Some
Fundamental Convictions
31.
The truths mentioned above, powerfully and clearly confirmed by the synod and
contained in the propositions, can be summarized in the following convictions
of faith, to which are connected all the other affirmations of the Catholic
doctrine on the sacrament of penance.
I.
The first conviction is that for a Christian the sacrament of penance is the
primary way of obtaining forgiveness and the remission of serious sin committed
after baptism. Certainly the Savior and his salvific action are not so bound to
a sacramental sign as to be unable in any period or area of the history of
salvation to work outside and above the sacraments. But in the school of faith
we learn that the same Savior desired and provided that the simple and precious
sacraments of faith would ordinarily be the effective means through which his
redemptive power passes and operates. It would therefore be foolish, as well as
presumptuous, to wish arbitrarily to disregard the means of grace and salvation
which the Lord has provided and, in the specific case, to claim to receive
forgiveness while doing without the sacrament which was instituted by Christ
precisely for forgiveness. The renewal of the rites carried out after the
council does not sanction any illusion or alteration in this direction.
According to the church's intention, it was and is meant to stir up in each one
of us a new impulse toward the renewal of our interior attitude; toward a
deeper understanding of the nature of the sacrament of penance; toward a
reception of the sacrament which is more filled with faith, not anxious but
trusting; toward a more frequent celebration of the sacrament which is seen to
be completely filled with the Lord's merciful love.
II.
The second conviction concerns the function of the sacrament of penance for
those who have recourse to it. According to the most ancient traditional idea,
the sacrament is a kind of judicial action; but this takes place before a
tribunal of mercy rather than of strict and rigorous justice, which is
comparable to human tribunals(178) only by analogy namely insofar as
sinners reveal their sins and their condition as creatures subject to sin; they
commit themselves to renouncing and combating sin; accept the punishment
(sacramental penance) which the confessor imposes on them and receive
absolution from him.
But
as it reflects on the function of this sacrament, the church's consciousness
discerns in it, over and above the character of judgment in the sense just
mentioned, a healing of a medicinal character. And this is linked to the fact
that the Gospel frequently presents Christ as healer,(179) while his
redemptive work is often called, from Christian antiquity, medicina salutis.
"I wish to heal, not accuse," St. Augustine said, referring to the
exercise of the pastoral activity regarding penance,(180) and it is
thanks to the medicine of confession that the experience of sin does not degenerate
into despair.(181) The Rite of Penance alludes to this healing aspect
of the sacrament,(182) to which modern man is perhaps more sensitive,
seeing as he does in sin the element of error but even more the element of
weakness and human frailty.
Whether
as a tribunal of mercy or a place of spiritual healing, under both aspects the
sacrament requires a knowledge of the sinner's heart in order to be able to
judge and absolve, to cure and heal. Precisely for this reason the sacrament
involves on the part of the penitent a sincere and complete confession of sins.
This therefore has a raison d'etre not only inspired by ascetical purposes (as
an exercise of humility and mortification), but one that is inherent in the
very nature of the sacrament.
III.
The third conviction, which is one that I wish to emphasize, concerns the
realities or parts which make up the sacramental sign of forgiveness and
reconciliation. Some of these realities are acts of the penitent, of varying
importance but each indispensable either for the validity, the completeness or
the fruitfulness of the sign.
First
of all, an indispensable condition is the rectitude and clarity of the
penitent's conscience. People cannot come to true and genuine repentance until
they realize that sin is contrary to the ethical norm written in their in most
being;(183) until they admit that they have had a personal and
responsible experience of this contrast; until they say not only that "sin
exists" but also "I have sinned"; until they admit that sin has
introduced a division into their consciences which then pervades their whole
being and separates them from God and from their brothers and sisters. The
sacramental sign of this clarity of conscience is the act traditionally called
the examination of conscience, an act that must never be one of anxious
psychological introspection, but a sincere and calm comparison with the
interior moral law, with the evangelical norms proposed by the church, with
Jesus Christ himself, who is our teacher and model of life, and with the
heavenly Father, who calls us to goodness and perfection.(184)
But
the essential act of penance, on the part of the penitent, is contrition, a
clear and decisive rejection of the sin committed, together with a resolution
not to commit it again,(185) out of the love which one has for God and
which is reborn with repentance. Understood in this way, contrition is
therefore the beginning and the heart of conversion, of that evangelical
metanoia which brings the person back to God like the prodigal son returning to
his father, and which has in the sacrament of penance its visible sign and
which perfects attrition. Hence "upon this contrition of heart depends the
truth of penance."(186)
While
reiterating everything that the church, inspired by God's word, teaches about
contrition, I particularly wish to emphasize here just one aspect of this
doctrine. It is one that should be better known and considered. Conversion and
contention are often considered under the aspect of the undeniable demands
which they involve and under the aspect of the mortification which they impose
for the purpose of bringing about a radical change of life. But we all to well
to recall and emphasize the fact that contrition and conversion are even more a
drawing near to the holiness of God, a rediscovery of one's true identity,
which has been upset and disturbed by sin, a liberation in the very depth of
self and thus a regaining of lost joy, the joy of being saved,(187)
which the majority of people in our time are no longer capable of experiencing.
We
therefore understand why, from the earliest Christian times, in line with the
apostles and with Christ, the church has included in the sacramental sign of
penance the confession of sins. This latter takes on such importance that for
centuries the usual name of the sacrament has been and still is that of
confession. The confession of sins is required, first of all, because the
sinner must be known by the person who in the sacrament exercises the role of
judge. He has to evaluate both the seriousness of the sins and the repentance
of the penitent; he also exercises the role of the healer and must acquaint
himself with the condition of the sick person in order to treat and heal him.
But the individual confession also has the value of a sign: a sign of the
meeting of the sinner with the mediation of the church in the person of the
minister, a sign of the person's revealing of self as a sinner in the sight of
God and the church,.of facing his own sinful condition in the eyes of God. The
confession of sins therefore cannot be reduced to a mere attempt at
psychological self-liberation even though it corresponds to that legitimate and
natural need, inherent in the human heart, to open oneself to another. It is a
liturgical act, solemn in its dramatic nature, yet humble and sober in the
grandeur of its meaning. It is the act of the prodigal son who returns to his
Father and is welcomed by him with the kiss of peace. It is an act of honesty
and courage. It is an act of entrusting oneself, beyond sin, to the mercy that
forgives.(188) Thus we understand why the confession of sins must
ordinarily be individual not collective, just as sin is a deeply personal
matter. But at the same time this confession in a way forces sin out of the
secret of the heart and thus out of the area of pure individuality, emphasizing
its social character as well, for through the minister of penance it is the
ecclesial community, which has been wounded by sin, that welcomes anew the
repentant and forgiven sinner.
The
other essential stage of the sacrament of penance this time along to the
confessor as judge and healer, a figure of God the Father welcoming and
forgiving the one who returns: This is the absolution. The words which express
it and the gestures that accompany it in the old and in the new Rite of Penance
are significantly simple in their-grandeur. The sacramental formula "I
absolve you" and the imposition of the hand and the Sign of the Cross made
over the penitent show that at this moment the contrite and converted sinner
comes into contact with the power and mercy of God. It is the moment at which,
in response to the penitent, the Trinity becomes present in order to blot out
sin and restore innocence. And the saving power of the passion, death and
resurrection of Jesus is also imparted to the penitent as the "mercy
stronger than sin and offense," as I defined it in my encyclical Dives in
Misericordia. God is always the one who is principally offended by sin-"Tibi
soli peccavi!"-and God alone can forgive. Hence the absolution that the
priest, the minister of forgiveness, though himself a sinner, grants to the
penitent is the effective sign of the intervention of the Father in every
absolution and the sign of the "resurrection" from "spiritual
death" which is renewed each time that the sacrament of penance is
administered. Only faith can give us certainty that at that moment every sin is
forgiven and blotted out by the mysterious intervention of the Savior.
Satisfaction
is the final act which crowns the sacramental sign of penance. In some
countries the act which the forgiven and absolved penitent agrees to perform
after receiving absolution is called precisely the penance. What is the meaning
of this satisfaction that one makes or the penance that one performs? Certainly
it is not a price that one pays for the sin absolved and for the forgiveness
obtained: No human price can match what is obtained, which is the fruit of
Christ's precious blood. Acts of satisfaction-which, while remaining simple and
humble, should be made to express more clearly all that they signify-mean a
number of valuable things: They are the sign of the personal commitment that
the Christian has made to God in the sacrament to begin a new life (and therefore
they should not be reduced to mere formulas to be recited, but should consist
of acts of worship, charity, mercy or reparation). They include the idea that
the pardoned sinner is able to join his own physical and spiritual
mortification-which has been sought after or at least accepted-to the passion
of Jesus, who has obtained the forgiveness for him. They remind us that even
after absolution there remains in the Christian a dark area due to the wound of
sin, to the imperfection of love in repentance, to the weakening of the
spiritual faculties. It is an area in which there still operates an infectious
source of sin which must always be fought with mortification and penance. This
is the meaning of the humble but sincere act of satisfaction.(189)
IV.
There remains to be made a brief mention of other important convictions about
the sacrament of penance.
First
of all, it must be emphasized that nothing is more personal and intimate that
this sacrament, in which the sinner stands alone before God with his sin,
repentance and trust. No one can repent in his place or ask forgiveness in his
name. There is a certain solitude of the sinner in his sin, and this can be
seen dramatically represented in Cain with sin "crouching at his
door," as the Book of Genesis says so effectively, and with the
distinctive mark on his forehead;(190) in David, admonished by the
prophet Nathan;(191) or in the prodigal son when he realizes the
condition to which he has reduced himself by staying away from his father and
decides to return to him.(192) Everything takes place between the
individual alone and God. But at the same time one cannot deny the social
nature of this sacrament, in which the whole church-militant, suffering and
glorious in heaven- comes to the aid of the penitent and welcomes him again
into her bosom, especially as it was the whole church which had been offended
and wounded by his sin. As the minister of penance, the priest by virtue of his
sacred office appears as the witness and representative of this ecclesial
nature of the sacrament. The individual nature and ecclesial nature are two
complementary aspects of the sacrament which the progressive reform of the Rite
of Penance, especially that contained in the Ordo Paenitentiae promulgated by
Paul VI, has sought to emphasize and to make more meaningful in its
celebration.
V.
Second, it must be emphasized that the most precious result of the forgiveness
obtained in the sacrament of penance consists in reconciliation with God, which
takes place in the inmost heart of the son who was lost and found again, which
every penitent is. But it has to be added that this reconciliation with God
leads, as it were, to other reconciliations which repair the breaches caused by
sin. The forgiven penitent is reconciled with himself in his inmost being,
where he regains his own true identity. He is reconciled with his brethren whom
he has in some way attacked and wounded. He is reconciled with the church. He
is reconciled with all creation.
As
a result of an awareness of this, at the end of the celebration there arises in
the penitent a sense of gratitude to God for the gift of divine mercy received,
and the church invites the penitent to have this sense of gratitude.
Every
confessional is a special and blessed place from which, with divisions wiped
away, there is born new and uncontaminated a reconciled individual-a reconciled
world!
VI.
Last, I particularly wish to speak of one final consideration, one which
concerns all of us priests, who are the ministers of the sacrament of
penance.(193) The priest's celebration of the eucharist and
administration of the other sacraments, his pastoral zeal, his relationship
with the faithful his communion with his brother priests, his collaboration
with his bishop, his life of prayer-in a word, the whole of his priestly
existence, suffers an inexorable decline if by negligence or for some other
reason he fails to receive the sacrament of penance at regular intervals and in
a spirit of genuine faith and devotion. If a priest were no longer to go to
confession or properly confess his sins, his priestly being and his priestly
action would feel its effects very soon and this would also be noticed by the
community of which he was the pastor.
But
I also add that even in order to be a good and effective minister of penance
the priest needs to have recourse to the source of grace and holiness present
in this sacrament We priests, on the basis of our personal experience, can
certainly say that the more careful we are to receive the sacrament of penance
and to approach it frequently and with good dispositions, the better we fulfill
our own ministry as confessors and ensure that our penitents benefit from it.
And on the other hand, this ministry would lose much of its effectiveness if in
some way we were to stop being good penitents. Such is the internal logic of
this great sacrament. It invites all of us priests of Christ to pay renewed
attention to our personal confession.
Personal
experience in its turn becomes and must become today an incentive for the
diligent, regular, patient and fervent exercise of the sacred ministry of
penance, to which we are committed by the very fact of our priesthood and our
vocation as pastors and servants of our brothers and sisters. Also with this
present exhortation I therefore address an earnest invitation to all the
priests of the world, especially to my brothers in the episcopacy and to
pastors of souls, an invitation to make every effort to encourage the faithful
to make use of this sacrament. I urge them to use all possible and suitable
means to ensure that the greatest possible number of our brothers and sisters
receive the "grace that has been given to us" through penance for the
reconciliation of every soul and of the whole world with God in Christ.
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