B
babochka
Guest
Could be. With the exception of Padre Pio, I don’t know. St. John Vianney was known for hearing confessions for many hours each day. While I imagine the average confession didn’t last that long, I suspect he had a few that did.On the other hand, neither one did confessions for just 45 minutes on Saturday afternoons.
I tend to agree with you here, but others do not. One example is St. Alphonsus Ligouri, the patron saint of confessors, who said:The obligation to hear everyone’s confessions outweighs the need to provide spiritual counsel beyond the de minimus required for a valid confession in most parishes.
“But some will say, ‘If we treat sinners in this manner a great deal of our time will be taken up, and others who are waiting cannot be heard.’ But in answer I say, that it is better to hear one confession well than to hear a great number imperfectly. But the most appropriate answer is, that the confessor has not to give an account to God of the persons who are waiting, but only of the person whose confession he has begun to hear.” (from Selva, or The Dignity and Duties of the Priest)
Proper normal procedure? Do you have a church document to back this up? I’ve never heard of seeking spiritual counsel as part of penance. I’m sure it exists, but I really don’t know about it being the proper, normal procedure. It seems that such would be the exception, not the norm.The proper normal procedure - there are always exceptions - is to hear the confession, provide some counsel, and make seeking spiritual counsel outside the confession line part of the penance.