M
Mark86
Guest
I suffer with sexual addiction, and so I normally go to confession about two or three times a week as a result. Every time I genuinely desire to go forward and sin no more, but my body has other plans and eventually I fall back into the cycle. Recently I went to confession, confessed all my sins and left, went home that night and fell back into my addiction. I felt bad about it as usual so the next morning I jumped back in the car and drove back and went to confession again… and I explained the whole thing to the priest, just as I always do… I always explain that I suffer with a sexual addiction (and yes, I am in a recovery program for it as well).
This time though, after hearing that I had been to confession two days in a row due to this sin, the priest said something I had never heard before… usually the priests just say “Be sorry for all your sins and trust in his mercy and for your penance, three Our Fathers and three Hail Marys” …etc. But this priest said that in my case, because of the extent of the addiction, it doesn’t sound like serious mortal sin, and that my real problem may be a lack of trust in God’s mercy. He talked about how God views us like we would view a tree that has a few bad fruits on it, and he said “you wouldn’t chop the whole tree down just because it has a few bad fruits, you’d prune away the bad fruits.” And went on to say that God understands the addiction and understands where my heart is, and how God knows that there’s more to me than just this addiction. He said the fact that I’m trying to recover, the fact that I’m going to confession…etc. are all things that God takes into account in my case and how all of them mean more to God than the sin itself.
Needless to say, I felt a great burden lifted like I hadn’t ever felt before in the year or so I’ve been Catholic… not because I want an excuse to masturbate (far from it!), but just a break from feeling like I’m first in line to HELL every other day actually feels nice for a change.
I’m just wondering what to do with this advice. If a priest in confession says that as long as I’m working toward recovery, which I am, that it’s not “mortal” (in my case), does that mean that it’s really not mortal? And if that’s the case, what does that mean exactly? Does that mean my addiction to masturbation is venial? And yes, the priest did say “in your case it’s not mortal, or as serious as it normally would be.”
I have difficulty trusting that.
This time though, after hearing that I had been to confession two days in a row due to this sin, the priest said something I had never heard before… usually the priests just say “Be sorry for all your sins and trust in his mercy and for your penance, three Our Fathers and three Hail Marys” …etc. But this priest said that in my case, because of the extent of the addiction, it doesn’t sound like serious mortal sin, and that my real problem may be a lack of trust in God’s mercy. He talked about how God views us like we would view a tree that has a few bad fruits on it, and he said “you wouldn’t chop the whole tree down just because it has a few bad fruits, you’d prune away the bad fruits.” And went on to say that God understands the addiction and understands where my heart is, and how God knows that there’s more to me than just this addiction. He said the fact that I’m trying to recover, the fact that I’m going to confession…etc. are all things that God takes into account in my case and how all of them mean more to God than the sin itself.
Needless to say, I felt a great burden lifted like I hadn’t ever felt before in the year or so I’ve been Catholic… not because I want an excuse to masturbate (far from it!), but just a break from feeling like I’m first in line to HELL every other day actually feels nice for a change.
I’m just wondering what to do with this advice. If a priest in confession says that as long as I’m working toward recovery, which I am, that it’s not “mortal” (in my case), does that mean that it’s really not mortal? And if that’s the case, what does that mean exactly? Does that mean my addiction to masturbation is venial? And yes, the priest did say “in your case it’s not mortal, or as serious as it normally would be.”
I have difficulty trusting that.