn’t remember it.
 
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