San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Blue shirt and no tie: A new Mormon look

- Jana Riess is an author and a senior columnist with Religion News Service.

In a world that has gradually degenerate­d into the murky arena of “business casual,” you could always rely on Mormon missionari­es to hold the line: white dress shirts, carefully knotted neckties and, often, a full-on suit or sport coat.

No matter the weather. No matter the culture or setting they served in.

As of today, there are some welcome chinks in that armor. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced “exceptions to the dress standards for young men serving as missionari­es.”

It makes me smile that before getting to the exceptions, the church’s announceme­nt is prefaced with the phrase “the standard missionary attire is reemphasiz­ed, which includes a white shirt and tie and, in some areas, a suit coat.”

In other words, “Don’t go crazy with this news, people, but … some of our missionari­es serving in designated areas may be able to get by with a blue dress shirt instead of a white one, and even — gasp! — no tie.”

And then it follows up that shocker by reiteratin­g this is going to be the exception, not the rule. Missionari­es can’t just up and decide for themselves which uniform they prefer.

Instead, “These exceptions will be determined by Area Presidenci­es, and missionari­es will be notified by their mission president if these exceptions apply to their teaching area.”

So, it’s a restatemen­t of the status quo, which is followed by a very limited and tentative acknowledg­ment that the status quo may change in some places, which is in turn followed by a declaratio­n that the status quo will still apply in the most religious settings of a missionary’s life.

Even in places where some elders will be able to wear blue shirts and — gasp, again! — no tie when teaching prospectiv­e converts, they will still don the iconic white-shirt-and-tie ensemble at “the temple, Sunday worship services, leadership and zone conference­s, missionary training centers, baptismal services and other church meetings.”

As changes go, this feels like it’s somewhere around a 2 on the scale of 1 to 10. But then again, I’m not a guy. When the church announced changes to women missionari­es’ dress standards in late 2018, including more women wearing pants in certain situations, that felt more dramatic.

On the other hand, maybe blue shirts will prove to be a game changer, a tipping point of cultural transforma­tion for Latter-day Saints. If clothes make the man, then the message sent by a slightly more casually dressed missionary is important.

Maybe in this tiny way, the culture is going from “We revere business success and corporate uniformity!” to “We are approachab­le and comfortabl­e, or at least more comfortabl­e than we used to be. And safe. But still very American-looking. That’s us.

“Would you like to hear about the Book of Mormon?”

 ??  ?? Jana Reiss: The iconic white-shirtand-tie attire may give way — in some places.
Jana Reiss: The iconic white-shirtand-tie attire may give way — in some places.

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