Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Origin of Marylike Standards of Modesty  (Read 284 times)

1 Member and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Re: Origin of Marylike Standards of Modesty
« Reply #10 on: Today at 05:05:07 PM »
Is it for us to question the principle behind a standard that has been decided for us by the Church? Being former seminarians does not give men the right to act like approved theologians (no accusations, only food for thought, and my previous comment was not an accusation either, again only food for thought). Or is it rather we who are obliged to obey despite not understanding completely?

"In practice, persons who introduce a new fashion somewhere and who excite astonishment by its audacity are guilty of mortal sin. By the way, let decent young girls learn this, unless they already know it: by earnest and diligent investigation, Professor Liepman has proved that the fashion for flesh-coloured silk stockings and short skirts was created by the girls of bad life in certain districts of Paris." — Cf. Poulin and Laramée: Une école de formation, p. 197.

From the clergy of Quebec after having received the above letter:

Also immodest are the flesh-colored stockings that give the impression that the legs are not covered. A garment that does not satisfy the conditions we have just described can never be tolerated outside without disobedience to the Church and without sin, and not even inside the home, between brothers and sisters, because it is there, we repeat, that the education of modesty and decency must be given." — Pastoral Letter of 1931, Letters of Monsignor Brunault, vol. 4, p. 435.

 “But what is infinitely more serious are the too short dresses, the complete bare arms and legs, in the costume children. These poor eight-year-old girls often scandalize their little brothers without knowing it. If they see some cassock in the street, a sign of someone who speaks against fashion, these angelic heads feel ill at ease, they hasten to arrange what is left of their clothes to cover themselves.

“Where are the real culprits? Is it not, among others, these reckless or stubborn mothers who violate their serious duties as educators? They make themselves partly responsible for the consequences which will result, sometimes cruel and dishonorable, from this cowardly and unprincipled education. "Principiis obsta", said the ancients, that is to say "fight against evil from its beginnings". It is at an early age that children must be accustomed to self-respect, to horror of what makes one think of evil, to a severe modesty. All this promotes virtue, the sole source of true happiness in life.
 
“Often good ladies ask us for precise rules on the modesty of clothing. Now, among several which have been given by high ecclesiastical authorities, I choose the following which I transmit to you, in the name of Christian morality, as the expression of the directions of the Pope himself:

“We recall, wrote the Cardinal-Vicar of Rome on September 24, 1928, that one cannot consider as decent a garment whose neckline exceeds the width of two fingers below the birth of the neck; a garment whose sleeves do not go down at least to the elbows and which goes down barely below the knees. Also indecent are the clothes of transparent fabric and the flesh-colored stockings, which give the illusion that the legs are not covered."

To bring these rules gradually into practice, especially inside and around the house, we need the help of all people of good will. Let the wise fathers of families—they are still legion—gently and firmly use their domestic authority. Let nuns, let all women of Catholic action, let people of piety preach the true Christian doctrine on modesty, and let them each exercise their apostolate within the sphere of their influence. And you, Gentlemen Priests, who often enter homes for the purpose of visiting or ministering, reprove, I beseech you, in all charity the mothers of families who are insufficiently scrupulous for themselves and for their children; on the other hand, congratulate those who fulfill their duty. —Excerpts from Circ. No. 67, Sept. 15, 1933, Mgr Decelles, Bishop of St-Hyacinthe