T
TimothyH
Guest
Whoa. I didn’t see that coming. Excellent.This (true?) story always comes into mind when hearing “Pope” and “Confession” in the same sentence.
Pope John Paul II and the Beggar Priest
God Bless…
-Tim-
Whoa. I didn’t see that coming. Excellent.This (true?) story always comes into mind when hearing “Pope” and “Confession” in the same sentence.
Pope John Paul II and the Beggar Priest
God Bless…
The Unique Impossibility of the Papacy
Mar 6, 2013
George Weigel
ROME—At the point at which John Paul II began his papacy in the first volume of my biography of him, *[Witness to Hope](http://www.amazon.com/Witness-Hope-Biography-Pope-John/dp/0060732032?tag=firstthings-20-20)*, I borrowed some thoughts from Hans Urs von Balthasar and tried to explain a bit of the uniqueness of the papal office:To be pope is to take on a task that is, by precise theological definition, impossible. Like every other office in the Church, the papacy exists for the sake of holiness. The office, though, is a creature of time and space, and holiness is eternal. No one, not even a pope who is a saint, can fully satisfy the office’s demands. Yet the office, according to the Church’s faith, is of the will of God, and the office cannot fail, although the officeholder will always fall short of the mark. That distinction between the office and the man who holds it is a consolation to any pope.According to [Balthasar], it is also “unutterably terrible.” The office reflects the unity of person and mission in Jesus Christ, of whom the pope is vicar. Every pope, the saints as well as the scoundrels, “stands at an utterly tragic place” [Balthasar continued], because he cannot be fully what the office demands. If he tries to be that, he arrogantly makes himself the equal of the Lord. If he consoles himself too easily with the thought that he must, necessarily, fail, he betrays the demand that the office makes of him, the demand of radical love. The Office of Peter always reflects Christ’s words to Peter—that, because of the depth of his love, he will be led where he does not want to go (John 21:18).

THIS IS SUCH A BEAUTIFUL STORY! Thanks for sharing friend!This (true?) story always comes into mind when hearing “Pope” and “Confession” in the same sentence.
Pope John Paul II and the Beggar Priest
God Bless…
I used to go regularly to one priest, who was also my spiritual director. Sometimes I’d be discouraged and say ‘it’s the same sins again, Father’. I remember him joking once ‘well, you wouldn’t want any new ones would you?’ It was a good way of encouraging me and shifting my perspective on things.I’m always repetitive with my confessions as well and sometimes I find that very discouraging. I have found that the more frequently I got to confession, though, the better I am at identifying sin.