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In my state, people have died without benefit of confession or anointing because hospitals wouldn’t let priests in. They didn’t deserve that, and they certainly didn’t deserve your flip “Starbucks” comment.Hey, it’s California! They want a confession app so that they can do their penance of only decaf lattes at Starbucks.
Be that as it may, it doesn’t mean that people died without divine forgiveness or the benefits of a plenary indulgence. The Church teaches the efficacy of an “act of perfect contrition” and the grant of the plenary indulgence (even in the absence of last rites – see Norm 18 of the Enchiridion of Indulgences).In my state, people have died without benefit of confession or anointing because hospitals wouldn’t let priests in
Back in the days of crude (by today’s standards) analog portable home telephones, which broadcast on open radio frequencies, my father and I would take out our marine and VHF band radio (police, cab dispatchers, and so on), and listen to nearby conversations. We heard one such conversation where the lady went into a tirade of language which, shall we say, would not be appropriate in the parlor when the monsignor stops by for tea and crumpets. We laughed ourselves sick! She had no clue she could be heard by others.It doesn’t mean that one can make a change of the nature of the sacrament, though. The sacrament requires face-to-face confession, not phone to phone. Setting aside the fact that any kind of phone communication can be overheard by people (doctors, nurses) it can also, in being ‘over the airwaves’ heard by anybody who happens to have the tech know how or simply through accident (many’s the time I have, during a call on my cell, heard not just the occasional word but whole sentences and paragraphs’ worth of talk from other parties).
It doesn’t mean that one can make a change of the nature of the sacrament, though. The sacrament requires face-to-face confession, not phone to phone. Setting aside the fact that any kind of phone communication can be overheard by people (doctors, nurses) it can also, in being ‘over the airwaves’ heard by anybody who happens to have the tech know how or simply through accident (many’s the time I have, during a call on my cell, heard not just the occasional word but whole sentences and paragraphs’ worth of talk from other parties).
NB of course that confidentiality nor breaches thereof have zero impact on the validity of sacramental confession, and anyone who might become privy to the contents of a sacramental confession (electronically or otherwise) is bound to secrecy (cf. Canon 983)I fail to see how using a nearby audio link is any more hazardous to “confidentiality”, than these people …
You are entirely correct. My argument for possible validity of “morally present” absolution did not rest on whether it would be subject to breach of confidentiality or not, but whether actual physical presence is required for validity. The Orthodox example I cited indicates that such validity might be possible, if we are willing to concede that the Holy Spirit leads them to true conclusions as to what makes a sacrament valid.HomeschoolDad:![]()
NB of course that confidentiality nor breaches thereof have zero impact on the validity of sacramental confession, and anyone who might become privy to the contents of a sacramental confession (electronically or otherwise) is bound to secrecy (cf. Canon 983)I fail to see how using a nearby audio link is any more hazardous to “confidentiality”, than these people …
I have been taught that physical presence is not required for the confession part, but it is required for the absolution. There is no obligatory form for the confession. Giving the confession in writing to the priest and the priest absolving in passing from a reasonable distance is valid.whether actual physical presence is required for validity.
Doesn’t a general absolution cover these circumstances?if I were the Pope ( here we go again… ), I would assemble my best sacramental theologians, and see if there is any way that, in extreme cases, the sacrament of penance could be valid if it were administered at a distance, with the penitent morally present, you might say.
One word for you: wiretaps.And I know we’ve been through this before on CAF, but I fail to see how using a nearby audio link (e.g., priest and penitent using cell phones while visible to each other from a short distance, as from a car in the parking lot to a priest 20 feet away) is any more hazardous to “confidentiality”,
The medical professionals who run hospitals think otherwise. Or, are you saying that you know how to safely run a hospital during a pandemic better than they do?There is no reason why a priest cannot enter a hospital or other healthcare establishment to administer the Last Rites if the appropriate, sensible precautions are taken.
Wiretaps that can de-encrypt digital conversations? That was supposed to be one selling point of digital phones in the first place.HomeschoolDad:![]()
One word for you: wiretaps.And I know we’ve been through this before on CAF, but I fail to see how using a nearby audio link (e.g., priest and penitent using cell phones while visible to each other from a short distance, as from a car in the parking lot to a priest 20 feet away) is any more hazardous to “confidentiality”,
And then there is the possibility of general absolution being administered to everyone in the nave of a church. What, then, if the Mass were being celebrated in a football stadium? What about all the people out in the tailgate area watching the Mass on Jumbotrons because they ran out of seating in the stadium? Are they “out of bounds” simply because they’re not physically within the stadium? What about the Pope’s Urbi et orbi blessing to the whole world?HomeschoolDad:![]()
I have been taught that physical presence is not required for the confession part, but it is required for the absolution. There is no obligatory form for the confession. Giving the confession in writing to the priest and the priest absolving in passing from a reasonable distance is valid.whether actual physical presence is required for validity.
Are you saying they can be tracked, activated, and possibly even used as eavesdropping tools even when they are turned off?So long as the government requires people to turn off their cell phones and leave them outside of offices where anything sensitive is discussed, I will leave my phone and watch outside the confessional.
I have heard the principle of a reasonable distance is how far away the priest’s voice could be heard without external tools, even by shouting.I shall ultimately accept the judgment of the Church on “how much physical distance does there have to be between priest and penitent for a valid absolution?” , but at the same time, I would welcome some clarification on what kind of distance that has to be.
I’m reminded here of Father Damien’s shouted confession to a priest on a ship some distance away. But in that case, so much for confidentiality.HomeschoolDad:![]()
I have heard the principle of a reasonable distance is how far away the priest’s voice could be heard without external tools, even by shouting.I shall ultimately accept the judgment of the Church on “how much physical distance does there have to be between priest and penitent for a valid absolution?” , but at the same time, I would welcome some clarification on what kind of distance that has to be.