Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Life used to be a much slower pace. For many people, Mass was their Sunday activity. So you got dressed up for it, went out after, etc. For most families, this is no longer a reasonable expectation. Mass is one of the many things happening on a Sunday. The Church is smart enough to welcome anyone with open arms, regardless of what they are wearing. They desperately need young parishioners.
Oh please. People aren’t that busy on Sundays, at least with anything of note. If anything they just go shopping more since everything is open. Stores used to be closed on Sundays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Country club
Fascinating that country clubs can enforce a business casual dress code but Catholic mass can’t?
Country clubs can enforce dress codes because they are happy to turn people away. That's not something the Catholic church is going to do.
I wasn’t being literal. Families can dress nice to go have a few hours of leisure at a country club—often a couple times a week—but can’t for 55 minutes of Sunday mass?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Country club
Fascinating that country clubs can enforce a business casual dress code but Catholic mass can’t?
Country clubs can enforce dress codes because they are happy to turn people away. That's not something the Catholic church is going to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Country club
Fascinating that country clubs can enforce a business casual dress code but Catholic mass can’t?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Country club
Fascinating that country clubs can enforce a business casual dress code but Catholic mass can’t?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Country club
Fascinating that country clubs can enforce a business casual dress code but Catholic mass can’t?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Country club
Fascinating that country clubs can enforce a business casual dress code but Catholic mass can’t?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Country club
Anonymous wrote:Life used to be a much slower pace. For many people, Mass was their Sunday activity. So you got dressed up for it, went out after, etc. For most families, this is no longer a reasonable expectation. Mass is one of the many things happening on a Sunday. The Church is smart enough to welcome anyone with open arms, regardless of what they are wearing. They desperately need young parishioners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are trashy, even in church. At 8am Mass I've observed men in cargo shorts and flip flops. Women baring cleavage, spaghetti straps, shorts and unkempt hair. This is in a more conservative Catholic church.
God is happy that they cared enough to show up.
Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Anonymous wrote:Do American families dress nice for anything today?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IME, Catholic mass has always been a more casual affair than other denominations' church services.
because it is required and no one wants to me there IMHE