
by Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
In a room next to the Church of Mercy in Salvador, Capuchin monks allowed a boutique to open, selling unisex items, including bikinis.
As one might imagine, the initiative caused a scandal among many churchgoers.
Friar Benjamim Capelli explained that the store’s rent will help increase the parish’s income for its charitable works.
Perhaps sensing the inconsistency of this argument—since a lawful end cannot justify immoral means—Friar Bruno Rossi added, “I only regret that some of our brothers, who are firmly rooted in the faith, are so easily scandalized and harbor such childish prejudices. It is interesting and symptomatic that traditionally austere friars, such as the Capuchins, have not perceived the impropriety of the business. Has the time not come to overturn false prejudices?” This information comes from a news item in the Jornal do Brasil daily on December 5, exactly one month ago.
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As far as I know, this information has not been denied. I would be very happy to receive a letter stating that the reported fact is untrue. I hereby undertake to inform readers of any denial.
However, I doubt it will come, so I will go ahead with my comment.
When I published a news item a few months ago about a convent of nuns in Spain that manufactured bikinis, I caused an understandable sensation among readers. Although no one dared deny the unusual news, some considered it doubtful; such a scandal could not have happened.
A similar case has now erupted in Bahia’s capital, Salvador. After all, there is little difference between manufacturing and selling bikinis.
However, in neither the Spanish nor the Bahian case do the vast majority of people draw the appropriate conclusions.
One of these, however, stands out. If, from its foundation to the present day, the Church has regarded nudism—of which the bikini is one of the most aggressive manifestations—with horror, and if church entities now manufacture and sell bikinis, then one of two things must be true:
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Either Catholic morality has changed completely, and therefore the Church is neither infallible nor divine.
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Or, by implicitly but ostensibly affirming the legitimacy of the bikini, these ecclesiastical entities are adulterating Church teaching and thereby excluding themselves from it.