Dear Mary, Help Us to be Responsible for Our Actions: Our Blessed Mother, Saint Benedict, Saturday, July 11, 2020


J.M.J.

The Forgotten Virtue: Modesty In Dress

 

(Nota Bene: This essay is adapted from a booklet by the author that was published by Queenship Publishing Company, Post Office Box 220, Goleta, California 93116-0220.)

 

Dress for both men and women has changed dramatically during the last seventy years. Much of what is worn today is meant to expose rather than to conceal the human body—a reason that has been, along with the need for protection, the traditional motive for clothing.

 

For centuries, Christians have looked to the virtue of modesty as it applies to vesture in order to judge what is appropriate.

 

The Catholic tradition has given us a valuable definition of modesty, which is the virtue that regulates one’s actions and exterior customs concerning sexual matters. It controls one’s behavior so to avoid unlawful sexual arousal in oneself or others.

 

Modesty is one of the Twelve Fruits of the Holy Spirit, which, according to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, “are perfections that the Holy Spirit forms in us as the first fruits of eternal glory. The tradition of the Church lists twelve of them: ‘charity, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, generosity, gentleness, faithfulness, modesty, self-control, chastity.’” (1832)

 

To dress modestly is to avoid deliberately causing sexual excitement in oneself or one’s neighbor. One who dresses modestly shuns clothes that are known or reasonably expected to effect sexual arousal in oneself or others. Modesty in dress pertains to both genders.

 

In harmony with the Magisterium and orthodox spiritual authors, Pope Venerable Pius XII, in the Allocution to the Girls of Catholic Action of Italy on October 6, 1940, addressed the necessity of cultivating modesty. He offered as a model of comportment Saint Perpetua, Martyr (?-circa 203): “When she was thrown into the air by a savage bull in the amphitheatre at Carthage, her first thought of action when she fell to the ground was to rearrange her dress to cover her thigh, because she was more concerned for modesty than pain.”

 

Thre Pontiff continued. “Many women have forgotten Christian modesty because of vanity and ambition: they rush wretchedly into dangers that can spell death to their purity. They give into the tyranny of fashion, be it even immodest, in such a way as to appear not even to suspect that it is unbecoming . . . they have lost the very concept of danger; they have lost the instinct of modesty.” (ibid.)

 

Over seven months later, on May 22, 1941, to members of the same group, Pope Pius XII warned of an indulgent attitude, or better said, the negative attitude of an ever greater part of public opinion, which renders it blind to the gravest moral disorders.” He was referring to the prevailing thought about matters of the dress and the behavior of women. The Holy Father urged the girls to adopt the the edifying pattern provided by Saint Agnes (circa 291-circa 304) and Saint Cecilia (Second Century-176/180 or 222-235), both Virgins and Martyrs. “Will you, then, for the love of Christ, in the esteem for virtue, not find at the bottom of your hearts the courage and strength to sacrifice a little well-being—a physical advantage, if you will—to conserve safe and pure the life of your souls?” (ibid.)

 

The same Pontiff asserted:

 

As St. Thomas of Aquinas teaches, the good of our soul must take precedence over that of our body, and to the good of our body we must prefer the good of the soul of our neighbor . . . If a certain kind of dress constitutes a grave and proximate occasion of sin, and endangers the salvation of your soul and others, it is your duty to give it up . . . O Christian mothers, if you knew what a future of anxieties and perils, of illguarded shame you prepare for your sons and daughters, imprudently getting them accustomed to live scantily dressed and making them lose their sense of modesty, you would be ashamed of yourselves and you would dread the harm you are making for yourselves, the harm which you are causing to these children, whom Heaven has entrusted to you to be brought up as Christians. (ibid.)

 

On July 17, 1954, he stated before the attendees of the Sodality Convention in Rome: “How many young girls there are who see nothing wrong in following certain shameless styles like so many sheep. They would certainly blush with shame if they could know the impression they make, and the feelings they evoke, in those who see them.”

 

Several years later, on November 8, 1957, in an address to the members of the Latin Union of High Fashion, Pope Pius XII, eleven months before his death, presented the still-valid principles of modesty in dress. The quotations that follow come from that discourse.

 

Clothing fulfills three necessary requirements: hygiene, decency and adornment. These are “so deeply rooted in nature that they cannot be disregarded or contradicted without provoking hostility and prejudice.”

 

Hygiene pertains mostly to “the climate, its variations, and other external factors” (e.g. discomfort, illness). Decency involves the “proper consideration for the sensitivity of others to objects that are unsightly, or, above all, as a defense of moral honesty and a shield against disordered sensuality.” Adornment is legitimate and “responds to the innate need, more greatly felt by woman, to enhance the beauty and dignity of the person with the same means that are suitable to satisfy the other two purposes.”

 

Fashion “has achieved an indisputable importance in public life, whether as an aesthetic expression of customs, or as an interpretation of public demand and a focal point of substantial economic interests.

 

“The rapidity of change (in styles) is further stimulated by a kind of silent competition, not really new, between the ‘elite’ who wish to assert their own personality with original forms of clothing, and the public who immediately convert them to their own use with more or less good imitations.”

 

The Pontiff then isolated the difficulty with fashion. “The problem of fashion consists in the harmonious reconciliation of a person’s exterior ornamentation with the interior of a quiet and modest spirit.” Like other material objects, fashion can become an undue attachment—even perhaps an addiction—for some persons. The Church “does not censure or condemn styles when they are meant for the proper decorum and ornamentation of the body, but she never fails to warn the faithful against being easily led astray by them.”

 

The human body is “God’s masterpiece in the visible world”; Jesus elevated the human body “to the rank of a temple and an instrument of the Holy Spirit, and as such must be respected.”

 

Certain fashions and styles “create confusion in well-ordered minds and can even be an incentive to evil.” It is possible to declare when the “limits of normal decency” have been violated. This sense of decency sounds an alarm when immodesty, seduction, lust, outrageous luxury or “idolatry of matter” exists.

 

What the Holy Father said in 1957 is still pertinent: “ . . . no matter how broad and changeable the relative morals of styles may be, there is always an absolute norm to be kept after having heard the admonition of conscience warning against approaching danger; style must never be a proximate occasion of sin.”

 

Those who design, promote and sell fashions have considerable responsibility. If, God forbid, anyone purposely inculcates “unchaste ideas and sensations,” then “there is present a technique of disguised malice.” For decency in dress to be restored, the intention of those who design the fashions and those who wear them must be upright. “In both there must be an awakening of the conscience as to their responsibility for the tragic consequences that could result from clothing which is overly bold, especially if it is worn in public.”

 

Clearly, “the immorality of styles depends in great part on excesses either of immodesty or luxury.” How is immodesty to be judged? “The garment must not be evaluated according to the estimation of a decadent or already corrupt society, but according to the aspirations of a society which prizes the dignity and seriousness of its public attire.”

 

Wanton luxury is also excessive. If the use of riches—even those obtained morally—is not moderated, then “either frightful barriers will be raised between classes, or the entire society will be set adrift, exhausted by the race toward a utopia of material happiness.”

 

Let us contemplate well the following three points concerning modesty in dress.

 

1. The Influence of Styles. There is a “language of clothing” that communicates certain messages, even destructive ones. One who with knowledge and deliberation routinely dresses provocatively so to entice another to impurity commits a mortal sin. The souls of both are wounded.

 

Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ demanded purity in glances, thoughts, desires and actions, and He warned against giving scandal. The Prophet Isaiah (3:16-24) foretold that the city of Sion would be dirtied by its daughters’ impurity.

 

Pope Venerable Pius XII declared: “It might be said that society speaks through the clothing it wears. Through its clothing it reveals its secret aspirations and uses it, at least in part, to build or destroy the future.”

 

2. The Importance of Control. Fashion designers, critics and consumers are to recall “that style should be directed and controlled instead of being abandoned to caprice and reduced to abject service.” Those who “make style,” cannot allow the “craze” to dictate when that particular trend goes against right reason and established morality. Consumers must remember that their “dignity demands of them that they should liberate themselves with free and enlightened conscience from the imposition of predetermined tastes, especially tastes debatable on moral grounds.”

 

3. Moderation is Necessary. The respect for a standard measure is “moderation.” It provides “a pattern by which to regulate, at all costs, greed for luxury, ambition, and capriciousness.” The Holy Father admonished: “Stylists, and especially designers, must let themselves be guided by moderation in designing the cut or line of a garment and in the selection of its ornaments, convinced that sobriety is the finest quality of art.”

 

When Christian decency is present, then one’s dress is “the worthy ornament of the person with whose beauty it blends as in a single triumph of admirable dignity.”

 

One need not necessarily wear clothes popular decades ago in order to be modest; however, there are standards that are so basic that to transgress them—regardless of the era, one’s good intention or ignorance—is to offend against decency.

 

Here are some practical “helps.”

 

Clothing composed of a transparent (that is, “see-through”) material is not modest because of its obvious intent to expose various body parts needy of cover.

 

Shorts that are very short (i.e. exposing much of the thigh), whether for a man or woman, cannot be regarded as decent. (Athletic pursuits that use shorts and a “jersey” type of shirt may be tolerated provided that both are moderate and no temptation is encouraged.) Boys and men shirtless without sufficient reason (an allowance is made for swimming and vigorous work and exercise, as long as temptation is avoided) is problematic, given that such may well be an unnecessary occasion of sin for another.

 

Men and boys not only have a responsibility to dress modestly but they also are to encourage to whatever extent they can the women and girls of their acquaintance to dress modestly, even avoiding those who do not when they themselves are tempted to sin precisely because of that immodest clothing. But it must be admitted that the sight of unclothed (even partially) bodies of women and girls has generally inspired lust and desire more than the bodies of men and boys.

 

Clothing that reveals the front and back of women and girls and highlights their torso is reprehensible. Skirts that rise much above the knee, emphasizing the shape of the leg for that very purpose, are inappropriate.

 

God has made the human body beautiful. Immodest attire neither contributes to the promotion of the human person nor to the establishing of the Kingdom. The modesty practiced by Jesus, Mary, Joseph and the Saints, especially the Virgin-Martyrs, is obtainable and necessary for us.


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