Nice of you to speak for other parishes and people. Your experience isn’t the norm throughout, the Catholic world, believe me.
Please explain more. Are priests in your diocese unwilling to give confessions outside normal scheduled times? Does your parish and/or diocese not have special penance services and confessions during Lent and Advent? Which diocese are you located in?
After Mass ? Then the person can’t receive Holy Communion if they’re in a state of mortal sin. How sad !
Why is it sad? I think it is important and valuable that a person experience some of the consequences of their mortal sin, and it helps them to realize the seriousness of their sin. Hopefully they will think better next time and realize they are choosing mortal sin over Jesus, and choosing to be separated from Him. It may give them some opportunity to grow and begin to avoid sin.
I’m not falling back on anything, just expressing my 65 years experience as a Catholic and knowing what many other Catholics think with regards to Confession.
You can’t have it both ways. Either confessions are too rare for people to get to, and General Absolution is needed, or confessions are available, but people don’t care to receive one. Which is it?
And I’m not sure the homily is the place to preach it and I have never heard a priest talk about the need for the people to go to Confession during a homily.
There are few BETTER times to speak about confession than during the homily. Considering the condition of the Church today, a priest should be bringing up and teaching on confession at least once a month in the homily.
Generally, the homily centers around the readings, and I have never heard one about going to Confession. Perhaps its how priests are trained and the directives from our Bishops ?
I’m unaware of how priests and bishops are trained. But I personally see confession as one of the easiest topics to talk about for homilies. And MANY readings relate to or can be tied into confession.
Take a look at last Sunday’s reading. All three readings talk about how they realize how sinful they are when they are in God’s Presence. EXTREMELY easy for the priest to relate this to how we should be at EVERY Mass, and how we should seriously reflect on our sins because we ARE in God’s Presence. And if we have mortal sins, then we need to take God’s burning love, like in the first reading, and go to confession to have it burned away from our soul.
God does not punish us, we separate ourselves from God and suffer the consequence. Read Pope John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI and now Pope Francis.
They preach about God’s mercy, not punishment.
Especially in this year of mercy, we need to understand that God is a God of mercy, not retribution.
Yes, God has perfect mercy, but also perfect justice. If we reject His mercy, He won’t force it upon us. And that punishment will be fearsome.
Actually more and more parishes are closing do to the lack of priests.
Perhaps because priests have avoided talking about the need for confession and repentance for 50 years. If there is no sin, no need for repentance, no need for confession, then there is no need to go to Church. Priests of the last 50 years have avoided telling people about why they need God’s mercy, and the people got the message and stopped attending.
My parish has one priest. His schedule is tight.
And I’m willing to bet that he is more than happy to squeeze in a confession at any time of the day. Is your parish hosting some penance services and special confession times this Lent?