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Why confess to a priest?
An American teacher who has charge of religious education in
a primary school told me the other day that she had been preparing
children for First Confession. She thought she had done a good
job until one eight-year old asked, 'Why do I have to say, "First
Confession?" Do I have to go through this again?' He thought
that one experience of confession was enough for a lifetime.
We all have different ideas and especially feelings about confession.
The title, 'Why Confess to a Priest?' is from a two-penny CTS
pamphlet that was on sale in churches during the 1940s and 50s.
So it is not a recent question. A lot of people like the idea
of general confession, where one would get absolution without
having to be explicit about any sins. People can jokingly refer
to this as 'confession on the cheap,' though Church law demands
that serious sins remitted in general confession should be specifically
confessed at a later date. There is no cut-price confession,
at least in the case of serious sin. What serious sin is, is
a matter for another time.
Burden or Gift
The really basic question can be expressed in this way; do we consider confession
as a burden or a gift? There are several slightly different ways in which the
same question might be put. Is God being kindly to us in establishing confession,
or it some kind of punishment? Is confession an act of mercy, or a hard punishment
for sin? Yet another way of putting the question would be, is actual confession
good for us? Would we be better off simply telling our sins to God? Well, we
have all told God that we are sorry for sin, but that does not seem to be enough
to satisfy the human heart. Is there something about us that makes it important
that we confess serious misdemeanours to another?
Confessing
We all have read or heard about people who committed a serious crime like murder.
They get away with it for years and then they feel they have to tell someone,
a friend or even go to the police and hand themselves in. What is going on
in these cases? Another example would be the twelve steps of Alcoholics Anonymous.
The fourth step on the road to recovery is 'Make a searching and serious moral
inventory of ourselves.' This is to look really honestly at the whole issue
of good and evil - not just drink abuse. Then the sixth step is, 'Admit to
God, to ourselves and another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.'
Again it is all wrongdoing, not just drink offences. Again note who must receive
the confession: admit to ourselves, to God and to another human being. In the
New Testament there is a passage in the letter of St. James that talks about
how people are getting along (James 5:7-16). The author begins by exhorting
patience. He then speaks about those who are suffering, they should pray. Those
who are cheerful should sing songs of praise. Those who are sick should be
anointed with oil and have hands laid on them by the presbyters. He then sums
up: 'Therefore confess your sins to one another and pray for one another that
you may be healed.' The confession of sin is somehow necessary for wellbeing.
These three examples of people feeling the need to admit to past crimes, the
wisdom of the AA fellowship, and the scriptural connection between confession
of sins and healing or well being invite us to look again at the sacrament
and see why confession is so important.
Healing
If I commit some serious sin, I can, and should, tell God that I am sorry.
God is merciful and will, I hope, forgive. But it is a very silent forgiveness.
Can I be sure that I have satisfied God? Is he content with my sorrow? In the
meantime I can still feel the isolation of sin, and the deep sense of shame
that can so easily lead me to think that I am unlovable or nasty. There is
a powerful psychological need to feel accepted. If I confess all my sins and
I am not rejected, but welcomed and encouraged, then life opens up again. So
long as I am not fully honest with myself, and have not admitted the exact
nature of my wrongs, then I can easily fall into the grasp of self-hatred.
If I admit only to part of my sin or somehow cover up, then lurking beneath
is the possible thought, if people really knew what I am like, they would reject
me. Confession, even in a dark corner of a church solves this basic problem.
If I confess, then I have my dignity restored; I am welcomed back from the
isolation of sin and guilt.
Seen in this way confession is a gift. It can still be embarrassing, but a
moment's embarrassment is a small price to pay. We can perhaps smile at the
thought: well I was not ashamed to sin, so why the big deal in confessing it?
This psychological need of admitting our evil and of being accepted and respected
is at the heart of the sacrament. But there are other advantages. The area
of sin is one in which we can very easily have a distorted picture of ourselves
and of our sinfulness. We may not be fully honest with ourselves and we can
rationalise our failings. We can escape their wrong and the harm they do to
others. Other people have an opposite problem. They are needlessly crushed
by sin and a sense of failure. They need to be encouraged and set free from
their guilt and perhaps from twisted thinking about themselves. I have often
been at services of reconciliation when people have come up just to mention
one or two sins and get absolution and I felt, if only I could say a few sentences
to this person and help them into freedom. But there is no opportunity and
they go off, forgiven, but still damaged or enslaved by anxiety, self-hatred,
scrupulosity, despair. The possibility of advice is a major feature in the
sacrament, and one of the important reasons why we should confess our sins.
We have seen then that we need not only forgiveness of sins, but also a remedy
for sin. Sin traps and makes us slaves. Merely to get absolution is a great
benefit, but people can need more. A word, a phrase from the priest can bring
a lot of healing. Confession is meant to be a dialogue between priest and the
penitent, so that the sin is uncovered, its roots uncovered and remedies sought.
Whether all this happens depends on how we use the sacrament, a quick fix,
or a step towards healing.
A Priest
The help that the priest can offer does not necessarily come from that the
fact that the priest is particularly learned or even very holy, but because
Christ in his Holy Spirit is present guiding both the priest and the person
confessing sins. What if a priest is angry or unpleasant? There is, I think,
only one thing to do. Walk out, telling him perhaps, as you leave, that he
is a disgrace. Nobody should put up with ill-treatment of any kind in confession.
We have two answers to the question, why confess to a priest? One is that confession
of the exact nature of our sins is very good and healing for us. The second
is that we can find remedy for sinful or harmful attitudes to ourselves and
others. Why is a priest better? The Church had ring-fastened confession to
make it a safe place. There is the seal of confession. Nothing told in confession
in order to receive absolution can ever be revealed. The penalty for a priest
doing so is papal excommunication, usually with expulsion from priesthood.
I have never heard of a case of this strict confessional secrecy being violated.
So a third reason is that the Church provided a safe place for the confession
that is sometimes necessary for us, and often helpful.
Meeting Christ
The main reason for confession to a priest is that we are dealing with a sacrament,
a way in which Christ set up a means for dispensing grace. 'Whose sins you
shall forgive, they are forgiven.' (see John 20:22-23). The priest cannot really
be said to forgive sins by the power of Christ, if he doesn't know what the
sins are. In the sacrament it is Christ who forgives. Since Christ is ascended
into heaven, we would not be able to see him or hear his voice forgiving us.
But he acts in the person of the priest. When the priest says, 'I absolve you
from your sins,' he is doing so in Christ's name and place; we hear the actual
words of forgiveness, and the sin is removed forever.
St Therese of Lisieux recalls her first confession. She says, 'I never
felt so much joy in my soul. Since then I've gone to confession on
all the great
feasts, and it was truly a feast for me each time.'
Chris O’Donnell
O.Carm
This article is reprinted by kind permission of ‘Spirituality’
(Dominican Publications) Vol 10
January/February 2004
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