H
Hopey
Guest
So, to sum up your advice, the priest is always correct in the way he determines whether or not an attempt occurred, or if the seal was broken. Is that a fair sum of what you just said? That her concern wasn’t valid, she should have listened to her priest?Actually, they are judged by the priest in question; he is the person who makes the judgment that no sacrament had started. And most cases end there.
This case went to the bishop not because the priest could not make a determination. It went there because the OP was under the mistaken assumption that if someone walked into the confessional, the seal applied. She did not understand the explanation the priest gave, so she spoke with the bishop.
As she noted, the bishop gave a less detailed explanation than has been given in these posts; and it is also obvious that other posters have had difficulty understanding longer explanations given in these posts.
Does that mean that in another case, the bishop will be involved? No, it does not.
What was determined was that there was no seal, because there was no attempt to confess. Another way of saying it was that the bishop determined that the individual who entered the confessional and vented did not intend to confess; so not sacrament, so no seal.
Which is what the priest determined, and which is what the bishop, after the OP went to him, confirmed after an examination.