Are you saying my confession wasn’t valid?
I do not fall into those latter categories (I am not ill and I have no trouble speaking.) Father read the notebook because he was in a hurry. I can’t possibly remember what I had written down, but I probably re-committed the same sins this week so I would be confessing them anyway.
Frankly, Melodeonist, you have experienced yet again why questions like this are wholly inappropriate for a forum like this.
Your alarm and concern arise because of the interpretation by someone who has neither the office nor the formation to answer the question and they have made an incorrect application.
What the CDWDS is referring to is that confession should be made verbally unless that is physically impossible (which they give examples of) or morally impossible (which they do not give examples of).
Your case would be a classic one for moral impossibility. Physically you could have said your confession as you have the power to speak and physically the priest could have heard it since he was not deaf…in either of those latter two cases, you being mute or the priest being deaf, using a list would have been necessary because auricular confession would be physically impossible.
The fact that the priest did not have the time to listen but could know your confession by reading what you had written was a case of a moral necessity, in light of his given situation and his assessment. His competence to make the determination should be accepted.
This is so fundamental that I would expect a first year seminarian to know these very basic categories and distinctions.
And yes, in spite of what someone wrote, your confession assuredly was integral because it included the exposition of everything you needed to confess. That is the essential property in this case for the confession being integral. It was simply done in non-verbal form.
You really create havoc for yourself when you:
- Believe that you are in a better position to determine what constitutes a sacrament’s validity than a priest who has spent years in study and formation precisely to know these matters.
- Bring your doubts and anxieties to a forum populated by far too people of whom the old adage applies, “A little bit of knowledge is a very dangerous thing.”