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When Our Blessed Lord redeemed us, He applied the benefits of the Redemption in
the Sacrament of Baptism. By this Baptism He freed us from sin and the slavery
of the devil; He restored us to God's grace; He reopened for us Heaven; made us
once more children of God: in a word, He placed us in the condition in which we
were before our fall through the sin of our first parents. This was certainly
a great kindness bestowed upon us, and one would think we would never forget
it, and never more lose God's friendship by any fault of ours; especially when
we had seen the great miseries brought upon the world by sin, and had learned
something of Hell where we would have been, and of Heaven which we would have
lost, if Our Lord had not redeemed us. Our Blessed Lord saw, however, that we
would forget His benefits, and again, even after Baptism, go freely into the
slavery of the devil. How, then, could we be saved? We could not be baptized
again, because Baptism can be given only once. Our good Lord in His kindness
instituted another Sacrament, by which we could once more be freed from sin if
we had the misfortune to fall into it after Baptism-it is the Sacrament of
Penance. It is called the plank in a shipwreck. When sailors are shipwrecked
and thrown helplessly into the ocean, their only hope is some floating plank
that may bear them to the shore. So when we fall after Baptism we are thrown
into the great ocean of sin, where we must perish if we do not rest upon the
Sacrament of Penance, which will bring us once more in safety to the friendship
of God. How very thankful the poor shipwrecked sailors would be to anyone who
would offer them a plank while they are in danger! Do you think they would
refuse to use it? In like manner how thankful we should be for the Sacrament
of Penance, and how anxious we should be to use it when we arc in danger of
losing our souls!
The Sacrament of Penance shows the very great kindness of Our Lord. He might
have said: I saved them once, and I will not trouble Myself more about them; if
they want to sin again, let them perish. But no, He forgives us and saves us
as often as we sincerely call on Him for help, being truly sorry for our sins.
He left this power also to His Apostles, saying to them: As often as any poor
sinner shall come to you and show that he is truly sorry for his sins, and has
the determination not to commit them again, and confesses them to you, I give
you the power to pardon his sins in the Sacrament of Penance. The forgiveness
of your sins is the chief though not the only blessing you receive in the
reception of this Sacrament, through which you derive so many and great
advantages from the exhortation, instruction, or advice of your confessor.
Is it not a great benefit to have a friend to whom you can go with the trials
of your mind and soul, your troubles, temptations, sins, and secrets? You have
that friend-the priest in the confessional. He is willing to help you, for he
consecrated his life to God to help men to save their souls. He is able to
help you, for he understands your difficulties, sins, and temptations, and the
means of overcoming them. He has made these things the study of his life, and
derives still greater knowledge of them from hearing the sad complaints of so
many relating their secret sorrows or afflictions, and begging his advice.
Then you are sure that whatever you tell him in the confessional will never be
made known to others, even if the priest has to die to conceal it. You might
tell your secrets to a friend, and if you afterwards offended him he would
probably reveal all you told him. The priest asks no reward for the service he
gives you in the confessional, but loves to help you, because he has pledged
himself to God to do so, and would sin if he did not. Some enemies of our holy
religion have tried to make people believe that Catholics have to pay the
priest in confession for forgiving their sins; but every Catholic, even the
youngest child who has been to confession, knows this to be untrue, and a base
calumny against our holy religion; even those who assert it do not believe it
themselves. The good done in the confessional will never be known in this
world. How many persons have been saved from sin, suicide, death, and other
evils by the advice and encouragement received in confession! How many persons
who have fallen into the lowest depths of sin have by the Sacrament of Penance
been raised up and made to lead good, respectable lives-a blessing to
themselves, their families, and society!
A. Penance is a Sacrament in which the sins committed after Baptism are
forgiven.
One who has never been baptized could not go to confession and receive
absolution, nor indeed any of the Sacraments.
A. The Sacrament of Penance remits sin and restores the friendship of God to
the soul by means of the absolution of the priest.
"Absolution" means the words the priest says at the time he forgives the
sins. Absolve means to loose or free. When ministers or ambassadors
are sent by our government to represent the United States in England, France,
Germany, or other countries, whatever they do there officially is done by the
United States. If they make an agreement with the governments to which they
are sent, the United States sanctions it, and the very moment they sign the
agreement it is signed and sanctioned by the authority of our government whose
representatives they are, and their official action becomes the action of the
United States itself. But when their term of office expires, though they
remain in the foreign countries, they have no longer any power to sign
agreements in the name and with the authority of the United States.
You see, therefore, that it is the power that is given them, and not their own,
that they exercise. In like manner Our Lord commissioned His priests and gave
them the power to forgive sins, and whatever they do in the Sacrament of
Penance He Himself does. At the very moment the priest pronounces the words of
absolution on earth his sentence is ratified in Heaven and the sins of the
penitent are blotted out.
It may increase your veneration for the Sacrament to know the precise manner in
which absolution is given. After the confession and giving of the penance, the
priest first prays for the sinner, saying: "May Almighty God have mercy on you,
and, your sins being forgiven, bring you to life everlasting. Amen." Then,
raising his right hand over the penitent, he says: "May the Almighty and
merciful Lord grant you pardon, absolution, and remission of your sins. Amen."
Then he continues: "May Our Lord Jesus Christ absolve you, and 1, by His
authority, absolve you from every bond of excommunication and interdict, as far
as I have power and you stand in need. Then I absolve you from your sins, in
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen." At these
last words he makes the Sign of the Cross over the penitent. In conclusion he
directs to God a prayer in behalf of the penitent in the following words: "May
the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the merits of the Blessed Virgin Mary and
of all the saints, and whatsoever good you may have done or evil you may have
suffered, be to you unto the remission of your sins, the increase of grace, and
the recompense of everlasting life. Amen." Then the priest says, "God bless
you" "Go in peace: or some other expression showing his delight at your
reconciliation with God.
A. I know that the priest has the power of absolving from sins
committed after Baptism, because Jesus Christ granted that power to the priests
of His Church when He said: "Receive ye the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall
forgive, they are forgiven them; whose sins you shall retain, they are
retained:'
Every Christian knows Our Lord Himself had power to forgive sins: (1)
because He was God, and (2) because He often did forgive them while on earth,.
and proved that He did by performing some miracle; as, for example (Mark 2;
John 5), when He cured the poor men who had been sick and suffering for
many years, He said to them, "Thy sins are forgiven thee; arise, take up thy
bed, and walk:' And the men did so. Since Our Lord had the power Himself, He
could give it to His Apostles if He wished, and He did give it to them and
their successors. For if He did not, how could we and all others who, after
Baptism, have fallen into sin be cleansed from it? This Sacrament of Penance
was for all time, and so He left the power with His Church, which is to last as
long as there is a living human being upon the earth. Our Lord promised to His
Apostles before His death this power to forgive sins (Matt. 18:18), and
He gave it to them after His resurrection (John 20:23), when He appeared to
them and breathed on them, and said: "Whose sins you shall forgive, they are
forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained"
A. The priests of the Church exercise the power of forgiving sins by hearing
the confession of sins, and granting pardon for them as ministers of God and in
His name.
The power to forgive sins implies the obligation of going to confession;
because, as most sins are secret, how could the Apostles know what sins to
forgive and what sins to retain-that is, not to forgive-unless they were told
by the sinner what sins he had committed? 'They could not see into his heart
as God can, and know his sins; and so if the sinner wished his sins forgiven,
he had to confess them to the Apostles or their successors. Therefore, since
we have the Sacrament of Penance, we must also have confession.
A. To receive the Sacrament of Penance worthily we must do five things:
- We must examine our conscience.
- We must have sorrow for our sins.
- We must make a firm resolution never more to offend God.
- We must confess our sins to the priest.
- We must accept the penance which the priest gives us.
When we are about to go to confession the first thing we should do is to pray
to the Holy Ghost to give us light to know and remember all our sins; to fully
understand how displeasing they are to God, and to have a great sorrow for
them, which includes the resolution of never committing them again. The next
thing we should do is:
- "Examine our conscience"; and first of all we find out how long a
time it is since our last confession, and whether we made a good confession
then and received Holy Communion and performed our penance. The best method of
examining is to take the Commandments and go over each one in our mind, seeing
if we have broken it, and in what way; for example: First. "I am the
Lord thy God; thou shalt not have strange gods before Me." Have I honored God?
Have I said my prayers morning and night; have I said them with attention and
devotion? Have I thanked God for all His blessings? Have I been more anxious
to please others than to please God, or offended Him for the sake of others?
Second "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain" Have I
cursed? Have I taken God's name in vain or spoken without reverence of holy
things? Third. "Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day. " Have I
neglected to hear Mass through my own fault on Sundays and holy days of
obligation? Have I kept others from Mass? Have I been late, and at what part
of the Mass did I come in? Have I been willfully distracted at Mass or have I
distracted others? Have I done servile work without necessity? Fourth.
"Honor thy father and thy mother." Have I been disobedient to parents or
others who have authority over me-to spiritual or temporal superiors, teachers,
etc.? Have I slighted or been ashamed of parents because they were poor or
uneducated? Have I neglected to give them what help I could when they were in
need of it? Have I spoken of them with disrespect or called them names that
were not proper? Fifth. "Thou shalt not kill." Have I done anything
that might lead to killing? Have I been angry or have I tried to take revenge?
Have I borne hatred or tried to injure others? Have I given scandal?
Sixth. "Thou shalt not commit adultery." Have I indulged in any bad
thoughts, looked at any bad pictures or objects, listened to any bad
conversation, told or listened to bad or immodest jokes or stories, or, in
general, spoken of bad things? Have I done any bad actions or desired to do
any while alone or with others? Seventh. "Thou shalt not steal" Have I
stolen anything myself or helped or advised others to steal? Have I received
anything or part of anything that I knew to be stolen? Do I owe money and not
pay it when I can? Have I bought anything with the intention of never paying
for it or at least knowing I never could pay for it? Have I made restitution
when told to do so by my confessor; or have I put it off from time to time?
Have I failed to give back what belonged to another? Have I found anything and
not tried to discover its owner, or have I kept it in my possession after I
knew to whom it belonged? Have I cheated in business or at games? Eighth.
"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor. " Have I told
lies or injured anyone by my talk? Have I told the faults of others without
any necessity? It is not allowed to tell the faults of others-even when you
tell the truth about them-unless some good comes of the telling. Ninth.
"Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife." This can come into our
examination on the Sixth Commandment. Tenth. "Thou shalt not covet thy
neighbor's goods" This can come into our examination on the Seventh
Commandment. After examining yourself on the Commandments of God, examine
yourself on the Commandments of the Church. First. "To hear Mass on
Sundays and holy days of obligation" This has been considered in the
examination on the Third Commandment. Second "To fast and abstain on the days
appointed" Have I knowingly eaten meat on Ash Wednesday or the Fridays of Lent,
or not done some chosen penance on the other Fridays of the year, or not fasted
on Ash Wednesday or Good Friday, unless I had good reason not to do so on
account of poor health or other reason? Third. "To confess at least
once a year." Is it over a year, and how much over it, since I have been to
confession? Fourth. "To receive Holy Eucharist during the Easter
time:' Did I go to Holy Communion between the first Sunday of Lent and Trinity
Sunday? If not, I have committed a mortal sin. Fifth. "To contribute
to the support of our pastors." Have I helped the church and reasonably paid my
share of its expenses-given to charity and the like, or have I made others pay
for the light, heat, and other things that cost money in the church, and shared
in their benefits without giving according to my means? Have, l kept what was
given me for the church or other-charity, or stolen from the church and not
stated that circumstance when I confessed that I stole? Sixth. "Not to
marry persons who are not Catholics, or who are related to us within the third
degree of kindred, or privately without witnesses, nor to solemnize marriage at
forbidden times." Have I anything to tell on this Commandment? After examining
yourself on the Commandments of God and of His Church, examine yourself on the
capital sins, especially on "Pride:' Have I been impudent and stubborn,
vain about my dress, and the like? Have I despised others simply on account of
poverty or something they could not help? "Gluttony." Have I ever taken
intoxicating drink to excess or broken a promise not to take it? Have I
knowingly caused others to be intoxicated? "Sloth:' Have I wasted my
time willfully and neglected to do my duty at school or elsewhere? After
examining yourself on the Commandments and capital sins, examine yourself on
the duties of your state of life. If you are at school, how have you studied?
You should study not alone to please your parents or teachers, but for the sake
of learning. If you are at work, have you been faithful to your employer, and
done your work well and honestly? The above method is generally recommended as
the best in the examination of conscience. But you need not follow these exact
questions; you can ask yourself any questions you please: the above questions
are given only as examples of what you might ask, and to show you how to
question yourself. It is useless to take any list of sins in a prayerbook and
examine yourself by it, confessing the sins just as they are given. If you do
take such a list and find in it some questions or sins that you do not
understand, do not trouble yourself about them. In asking yourself the
questions, if you find you have sinned against a Commandment, stop and consider
how many times. There are few persons who sin against all the Commandments.
Some sin against one and some against another. Find out the worst sin you have
and the one you have most frequently committed, and be sure of telling it.
- "Have sorrow for our sins:' After examining your conscience and
finding out the sins you have committed, the next thing is to be sorry for
them. The sorrow is the most essential part in the whole Sacrament of Penance.
In this Sacrament there are, as you know, three parts: contrition, confession,
and satisfaction-and contrition is the most important part. When, therefore,
we are preparing for confession, we should spend just as much time, and even
more, in exciting ourselves to sorrow for our sins as in the examination of our
conscience. Some persons forget this and spend all their time examining their
conscience. We should pray for sorrow if we think we have none. Remember the
act of contrition made at confession is not the sorrow, but only an outward
sign by which we make known to the priest that we have the sorrow in our
hearts, and therefore we must have the sorrow before making the confession-or
at least, before receiving the absolution. Now what kind of sorrow must we
have? Someone might say, I am not truly sorry because I cannot cry. If some
of my friends died, I would be more sorry for that than for my sins. Do not
make any such mistakes. The true and necessary kind of sorrow for sin is to
know that by sin you have offended God, and now feel that it was very wrong,
and that you have from this moment the firm determination never to offend Him
more. If God adds to this a feeling that brings tears to your eyes, it is
good, but not necessary.
- Remember real sorrow for sin supposes and contains "a firm resolution"
never to sin again. How can you say to God, "O my God, I am heartily
sorry," etc., if you are waiting only for the next opportunity to sin? How can
we be sorry for the past if we are going to do the same in the future? Do you
think the thief would be sorry for his past thefts if he had his mind made up
to steal again as soon as he had the chance? Ah, but you will say, nearly all
persons sin again after confession. I know that; but when they were making
their confession they thought they never would, and really meant never to sin
again; but when temptation came, they forgot the good resolution, did not use
God's help, and fell into sin again. I mean, therefore, that at the time you
make the act of contrition you must really mean what you say and promise never
to sin, and take every means you can to keep that promise. If you do fall
afterwards, renew your promise as quickly as possible and make a greater effort
than before. Be on your guard against those things that make you break your
promise, and then your act of contrition will be a good one. A person may be
afraid that he will fall again, but being afraid does not make his contrition
worthless as long as he wishes, hopes, and intends never to sin again. We
should always be afraid of falling into sin, and we will fall into it if we
depend upon ourselves alone, and not on the help which God gives us in His
grace.
- "Confess our sins." Having made the necessary preparation, you will
next go into the confessional; and while you are waiting for the priest to hear
you, you should say the Confiteor. When the priest turns to you, bless
yourself and say: "Bless me, father, for I have sinned. It is a month or a
week (or whatever time it may be) since my last confession, and I have since
committed these sins" Then tell your sins as you found them in examining
yourself. In confession you must tell only such things as are sins. You must
not tell all the details and a long story with every sin. For example, if a
boy should confess that he went to see a friend, and after that met another
friend, and when he came home he was asked what had kept him, and he told a
lie. Now, the going to see the friend and the meeting of the other friend, and
all the rest, was not a sin: the sin was telling the lie, and that was all that
should have been confessed. Therefore, tell only the sins. Then tell only
your own sins, and be very careful not to mention anyone's name-even your
own-in confession. Be brief, and do not say, I broke the First Commandment or
the Second by doing so and so; tell the sin simply as it is, and the priest
himself will know what Commandment you violated. Again, when you have
committed a sin several times a day do not multiply that by the number of days
since your last confession and say to the priest, I have told lies, for
example, four hundred and forty-two times. Such things only confuse you and
make you forget your sins. Simply say, I am in the habit of telling lies,
about so many, three or four-or whatever number it may be-times a day. Never
say "sometimes" or "often" when you are telling the number of your sins.
Sometimes might mean ten or it might mean twenty times. How then can the
priest know the number by that expression? Give the number as nearly as you
can, and if you do not know the whole number give the number of times a day,
etc. Never say "maybe" I did so and so; because maybe you did not, and the
priest cannot judge. Tell what you consider your worst sin first, then if
there be any sin you are ashamed to tell or do not know how to tell, say to the
priest: "Father, I have a sin I am ashamed to tell, or a sin I do not know how
to tell"; and then the priest will ask you some questions and help you to tell
it. But never think of going away from the confessional with some sin that you
did not tell. The devil sometimes tempts people to do this, because he does
not like to see them in a state of grace and friends of God. When you are
committing the sin, he makes you believe it is not a great sin, and that you
can tell it in confession; but after you have committed it he makes you believe
that it is a most terrible sin, and that if you tell ,it, the priest will scold
you severely. So it is concealed and the person leaves the confessional with a
new sin upon his soul-that of sacrilege. When Judas was tempted to betray Our
Lord, he thought thirty pieces of silver a great deal of money; and then, after
he had committed the sin, he cared nothing for the money, but went and threw it
away, and thought his sin so dreadful that he hanged himself, dying in despair.
It is not necessary to tell the priest the exact words you said in cursing or
in bad conversation, unless he asks you; but simply say, Father, I cursed so
many times. Do not speak too loud in the confessional, but loud enough for the
priest to hear you. If you are deaf, do not go into the confessional while
others are near, but wait till all have been heard and then go in last, or ask
the priest to hear you someplace else.
- Listen attentively to hear what "penance" the priest gives you, and
say the act of contrition while he pronounces the words of absolution; and
above all, never leave the confessional till the priest closes the little door
or tells you to go. If the priest does not say at what particular time you are
to say your penance, say it as soon as you can. When you have, told all your
sins, you will say: "For these and all the sins of my whole life, especially
any I have forgotten, I am heartily sorry, and ask pardon and penance!' Listen
to the priest's advice, and answer simply any question he may ask you. If you
should forget a mortal sin in confession and remember it the same day or
evening, or while you are still in the church, it will not be necessary to wait
and go to confession again. It is forgiven already, because it was included in
your forgotten sins; but you must tell it the next time you go to confession,
saying before your regular confession: In my last confession I forgot this sin.
Of course if you tried to forget your sins your confession would be invalid.
It is only when you examine your conscience with all reasonable care, and then
after all forget some sins, that such forgotten sins are forgiven. Never talk
or quarrel for places while waiting for confession, and never cheat another out
of his turn in going to confession. It is unjust, it makes the person angry,
and lessens his good disposition for confession. It creates confusion, and
annoys the priest who hears the noise. If you are in a hurry, ask the others
to allow you to go first; and if they will not be contented and wait, and if
you cannot wait, go some other time, unless you are in the state of mortal sin.
In this case you should go to confession that day, no matter what the
inconvenience. Spend your time while waiting in praying for pardon and sorrow.
Never keep the priest waiting for you in the confessional-, pass in as
soon as he is prepared to hear you.
A. The examination of conscience is an earnest effort to recall to mind all
the sins we have committed since our last worthy confession.
"Worthy confession," because if we made bad confessions we must tell how
often we made them, and whether we received Holy Communion after them or not,
and also all the sins we told in the bad confessions, and all others committed
since the good confession. If, for example, a boy made a good confession in
January, and in confession in February concealed a mortal sin and went to
confession after that every month to December, he would have to go back to his
last good confession, and repeat all the sins committed since January, and also
say that he had gone to confession once a month and made bad confessions all
these times.
A. We can make a good examination of conscience by calling to memory the
Commandments of God, the precepts of the Church, the seven capital sins, and
the particular duties of our state in life, to find out the sins we have
committed.
A. Before beginning the examination of conscience we should pray to God to
give us light to know our sins and grace to detest them.
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