Confession is a sacrament in which we confess dark deeds, shameful sins, cowardly compromises, repeated rifts. It is something we often wish more to be done with than to do; we know we must go, that it is “good for us” as a visit to the dentist’s or the doctor’s is good for us. It might seem as if the place where we fess up, red-handed, and receive the cleansing bath of the Redeemer’s Blood should be a discreet, hidden, almost unnoticed spot, somewhere over in the corner, perhaps fused into the surrounding architecture like a broom closet (indeed, some confessionals were turned into broom closets after Vatican II, though the brooms had surely done nothing to deserve an environment reserved to rational animals).
Yet the designers and builders of Catholic churches and of their furnishings operated under a very different mentality. They made confessionals beautiful works of art (sometimes even extravagant), put them in prominent places where no one could miss them, and multiplied their number, so that you couldn’t avoid seeing them.
This, at least, was the Catholic (Counter-)Reformation’s way of reaffirming what the Protestants denied: that the Lord had, in His great mercy, provided the Catholic Church with an efficacious means for blotting out post-baptismal grave sin, a “second plank after shipwreck.” Contrary to some early heretics, grave sin after baptism, even including apostasy, could be forgiven; no sin permanently barred the penitent soul from grace. Contrary to the more recent heretics, faith alone was not enough, but faith must be faith in the Blood of Christ applied to souls by the ministry of the Church, at His bidding—ultimately, so that we could be rightly humbled and utterly certain of our having been forgiven.
These are some of the thoughts I had on my mind as I explored churches in Sicily in February and started taking pictures of the lovely Baroque confessionals that nearly every church contained. I will not try to label exactly which church each one belonged to, as that is somewhat beside the point; I doubt anyone will ever make a trip to a church just to see a confessional. Rather, one can marvel at the artistic creativity employed, and the strong, silent, steady love of this sacrament that such furnishings convey.
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Why Should We Build Beautiful Confessionals?
Peter KwasniewskiPosted Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Labels: Baroque, Confession, confessionals, liturgical furnishings, Peter Kwasniewski, Sicily
Thursday, March 06, 2025
Concilium’s Attack on Confession (Part 4.2): Mortal Sins Before Communion? No Problem!
Gregory DiPippoThis is the second part of an article which we published on Tuesday, Mr Phillip Campbell’s investigation into what the writers of the “progressive” theological journal Concilium were saying about reform of the sacrament of Confession in the years which immediately followed the most recent ecumenical council. This installment is a detailed consideration of the particularly perverse work of a theologian named Jean-Marie Tillard. Once again, our thanks to Mr Campbell for sharing his highly interesting and useful work with us.
The end game should be fairly obvious at this point: if any sinner can obtain forgiveness by receiving the Eucharist, there is no need for an individual sacrament of penance. Tillard concludes his argument by questioning the teaching of Trent that Catholics guilty of mortal sin must go to confession before receiving communion:
Why, if what I have said is correct, must one hold that “those whose conscience is weighed down by mortal sin must first go to sacramental confession if they can find a confessor”, before they approach the Eucharistic table? Does this not improperly diminish the value of full participation in the Paschal meal? [20]
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The Prodigal Son Not Doing Anything Particularly Wrong Because He Wasn’t Acting from Deliberate Malice, by the Austrian painter Franz Christoph Janneck (1703-61). Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |
in the present-day context, one would distinguish between sins of real malice in which bad will is evident, and sins which are possibly serious in terms of matter but which imply a capitulation of the will (if, indeed, it has occurred at all) apart from the “pressure of meditated and relished malice”. These distinctions, especially the latter, are illuminating: reception of the Eucharist is enough to efface all sins where no real malice is apparent. [22]
In strict theological terms, the presence of this contrition (and the votum guaranteeing it) suffices for the sinner—whatever the gravity of his sin—to be able in truth to eat the body and drink the blood of Jesus, and not unto his own damnation (1 Cor. 11, 27-30)… Provided that the votum exists, even though he has sinned gravely, the Christian can receive the body and blood of the Lord without previous sacramental confession, and can obtain his reconciliation from that body: one might say that God “anticipates” the confession which will make explicit a reality already essentially present in its eucharistic source. [23]
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St Thomas Aquinas Triumphing Over Heretics, 1471, by the Florentine painter Benozzo Gozzoli (1421-97.) Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |
It is written, “He that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh judgment to himself”: and a gloss of the same passage makes the following commentary: “He eats and drinks unworthily who is in the state of sin, or who handles (the sacrament) irreverently; and such a one eats and drinks judgment, i.e. damnation, unto himself.” Therefore, he that is in mortal sin, by taking the sacrament heaps sin upon sin, rather than obtains forgiveness of his sin. [25]
Wednesday, March 05, 2025
What Might Christ Say to Us in the Confessional?
Peter KwasniewskiLet us remember that, in the sobering words of Dom Eugene Boylan, “It would seem that there are special graces that will not be given to souls unless someone pays a special price for them in penance and suffering.”
This might be the advice that Our Lord would give us if He were sitting in the confessional and we happened to come in, with our assorted burdens. He would free us from those burdens, but then ask us to take on some other burdens voluntarily, for the sake of His Mystical Body. Not merely to fulfill a penance (which is often easy enough), but to pay that special price that has been put on the rescue of this or that soul, in order to give a lowly believer the dignity of being a little co-redeemer, beneath and with Christ, in union with His Mother at the foot of the Cross.
Bishop Athanasius Schneider, in a book from Emmaus Road that was too little noticed when it appeared—I am referring to Man of God: The Catholic Priest and the Cornerstones of His Life—writes: “Fleeing from or rejecting the cross and the Christian practice of interior and exterior mortification leads to a lukewarm and spiritually sterile life.” He then cites a remarkable passage from Fr. Garrigou-Lagrange’s book The Priest in Union with Christ, published more than seventy years ago:
There are at present in the world many people who wish to suppress all forms of mortification, penance, and reparation; they are anxious to destroy the cross and the spirit of sacrifice as being opposed to the modern spirit of so-called liberty or license and uncontrolled pleasure. Consequently their lives have become completely barren, because no one has ever been known to scale great heights without a spirit of sacrifice. […]Bishop Schneider also quotes a most remarkable passage from the little-known spiritual writer Fr. Claude Arvisenet, who imagines what Christ would say to his priest in the confessional. Now that we are entering into a season in which many Catholics will be seeking out the sacrament of penance, this advice may be timely:
In view of this widespread sterility in human endeavor many would-be reformers are asserting that what is needed is a new approach to the priestly and religious life, in order to adapt them to the needs of the modern era. So far as the religious life is concerned, they are of the opinion that its austerity ought to be mitigated since it is now out of date: time devoted to prayer should be cut down to leave more time for external activities. They would also adapt the priestly life to the spirit of the times: to them it seems no longer suitable for priests to wear a special dress or the tonsure or any outward sign of their priesthood, or even to recite the breviary—perhaps even celibacy has become outmoded—and so on.
Such has been the attitude adopted by many Protestants, and it is of interest to remember that Luther in cutting himself off from the Church immediately renounced the three religious vows…. And why has their enthusiasm for the glory of God and the salvation of souls waned? For want of the spirit of sacrifice. The priest has failed to recognize that he must be a victim in union with Christ, and that he cannot save souls except through the same means as Christ himself used. It is only this spirit of sacrifice which can rectify disorder in the soul of a priest or religious, and thus make way for genuine charity bringing in its train peace and joy, which spread themselves to other souls. Take away mortification and you immediately take away joy, because once the affections of man are allowed to settle on things of sense they can no longer be raised to God and the supernatural.
There is certainly no need to remodel the priestly and religious lives and thus imitate the modernist renovation of dogma. (pp. 67-68)
My son, if thou upbraidest them harshly in the beginning, or even unnecessarily in the course of their confession, what will happen? The last sheep that is at the very door of the fold will flee away in terror, thinking that he has found a wolf, not a pastor…. Thus will perish through they fault they brother for whom I have died, to whom I have sent thee, whom I have trustfully committed to thy care. Remember, my son, that they penitent brother is a man and not an angel, and that thou art not a minister of vindictive justice, but of justice tempered by mercy….This is the something which the whole Church needs to be reminded of, a better counsel than the obsessively one-sided “mercy for all and for everything”, or advice to priests that they should “always” absolve everyone who comes to the confessional, and that in some cases those who are in an adulterous relationship should be allowed to confess without an intention of avoiding future sin by living as brother and sister. One only wonders what Arvisenet, who died in 1831, would have said about such brash assertions of the modern era against the divine law. One wonders what the Lord would say—or, rather, has already said.
Nevertheless, my son, compel them to observe all things that I have commanded thee, to cease acting perversely, and to learn to walk in the way of my commandments. Nor deem it mercy to cast pearls before swine, nor to give the bread of angels to those who delight in husks…. O false peace, which leaves war in the heart; O deceptive mercy, which produces sleep and not a cure, death and not life! O unjust judge, who, for the satisfaction of an evil-desiring man, prostitutes my authority!
Truly, my son, one who knowingly, or even through culpable lack of knowledge, absolves a sinner who is not contrite nor converted from his evil ways, dares to bestow my peace upon my enemy while he still hates me, hands me over to him to be crucified at his hands. See, my son, how sometimes my house becomes a den of thieves; see how these careless priests fail in their duty. O modern Pilates, who thus through cowardice and culpable weakness hand me over to whosoever would again crucify me! O my son, far be such iniquity from thee, such cruel and sinful kindness. Remember that the power and precept was given to thee not only to loose but also to bind.
Therefore exercise the greatest care, that in thy ministry mercy and truth may meet each other and justice and peace may kiss. Thus shalt thou be a faithful and prudent dispenser of my mysteries.
For, as Msgr. Ronald Knox reminds us, in a literary memento mori well suited to the start of Lent:
“Hodie eris mecum in Paradiso, this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise”—let us remember that today may be the last of its series. When you go to bed, you will wind up your watch just as usual, your letters will be speeding this way and that, assuring your friends that you are well. And then, in the night, just a click in the mechanism of your body, a moment of horror in your dreams; and tomorrow morning the bell will be tolling for you, and your soul will have met God in judgment.
Tuesday, March 04, 2025
Concilium’s Attack on Confession (Part 4.1): Mortal Sins Before Communion? No Problem!
Gregory DiPippoOn Shrove Tuesday of last year, we began a series which Mr Phillip Campbell, author of the blog Unam Sanctam Catholicam, has very kindly shared with NLM. It is the result of his investigation into what the writers of the “progressive” theological journal Concilium were saying about reform of the sacrament of Confession in the years which immediately followed the most recent ecumenical council. This newest installment, a detailed consideration of the particularly perverse work of a theologian named Jean-Marie Tillard, is fairly lengthy, and will be presented in two parts. Once again, our thanks to Mr Campbell for sharing his highly interesting and useful work with us.
The year 1971 was a time of heady exhilaration for the liturgical progressives. Their destructive work in the immediate aftermath of Vatican II had borne fruit in the implementation of Paul VI’s Novus Ordo Missae the previous year, and with the successful deconstruction of the ancient liturgy there was the sense that anything was possible. Having razed the bastions of the traditional Mass, the progressives turned their sights towards the sacrament of penance, long a target of liberal antagonism. To this end, Dominican arch-progressive Edward Schillebeeckx published a collection of essays in 1971’s Volume 61 of Concilium, the preeminent organ of liberal theology. I have documented the contents of these essays in previous installments in this series (Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3). Today we will continue this exploration of early 70’s progressivism with a dissection of an essay entitled “The Bread and Cup of Reconciliation” by French Canadian Dominican Jean-Marie Tillard (1927-2000).
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Fr Tillard wearing the updated habit of a Dominican Doctor of Theology, on the cover of the French edition of his book titled, “I believe, despite everything.” Ça dit tout... |
Admittedly, this reconciliation was accomplished once and for all (ephapax) in the event of the death-and-resurrection of Christ, but once again it is applied to the Church hic et nunc, in its sinful situation, by virtue of the sacramental character of the celebration and meal. By one and the same action the Church is freed from its sin and enters into more authentic koinonia. [4]
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Young People™ gather in Woodstock, New York, in August 1969 for a celebration of the Eucharist in the ritus Tillardensis. (Image from Wikimedia Commons by Derek Redmond and Paul Campbell (no relation) CC BY-SA 3.0) |
Theologians speak of a kind of objective desire (votum), implicit in the very nature of baptism and not only in the believer’s intention to be baptized. Aquinas wrote that without the votum of the Eucharist there would be no salvation for man, since no one could attain grace without this aspiration to full eucharistic reconciliation—a form of desire already objectively implied in the structure of baptism and which must pass into the consciousness of the baptized person when mature. The reconciliatory efficacy of baptism depends essentially on the ordination pf baptism at the Lord’s Supper. [6]
The very experience of eating together, in an atmosphere of celebration, is redolent of a meeting in love, a mutual opening-forth, an advance beyond mere intrinsic individual existence, and therefore (in consideration of what men actually are) what counts is less the fact of eating than of eating together while sharing the same existential blessing. [7]
The sign that Jesus made the matter of his sacrament is not the bread and wine in their static existence, or even merely in their power to sustain life. It is the bread and the cup already involved in the symbolic act of human encounter and unity. In this way, the reconciliation bestowed is signified in all its fullness: communion with God is recognized here and now in the communion of human brothers. A sign of human brotherhood encloses the mystery of reconciliation. [8]
In taking the bread and the cup of expiation, the believer participates in the propitiatory power of the cross. His sins are also wiped out…In the most realistic sense of the term, the Eucharist is the sacrament of forgiveness, because is the sacramental presence and communication of the act which remits sins. [10]
[T]he eucharistic “sacrifice” does not offer another crucifixion but applies the virtue of the cross. But this application relates to all sins, even the most serious, committed after baptism. [12]
A person who is conscious of grave sin is not to celebrate Mass or receive the body of the Lord without previous sacramental confession unless there is a grave reason and there is no opportunity to confess; in this case the person is to remember the obligation to make an act of perfect contrition which includes the resolution of confessing as soon as possible. [14]
As far as the sinner is concerned, the essential expression of this love [of God] is contrition. Through the power of the memorial of the propitiatory sacrifice of the Passover, in the fullness of the communal celebration, God grants the seriously guilty though well-intentioned Christian the grace which allows his contrition to develop and thus permits him to actually receive, together with his brothers, the bread and the cup of reconciliation. [16]
[T]hrough contrition, God already invites man into the full reception of His love…Through the power of the memorial, God moulds [sic] the believer who is well disposed even though culpable of grave sin, and who is taking part in the celebration, in order to make him able truly to eat the bread of salvation and truly drink the cup of the covenant… It is possible for the two moments to be attained in the same act of sacramental manducation. As is known, this is Thomist theory: if the insufficiently contrite sinner approaches the Lord’s table in quite good faith and reverently, together with the body and blood of the Passover, he will receive the charity that inspires his contrition and hence opens him to the friendship of God. [17]
If, at the moment when he approaches the bread and the cup of reconciliation, the sinner has not already taken this step [i.e., mustering up an attitude of contrition] before presenting himself at the banquet of friendship (which, in a sacramental perspective in which the laws of grace are one with the rhythms of human psychology, is the usual attitude), he must then at least have the firm desire (votum) and sincere resolution to take it eventually. There can be no true reconciliation without at least this votum, which is the manifest expression and guarantee of the existence of authentic contrition… [18]
Nevertheless this sacrament can effect the forgiveness of sin in two ways. First of all, by being received, not actually, but in desire; as when a man is first justified from sin. Secondly, when received by one in mortal sin of which he is not conscious, and for which he has no attachment; since possibly he was not sufficiently contrite at first, but by approaching this sacrament devoutly and reverently he obtains the grace of charity, which will perfect his contrition and bring forgiveness of sin. [19]
Friday, August 09, 2024
Concilium’s Attack on Confession (Part 3): Reconciliation as Socio-Political Struggle
Gregory DiPippoThis is third part of an article which Mr Phillip Campbell, author of the blog Unam Sanctam Catholicam, has very kindly shared with us, his investigation into what the “progressive” theological journal Concilium was saying about reform of the sacrament of Confession in the years which immediately followed the most recent ecumenical council. The first part was published in February, and the second in March. Once again, we are very grateful to him for sharing his work with us.
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A confessional in the cathedral of St Stephen in Toulouse, France. Image from Wikimedia Commons by Didier Descouens, CC BY-SA 4.0. |
In our previous installments in this series on the journal Concilium’s 1971 attack on Confession, we have documented the progressives’ attempts to frame the traditional administration of the sacrament as in a state of crisis (Part 1), and their subsequent call for a redefinition of guilt as a social construct (Part 2). Today we continue with a study of their attempt to recontextualize the nature of reconciliation in order to undermine the foundation of private penance.
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Fr Duquoc wearing the updated habit of a Dominican Doctor of Theology. |
Yet reconciliation is an object of suspicion owing to the forms it assumes in the Catholic Church, and notably owing to the celebration of penance… The sacrament of penance, as it is practiced today in the Catholic Church, gives rise to many reservations. There are fervent Christians, including priests and religious, who are unable to overcome their repugnance to its method of administration. There are many facile explanations of their allergy: the loss of a sense of sin, forgetfulness of God, distaste for prayer. But these explanations are unfortunately of too universal a kind to throw light upon this particular phenomenon—for they would apply just as much to lukewarm believers who nevertheless experience no distaste for the existing forms of the sacrament of penance and often have recourse to them. It is precisely where Christianity is taken most seriously that repugnance to the sacrament of penance is most apparent. [2]
As you well know, Venerable Brethren, it is true that venial sins may be expiated in many ways which are to be highly commended. But to ensure more rapid progress day by day in the path of virtue, for a constant and speedy advancement in the path of virtue, we highly recommend the pious practice of frequent confession, introduced by the church under the guidance of the Holy Spirit; for by this means we grow in a true knowledge of ourselves and in Christian humility, bad habits are uprooted, spiritual negligence and apathy are prevented, the conscience is purified and the will strengthened, salutary spiritual direction is obtained, and grace is increased by the efficacy of the sacrament itself. Let those, therefore, among the younger clergy who make light of or lessen esteem for frequent confession realize that what they are doing is alien to the Spirit of Christ and disastrous for the Mystical Body of our Savior. [9]
The current emphasis in Christianity on the dynamic and future character of reconciliation [i.e., concern for the Last Judgment] robs forgiveness of its historicism, reduces it to a private dimension, in short, devalues it. Struggle, as the active and committed form of reconciliation, has pride of place. Forgiveness, seen as obsessed with the past, is an obstacle to the freedom required for political struggle. The shift in emphasis in reconciliation makes the sacrament of penance meaningless; the social import of forgiveness is underestimated. [10]
Here and now we are immersed in the class-war and injustice. Brotherhood, transparency, peace are no more than hopes; whenever they have a germ of reality, the reality is regional… Today, in the Churches, small spontaneous groups, deeply committed and politically like-minded, are fighting for a Church to their image, purified of hierarchical and anonymous relations, a place of free expression. These communities are revolutionary in aims and status… believers most sensitive to collective phenomenon and social injustices are also the most hostile to the existing forms of penance. Militant Christians engaged in trade-unions or political activities, or involved in the class-war, are the first to be infected by the allergy to sacramentality as it exists in the Church today. There is no question at all of indifference to God or to the Gospel of Christ, but in their daily fight for the setting up of a less inhuman society, and in their political projects, the sacrament of reconciliation strikes them as either meaningless or ineffectual. A serious attitude to reconciliation as something to be effected here and now empties of its meaning reconciliation symbolized in the sacramental act. [11]
The existing form, inherited from Irish missionary monasticism, robs sacramental penance of its social character and implies that forgiveness and reconciliation belong to an inner conscience. Moreover, it encourages the sentiment already too prevalent in our society that religion is a private affair. So the form of a sacrament does influence its meaning; and as things are now it obscures its true significance. The reform of rites is thus not an undertaking of secondary importance — it is the very condition of understanding what Christianity is about. [14]
The purpose [of reforming the sacrament] is clear; it is provided by the necessary link between forgiveness and reconciliation at the level of true history. The sacramental symbol should make clear that forgiveness is a social function necessary to our history as it makes its way toward reconciliation. [17]
Does this private form of penance represent a concession to a mediocre form of Christian life? Is it a sacred therapy to appease consciences that are incapable of making their own the evangelical demands? Or does it illustrate an obsession with legalism in our relations with God? Is the institution of confession for faults that do not stop the forward-march of the community ascribable to an unhealthy desire for purity? It is difficult to answer these questions. [18]
The reconciliation celebrated in the sacrament of penance [i.e., the traditional form] is first and foremost reconciliation with oneself, which becomes the sign of reconciliation with God—this is a far cry indeed from the symbol advocated by the early Church, reconciliation with one’s brother as the sign of reconciliation with God. The form of the administration of the sacrament is not harmless; it favors one aspect of reconciliation. The private form favors reconciliation with oneself in the interior of one’s conscience, sole seat of authentic relationship with God. Other human realities, and notably economic and political relationships, escape all interference from Christianity …… This situation invites us to a great creative effort in the liturgical domain — otherwise the seeming discrepancy between our history and the symbolic celebration of reconciliation will grow; sacramental reconciliation will be seen as factitious, and be abandoned, or it will appear politically as a structure upholding the status quo. Hence the urgency of discovering new forms of celebration … The rites passed on by our history were imposed on it without sufficient attention being paid to local forms of possible signs of reconciliation. Certainly efforts are being made today to extricate Christian sacramentality from the situation in which it finds itself. Up till now these efforts have not amounted to much — they have combined a public penitential liturgy with private confession [i.e., the penance services of the Novus Ordo]. The gap between reconciliation with oneself and reconciliation with mankind, sign of reconciliation with God, is far from being overcome at the level of symbol. Confession still seems too bound up with an abstract law.Yet I do not think we need despair. The current criticism of the insignificance of the sacrament of reconciliation spurs us on to new discoveries. The Church cannot for long do without an effective symbolization of the social, historical and collective function of forgiveness. [21]
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What could go wrong? (Victims of a struggle session in occupied Tibet during the Chinese cultural revolution. Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
I have recently heard that some have unlawfully presumed to act contrary to a rule of Apostolic origin. And I hereby decree that the unlawful practice be completely stopped. It is with regard to the reception of penance. An abuse has crept in which requires that the faithful write out their individual sins in a little book which is then to be read out loud to the public.All that is necessary, however, is for the sinner to manifest his conscience in a secret confession to the priests alone... It is sufficient, therefore, to have first offered one’s confession to God, and then also to the priest, who acts as an intercessor for the transgressions of the penitents. [22]
Friday, March 08, 2024
Concilium’s Attack on Confession (Part 2): Guilt as a Social Construct
Gregory DiPippoThis is second part of an article which Mr Phillip Campbell, author of the blog Unam Sanctam Catholicam, has very kindly shared with us, his investigation into what the “progressive” theological journal Concilium was saying about reform of the sacrament of Confession in the years which immediately followed the most recent ecumenical council. The first part was published on Shrove Tuesday.
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The Confession, 1838, by the Milanese painter Giuseppe Molteni (1800-67); image from Wikimedia Commons, supplied by Fondazione Cariplo, CC BY-SA 3.0. |
The progressive attack on the sacrament of confession launched by the journal Concilium in 1971 was not restricted to rubrical considerations. The journal’s opening salvo against the sacrament began rather with an examination of the concept of guilt, addressed from purely sociological and psychological perspectives . Editor Edward Schillebeeckx set the stage for this approach in his introduction to the volume, arguing that, “As systems of value change, the sense of guilt changes with them.” [1] This will be a fundamental point in Concilium’s attack on the sacrament: traditional sacramental forms are no longer useful because the psychological and sociological categories of guilt presupposed by the sacrament have shifted. Schillebeeckx directly correlated shifting ideas about guilt to fewer people frequenting the sacrament, as “Within the Church, the change in the sense of guilt is manifested by a greatly diminished interest in the existing forms of forgiveness of sins.” [2] As we shall see, the Concilium authors will argue that advances in the psychological understanding of guilt and moral action rendered the traditional form of confession at best obsolete, and at worst positively harmful.
The sense of guilt is reinforced by the processes of pardon and reconciliation…Guilt appears as the sense of an individual departure from the norms of the group, even if this fact is not consciously perceived. On this basis guilt takes on, in a hidden way, the function of cultural reintegration. This means that guilt is a mechanism which assures institutionalization. [9]
If these analyses are correct, the concrete forms of guilt and hence moral feeling derive to some extent from criteria whose origin is not explicitly known to the person and which contribute, in a hidden way, to stabilize a social order by working out a system of evidences. [11]
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A famous photograph of Sigmund Fraud, 1921, by Max Halbertstadt. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
The conviction that private confession is useless does not in any way call Christ’s ministry of reconciliation into question. On the contrary, all effective reconciliation is seen by these Christians as an act of Christ. They are aware of the concrete quality of reconciliation, of its truth at the heart of conflicts. But private penance seems to them to suppress these conflicts artificially through the subterfuge of an inward guilt and forgiveness that have no bearing on the real conditions of life. [21]
The current emphasis in Christianity on the dynamic and future character of reconciliation robs forgiveness of historicism, reduces it to a private dimension, in short, devalues it. Struggle, as the active and committed form of reconciliation, has pride of place. Forgiveness, seen as obsessed with the past, is an obstacle to the freedom required for political struggle. The shift in emphasis in reconciliation makes the sacrament of penance meaningless; the social import of forgiveness is underestimated. [22]
the social import of sacramental penance resides ultimately in the link it establishes between forgiveness and reconciliation in our history. This dimension requires that the forms of its symbolization in the Church should be ceaselessly defined and delimited by the meaning that is to be brought out [i.e., by the demands of the new message]. [24]
preaching to the general public often owes its efficacy to the fact that it is in keeping with the dominant culture. It sees its power of creating institutions decline where it no longer corresponds to the latent cultural models which have evolved under various collective pressures. [27]
Now that the techniques of the human sciences are building up towards mastery of relations with others and of social interventions, without making use directly of the mechanism of guilt, it is no doubt important, from the point of view of a Christian evaluation, to react consciously and lucidly with regard to something which — perhaps in a hidden way — is at the origin of a new concept of individual and collective destiny. [29]
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The Conversion of St Augustine, 1430-35 ca., by Fra Angelico (1395 ca. 1455) and workshop. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
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St Francis de Sales in His Study, 1760, by Peter Anton Lorenzoni (1721-2), in the parish church of St Sigismund in Salzburg, Austria. (Image from Wikimedia Commons by Wolfgang Sauber, CC BY-SA 3.0.) |
We must not fret over our own imperfections… you must be sorry for the faults you commit with a repentance which is strong, level-headed, steady, and tranquil — a repentance that is not agitated, not worried, not discouraged.… You must hate your faults, but you should do so calmly and peacefully, without fuss or anxiety. You must be patient when you see them and benefit from seeing your own lowliness. Unless you do this, your imperfections, of which you are acutely conscious, will disturb you even more and thus grow stronger, for nothing is more favorable to the growth of these weeds than our anxiety and over eagerness to get rid of them.… Confess your fault and beg for mercy in the ear of your confessor to receive absolution. But when that is done, remain peaceful, and having detested the offense, embrace lovingly your lowliness.” [32]