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My question is how do you all come up with the confidence to confess the crap you have done to priests? Like for example lets say there is this black guy. We will call him Mark. He is checking out videos on Youtube and he gets all pissed off over this one derogatory comment made about his race by some white dude. So, Mark gets in this racial cyberwar with this guy and types the most horrid racist comments about the white race. When he finishes typing, he says, " Oh gosh, what have I done?! I didn't mean anything I have just typed. I don't hate white people!" and the local priest at his church is white.
or someone like this girl (Mary). She is a devout Catholic. She is not primiscous and considers herself straight. however, one day, she is with her best friend Sarah, something happened, next thing you know, they are having sex and for the time, she enjoyed it, but now she deeply regrets it and is very ashamed. How do you confess stuff like that?
What if the priest tells others?

2007-11-26 09:21:50 · 16 answers · asked by Sapphire-by-the-sea 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

16 answers

One has nothing to fear. They take a vow to not repeat and they forget it after your sins are forgiven. Look at it as speaking to God who is whom the Priest represents. Peace

2007-11-26 09:31:25 · answer #1 · answered by PARVFAN 7 · 3 0

Any competent priest does not care what you have done, unless it's a mental health issue. He is not the one you have offended, and he's already heard about worse sins than yours. The reason one comes to confession is to renounce what was done, ask someone who can verbally respond for forgiveness, and resolve not to do it again. If the penitent can't do these things, s/he's not ready.

Confession is a special situation, where the social rules don't apply and the masks can come off. It's like counselling (which is also offered by priests), when one can be more honest than in the outside world. The priest does not share information under the seal of confession any more than a lawyer, doctor or psychologist would. Priests have been summoned to court, but they cannot testify against a penitent, no matter what was confessed. Secrecy is so ingrained in the training that any priest who even pretended to gossip about a penitent would be reported to his superiors.

Some penitents prefer to speak with someone they can see. Others prefer anonymity. Reconciliation rooms are arranged so that the priest never sees the penitent without their consent. All the priest cares about is reconciling the penitent with God, not the details.

Even if he remembered every sin confessed to him and could identify who had done what, what could he do with it? We are all sinners and have fallen short of the grace of God. Even priests go to confession. No one wants to keep all that with them every day. If anything, it connects the priest with the humanity of his parishioners and the chronic need for people to seek and give forgiveness. If God forgives, what can the priest hold against anyone?

2007-11-26 09:46:46 · answer #2 · answered by skepsis 7 · 2 0

No. Sexual abuse (molestation) is taken into consideration one of those psychological ailment. that's concerning to not one of the failings you assert. It replaced into not around the board, yet in user-friendly terms a tiny single digit fraction of preists have been in touch. As such, ataistically speaking there is possibly a lowere probabliity of molestaion with the help of a catholic priest than there is interior the final poulation. the only maximum telling element in molestation is unquestionably molestation. a hundred% of perpatators have been molested as little ones, in spite of the undeniable fact that in the process user-friendly terms 20 % of those molested grow to be perpatrators, something the remining 80% discover hurting yet another to be too repugnant. So, you're barkign up the incorrect tree. rather of focusing on the church which has taken reponsiblity with the help of removing perpatrators, ofering counciling for survivors, putting their money the place their mouth is, taking measures to work out tha not something like this occurs ever returned; we could continually be specializing in different einstitutions and the final inhabitants -- families, to rid society of this scourge and heal people who've been affected. The consequeces of having been molested, the ensuing PTSD, may well be devasting and existence-long, and the indications are in basic terms approximately univerrsally mis-clinically determined. basic misdiagnoses are yet at the instant are not constrained to schitzophrenia, anxeity affliction, bi-polar, alcoholism. in spite of the undeniable fact that, there are multiple in a position techniques for therapeutic from Trauma that are rising. Dr. Herman's e book under is in user-friendly terms a start up an define.

2016-10-02 04:31:03 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The confessional is sacred and the priest cannot tell anybody else about your sin. It is a mortal sin for him to do so.

Whatever your sins, you muster up the courage to say them aloud in the presence of whichever priest is there and then you wait to be absolved by the blood of the Lamb and do your penance and feel magnificently forgiven and free afterwards. It's not easy, but it's totally worth it.

2007-11-29 15:06:48 · answer #4 · answered by sparki777 7 · 0 0

" When you come to confession, to this fountain of mercy, the Blood and Water which came forth from My Heart always flows down uppon your soul. in the Trbunal of Mercy the greates miracles take place and are incessantly repeated. Here the misery of the soul meets the God of mercy.
Come with faith to the feet of my representative. I Myself am waiting there for you. I am only hidden by the priest. ... I Myself act in your soul. The person of the priest is, for Me, only a screen. Never analyze what sort of a priest it is that I am making use of; open your soul in confession as you would to Me and I will fill it with My light."

-- Divine Mercy: from the visions of St. Faustina, the first Saint of the new millenium who spread a message of mercy to the modern world.

2007-11-27 14:39:04 · answer #5 · answered by the good guy 4 · 0 0

Catholics do not confess sins to a priest instead of to God. We confess to a priest representing God. The prayer of absolution, which the priest prays while administering the sacrament, says "I absolve you from your sin the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit." It is in God's name the priest forgives, not in his own name.

When Catholics receive the sacrament of reconciliation, we have the opportunity not only to be forgiven, but to receive advice from the priest...kind and wise counsel as to how to do better in the future, living the Christian life.



When you confess you are brought to humbleness and realizing that you have sinned. Are you not humble and sincere when you ask God to forgive you for your sins?

2007-11-26 10:21:58 · answer #6 · answered by tebone0315 7 · 2 0

I think of it this way -

If you want a doctor to help you, you must be 100% honest with him or her. It does not help a bit to tell you doctor that you exercise seven days a week and have never touced a cigarette in your life if that is not really the case.

Same goes for lawyers and priests. Just like you cannot shock a doctor with your medical problems, you cannot shock a priest with your religious or moral problems.

2007-11-26 09:33:16 · answer #7 · answered by Adoptive Father 6 · 2 0

What an imagination.

Confession has nothing to do with any of that stuff.....confession is more like talking to a therapist about things that you think you've done wrong and how to stop doing those things.

Read about the religion and some of it will make sense to you.......if you truly want information and not just to poke holes.

2007-11-26 09:30:45 · answer #8 · answered by daljack -a girl 7 · 3 0

Fiurst, you can confess anonymously if that is your preference. Secondly, a priest CANNOT reveal anything you confess. If he does, he is instantly excommunicated from the Catholic Church. Don't you think Jesus considered these kinds of things before He told His first priests, "whose sins you forgive, they are forgiven them"?

2007-11-26 09:42:18 · answer #9 · answered by PaulCyp 7 · 2 0

The priest is bound by a seal of silence and can never tell anyone what he hears in confession. If he does, it is a mortal sin on his soul.

2007-11-26 14:48:41 · answer #10 · answered by Danny H 6 · 2 0

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