J
jmcrae
Guest
The practice of the Early Church, for the first 600 years, was that penitents confessed their sins during the Penitential Rite at the beginning of Mass, and received Absolution from the presiding Bishop or priest in the hearing of the whole congregation. For the first 150 years of the Church, this was actually the whole Sacrament, but in the mid to late 100s AD, we find penitents going privately to trusted priests, to ask their advice on which sins they should confess publicly, and receiving Absolution for those sins that they were not required to confess publicly.
In Ireland during the 500s AD, the missionaries found that their congregation members were too shy to do the public portion of the Sacrament, and were in danger of neglecting the Sacrament of Confession altogether, so they dispensed them from the public act altogether, and made the Sacrament of Confession to be a private matter between priest and penitent. This form of the Sacrament gradually spread throughout Europe, and by 700 AD, it was the only way to do it. The Rite of Penance became what we know it as, today.
The notion of “confessing” privately to God alone (although how the private thoughts of one’s mind constitute a “confession” is obscure to me) is rather recent, and finds no precedent in Christian history, nor in the previous Jewish practice, which entailed not onlu confessing one’s sins to the son of Levi, but also bringing the appropriate animal for sacrifice, and eating of its flesh in a ritual action.
It’s clear that when Jesus said “Confess your sins” the Apostles took Him to mean, confess out loud in the presence of other Christians. This is still the understanding that we apply to it today, even though today, the penitent only confesses out loud in the presence of the priest, and not in front of the whole congregation, as in Apostolic times.
In Ireland during the 500s AD, the missionaries found that their congregation members were too shy to do the public portion of the Sacrament, and were in danger of neglecting the Sacrament of Confession altogether, so they dispensed them from the public act altogether, and made the Sacrament of Confession to be a private matter between priest and penitent. This form of the Sacrament gradually spread throughout Europe, and by 700 AD, it was the only way to do it. The Rite of Penance became what we know it as, today.
The notion of “confessing” privately to God alone (although how the private thoughts of one’s mind constitute a “confession” is obscure to me) is rather recent, and finds no precedent in Christian history, nor in the previous Jewish practice, which entailed not onlu confessing one’s sins to the son of Levi, but also bringing the appropriate animal for sacrifice, and eating of its flesh in a ritual action.
It’s clear that when Jesus said “Confess your sins” the Apostles took Him to mean, confess out loud in the presence of other Christians. This is still the understanding that we apply to it today, even though today, the penitent only confesses out loud in the presence of the priest, and not in front of the whole congregation, as in Apostolic times.