Showing posts with label confession. Show all posts
Showing posts with label confession. Show all posts

Friday, August 1, 2025

At the Jubilee for Youth, young people seek out the Sacrament of Reconciliation





 Vatican

200 confessionals now open for the day of penitence in Rome

From 10:30am to 6:00pm, the Circus Maximus, the ancient Roman arena, will be an open-air confessional for young people wishing to receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation as part of the Holy Year celebrations. For the occasion, the Youcat Foundation will distribute 10,000 copies of a text on the subject.

Vatican News

For the hundreds of thousands of young pilgrims who have arrived in Rome for their Jubilee, Friday, 1 August, will be a day fully dedicated to the Sacrament of Reconciliation, before gathering with Pope Leo XIV on Saturday and Sunday at the Tor Vergata esplanade. From 10:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., 200 confession stations will be available, staffed by priests and confessors ready to listen.

Stations in Different Languages

Pilgrims who speak Italian, Spanish, English, French, Portuguese, and Polish will find confession stations in their own languages available throughout the day. Stations for German, Hungarian, Slovak, Korean, and Chinese speakers will be available at designated times.





Around 200 confessionals are available to young people for the Sacrament of Reconciliation today   (ANSA)


Youcat Distributes Its Book on Confession

During the “Day of Penitence,” twenty volunteers from the Youcat Foundation will distribute 10,000 copies of the Youcat book on confession. This special edition, published for the Jubilee of Youth, will be available in four languages: Italian, English, French, and German.

The Youcat Foundation will distribute 10,000 copies of a text dedicated to confession.


First published in 2014 and updated for the occasion, the book aims to provide young people with an accessible introduction to the Sacrament of Reconciliation. The new edition includes an examination of conscience, explanations of the meaning of confession, and some helpful prayers.

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Trump administration and DOJ going to bat for Catholic priests vs. the unholy state of Washington

 

'Will not sit idly by': DOJ sues to prevent Catholic priests from violating secrecy of confessional by having to report child abuse


President Donald Trump speaks as Attorney General Pam Bondi listens during a meeting with the Fraternal Order of Police in the State Dinning Room of the White House, Thursday, June 5, 2025, in Washington (AP Photo/Alex Brandon).


The Trump administration and the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice are going to bat for Catholic priests, the sacrament of penance, and the seal of confession, claiming in a lawsuit against the state of Washington that newly signed mandatory reporting legislation amounts to an attack on the First Amendment and the free exercise of religion.


The DOJ said Monday that it's suing in order to intervene and protect Catholic priests from having to choose between excommunication from the church — if they were to speak of a given confession — or facing potential prosecution by the state, if they did not comply with child abuse and neglect reporting mandates.

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The lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington asserts that SB 5375, set to take effect as of July 27, violates the First and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution by purporting to compel clerics to report child abuse or neglect and thereby override their sincere religious beliefs.

Under the law, when "any member of the clergy … has reasonable cause to believe that a child has suffered abuse or neglect, he or she shall report such incident, or cause a report to be made, to the proper law enforcement agency," the law says. The duty to report already exists for others in positions of responsibility outside the context of religion, including law enforcement officers, psychologists, nurses, and childcare providers.

A key distinction, however, is that confidentiality of the confessional is nonnegotiable under canon law, and the breaking of that seal is punishable by excommunication — being cut off from the church.

"By design, SB 5375 directly interferes with and substantially burdens this sacred rite. It adds 'any member of the clergy,' which expressly includes Catholic priests, as individuals who must report information relating to suspected child abuse or neglect to state officials or law enforcement," the DOJ filing said. "The failure to do so subjects priests to criminal penalties and civil liability."

"Although Washington, like every other state, recognizes a privilege for Confession and other confidential religious communications, SB 5375 strips Catholic priests of their ability to rely on this or any other legal privilege as a defense to reporting suspected abuse or neglect," the suit to intervene added. "Thus, to comply with SB 5375, Catholic priests must disclose information even when it has been obtained solely through the sacred rite of Confession."

The court documents note that the DOJ is not "challeng[ing] the inclusion of priests as mandatory reporters per se," but specifically any mandatory reporting of what is learned through the confessional.

In a statement on the DOJ's case, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon said SB 5375 and any other bills that "explicitly target religious practices such as the Sacrament of Confession in the Catholic Church have no place in our society."

"Senate Bill 5375 unconstitutionally forces Catholic priests in Washington to choose between their obligations to the Catholic Church and their penitents or face criminal consequences, while treating the priest-penitent privilege differently than other well-settled privileges," Dhillon added. "The Justice Department will not sit idly by when States mount attacks on the free exercise of religion."

Monday, May 5, 2025

New law in Washington state could put Priests at odds with the law as they safeguard the seal of Confession

 

Washington state bill requiring clergy to report child abuse signed by governor




A Washington state bill requiring clergy to report child abuse -- without exceptions for sacramental confessions -- was signed in to law by Democratic Gov. Bob Ferguson May 2, 2025. (OSV News photo/Nancy Phelan Wiechec)

(OSV News) — Legislation that would require clergy to report child abuse or neglect in Washington state was signed into law by Democratic Gov. Bob Ferguson May 2. 

While some have argued the bill closes an important omission from the state’s list of mandatory reporters, others have expressed concern that without exceptions for clergy-penitent privilege, the law could place Catholic priests at odds with civil law in order to uphold church law regarding the seal of the confessional.

The legislation, Senate Bill 5375, sponsored by Democratic Sen. Noel Frame of Seattle will make members of the clergy mandatory reporters, or people required by law to report suspected or known instances of child abuse or neglect, without an exception to the requirement for sacramental confessions. Other mandatory reporters in Washington state include school personnel, nurses, social service counselors and psychologists.

‘Keeping the Seal of Confesion’

In a May 2 statement, Bishop Thomas A. Daly of Spokane, Washington, said, “I want to assure you that your shepherds, bishop and priests, are committed to keeping the seal of confession — even to the point of going to jail. The Sacrament of Penance is sacred and will remain that way in the Diocese of Spokane.”

“For those legislators who question our commitment to the safety of your children, simply speak with any mom who volunteers with a parish youth group, any Catholic school teacher, any dad who coaches a parochial school basketball team or any priest, deacon or seminarian, and you will learn first-hand about our solid protocols and procedures,” he said.

“The Diocese of Spokane maintains an entire department at the Chancery, the Office of Child and Youth protection, staffed by professional laypeople,” he continued. “We have a zero-tolerance policy regarding child sexual abuse. Our goal is do everything within our power to keep your children safe while we attempt to lead them to know and love Jesus Christ who commanded, ‘let the children come to me and do not hinder them.'”

Religious Freedom

Bishop Daly added, “An important element to the greatness of America is our Constitutional commitment to religious freedom.”

In a February statement about her bill to make clergy mandatory reporters, Frame said, “It’s long past time that the Legislature steps up, closes this loophole, and protects children.”

“I know this is a tough subject for many of my colleagues, especially those with deep religious views,” she said. “I respect that, but this bill is about the separation of church and state. This bill is about the state’s secular responsibility to the public interest of protecting children. That’s the most important thing we do here.”

Similar bills failed in the Legislature in the two previous years after lawmakers could not reach consensus on whether to make the exception.

Called for ‘Narrow Exception’

The Washington State Catholic Conference opposed the particular version of the legislation that was approved by the Legislature, urging its supporters to tell their lawmakers to reject it “unless it is amended to provide a narrow exception for confidential communications between a member of the clergy and a penitent person of faith.”

“The majority of states that include clergy as mandatory reporters include an exemption for confidential communications, demonstrating that the states’ interests in child protection can be achieved without violating the right to free exercise of religion,” the conference said in an April advocacy bulletin.

The conference, which is the public policy arm of the state’s Catholic bishops, has stated it would support such legislation with an exemption for the sacrament of confession. A spokesperson for the conference did not immediately respond to a request for comment from OSV News.

Mandatory Reporting in Other States

Most states that specifically include clergy in their mandatory reporting laws provide some clergy-penitent privileges to varying degrees, according to data from the Child Welfare Information Gateway, which operates under the Children’s Bureau at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

After signing the bill, Ferguson told reporters that he is Catholic and sees the legislation as “pretty straightforward.”

“My uncle was a Jesuit priest for many years, (I’ve) been to confession myself — and so I’m very familiar with that,” he said, according to KXLY-TV. “I felt this was important legislation and protecting kids is first priority.”

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states that priests are strictly forbidden from divulging what penitents tell them during confession, which is part of the sacrament of reconciliation, and states that information a penitent divulges is under “seal.”

“Given the delicacy and greatness of this ministry and the respect due to persons, the Church declares that every priest who hears confessions is bound under very severe penalties to keep absolute secrecy regarding the sins that his penitents have confessed to him,” the catechism states.

Kate Scanlon is a national reporter for OSV News covering Washington. Follow her on X @kgscanlon.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Pope Francis to confessors: minister mercy

 

File photo of Pope Francis confessing the faithful during the WYD in Lisbon in 2023File photo of Pope Francis confessing the faithful during the WYD in Lisbon in 2023  (VATICAN MEDIA Divisione Foto)

Pope encourages confessors to be ministers of mercy

Pope Francis invites confessors to be “ministers of mercy” as they accompany the faithful on their path of reconciliation and renewal.

By Linda Bordoni

In a message on Thursday, 27 March, Pope Francis reflected on the privileged role of confessors, especially during the 2025 Holy Year.

His words of encouragement were addressed to participants of the 35th Course on the Internal Forum, organized by the Apostolic Penitentiary.

“Celebrating Mercy, particularly with the pilgrims of the Jubilee, is a privilege: God has made us ministers of Mercy by His grace, a gift we receive because we ourselves have been, and continue to be, the first to experience His forgiveness,” he said.

The event, held from March 24-28, provides ongoing formation for confessors in light of the importance of their sacramental ministry. Addressing them as “Dear brothers,” the Pope urged them to be men of prayer, as prayer is the foundation of their ministry.

“In prayer are rooted the foundations of your ministerial action, through which you extend the work of Jesus, who still and always repeats: ‘Neither do I condemn you. Go, and from now on do not sin anymore’ (John 8:11)," he wrote.

As the Church celebrates the Jubilee Year, the Holy Father said, “May this liberating word of the Lord resound throughout the Church (…) bringing about the renewal of hearts that flows from reconciliation with God and opens the way to new fraternal relationships.”

The Pope also highlighted the connection between mercy and peace, affirming that true peace is born from God's mercy and brings hope that does not disappoint.

Concluding his message, Pope Francis expressed gratitude for the indispensable sacramental ministry of confessors and entrusted them to the care of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Pope shares advice with confessors: "Always forgive'

 

Pope Francis meets the Vatican Penitentiaries in the Consistory HallPope Francis meets the Vatican Penitentiaries in the Consistory Hall  (Vatican Media)

Pope to Vatican confessors: 'Always forgive'

Addressing the community of the Vatican College of Penitentiaries, Pope Francis reminds them that a good confessor must always be close, merciful and compassionate towards the penitent.

By Lisa Zengarini

“Always forgive everything, because we are here to forgive; let others argue!”

Pope Francis reiterated this refrain on Thursday as he addressed the community of the Vatican College of Penitentiaries on occasion of the 250th anniversary of the entrusting of the Ministry of Confessions in St. Peter’s Basilica to the Conventual Franciscans. This ministry has been under their care since 1774.

God's tenderness

Addressing the 60 Vatican confessors accompanied by their Rector, Father Vincenzo Cosatti O.F.M.Conv., in the Consistory Hall, the Pope highlighted the vital importance of their service in the Basilica, both for those who go there to confess and also for other visitors.

He said the ministry "bears witness to them that the Church welcomes them first of all as a community of the forgiven, who believe, hope, and love in the light and strength of God’s tenderness.”

The Pope focused his reflections on three key aspects of their ministry: humility, listening, and mercy. 

Humility

Drawing from the example of the Apostle Peter, who, after his own personal failings, learned humility through seeking forgiveness, he invited the Franciscan confessors to view themselves as “penitents” first, always seeking God’s mercy.

This humility, the Pope said, should be reflected in their prayers and actions within the sacred space of the Basilica.

Compassionate listeners, not psychiatrists

Pope Francis then highlighted the importance of  active and empathetic listening, especially to the young and vulnerable, warning, however,  that a confessor is not a psychiatrist.

“The less you talk, the better,” he said. “Just listen, console and forgive.”

The Pope urged the confessors to approach each person’s words as a gift from God, which not only helps in guiding others but also aids in their own personal conversion.

“Listening is not just hearing what people say, but first of all receiving their words as a gift from God for one's own conversion, docilely, like clay in the hands of the potter in their own personal conversion.”

He reminded them that by truly listening to the penitent in the Sacrament of Reconciliation the confessor listens “to Jesus himself, poor and humble”, thus facilitating a personal encounter between that penitent and Christ.

Forgiveness and mercy

Finally, Pope Francis urged the confessors to be merciful, compassionate, and gentle toward the penitent, recognizing that those seeking confession are already humbled by their sins.  

“As dispensers of God’s forgiveness, it is important to be ‘men of mercy,’ radiant, generous, ready to understand and console, in words and attitudes," he stressed, drawing from the words of the Capuchin Saint Leopold Mandic, a contemporary of Padre Pio known for being merciful and generous with his penances.

“The confessor must be close, merciful and compassionate” like God, Pope Francis insisted, citing the example of another Capuchin friar, Luis Pascual Dri, whom he made Cardinal in 2023, and whom he has often pointed to as an icon of what a confessor ought to be.

“Closeness, mercy and compassion are the three faces of God”

Concluding, Pope Francis thanked the Vatican Penitentiaries for their service, while again encouraging them to carry out their ministry in humility, listening, and mercy.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Catholics are coming back to confession

 




Despite the Catholic Church’s requirement that Catholics go to confession at least once a year — with more frequent confession highly encouraged, and required if a Catholic is conscious of mortal sin and wishes to receive Communion — Catholics in the U.S. don’t go to confession very often.

Polling from EWTN News/RealClear Opinion Research (EWTN is CNA’s parent company) has consistently shown that over half of U.S. Catholics go to confession either less than once a year or not at all.

Yet within this year’s nationally representative EWTN poll results was one rather surprising detail: The number of Catholics who reported going to confession regularly is going up.

Although 18% of the Catholics surveyed this year said they never go to confession and 24% go less than once a year, this actually represents an increase over poll numbers from 2022. That year, 28% of respondents said they went to confession less than annually and 35% said they never went at all.

Fully 42% of the Catholics surveyed in 2024 said they go to confession at least once a year — in line with the Church’s requirements — while 16% go to confession at least once a month.

In the 2022 survey, just 10% of respondents that year said they went to confession monthly.

‘Leaving the light on’

In some corners of the country — in dioceses that have consciously sought to promote the sacrament of confession in recent years — the statistics were a welcome sign that their efforts are working.

The Archdiocese of Washington and the Diocese of Arlington, Virginia — both of which share the bulk of the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area — jointly created an initiative more than a decade ago designed to promote the sacrament of confession called “The Light Is On for You.”

The idea, which has since been copied by more than a half-dozen other dioceses nationwide, is a simple one: During the penitential seasons of Lent and Advent, every parish in the diocese opens its doors for several hours each Wednesday evening to allow people the opportunity to seek God’s mercy. 

In Arlington and Washington, the dioceses have promoted the initiative widely with ads on buses, radio, and TV spots, and other media that are designed to have a broad reach beyond Catholics who are regularly in the pews. 

Father Donald Planty, the pastor at St. Charles Borromeo Parish in Arlington, told CNA he has seen the initiative lead to an increased demand for confessions — so much so that at his parish they decided to continue offering confessions every Wednesday night of the year. 

And the results have been positive: Planty said he and his fellow priests at the parish have heard an estimated 25,000 total confessions on Wednesday nights since 2014. And that doesn’t count all the confessions heard on the other four days of the week they offer it at St. Charles. 

Planty said they’ve found a simple but winning formula to get people to come back to the sacrament: Make confession more available and preach on it at Mass.

“It’s like a field of dreams: If you build it, they will come. If you offer it, they will come. It’s very simple,” he said. 

He emphasized for fellow priests the importance of putting people at ease when they arrive in the confessional, especially if they’ve been away from the sacrament for a while. He said he welcomes penitents to the confessional with a variation on the phrase he also preaches on during Mass, assuring them that the Lord welcomes them “with open arms.”

“‘In the sacrament of penance, the Lord Jesus welcomes you with open arms. He forgives your sins, and he forgets them. And you start a new life with his love, with his grace in your heart,’” Planty said, reciting the typical phrase he offers in his homilies. 

“I often add, especially when I’m preaching: ‘There is no unforgivable sin. There is no unforgivable sin. There is no unforgivable sin.’ I repeat it three times. There’s nothing to be afraid of, and everything to gain [by coming to confession],” Planty explained.

Variations on the “Light Is On for You” initiative have been implemented in dioceses all across the country: for instance in DallasGrand Rapids, Michigan; Portland, MaineToledo, Ohio; Scranton, Pennsylvania; Fort Wayne-South Bend, Indiana; and Erie, Pennsylvania. It has even inspired bishops abroad. 

Danielle Cummings, chancellor and communications director for the Diocese of Syracuse, New York, similarly told CNA that they have seen a marked increase in demand for confessions since they began offering “The Light Is On for You” several years ago. 

And like in Washington and Arlington, the Syracuse Diocese buys time in major media markets to promote the initiative in the hopes that people who have been away from the sacrament for a while will come back. 

Cummings said they have found that people far and wide see and hear the ads inviting them back to confession and it “resonates in their heart” as something they ought to be doing.

It’s not a typical “penance service,” she added — it’s just an open church building with a prayerful atmosphere inside and priests available to hear confessions when people are ready. 

Every year after the initiative takes place, Cummings said she asks pastors for anecdotal stories about how it went. She said she has heard remarkable reports, including Catholics returning to confession after 50 years away and parishes adding permanent confession times due to increased demand after participating. 

“It has been just an overwhelming experience here in the diocese. I would recommend it to any diocese to begin this initiative,” Cummings said. 

“What it really [does] is make people remember going to confession and remember how relieved, how the burden has been lifted, when they walk out of the confessional.”

Similar to Planty, Cummings said they have found that the best advice they can give for dioceses wanting to replicate their success is: “Keep it simple.” 

“I would be very surprised to hear that any diocese [that has done this] has not seen a change in the number of confessions being sought after doing this kind of initiative,” Cummings said. 

Rediscovering the sacrament 

Father Wade Menezes, CPM, a Father of Mercy and a frequent contributor to EWTN, wrote a book on sin and God’s mercy titled “Overcoming the Evil Within: The Reality of Sin and the Transforming Power of God’s Grace and Mercy.” 

In a chapter dedicated to the sacrament of confession, Menezes lays out some of the most common reasons that Catholics avoid the sacrament: for example, they fear being judged or scolded for their sins; they don’t realize the importance of confession; or they consider confession unnecessary. 

But Menezes said he believes that regular confession and Eucharistic participation are essential for spiritual maintenance and growth, contributing to a person’s overall sanctity as well as his or her peace of mind.

“These two sacraments, confession and Eucharist, are precisely the two of the seven that sustain us in our daily vocation and walk in life — regardless of what that may be: single, married, widowed, consecrated religious, diocesan priest, etc. It’s a tragedy that some Catholics stay away from confession for so long,” he commented to CNA.

“I’m a huge advocate of monthly confession, 12 times a year, faithfully … The main purpose of a monthly confession is precisely to have only venial sins to confess. Hopefully, those who go monthly won’t have mortal sins to confess, at least not often. In other words, it’s the practice of monthly confession, per se, that’s helping to keep them away from committing mortal sin.”

Oftentimes, a big factor keeping people from seeking the sacrament is unavailability, Menezes noted.

While acknowledging that many priests are overwhelmed and may not feel they can offer confession more frequently, he encouraged priests to make more time for this sacrament anyway, assuring them that God will lighten their workload in other ways.

“We need to make ourselves more available as priests. This is why the programs that do exist that really promote confession, like [‘The Light Is On for You’], that several dioceses have taken on, is a wonderful, wonderful thing,” he said.

“Regarding the pastor who’s alone with no associate pastors to aid him — hopefully he’ll feel compelled to make more time to administer the sacrament of reconciliation; in doing so, I’m confident that he will discover that God cannot be outdone in his generosity,” he said. 

“God will help lighten up his schedule in other ways if he makes time to hear the confessions of the souls of his parishioners, because he’s first and foremost the guardian and caretaker of the souls in his parish.”

Laying out the nine chief benefits of going to confession, Menezes reiterated in his book how beneficial it is to go to the sacrament monthly, if possible. He encouraged Catholics to make use of an examination of conscience brochure available on the Fathers of Mercy website, which serves as both a guide for self-reflection and a mini-catechism, helping individuals prepare for confession effectively. 

His order distributes about 600,000 of these brochures annually, Menezes said.

“Monthly confession also brings you great peace with your past … Each monthly confession literally only looks back on that past four- to five-week period of your life. And there’s nothing more great than having that solidified, moral compass that, ‘Yes, I’m totally, totally at peace with my past,’” he explained to CNA.

“Regular Eucharist and regular confession helps create that solid moral compass in your life. There‘s no need to ever look back anymore.”