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edward_george1
Guest
I would say probably not. They didn’t know at the time. It might help to bring them peace if they brought it up again, but if the person tends toward scrupulosity besides, and has made a habit of confessing old sins, this would be ill-advised. For most people, though, it might be helpful.
I think it’s a case-by-case thing, as with everything else, as to when to confess past sins. If you are certain you have not confessed something in the past, confess it. If you aren’t sure, and it just sort of pops up, mention it. If you were ignorant of how to do it right, as in the above case, and it’s bothering you, bring it up, but leave it there once you have. If you keep being nagged over and over by the fear that you didn’t confess something right, then confess it once to get it over with, but don’t do it again, no matter how bad it nags you.
There have been times when a past sin has come back to me, even one I might have confessed, that I brought to confession and found healing from the pain it had caused. There was one time that years after the fact, I realized how sinful something was that I had never thought to bring to confession, and it brought me great healing to bring it back up. This was so much so that I had even thought of that bad thing I’d done and the person I’d hurt, and rehearsed how I was going to apologize for it when I saw that person (someone I see rarely), and then I confessed it, and then forgot all about it until months after I’d seen the person. And it doesn’t bother me as much as it had before.
So a good rule of thumb would be:
I think it’s a case-by-case thing, as with everything else, as to when to confess past sins. If you are certain you have not confessed something in the past, confess it. If you aren’t sure, and it just sort of pops up, mention it. If you were ignorant of how to do it right, as in the above case, and it’s bothering you, bring it up, but leave it there once you have. If you keep being nagged over and over by the fear that you didn’t confess something right, then confess it once to get it over with, but don’t do it again, no matter how bad it nags you.
There have been times when a past sin has come back to me, even one I might have confessed, that I brought to confession and found healing from the pain it had caused. There was one time that years after the fact, I realized how sinful something was that I had never thought to bring to confession, and it brought me great healing to bring it back up. This was so much so that I had even thought of that bad thing I’d done and the person I’d hurt, and rehearsed how I was going to apologize for it when I saw that person (someone I see rarely), and then I confessed it, and then forgot all about it until months after I’d seen the person. And it doesn’t bother me as much as it had before.
So a good rule of thumb would be:
- If you might be scrupulous, don’t confess past sins, especially without guidance from a spiritual director.
- If you aren’t scrupulous or don’t seem to be tending toward it, you can for your own peace of mind, but you don’t have to.