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Erin_Marie
Guest
How do I explain the Sacrament of Reconciliation to my mother (a protestant)? I tried to tell her what it feels like, but I think I need to take a more fact-based approach.



Whoops! Looks like you’ve already got the main points down. Just remember to try and be patient and understanding of your mom’s questions. There is a lot about the Catholic faith that is hard to understand. Also, try and see if your mom can actually come up with this Bible passage she’s talking about. It would help a lot in understanding where she’s coming from.Thank you for your thoughts, Joao.
I just read the tract on Confession, and found this: "After his resurrection, Jesus passed on his mission to forgive sins to his ministers, telling them, “As the Father has sent me, even so I send you. . . . Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained”(John 20:21-23) ".
My mom talks about a passage that says if you ask Jesus to forgive you, He will. She says her sins are between her and God, and that no priest can judge another persons sins.
It frustrates me, because sometimes she asks questions about my faith, and I have a hard time answering them.
You might try explaining that we believe that the priest is acting for Christ. In other words, Christ speaks to us through the priest. St. Faustina writes about this in her Diary. You would need to explain apostolic succession, which others have already written about here. Most major issues do lead back to a question of authority.My mom talks about a passage that says if you ask Jesus to forgive you, He will. She says her sins are between her and God, and that no priest can judge another persons sins.
An excellent websight to use in understanding and explaining the Catholic faith is:I would love to hear how the sacrament was instituted.
“Whose Sins You Shall Forgive”
29. …
In the fullness of time the Son of God, coming as the lamb who takes away and bears upon himself the sin of the world appears as the one who has the power both to judge(159) and to forgive sins,(160) and who has come not to condemn but to forgive and save.(161)
Now this power to " forgive sins" Jesus confers through the Holy Spirit upon ordinary men, themselves subject to the snare of sin, namely his apostles: “Receive the Holy Spirit. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven; whose sins you shall retain, they are retained.”(162) This is one of the most awe-inspiring innovations of the Gospel! He confers this power on the apostles also as something which they can transmit-as the church has understood it from the beginning-to their successors, charged by the same apostles with the mission and responsibility of continuing their work as proclaimers of the Gospel and ministers of Christ’s redemptive work.
Here there is seen in all its grandeur the figure of the minister of the sacrament of penance who by very ancient custom is called the confessor.
Just as at the altar where he celebrates the eucharist and just as in each one of the sacraments, so the priest, as the minister of penance, acts “in persona Christi” The Christ whom he makes present and who accomplishes the mystery of the forgiveness of sins is the Christ who appears as the brother of man,(163) the merciful high priest, faithful and compassionate,(164) the shepherd intent on finding the lost sheep,(165) the physician who heals and comforts,(166) the one master who teaches the truth and reveals the ways of God,(167) the judge of the living and the dead,(168) who judges according to the truth and not according to appearances.(169)
I wish I could take credit for this but I can’t; its something I got from the Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph 1421, which says:I never thought of the parallel between the two sacraments. Thank you for pointing that out!