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Don_Ruggero
Guest
You were validly absolved. You should be at peace.Is my confession invalid if I didn’t state how many times I committed a mortal sin![]()
You were validly absolved. You should be at peace.Is my confession invalid if I didn’t state how many times I committed a mortal sin![]()
This seems to be a recurring theme.Do not let people on the internet make you fearful or doubt your priest.
You are welcome. Thank you for your appreciation.Excellent reply! Thanks for taking the time, Father Ruggero.
Not really as I said I am not an expert. That is an expression of a lack of confidence.It is your confidence in yourself that is misplaced – and you have moreover grossly arrived to an incorrect conclusion.
He didn’t say cease something, he said to cease accounting for the number of times he committed a mortal sin. Are you saying accounting for mortal sins by number is not required? Are you saying that priests can for any or no reason validly tell a penitent to not account for mortal sins by number?The confessor told the penitent to cease something he was doing in his confession. I think I can surmise why…but it does not matter. The confessor’s judgement, as the celebrant of this sacrament, means the penitent was correct to comply with the confessor’s instructions and directive.
Actually, you are wrong to say I am assuming anything. I repeatedly offered my opinion stating unless something relevant has not been revealed. I specifically noted there may be more to this than revealed.Finally, you are wrong to assume what is known and what is not known. The confessor knows why he did what he did – and he knows the reason that he did it. He is the only one at this point who needs to know.
I don’t disagree that I lack many things. But that doesn’t mean I can’t form judgments and even valid judgments concerning the sacrament. If I had no such power then I as a penitent myself could never know if I had received the sacrament. I have to form a judgment that something occurred to know I have received the sacrament. Hopefully the Church wants the laity to know when they have received the sacrament so that they can be at peace.As a lay person, you are not the judge of a priest who has received the faculty to hear confessions.
You do not have the academic education, the pastoral training or the experience to do so
You do not have jurisdiction to do so, which is delineated by a proper process
Are you saying penitents do not need to give an accounting of the number of times they committed a mortal sin? Are you saying that a priest can for any or no reason forbid that a penitent account for the number of times they committed a mortal sin?You say that you know what it takes to make a good confession and you speak of rather “simple rules” – but what you have demonstrated to me is a radical lack of understanding regarding the celebrant of the sacrament’s latitude that the Church gives him to deal precisely with the individual celebration of that sacrament and the penitent seeking it.
Besides chasitizing me could you enlighten me as to those reasons? The reason I commented was because I participate in this online forum comprised mostly of laity. The questions aren’t answered only by priests or by people with the extensive training you represent as necessary to comment on matters. The other answers provided were no more informed than mine by your criteria.Those are not, in fact, the only options – and if you don’t know that, I do not understand why you would comment on this matter in a public forum where people can be misled by this error.
Why would you say not to reference Canon Law?Then the penitent has absolutely no reason to bring any of that up again. They were absolved; issue ended.
what you are not answering is why you think they have to bring up the number; and don’t boot to Canon law; tell me what the consequences are for not bringing it up.
There are no consequences. Period. No consequences, no need, no purpose.
Canon law isn’t the only source of information. I see no reason why absolution was valid but confession incomplete can’t be an option. That is exactly the position of forgotten mortal sins, general absolution and anointing. If you forced me into your two choices I’d be left thinking the absolution was invalid and I’d have to start from scratch.Thus there are only two conclusions:
The confession is valid - which means, there is no reason to tell the number next time.
the confession is invalid - which means the penitent needs to start all over, including all sins.
There is no third scenario, unless you can show why; and Canon law does not answer either of those.
I was unclear. I meant he didn’t say to cease something as in something unimportant or not relevant to a good confession. He said to cease something specific that is normally essential to a good confession.Your second response to Father Ruggero: “He didn’t say to cease something, he said to cease accounting…”
Yes, he did say to cease something - and then you reiterated what he said to cease. You are contradicting yourslef in the same sentance.
The right and ability was unclear to me. If a confessor can unilaterally for or without cause waive this duty then I was not aware. It may be that this is so. And I am not saying it must be one way or the other. I only try to follow the Church’s teachings as best I can.What he said is that the confessor has the right and ability to not require that, by saying “don’t count”. There is a vast difference between saying one does not have to count" and saying the “the confessor can waive that duty”.
Nor have you or anyone else cited a source saying a priest can unilaterally for or without cause suspend the normal requirement to enumerate mortal sins. I have explained my line of reasoning which seems to me sound. I may be wrong and don’t hold myself up as an authority.I gave you the opportunity to name whatever other source you have to say that the OP needs to return to confession, and you have none. Instead, you continue to argue that you “know” without any information upon which to base that.
I don’t mind being disproven. I am simply trying to answer the question and understand what is allowed. But you answered the question too. What is the authority behind your answer?You are right that you do not have knowledge. I am not trying to get in your case, but you have been given the answer, repeatedly, and you continue to insist that with your lac of any basis other than mere speculation, that you are right.
I’m confused. This is an anonymous Internet forum. The idea is that regular Catholic laity can have a discussion and answer questions. If the question needs an authoritative answer then it must be asked elsewhere.For whatever reason, if you do not have training in a matter (and in this, it is plain you do not) then perhaps you should avoid wading into a discussion where you cannot cite a source of your o[pinion.
Yes, I have no doubt that he did – and I have no doubt that you don’t want to.When this priest told me to stop giving the number of times I have committed a mortal sin, he did say why, but the explanation he gave was extremely vague, and had several implications that I won’t get into here.
I don’t play this game, young man.So if the priest has the authority waive the essential norm for a good confession, I want a detailed explanation as to the nature of this authority and how it works, because if the priest does have this authority, then there is concern about whether the priest, misused, abused, or did not understand the nature of that authority.
No, my specific question has not been answered. I am not clear on what is allowed.He answered a specific point with specific information and you questioned if he was saying “never”. Nothing in his comment should have elicited that.
Actually I am not typically one who does. Asking questions isn’t inherently wrong.It is truly amazing how many people question the actions of priests, and by implication, their integrity and knowledge.
I can’t say or know what anyone else may do. If I am ignorant I would appreciate an explanation. Just saying I am wrong doesn’t teach me.Father Ruggero has stated the fact. He is not going to give you, or any of us, a course in sacramental theology and practice. Your line of reasoning has been refined by the questions you have asked, and I have answered by focused questions.
A lot of words have been typed on this thread. It isn’t as if people aren’t willing to spend time commenting on this. So I’m not sure how an explanation beyond simply saying I am wrong is so difficult.the answer behind my response is the same as the answer behind Father Ruggero’s response. And a blog is not a place for a complete explication of the matter. If you wish more, speak with your confessor.
To be clear I never cited any source. Someone else cited Canon Law. I agree with that citation. No one has cited anything else. Only opinions have been offered. The only evidence offered is on the side of numbering your sins.I dismiss your ability to answer it by your approach and the sources you think are more absolute than they are.
Please don’t throw around the word “modernist” like that. In the Church, it has a specific meaning for a specific heresy. Accusing your RCIA instructress of modernism is a very serious accusation, one which only the Church’s appointed hierarchy, and certainly not a recent convert, is in a position to make.This priest doesn’t know that well, and I think most of what he does know about me, he knows from my modernist RCIA Instructress.