E
EasterJoy
Guest
Paul wrote that women should not wear “elaborate” hairstyles or “costly clothing”. He wrote that a woman’s primary adornment should be her good deeds; I think that had men’s clothing been in an ostentatious period, he might have included Christians in general in that statement.I used to live in Italy. I was very affected by this historically Catholic country. Italians, in my opinion, are the best dressed people in the world - much better than the French (who always get the attention), though the French also dress quite beautifully.
Italians have very small, very simple, classical wardrobes. No ankle-length “prairie dresses”; the women wear dresses/skirts and pants, but the pants are more in the style of the 1940’s (fitted and classic). I would see my neighbors wear the same item of clothing several times in a week, but it was always accessorized differently or worn with different clothing pieces.
I now have about 20 pieces of clothing in my “working wardrobe”. I feel that I dress better than ever, have better quality clothing - yet I have never have a wardrobe so small! But I am so grateful for my time in Italy, and the lessons that I learned there.
That is why I am always so suspicious about the “modest” clothing standards promoted in traditionalist circles in the U.S. - I feel that they are tainted by puritanism, and have little to do with true Catholic modesty.
If you look in the mirror and your thought is to compare yourself to others, of how stunning or holy or whatever others will think you are because of your dress choices, and not whether you give the impression to others that you care whether they find it pleasant or trying to look at you, or that you have an appreciation of the solemnity (or not) of the occasion you are sharing, then that attitude needs questioning, regardless of your skirt length. There is a degree to which a person might inappropriately call attention to himself or herself by extreme choices in clothing, whether that clothing is extremely revealing or extreme in some other direction.
I don’t think jumpers fall under that category. And really: let us not get our priorities mixed up here. Willful bad taste, if it is a sin at all, is a venial one. When it is an unconscious fault, we are bound to be as charitable as we can about it. We all have a few ugly things about us, but few of these things are positively chosen.
The only really serious sins we are talking about in this thread are lust and spiritual pride, one which a person’s clothing choices might provide an occasion for in another and the other which one’s dress might encourage in the self. If you are on a warpath to make other people better by making them more like you, that is a red flag. Not an indictment, but it should raise questions. If your opinions tempt you to correct those over whom you have no authority and judge those whom you have been given no mandate to judge–and this is as much if you think them “too pure” as “not pure enough”–then again: question that attitude.
If you really think that a look at your ankle or shoulder is such a huge temptation towards lust…well, again, examine that assumption. It does men no good to act as if they have no ability at all to exercise their own self-control. If you think their lust is not your problem: examine that attitude.
Some people will get cancer no matter what they do and some people will indulge the sin of lust no matter what you do. Let the risk assessment be reasonable, even when the risk in question is of a deadly variety. We have not been commanded to eliminate the risk of sin or deadly disease in the world. It is not possible. It is possible to ruin the joy, peace, and tranquility of our lives and those around us by giving ourselves either too responsibility for bad thing happening, as much so as if we give ourselves too little.
If you dress in such a way that you think yourself better than others, consider toning it down, whichever direction that takes you. After that, reserve your opinion for those, like those participating in this thread, who ask you for it. These are spiritual exercises which will do you no harm, and which may render your soul a profit.
PS By “you”, I meant readers in general, not “tcraig”!!! I think tcraig’s clothing standards sound modest in both appearance and financial impact!