i get that 100% ; by why is it "necesaary to “eyeball” the priest when you go to confession?
Some people say that it helps them to focus more when they are behind a screen, even if their identity is known to the priest. They say that it makes them more easily remember that they are confessing to Christ.
I find it disconcerting and disorienting to speak to a screen without any sign of the human behind it. God has ordained that we confess to a human being for a reason and I find that it helps me on a purely human level to come face-to-face with the human being who has been charged with the task of hearing my confession, the Father who will forgive me in God’s own name.
it didn’t use to be that way
In some times and places, that is true.
For a millennium and a half, nobody ever used a screen. Then a great saint saw it as a solution to a problem and implemented it. The idea caught on and eventually became the most common way - the only way it had ever been done in living memory. It went on that way for centuries. It became enshrined as a right of the faithful in the Latin Church.
Yet, the old way didn’t die. It was always practiced in the Eastern Churches and was practiced even in the Latin Church, out of necessity or sometimes convenience. The Church decided to encourage a renewal of the old way, giving both the faithful and the priests the right of refusal.
You can argue that face-to-face confession is good or bad, but you can’t really argue that it is new.
at a Marian shrine where i sometimes attend Mass ( where the chaos over the absence of kneelers exists); the chaplain said openly; “i don’t do face to face confession”
Good for him. That is his right and I’m sure he has his reasons. If I had an urgent need, I would go to him in an instant, but I would not seek him out.
; a half dozen people waiting on line and one person taking 20 minutes of the “window” to explain to priest “face to face” their life history…
You seem so sure that face-to-face confession is the cause of the delay and the fault of the penitents. How do you know that they are explaining their life history to the priest and how you know they are going face-to-face?
In my experience, it is the priest who sets the tone and pace for the confession. An experienced priest should be able to move things along if he needs to.
I occasionally attend an FSSP (Latin Mass) parish. The confessionals there only allow for confessions behind a screen. Even there, one hears complaining about “confessional hogs” and “people who need to share their life stories in confession”.
Finally, a word from Fr. Z’s blog, sharing his advice for priests:
And FATHERS! Be BRIEF! You ramble too. Oh how many times have I pounded my head gently against the grate thinking, “Just give me absolution”
Bearing wrongs patiently is a spiritual work of mercy.