T
tafan2
Guest
Very true, because the priest would not be changing how he dealt with the penitent outside of confession. If, on the other hand, a parish’s business manager confessed to the priest he had been embezzling from the parish, the priest could not fire the business manager. We had a pastor once who told certain staff members that he would prefer they go to a different confessor than him. That way, if he came across something suspicious he could always act on it, but if the person in question also happened to confess it to him, he could not. He did not enforce this as a rule, just told them it was his preference.