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One
venerable tradition with much metaphysical significance that has faded
in the horizons of the post-Vatican II era is the practice of women
covering their heads in Church.
The veil is a beautiful symbol of the natural order affirmed by
Scripture: “Man was not created for woman, but the woman for the man” (1
Cor. 11:9). The man was not to cover his head “because he is the image
and glory of God.” But “the woman is the glory of the man because she
came from the man… Thus, the woman is under the power of her husband.”
That women should remain veiled in church while men do not is one symbol
of this harmonious natural order establishing the husband’s authority
over the wife.
The veil represents the natural hierarchy established by God in which
the woman is subject to the male: “Let wives be subject to their
husbands as to the Lord; because a husband is head of the wife, just as
Christ is head of the Church (Eph. 5:22:23).
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The veil: the sign of purity of the bride.
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This
sublime comparison of husband and wife to the union between Christ and
His Church suggests a benevolence in command unimagined before the rise
of Christianity. It establishes the loving respect along with protection
that a man should provide for his wife. The woman is not only the
companion of a man’s life, but also of his spirit – destined to be the
other half of his existence.
The veil is also a sign of espousal for both the bride of man and the
bride of Christ. It is very significant that traditionally the great
moments of a woman’s life show her concealed. This hidden role of women
makes up part of the secret of Mary, the Morning Star — which rises in
advance of the sun in order to lose itself therein. Mary does not come
into prominence for her own sake, but for that of her Son. This spirit
of self-sacrifice and surrender, which forms the very core of a woman’s
nature, is what the feminists simply cannot abide. They would change all
that. They would have women in the forefront, independent wage-earners
and bold decision-makers. They perhaps understand the great symbolism of
the veil better than the conservative, and thus have taken great care to
throw it off it with a contemptuous laugh. But the ironic smile that
lingers on their lips reveals a great unhappiness and discontent. For
when a woman revolts against this divine order, it is easy to predict
the beginning of the woman who has lost her self-identity and
self-respect, or who has become the slave of man and his passions.
The Veil: It’s History
Both the men and the women of the Old Covenant covered their heads in
the Temple. That only women should cover their heads was preached by the
Apostle of the Gentiles: “But every woman praying or prophesying with
her head uncovered disgraces her head” (1 Cor. 11:5-6). Thus this
custom, rooted in Scripture, became a tradition practiced by Catholic
women from the earliest days of the Church.
However, I am unaware of any verse more ridiculed or any Apostle more
reviled by the feminists. These loud, strident, and academically proud
revolutionaries labeled
St. Paul
a misogynist because they erroneously claim that he based this tradition
on his personal opinion. This is not true. The words of St. Paul
actually make it quite clear that it is Our Lord Himself who desires and
commands women to cover their heads in church as a visible sign of the
order He established. The real reason the feminist scholars relentlessly
denigrate the Apostle is because of their own mania to place women on an
equal level with men and stimulate masculine ways.
It was not only Scripture and Tradition that prescribed women to cover
their heads in church. It was also mandated by Canon Law. In fact, the
old Canon 1262.2 stated that women must cover their heads “especially
when they approach the holy table.” This Canon was never repudiated in
those heady days of change that followed Vatican II. It was simply
ignored.
Nothwithstanding the fact that women are mandated to cover their
heads by Canon Law, Scripture and Tradition, the post-Vatican II Church
capitulated on this point with nary a protest. Influenced by the spirit
of adaptation to the modern world, a generalized relaxation of
formalities in the sacred rituals and a more casual dress for Mass, many
women began to leave off the head covering - even though Church
discipline had not changed. But everything else was being changed,
simplified, relaxed, thrown out or off – why not the veil?
Finally, the 1983 new Code of Canon Law gave implicit approval to
this egalitarian trend simply by ignoring all mention of women’s veils.
The Veil:
It’s Restoration
It seems to me that most women did not leave off the veil or a head
covering as an explicit act of revolt. Nor did they do so to please men.
I have never heard a man - except for a few progressives bad-spirited
priests - ridicule a veiled woman praying in church. To the contrary, I
have heard many men admit that they stand in a kind of awe at the beauty
and mystery of a veiled woman. Clothing is never without a meaning, and
a man intuitively understands that the veil represents a gentle
submission that lies at the very essence of womanhood and femininity.
Rather, it has been the mockery of women and their slavish submission to
modern fashion that has been the horrible traitor to the dignity of
women. How many young women in veils have lost courage in face of those
superior, self-confident smiles of their bareheaded peers? How many
women have succumbed to that certain look of the gentle sex which
cruelly labels the veiled woman as “old-fashioned” or out of step with
modernity? A simple remark: “Oh, she must be a Trad. She’s in a veil,”
becomes reason for shame and confusion, rather than pride and
self-respect. How many women in cases like this shamefully follow Peter,
who denied Our Lord for fear of a laugh of a serving girl…
The solution is simple. Women need to realize the profound and marvelous
meaning of the veil, a ceremonial vestment that makes them pleasing in
prayer in the sight of God and the angels. It is women who must restore
this tradition. For a woman to submit to this norm of the Church is a
sign of her acceptance of her femininity and her place in the divine
order. With this small fiat, which mirrors that grand fiat
of Our Lady, she can find a small part of the fulfillment, dignity,
serenity and joy so sadly lacking in the modern liberated woman.
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