Thank you all for replying. Here’s why I posted this question:
Before I say this, I want to make it
very clear that I don’t know if these events have ever happened.
I have heard of some priests that have come up with a “loophole” for the Seal of Confession. If a situation ever arises where someone confesses a heinous crime to one of these priests, they would try to get the penitent to confess to them outside the Confessional, at which point they could report the matter to the police. This, in my understanding, would be a
violation of the Seal - the priest would have used knowledge received in Confession to the detriment of the penitent.
Again, I don’t know if what I typed above is true. I was thinking about what I should do if it ever became clear in Confession that a priest would break the Seal. I decided to say something similar to what I typed in the previous paragraph if a priest were to ever try that on me. At the time,
I didn’t know that one should not discuss knowledge of sins from Confession if it were already public knowledge -
if a priest had
ever broken the Seal like this, no doubt it would be in the news. If it weren’t in the news, I wouldn’t know if it were true anyway.
I wrote down what I would say on a piece of paper and took it to Confession. Fortunately, I never had to say what I planned to say - most, if not all priests, would probably not stoop so low as to break the Seal. I posted this to see if what I planned to do was sinful, although now it’s still not so clear. I have three questions now:
- Is my confession invalid even though I didn’t know what I planned to do was sin?
- What should I actually do if something like this arises? I’m going to Confession in a few hours - I want to be fully prepared.
- I’ve cut up the paper into pieces (although someone could piece them together again). Do I have to burn the pieces to make sure no one jumps to the wrong conclusion that priests have broken the Seal as I described?