Again, talking to Jesus is not enough ? I thought you enter the church and kneel for some private reflection between you and the Lord as to your "sins’’. How else are you to know what to tell the priest,with out God’s help ? As David says, "if there be any uncleaness in me, show me Lord ". So as a Catholic you are to have this reflective even penitent time with the Lord first, then out of obedience go to the priest for absolution by rite/sacrament. So not directly from the Lord but indirectly, thru intermediary are you forgiven. Point is we both go before the Lord first and hence no one is "lost or "unfulfilled’ before Him like you suggest but let each be convinced as to how the Lord works.
When I was an Evangelical Protestant, I would have agreed with you because I didn’t know.
But having experienced the Sacrament of Reconciliation on a fairly-regular basis, I testify that it is so very healing and uplifting. It is not of this world.
The priest is not an intermediary at all. Rather, he stands in for Jesus Himself.
When I go to Confession, I am not speaking with a priest. It is not the priest who forgives my sins, it is Jesus, the Lord. He uses the priest’s body and mouth to make His forgiveness to visible and audible to me and the other penitents.
I know that you are familiar with the concept of “being Jesus to others.” When we help a missionary build a clinic overseas, we are Jesus to the nationals who are observing and often helping out. When we go to the local jail to visit the prisoners, we are Jesus to the prisoners. When we teach VBS or AWANAs, we are Jesus to the children.
One of my Baptist pastors once told the story of a little girl who routinely greeted him by saying, “Hi, Jesus!”
This isn’t just a “Christian-style positive thinking technique.” When we are Christians yielding ourselves to God’s will, we literally, truly, have Christ in US (the hope of glory!).
And that’s what the priest is doing in the Confessional–he IS Jesus to us. We can see (sometimes, when there is no screen) and hear Jesus speak words of forgiveness to us and it is incredibly healing and restorative.
I wish that Protestants could experience confession with a priest at least once. It’s nothing at all like the confessions that Protestants make one to another in various small group settings or with their prayer partner or even with their pastor. The Sacrament of Reconciliation is stepping out of this world into God’s realm. God uses our very humanity and our human needs to see and hear to accomplish His very spiritual work of forgiveness of our sins and restoration to Himself.
This is the way that God intended for Christians to repent and be forgiven and restored to full fellowship with Jesus and His Church. It’s in the Bible, and it’s described over and over in the various church histories written in the earliest days of the Church. In modern times, we have chosen to go against this way and relegate confession and forgiveness to a mental exercise within ourselves. It works for Protestants because God is merciful and does not hold it against them that they obey their parents and elders and do what they have been taught. But it’s not what God intended.