volzcpa:
I am unfamiliar with the which perspectives of the Society of Saint Pius X are included in this [Dressing with Dignity] book. Could you please provide some specific examples?
I am revisiting this topic though it has had no activity in a long while only because I noted I missed the above question (btw, I am KayMS)
All of the comments on p. 136. They are the translator notes of Bp. Richard Williamson of the SSPX. Here are more of the bishop’s insights on women and dress:
sspx.ca/Documents/Bishop-Williamson/September1-1991.htm
Robert T. Hart
Those Who Serve God Should Not Follow the Fashions published by Pray the Rosary. Pray the Rosary is a strong supporter of CMRI (a sedevacantist group). Mrs Hammond just attended their Fatima Conference in the Pacific Northwest (though she only generally mentions this detail in her blog
colleenhammond.blogspot.com/2005/10/book-tour-update.html )
cmri.org/fatimaconference.html
The position that women cannot wear pants, is that of the SSPX and other radical traditional groups - not the church. Read this article:
seekwisdom.org/articles/deut22_5.htm
Ann Cillis (another source used in
Dressing with Dignity) is an SSPX adherent. In the book,
Arrivederci, Padre Pio from which Mrs. Hammond quotes, Mrs. Cillis included the full text of one of the excommuncated Archbishop Lebfebvre’s speeches given in Canada (reprinted here:
sspx.ca/Angelus/2004_April/Holy_Sacrifice_Mass.htm). As to the quote Mrs. Hammond took from Mrs. Cillis, the alleged verbal interview is unlike the actual letters on record from Saint Pio’s spiritual daughters. Cillis’ interview is with a person who has absolutely no hesitation in revealing the exact details of a very private matter - confession. The spiritual daughters of Saint Pio were not prone to be so descript! There is no way to corroborate the information as stated by Mrs. Cillis in her book since a priest would be strictly prohibited by the seal of confession from corroborating or denying the information; that is, if the good Saint were still alive. Credibility seems of less value than the attempt to find anything that will support the no-pants perspective of the Society.
Someone mentioned that throught the survey Mrs. Hammond cites, we are shown that “men’s reactions to women in pants, point to pants being includable in the immodest dress category.” NO, Mrs. Hammond does not give any details of this survey. We are not told if the women were wearing immodest pants or modest pants. We are not told what their other clothing happens to be (modest or immodest) or what poses the models were in (normal or suggestive). Her conclusions are a gross generalization and not balanced by the results of similiar studies of men’s reactions to women in dresses.