J
jmannarino
Guest
Hello,
I fully agree with the Church’s teaching that confession is a valid sacrament and important for our life of faith. What I don’t quite understand is why in the 4th Lateran Council, the Church made it a once a year requirement.
The Catechism teaches us that Jesus alone forgives sins. And that he chose to bestow this gift upon the ministers of his Church (priests, bishops, etc.). But nowhere can I find an explanation of why it became a “requirement”. Something that is good and needed is great. But something that must be done once a year seems to me a legalistic requirement.
As I am leaning more about my faith I am understanding that often, a teaching that is declared in the cannons is really something that was already the custom for many years and even centuries before. What I am not understanding is where in history it become something that was required of Christians (the Fathers? Bishops after the Fathers?) and why it would be a “requirement” vs. an opportunity to experience grace that Christians were simply encouraged and exhorted to experience. And where did the teaching that Mortal sins can ONLY be forgiven through confession vs. through prayer directly to Jesus come about and why?
I ask you to please answer the question and not try to convince me that Confession is a valid sacrament. I already believe that. I just want to understand when it became a rule and WHY.
Thanks for any help you can give me.
James
I fully agree with the Church’s teaching that confession is a valid sacrament and important for our life of faith. What I don’t quite understand is why in the 4th Lateran Council, the Church made it a once a year requirement.
The Catechism teaches us that Jesus alone forgives sins. And that he chose to bestow this gift upon the ministers of his Church (priests, bishops, etc.). But nowhere can I find an explanation of why it became a “requirement”. Something that is good and needed is great. But something that must be done once a year seems to me a legalistic requirement.
As I am leaning more about my faith I am understanding that often, a teaching that is declared in the cannons is really something that was already the custom for many years and even centuries before. What I am not understanding is where in history it become something that was required of Christians (the Fathers? Bishops after the Fathers?) and why it would be a “requirement” vs. an opportunity to experience grace that Christians were simply encouraged and exhorted to experience. And where did the teaching that Mortal sins can ONLY be forgiven through confession vs. through prayer directly to Jesus come about and why?
I ask you to please answer the question and not try to convince me that Confession is a valid sacrament. I already believe that. I just want to understand when it became a rule and WHY.
Thanks for any help you can give me.
James