N
neophyte
Guest
YES!You also didn’t answer my second question; if I overhear a confession in Church, I’m placed under the seal by proxy even though I’m a laywoman. Would the same apply to any Catholic who read this diary?
YES!You also didn’t answer my second question; if I overhear a confession in Church, I’m placed under the seal by proxy even though I’m a laywoman. Would the same apply to any Catholic who read this diary?
Of course. The seal doesn’t bind the penitent himself, only those who hear (or overhear) the confession.Now here is something else in regard to the Seal of Confession. One tells a sin to a Priest in the Confessional. He is bound to secrecy even if his life is threatened. Are you, the penitent, free to tell another of your sin?
Thank you; you’ve been very helpful.No. No faithful priest would ever do such a thing. Of course, it’s always possible for anyone to break a law. However, this is the sort of thing that a faithful priest would never even consider doing.
I cannot stress that enough. This is the sort of thing that a priest would absolutely never do; not even consider it.
Absolutely yes. Anyone (repeat, anyone) who reads it would be absolutely bound by the Seal of Confession.
As far as the second priest goes, from his point of view, it would be exactly the same obligations that would apply if he heard the confession himself. He would be absolutely obligated to destroy it the moment he realized what he was reading.
Would they be able to confiscate it? That depends of course. Maybe they obtain a warrant for the book. However if they did it would still be privileged communication and absolutely protected by the Seal of Confession and all the legal protections that stem from it. So ultimately it would not be admissible in court.
On an episode of the Simpsons, Smithers confesses to shooting Mr. Burns in a confessional manned by the Springfield police- who immediately pinched him for the crime.Yes.
Even if the confession is simulated, the Seal applies. So even an imposter priest is still bound by the Seal.
(Simulated is not the same as theatrical acting or practice for religious ed purposes).
I’m not quite sure I understand the questions. I haven’t seen the episode, for one thing.On an episode of the Simpsons, Smithers confesses to shooting Mr. Burns in a confessional manned by the Springfield police- who immediately pinched him for the crime.
I guess that would be a simulated confession, but would the Seal apply as Smithers said he wasn’t Catholic, so it wasn’t a sacrament?
I don’t think the confession would be allowed in a court of law in the United States, because of privilege laws, but how about specifically the Seal.