Sunday, November 18, 2012

Vatican: Priests Must be Recognizable by Their Clothing


Vatican City (kathnet/KAP) The Vatican has called upon active priests, to wear their priestly clothing in service and in public. With a circular letter in October, which has now been made known, Cardinal Secretary Tarcisio Bertone reminded his priestly colleagues of valid ecclesiastical norms.

Especially in a secular world it is important that a priest can be visibly recognizable as a man of God and servant of the Church, is how it has been relayed to Roman ecclesiastical circles.

According to a Church canon 284, clerics are encouraged, "in accordance with the norms given by the Bishops' Conference and the justifiable locale customs to wear appropriate clothes."

The Italian Bishops' Conference has prescribed the cassock or the clerics -- black or dark grey suit with white priest's collar (see photo). The Roman Diocesan Director has disseminated these norms for all priests who are active in their area.

It is not entirely clear who the recipient for this new decree is. There Bishops and Monsignore are almost continuously directed according to clerical dress codes, may be meant as an example and a signal for priestly guests, who visit Rome, say observers.
Link to kath.net...

2 comments:

Pray for all priests. said...

Wonder who is going to tell the retired fat priest in shorts who shows up at my local Latin Mass? Diocesan Mass of course. Not a Mass by the FSSP and certainly not by the SSPX.

I suppose...as long as he can still clap and laugh aloud at the occasional funny from the pulpit...he won't mind returning to his collar. Especially if he can still wear the shorts.

May God bless all Novus Ordo priests that they return to the dignity of their priesthood and the saving of souls. Beginning with their own.

Anonymous said...

i was trying to find a rcia class to attend. i made an appointment to meet the priest/pastor.

he showed up in a hawian shirt shorts and flip flops.

i never went back.

i am glad to hear rome ruled on this.