Category: Modesty
Subject: Modesty
In The News: No More Navel Gazing in Church
ROME (Reuters) – An Italian priest is resorting to some innovative theology to rid his church of young women’s bare midriffs.
“God knew what your navel looked like even before you were born, so there is no need to expose it in church,” commands a sign at the entrance to the church in Cinisello Balsamo.
Guards at major churches in Italy routinely keep out people wearing skimpy attire. But Father Felice says he resorted to the signs because his parish cannot afford guards to keep out the low-cut jeans and high-cut tops, newspapers reported Monday.
Monday, 6/5/2006 Reuters
Analysis:
It is summer, and clothes are coming off… all over the world. It is to the point that people are not only willing to dress immodestly, but they are not hesitant to do so in places where it is offensive to others.
Continue reading “In The News: No More Navel Gazing in Church” →
Cleaner Cheering Wins Out in the House
AUSTIN – Forget education reform and taxes. On Tuesday, the Texas House turned its attention to a measure dubbed “the booty bill,” voting to crack down on cheerleaders who perform sexually suggestive routines at school-sponsored events.
The legislation, which passed 65-56, would give the state and school districts more power to shut down or punish drill teams, dance squads, cheerleaders or “any other performance group” that perform ribald acts.
Many members chortled, joked and jovially waved blue and white pompoms during the debate, but the bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Al Edwards of Houston, said the legislation is no laughing matter.
“Girls can get out and do these overtly sexual performances and we applaud them. And that’s not right,” said Edwards, an ordained minister. “This is the beginning of an era to change some of what we’ve been seeing.”
Though Edwards is a Democrat, most in his party opposed the bill while most Republicans voted in favor.
Opponents said the bill has already made Texas a national laughingstock, can’t be enforced and gives the state a power that should be reserved exclusively for local school districts&ldots;
…State Rep. Senfronia Thompson, D-Houston, said the bill was embarrassing and insulting, particularly as more pressing issues — like a major overhaul of the state’s school finance system — await consideration.
“We can’t legislate morality,” Thompson said. “I don’t know how this bill got to the floor. It’s stupid!”
The measure, which would still have to pass the Senate and be signed by the governor to become law, would allow the Texas Education Agency to require that school districts review possibly lewd performances.
If the school district determined that the act was conducted in an “overtly sexually suggestive manner,” they would have to take unspecified “appropriate action” against the performers and the performers’ sponsor.
Will Harrell, director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, said the legislation was too vague, petty and “patently unconstitutional.”
“This broad, morally restrictive legislation reminds me of the Taliban,” Harrell said, referring to the former hard-line regime in Afghanistan. “Why not go all the way? Why not require them all to wear a burka?”
Ft. Worth Star Telegram
Jay Root
Analysis:
I purposefully printed most of the article, as it speaks for itself. While I will not comment on the wisdom of the legislation itself, the present attitudes toward what is obviously lasciviousness is interesting:
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The view that we can’t legislate morality is obviously not so. Laws against murder, for example, do just that.
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We live in a society in which many think that any limitation of prurient activity is tantamount to fascism.
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The world recognizes that the routines and dress of cheerleaders are sexually suggestive. Why is it that so many Christian parents still allow their daughters to participate?
Sets and Subsets
There is a simple mathematical principle that children learn early on in their education, as they are taught “sets” of numbers.
Simply, we could state that one set of numbers would be all “positive, whole” numbers. The set would be described in the following manner:
{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,…}
Within that set of whole numbers, we could have a subset of all odd whole numbers that have a positive value. Described as:
{1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15,…}
Other similar sets could be represented in similar ways. Continue reading “Sets and Subsets” →
A Little of a Coquette
(Modesty, Dancing & Behavior)
Dress
When I read The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by Washington Irving, as a high school assignment, I was struck by a short passage which I have remembered since as the “ankle passage.” At the time, I was struck with how times had changed, regarding the morals of the day. Recently, I read the short story again, and came across the passage. It is a description of a young woman, (a bit of a flirt), who was the object of Ichabod Crane’s attention. Here is an excerpt: Continue reading “A Little of a Coquette” →
Jail Imposes Dress Code for Visitors
SOUTH BEND, Ind. – Guards at the St. Joseph County Jail are doing double duty as fashion police, enforcing new regulations that prohibit visitors from wearing scanty attire.
The new rules are on a sign posted at the jail entrance, the South Bend Tribune reported Tuesday. See-through tops, mini skirts and short shorts are out, and underwear is required to remain invisible. Hats also are banned, since they can be used to smuggle items into the jail or may be a gang emblem.
“A lot of people have gotten away with inappropriate clothing in the past. Hopefully this will prevent it,” said Keith Rininger, director of inmate services at the jail.
Warm weather brings out more bare skin, but sometimes visitors bare even more, officials say.
“We’ve had women flash the men they come in to see,” Rininger said.
In the confines of a jail, such behavior can cause problems, he said. “I don’t know how to put it delicately, but when men are locked up for a long time and they see their girlfriend, or their wife, or someone else’s girlfriend, it can cause tension. That’s not a good thing in this kind of environment,” he said.
AP, May 19, 2004
Analysis:
It is that time of the year again when temperatures rise and clothes are shed. The above article makes note of the effect which insufficient clothing has on men.