M
Maximus_88
Guest
Today while I was in confession I began confessing sins from when I was a kid that I had previously forgotten. As I was doing this, the priest interrupted me and told me that it was not necessary to confess those sins which I had forgotten to confess in the past. He then asked me to confess any sins that I had committed after my most recent confession. I still remembered a sin from my past that I wanted to confess, but then at the same time I was not in the frame of mind at that point to disobey the priest, so I did what he told me to do.
It is my understanding that Canon Law requires me to confess any mortal sins that are on my conscience. I also know that deliberate consent of the will is required in order for a mortal sin to be committed. So my question is, did I make a bad confession, thereby committing the sin of sacrilege, by omitting the past sin, or did I lack the consent to do so because the priest explicitly told me to confess only those sins that I have committed since my last confession and I was simply doing what he told me to do?
It is my understanding that Canon Law requires me to confess any mortal sins that are on my conscience. I also know that deliberate consent of the will is required in order for a mortal sin to be committed. So my question is, did I make a bad confession, thereby committing the sin of sacrilege, by omitting the past sin, or did I lack the consent to do so because the priest explicitly told me to confess only those sins that I have committed since my last confession and I was simply doing what he told me to do?