M
Mt19_26
Guest
I was just wondering how many people go to confession face-to-face vs behind a screen. I personally almost always go face-to-face when it’s available.
:bigyikes: Sorry, going behind a screen is bad enough.I was just wondering how many people go to confession face-to-face vs behind a screen. I personally almost always go face-to-face when it’s available.
I don’t think this is the case because no one is forced or encouraged to go face-to-face. Atleast not in my parish. I go face-to-face because I feel more confortable when I can look at the priest when he’s talking and I don’t have anything to confess that is particularily embarassing.The whole thing behind the “Face to Face” confession is the liberals in the Church attempting to STOP people from going to confession.
Ken
Wow, that’s so charitable. Thanks! I’m sure all of us who confess face to face appreciate it!The whole thing behind the “Face to Face” confession is the liberals in the Church attempting to STOP people from going to confession.
Ken
The whole thing behind “face to face” is to give those who prefer it a chance not to feel clausterphobic in a teeny booth; to psychologically “own up” to their sins, by facing the priest; to put a face on Jesus through the priest. I prefer this method every week. It does not stop me from going. Laziness, cold mornings (I go in the early AM), lack of humility and a false sense of pride might keep me from going, but not one method over the other.The whole thing behind the “Face to Face” confession is the liberals in the Church attempting to STOP people from going to confession.
Ken
St. Francis de Sales in his book Introduction to the Devout Life recommends the use of one regular confessor. And it does not dissolve into a therapy session. It’s still species and number. If something really embarassing came up, by using a regular confessor, one knows that priest better than another priest and it’s actually easier to admit for me.Confession, any way you do it is great, but if you’re accustomed to doing it face to face, doesn’t it become more of a therapy session? And if you develop that kind of relationship with the priest, it seems like the focus is on the human interaction rather than the sacrament. Suppose something really embarrassing came up that needed to be confessed? Would you go elsewhere? I’ve done it both face to face and behind the screen, and my sense of the sacrament is greater when I go behind a screen and the priest is more clearly acting in Christ’s place…I also feel more free to be brutally honest and to ask questions, etc as I need not concern myself with any visual reaction to my sins, etc.
Face to face confession has around in the Eastern church for CENTURIES and NO BODY has a problem with it…:yup:The whole thing behind the “Face to Face” confession is the liberals in the Church attempting to STOP people from going to confession.
Well, that’s for you.We don’t do the “box”:tsktsk:
I’ve heard this about a “regular” confessor being preferable (whether behind the screen or not), but I found that everytime I got one I thought would be regular…the priests got shuffled around to distant parishes. So our diocese doesn’t facilitate that…and since you don’t even know when you enter a given parish whether Father A or Father B will be in the confessional…I found it works out better if you aren’t set on one confessor. Again, the sacrament is still the sacrament, even if you get the worst confessor in the world on occasion.St. Francis de Sales in his book Introduction to the Devout Life recommends the use of one regular confessor. And it does not dissolve into a therapy session. It’s still species and number. If something really embarassing came up, by using a regular confessor, one knows that priest better than another priest and it’s actually easier to admit for me.
If a person found himself in such a situation, he could always avail himself of another priest someplace else as long as he is not “shopping” priests for the answer he wants to hear, particularly in large cities. Chicago has St. Peter’s in the Loop, where they have confession 11.5 hours a day, booth or face-to-face, your choice.