P
powerofk
Guest
The sacrament of confession has definitely changed throughout the centuries. I was taught when I was younger that originally, a sacramental confession was allowed only once during one’s post-baptismal lifetime. This seems to have been the case when the non-canonical (but still considered edifying spiritual reading) Shepherd of Hermas was written. Part of the book actually details how the sacrament of confession occured in the early Church. Later, confession was allowed more often - though public sins required a public penance and more private sins required a more private penance. The purpose of the curtain was to protect the anonymity of the penitent in times where priests were often pressed upon pain of death to state who visited them in the confessional. The thought was, if a priest hadn’t seen the penitent, he wouldn’t be able to say whether the penitent had come to him in confession or not.Hi '57,
If I may cut in, I know the apostles baptized, made disciples, but not sure they ever held “confessional” time as done today. I would think forgiving and retaining must be something else.
Blessings
Nowadays, though some still prefer the curtain, we are allowed to have a face-to-face confession, which I prefer personally, because it’s like having a face-to-face with Jesus Himself (remember, the Church considers the priest to act in persona Christi (that is, simply as Jesus’s mouthpiece - the voice heard is the priest’s, though the real person speaking is Jesus Himself) both while saying the words of consecration for the Holy Eucharist and while saying the words of absolution in Confession.
That’s the key - in the Sacrament of Confession, it’s not the priest who forgives us - it’s Jesus Himself. We could pray to Jesus and ask Him to forgive our sins, but it’s quite easy to delude oneself and believe that we’ve been forgiven or that we have permission to continue in committing a sin. For a Catholic with the proper sense of humility (not overly proud nor overly scrupulous), Confession keeps him/her honest with himself or herself. Why? Because the person (1) has to admit that he/she is not perfect, but (2) is assured of God’s mercy and that God will help the person from continuing to stumble in the future. We’re forced to actually admit that we are sinners, but we actually get to hear with our own human ears that we’re forgiven! This, actually, is huge! Here’s my question for you, benhur (and I mean this honestly, not in a degrading, push off way): As a Protestant, when you sin, how do you know if God has forgiven you of a sin that you committed after your baptism?