Posted on 04/11/2012 5:08:39 PM PDT by Salvation
I know, I know, I am so hopelessly old fashioned. But I want to say, I miss women wearing hats. I have written before (HERE) of how I miss them wearing the veil in Church. But even before the veil, the hat was more commonly worn by women in 1940s and before (See photo below left, of my parish taken in the early 1950s, click photo for a larger view). Veils became popular in the later 1950s and 1960s before head coverings for women (and men) all but disappeared in the late 1960s (along with just about everything elegant).
The Easter Bonnet, once a main tradition at Easter, now provokes stares of confusion when mentioned to younger people today. Easter Bonnet? Whats that?! Too bad, gone with the (cultural) wind.
Frankly we have become a very informal culture and we almost never dress up any more. Jeans and a T-Shirt, even for Mass. When I was a kid in the early 1960s I would not set foot in the Church without trousers, a button down shirt, a necktie and (in the cooler months) a dress jacket). Women and girls always wore a dress and a veil or hat. Frankly too, we would not think of going to a restaurant in those years either, without dressing up a good bit.
Yeah, I know, I am hopelessly out of date and some of you feel judged. But Im just going to say it again, I miss the fact that we almost never dress up any more, and that things like hats, jackets and ties for men, formal and pretty dresses for women, veils (or hats) in Church are gone.
In the African American Community where I have served for most of my priesthood, dressing up for Church and women wearing hats and veils, hung on a lot longer, but it too has largely subsided. I read an article in the Washington Post yesterday that largely read the funeral rites over hat wearing in the Black congregations. Theres still a few with the ole time religion but they are far fewer. Here are a some excerpts from the article:
For generations, church sanctuaries across the nation on Sunday mornings, especially in black churches and especially on Easter, transformed into a collage of hats: straw ones, felt ones, velvet ones, every shape, size and color, with bows, jewels and feathers, reaching for the heavens.
But anyone walking into todays services expecting to see a nonstop parade of women making fashion statements on their heads will be sorely disappointed. Many daughters and granddaughters of the women who made bold and flashy hats synonymous with the black church have not carried on the tradition.
Anita Saunders, 42 grew up watching her mothers generation flaunt their hats in church. And I always loved it, says the Indianapolis resident. It was part of Sunday, the experience of the hats. We looked forward to seeing what hat Sister So-and-So was going to wear. My friends, we all grew up in the same church with mothers who wore hats, but we dont. And so, yes, it seems its fading out.
Elaine Saunders is part of that generation of black women who launched hat-wearing into the stratosphere ..Their style was dignified, elegant, sometimes irreverent and even humorous, but it was always eye-catching. You have a certain air when you put on a hat. If you put on the whole shebang and youre satisfied, you walk different. You act different. And people treat you different, says Saunders .
The whole shebang would be a hat that matches the suit that matches the shoes that match the bag
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Mother and daughter not only wore hats and gloves to church but also donned them for shopping trips downtown. If you were dressed up, they thought you were somebody important, so youd get waited on, Saunders said.
I guess as I got older, around my teens, I started flirting around with different hairstyles, said Sylvia Magby, 58, I started cutting my hair, and I just never found a hat that fit my head. Her youngest sister, Anita wont go near a hat (except the emergency baseball cap for bad hair days). She was much younger when she first rebelled against them. I was maybe 6, and I was very concerned that the hat would disturb my bangs, and I wanted nothing to do with it, she recalls.
Many women say, I have hats from my mother and other relatives, but I dont wear them, or Hats dont look good on me, [But] as Saunders sees it, there will be a set of women who will wear hats forever. there, in all its splendor, that poof of fuchsia and iridescent feathers, for all the world to see.
Read the Full Article Here: Church Ladies and their Hats, A Fading Tradition
Some will doubtless say, Well look, it sounds like it was more about pride and getting seen, than worshiping God. Others will doubtless remark that the Scriptures envision a woman covering her head before God as a way of covering her glory (i.e. her hair) and thus being humble before God. OK fine, but Id just like to add that there is also something wonderful about the dignity of dressing really well to go to Gods house, something classy, something fitting. And again Ill just say, I miss it, and always appreciate when I see it.
We men too have let things drop often marching into Church with sandals, jeans and a t-shirt. I regret too that we so seldom wear suits or hats anymore. Priests still wear the suit, but a fine cassock is hard to find and there is a lot of sloppy and poorly set forth liturgical vestments and altar cloths. Finer things are few and far between.
A small boast form your host, I have worn a fedora in the cooler months since my 20s. Not only do I think it looks good, but it is also does a great job keeping the cold away. I am amazed at what a difference a simple hat can make. Think about it men, a good hat can be classy and warm.
And ladies, I dont DARE tell you what to do, but let me just say it again, I MISS the veils and hats. Yes, a real touch of class. Uh oh, now the comments are open.
Altar Boys, Choir Girls.
As it should be!
This event is at our parish...and run live on EWTN
http://www.holytrinityapostolate.com/index.php
"Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ.
2 I praise you for remembering me in everything and for holding to the traditions just as I passed them on to you. 3 But I want you to realize that the head of every man is Christ, and the head of the woman is man,[a] and the head of Christ is God. 4 Every man who prays or prophesies with his head covered dishonors his head. 5 But every woman who prays or prophesies with her head uncovered dishonors her headit is the same as having her head shaved. 6 For if a woman does not cover her head, she might as well have her hair cut off; but if it is a disgrace for a woman to have her hair cut off or her head shaved, then she should cover her head. 7 A man ought not to cover his head,[b] since he is the image and glory of God; but woman is the glory of man. 8 For man did not come from woman, but woman from man; 9 neither was man created for woman, but woman for man. 10 It is for this reason that a woman ought to have authority over her own[c] head, because of the angels. 11 Nevertheless, in the Lord woman is not independent of man, nor is man independent of woman. 12 For as woman came from man, so also man is born of woman. But everything comes from God.
13 Judge for yourselves: Is it proper for a woman to pray to God with her head uncovered? 14 Does not the very nature of things teach you that if a man has long hair, it is a disgrace to him, 15 but that if a woman has long hair, it is her glory? For long hair is given to her as a covering. 16 If anyone wants to be contentious about this, we have no other practicenor do the churches of God."
Of course they are Scripture, never-the-less totally ignored by almost all "bible-believing" Christians in America today.
Overseas...it's another matter. Thanks be to God!
It's too bad that, starting with our women...Americans are so rebellious today.
Oh, that passage is I Corinthians 11:1-15.
Given the state of religion in this country today, we should be thankful for those who do show up for church - hats or not.
I miss sermons being preached on a hill.
Thanks for the biblical quotes.
When I was praying for my husband to convert, I covered my head out of respect. I believed this was subservient to God, so I didn’t want anything to make me stand out.
I got a chapel cap in black and wore it until he converted. Few people noticed.
(Thank you St. Monica for your intercession!)
This is wonderful. Someone has to start it. By the little ones shall we be taught?
(U know your daughter is no longer a little one, but ......)
The first time my mom saw a woman in church without a hat she thought the world was coming to an end. Now I give out bulletins at the door at my church, and I often have to avert my eyes to avoid appearing to ogle low-cut tops and butt-high hems. Eye contact......eye contact......
Most of the women at the Anglican Church we visited for a christening on Easter were wearing hats. The church we attended in Atlanta had a large number of women who wore hats or something lacy on their heads. The church we attend in Raleigh not many.
Yeah well I miss men being men. Three years ago when my son was a newborn I sat cross legged on the floor and fed him during Christmas eve mass. This year I did the same with my daughter. We attend mass every week yet have no place to sit during Christmas and Easter masses. I have yet to be offered a seat by an able bodied male.
Tuning out your small children is a major strategic error. Even your spouse may get up to who-knows-what atrocities while you're recollected!
Wearing a veil - or my hat with the big red rose on the back - will have to wait for my Retirement Years, I'm afraid.
“Habib” means “beloved.” Its use responding to a post about JFK made me snicker a little, but the feminine is “habiba” and the plural “habibi.”
“Habib” really calls to mind one Barack Hussein Obama ...
I adore hats! There is nowhere to buy them locally where I live. Any good online shops?
I think Craftmore meant hijab.
At my parish in Havana, some of the women wore tube tops and very short shorts to Mass.
If you look up mantillas you will find some in colors.
I found a wonderful white wide brimmed hat at a local Oregon store. Keep looking.
Where I live (in the Southwest) it is very unusual for men to wear a tie to Sunday Mass, even in middle class areas. Our suburban parish sanctuary holds about 1000 people and on a good day you’ll see a dozen ties. They really stand out here.
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I’ve often thought that the fear of looking holier than thou in Church as somewhat overblown—most people are much too self-absorbed to give much thought to how others are coming across (I admit this may be a bigger problem in smaller parishes. All of the parishes I’ve belonged to have been on the large size).
I remember when young men knew enough to take off their hats when coming inside. They now even sit at the dinner table (not MY dinner table) wearing their baseball hats.
You’re right. Someohow I managed five, though with a hat on.
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