Christian Women Wearing Jeans is WRONG

3
Testimony from Susan I will try to keep this short. I think I could write a book! My dad was saved in an IFB church when I was 6 years old. Two years later, he was called to preach and made plans to go off to Bible college. The church where the college was located also had a Christian school, which he planned to place me in. The school had a dress code which included dresses for girls, so I would be wearing dresses to school all day and dresses to church (this was 34 years ago, so everyone wore dresses to church then). He explained to me that, since I'd be wearing dresses most of the time anyway, it only made sense for me to wear them all the time. He and my mother had been learning about dresses only for ladies and had come to the conclusion that it was right and that I should wear dresses also. I submitted to that with no problem. I don't remember ever hating wearing dresses; it was just how our family lived. As a teen, there were moments of discomfort when I felt odd, but not overwhelmingly so. My dh and his family had the same conviction, so after we married, I still wore dresses only. It was just how we lived. There came a point about 10 years ago, that I had a friend who was a Baptist preacher's daughter. She had been raised to wear only dresses, but after she married she had grown away from that. She began talking to me, questioning my "conviction," so I talked to Wes about it. I finally talked him into letting me wear pants just around the house. He said only at home, and no jeans, only slacks. I wore them about 3 times, and felt so out of place that I decided I'd study this thing out for myself. I used a concordance and my Bible and a book or two (I think maybe Cathy Corle's book was one I read), and the things that made wearing dresses my personal conviction were the modesty of dresses and separation from the world. Women are to dress in modest apparel. Modest means not extreme or bold, and not morally loose. Those can apply to pants, yes; but when I have on a pair of pants, I don't feel that my body is covered. Pants are form-fitting, thus exposing my body. That's just how I feel. The illustration that Cathy Corle uses is two pictures of the same woman. The first one has her in a nice dress. She asked a group of ladies what they noticed about this woman, and they answered her face. Then she showed them the picture of the same woman in a pair of jeans and asked

description

Christians no tattoos or jeans!!!

Transcript of Christian Women Wearing Jeans is WRONG

Page 1: Christian Women Wearing Jeans is WRONG

Testimony from Susan

I will try to keep this short. I think I could write a book!

My dad was saved in an IFB church when I was 6 years old. Two years later,

he was called to preach and made plans to go off to Bible college. The church

where the college was located also had a Christian school, which he planned to place

me in. The school had a dress code which included dresses for girls, so I would be

wearing dresses to school all day and dresses to church (this was 34 years ago, so

everyone wore dresses to church then). He explained to me that, since I'd be

wearing dresses most of the time anyway, it only made sense for me to wear them

all the time. He and my mother had been learning about dresses only for ladies and

had come to the conclusion that it was right and that I should wear dresses also. I

submitted to that with no problem.

I don't remember ever hating wearing dresses; it was just how our family

lived. As a teen, there were moments of discomfort when I felt odd, but not

overwhelmingly so. My dh and his family had the same conviction, so after we

married, I still wore dresses only. It was just how we lived.

There came a point about 10 years ago, that I had a friend who was a Baptist

preacher's daughter. She had been raised to wear only dresses, but after she

married she had grown away from that. She began talking to me, questioning my

"conviction," so I talked to Wes about it. I finally talked him into letting me wear

pants just around the house. He said only at home, and no jeans, only slacks. I wore

them about 3 times, and felt so out of place that I decided I'd study this thing out

for myself.

I used a concordance and my Bible and a book or two (I think maybe Cathy

Corle's book was one I read), and the things that made wearing dresses my

personal conviction were the modesty of dresses and separation from the world.

Women are to dress in modest apparel. Modest means not extreme or bold,

and not morally loose. Those can apply to pants, yes; but when I have on a pair of

pants, I don't feel that my body is covered. Pants are form-fitting, thus exposing

my body. That's just how I feel. The illustration that Cathy Corle uses is two

pictures of the same woman. The first one has her in a nice dress. She asked a

group of ladies what they noticed about this woman, and they answered her face.

Then she showed them the picture of the same woman in a pair of jeans and asked

Page 2: Christian Women Wearing Jeans is WRONG

what they noticed. They said their eyes were immediately drawn to the crotch

area! That drove home to me that clothes can emphasize the body or the face; I'd

rather have folks, especially men, notice my face and not my body. Again, this is my

feeling.

The other thing that convinced me was the doctrine of separation from the

world. The fashion of the world is to wear pants (patterned after men's clothing).

This wasn't the case until about 100 years ago, when actresses began wearing pant

suits that resembled men's suits. Before that, women almost universally wore

dresses (I remember my Granny saying that she wore her brother's overalls to

pick cotton to keep her legs from getting all scratched up). So the fashion of the

world became women wearing pants. I felt that, to be separate from the world, I

needed to dress differently than the world. I also needed to be feminine and

distinctively female; there should be a noticeable difference between my clothes

and a man's clothes. The difference in our culture is that women wear dresses and

men wear pants, so I believe it's right for me to wear dresses.

Several years ago, my pastor gave some principles for Christian dress.

They're very helpful, and they can be applied to male or female, pants or dresses.

1. Modesty - does this clothing cover me adequately? I Tim. 2:9

2. Not worldly - does this clothing reflect the current trends of

Hollywood and TV? I John 2:15

3. Difference - does this clothing easily show there's a difference

between me and the opposite gender? Deut. 22:5

4. Unoffensive - does this clothing offend a brother or sister in

Christ? As a woman, will this cause my brother to stumble or think

lustfully about me? Rom 14:7-8,12-13 I Cor. 10:23; 8:13

5. Glorifies God - does this clothing glorify God, or does it call

attention to me and glorify me? I Cor. 10:31

As for this beign a matter between a wife, husband, and God:

A saved man will encourage his wife to do what God is laying on her heart.

Several ladies have mentioned how their husbands didn't see the need for dresses

only, but supported them in wearing them because the ladies felt that is what God

wanted them to do. With an unsaved husband, the dress issue can be a witness to

her husband in one of two ways: if he doesn't mind her wearing dresses only, it can

be a witness of her changed life; if he doesn't want her to wear dresses only, her

Page 3: Christian Women Wearing Jeans is WRONG

submission to him in this area will be a witness to him (especially if she makes sure

to wear what pleases him when they are at home, even if she wears dresses all the

rest of the time).

This issue is just like any other that families have to make a decision about.

If your heart is open to do whatever God wants you to, and you study scriptures

related to it and come to a different conclusion than others, you've done what you

need to to follow God's leading. We have freedom in Christ to follow Him as He

leads us to. I don't know why some people develop certain convictions and others

don't. How people dress is not a salvation issue; it's a separation issue. It's not my

job to win them over to my way of thinking on separation - it's the Holy Spirit's

job to teach them how God wants them to live. If they ask why I believe

something, I'll tell them; otherwise, I stay quiet.