Pompidou
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,242
- Location
- Plainfield, CT
Another way to look at the question of dressing is to consider tradition: For generation upon generation, up until very recently, it was taken for granted that people would dress well for church, for the symphony, for a good restaurant, for a wedding, for a funeral, and so forth. Now, over the course of just a few years, a segment of the population (which I personally view as being lazy, slothful, self-centered, and ignorant) has taken it upon themselves to discard this tradition and show up dressed however they please, thus lessening the experience for everyone else. To these people, there is no such thing as an "occasion" except as defined by their own presence (hey, man, what's your problem? Does anybody except me even exist? I just wanna do my own thing . . .).
Tradition shouldn't hold any particular value for its own sake. If something is right, tradition doesn't make it better, nor does tradition make wrong actions better. I, personally, think it's important to look good, but "because that's how we've always done it" doesn't mean anything to me. I don't spend my whole life reinventing wheels, by any means, but I do try to independently justify as much as I can. I don't believe there's any other reason to justify dressing nicely for church other than a personal desire to do so.
That said, I do believe people are obligated to respect any host's dress codes. If a church had a dress code, I'd agree people need to respect it or find a new church. I don't believe anything except safety merits a dress code. Maybe people can talk their pastors into adopting dress codes so that their moments with the almighty aren't soiled by the unwashed masses. Might make a handful of people happy, and that's not a bad thing - making people happy.