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maria1125
Guest
My pastor only has face-to-face confession and I feel uncomfortable with that. I go to a different parish for this sacrament. Aren’t priest suppose to give you the option? Where can I find this statement?
I would be so tempted to take a small mirror the size of the opening and fix it up there on my side facing him.Thank you. Thank you. Thank you!
My priest uses the confessionals, but has taken out the screen so I see him clearly and he sees me. He even asked my sister to take off her glasses. I guess he wanted to see if she was sincere. Anyways, thank you so much.
Ugh. Actually, my first confession as a Catholic was at a monastery, and it was in a small conference room without even a kneeler, much less a screen. They have fixed that since.When I did my first confession before being confirmed, I tried to sit behind the screen. The Priest told me to sit facing him, when I asked if I could sit behind the screen he said No, that I had to face him.
He stated that I had to face him because it made for better communication. Other than that, he was extremely nice and encouraging during the confession. He was very helpful and talked me through it.
I was rather surprised when I encountered this in the CIC a year or so ago because I had been told that the confessionals at Notre Dame were no longer used because people HAD TO be given the option for face to face - this meant that everyone was in effect forced to confess face to face. Knowing that basically 3/4 of the confessions I’ve ever made have had no option of a screen, why do we see this widespread disobedience of canon law? Is there any sort of American particular law that might justify it?CODE OF CANON LAW
Can. 964 §1 The proper place for hearing sacramental confessions is a church or oratory.
§2 As far as the confessional is concerned, norms are to be issued by the Episcopal Conference, with the proviso however that confessionals, which the faithful who so wish may freely use, are located in an open place, and fitted with a fixed grille between the penitent and the confessor.
§3 Except for a just reason, confessions are not to be heard elsewhere than in a confessional.
I have to ask, what is a “good confession” and a “better confession?”…any priest who hears confessions often will tell you that “you hear better confessions behind the screen.”