Thank you both for your replies.
Does anyone have any speculative thoughts on why a priest might have told me not to do this? Keep in mind this priest does not know me, and I was in a parish for Confession that was not my own. My own parish has several priests, and I’ve been to confession with maybe 15 since my conversion. This is the first time I’ve been asked to not use notes.
Incidentally, I started this thread after posting the same one in Ask An Apologist. Frankly, I didn’t expect to get an answer, so my apologies to those who might wonder why I’m asking this in multiple places.
You have asked a question that only the priest himself would be able to answer.
As a confessor of many years, yes there are reasons why a priest would say to a penitent not to use a list but it is impossible for me to speculate as to which might or might not apply to you in your circumstance or what it was that the priest observed for him to say what he did. And, of course, I don’t know what you confessed or the actual words he said or the way he said them.
For people who are new to receiving the sacrament…either because they are newly Catholic or because they are newly returned to the Church…I think having a prompt at hand, such as a list, can be a great help. I myself use a list, for example, when I make a more general confession on the occasion of my monastic retreats as there will be specific points I want to address with the monk hearing my confession that emerge from the meditations of my retreat and themes of my retreat, which in any event are self-directed.
The use of a list can be legitimate…but using them also calls for great prudence and great care for various reasons.
You mention that your confessions never take more that 10-30 seconds and that you confess frequently – but frequently is so non-specific and relative as to give me no real gauge as to how often one is actually indicating.
If someone were to come into the confessional, had just confessed extremely recently, and read off an entire list in such rapid fire succession as to get through the list in as few seconds as absolutely possible, yes, it could raise a question or two or even several for the confessor about how the penitent understood the sacrament of reconciliation as an encounter with Christ and of actual
metanoia.
If the counsel of this one priest troubles you enough that you are asking about it through various postings, I would suggest you ask a priest, when next you are confessing, in the place where you normally confess. If this has not been raised by any one of them, I would say that it is probably not a cause for concern…but trying to answer any further than that is in the realm of pure speculation.