D
DeniseNY
Guest
I think I jumble a bunch of these together when I go.But a person can make their very own and thatâs OK. The important thing is to express contrition and a desire to do better. One time, during a particularly difficult confession, the priest asked me to make my Act of Contrition and I found that my mind was totally blank! I asked the priest for help since there were no âcheat sheetsâ in the confessional, and he asked me:
âAre you sorry for your sins?â
Me: âYes.â
Priest: âAre you going to try to stop doing them?â
Me: âYes.â
Priest: âThere you go - thereâs your Act of Contrition.â
(In this case I was confessing sins related to perfectionism, scrupulous tendencies - so I think he wanted to make sure that I understood that being forgiven and absolved was not just a matter of me reciting prayers perfectly.)
I had a similar experience, but not due to scrupulosity. I had not been to confession (and indeed, I had been away from the church for about 20 years). Although I tried to remember the Act of Contrition I learned in CCD, and tried to prepare before entering the confessional, I was so nervous that I couldnât get out the words. i lexplained this to the priest, and he was very understanding and said the most important thing was that I was truly sorry for my sins, wanted to confess them (I had 20 years worth to get through!), and was back in Church
The one that I learned in the 1970s:
O my God, I am heartily sorry for having offended Thee, and
I detest all my sins because of Thy just punishments,
but most of all because they offend Thee, my God,
Who art all-good and deserving of all my love.
I firmly resolve, with the help of Thy grace, to sin no more and to avoid the near occasions of sin.