USCCB Media Blog: 10 points in favor of going to confession

I am all for any official entity of the Church promoting the Sacrament of Penance.

The media blog of the USCCB has a post by Sr. Mary Ann Walsh about the Sacrament of Penance.  Shall we have look with my usual approach of emphases and comments?
Confession: It puts you straight with everyone
Penance, aka confession, is the sacrament of the forgiveness of sin. You can’t beat it for convenience. [Not to mention salvation.] It’s available practically whenever. Tell a priest you want to go to confession and you’ll get his attention. One bishop I know was cornered on an airplane. Another passenger figured out what was going on and asked if he could confess too. It must have been an interesting game of musical seats. An interesting question for priests might be: Where was the strangest place you ever administered the sacrament of penance? The answers I’ve gathered include “in a sports bar, at a graduation party” and “on the golf course, walking up the fairway.”
Confession has benefits. Here are ten:
1. Confidentiality guaranteed. There’s nothing like confessing your sins [That’s the key, isn’t it?  Forgiveness of sins.  I am glad to see that the word was mentioned at the top.] to someone guaranteed not to tell anyone else. Sometimes you need to talk in absolute confidence. Even under subpoena, a priest can’t tell anyone what’s said to him in confession. He can’t even hint at it. Now that’s confidentiality.
2. Housekeeping for the soul. It feels good to be able to start a clean life all over again. Like going into a sparkling living room in your home, it’s nice when clutter is removed – even if it’s your own.  [Again, it is about forgiveness of sins.]
3. A balm for the desire for revenge. When you have been forgiven you can forgive others. If the perfect Jesus forgives me, who am I to want to avenge the slights in my life. Think: “Why did they promote him over me?’ or “Mom played favorites!”
4. Low cost therapy. It’s free, which makes it cheaper than a psychiatrist for dealing with guilt.  [To a certain extent yes.  But some people need the help of a professional as well.  The confessional is more the “tribunal dock” than it is the “couch”.]
5. Forced time to think. Socrates said that the unexamined life is not worth living. To examine our lives and acknowledge failings marks the first step of making things right with God, others and ourselves. Life can be more worth living when you ponder the meaning of your own life.
6. Contribution toward world peace. Gaudium et Spes, the Second Vatican Council’s Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, said that the imbalances in the world that lead to war and tensions “are linked with that more basic imbalance which is rooted in the heart of man.” Peace of soul leads to peace of heart leads to peace beyond oneself.  [I had the amusing image of the pageant in Miss Congeniality for a moment there.  But seriously, when liberals start talking about “structural sin” we must always go back to the fact that personal sins are at the core of all “structural sin”.  This was a good point.  Sr. Walsh points to the fact that when we sin, we hurt everyone.  Personal sin really does hurt everyone.]
7. A better neighborhood. Confession leaves you feling good about yourself, thereby cutting back the inclination to road rage and aggressive shopping cart driving. With the grace of the sacrament you’re energized to, as Jesus said to the woman caught in adultery, “go and sin no more.”  [One of the effects of the sacrament of penance is that it also imparts actual graces which can help you to resist sinning in the future.]
8. Realistic self-perception. Confession helps overcome arrogance when you have to admit you’re as much of a sinner as anyone else. It helps build tolerance for others’ perceived shortcomings. [A partial remedy to the echo of the Sin of Adam and Eve who allowed themselves to believe the lie that we could be as gods.]
9. One more benefit of being Catholic. There are lots of benefits, including a sense of community, liturgical rites to help us encounter God in prayer, and the wonderful sense of humanity exemplified in the saints, from Mary, the loving Mother of God, to Augustine, the exasperating son of Monica. The sacrament that leads us to inner peace is among the greatest boons.  [I continue with the movie flash… this time of the Red Panda in Kung Fu Panda …. “Inner peace…. Inner peace….”.  But this point touches on our Catholic identity, doesn’t it?  Going to confession is what Catholics do.]
10. Closeness to God. Confession helps you realize that you have a close connection to God and receive his grace through the sacraments. What can be better than knowing God’s on your team, or, to be less arrogant about it, that you are on God’s.

Just because I can perhaps be a little blunter here than Sr. Walsh can be there….

11. Avoid going to Hell for eternity.   ‘Nuf said.

Good points!   In some ways, what Sr. Walsh has done here is repackage in new language, so to speak, some classic points about the benefits of the sacrament.

We need to revive the sacrament of penance.  If any of Sister’s points, above, help you to seek out the confessional, then it was worth the USCCB having a blog.  The same goes for this one.

To to confession.

And after her points, here are my 20 Tips for making a good confession.

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Again about the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles

A quick addendum to my recent post about my visit to the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles near Kansas City, MO.

The sisters recorded yet another audio CD.  They sing Marian hymns on this new disk.   Mother was kind enough to give me a disk during my recent visit.

Give it this sample a listen!   (Then buys some CDs.)

You can listen to their hymns while refreshing your supply of Mystic Monk Coffee!

Posted in Just Too Cool, Lighter fare, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged
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Bishops Conferences and Fangorn Forest

A comment from a reader in my email:

This talk of the bishops, and lots of talking, and going to war somehow calls to my mind the Ents.
If our Entish bishops were to rouse themselves to war, they could be formidable.
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A visit to the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles (D. KC)

I have written before about the wonderful Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph. They were invited to the diocese by His Excellency Robert Finn, the ordinary of the region.

The sisters are building their new digs out in the countryside. I posted about that here.

I made a visit to their new place to see the progress. Very impressive. They are still in the building which will eventually become their guest house. Brick by brick, is I believe how you describe this?

Here is one of my favorite photos, just inside the main entrance of the place.

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First things first… the chapel. The altar was obtained from, I believe, a closed church in Ohio.

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Of particular interest was the work area for their vestments and embroidery. Here are a few action shots.

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They have quite the construction line going.

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Storage racks for fabric.

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Cases for different colored thread, etc.
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There is Mother, … perhaps the only time she will ever be to the left of anything.

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Since they are not in their final digs, they have to hold their chapter in a less formal setting.

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They have an apostolate of praying for priests.

We also saw some of the grounds as Mother gave us a short tour in the ATV.

And here is a sample of work they did on the wimpe used during Mass at the Cathedral in Kansas City this morning, where some seminarians received “candidacy” before going off to major seminary.

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The stemma is that of Bp. Finn, but without the addition of the diocesan stemma. I forget the technical term…. impalement, perhaps?

One of the seminarians had a surplice made by the sisters. If you clerics or seminarians out there are looking for gear, contact the sisters. Excellent work by very happy women who are loving what they do. A good way to support them too.

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Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , ,
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How small-c catholic liberals attack what they don’t like

In the past I have mentioned that catholic liberals right now are using the clerical abuse issue as a blunt instrument with which to bludgeon any issue or any person they don’t like.
If they don’t like, say, the Church’s teaching about the impossibility of the ordination of women, the Church should change its “policy” because, of course, the bishops failed to prevent the sexual abuse of children.   If they don’t like that a bishop sticks to the Church’s teaching on contrary-to-nature unions, then he should just shut up, because bishops failed in the sphere of clerical abuse.  If they don’t like the new translation of the Missal, then no one should use it because the bishops didn’t handle the abuses thing well enough.

If they don’t like a particular bishop….  you get my drift.

Here is an example of this from National Catholic Fishwrap.

Sacrifice at the altar of God

by Thomas C. Fox on Jul. 09, 2011
NCR Today

Rita Ferrone, author of several books on liturgy, has written in the July 15 issue of Commonweal a searing critique of the New Roman Missal translation set to take affect in November.

These are tough years for the U.S. bishops who have fallen under dark clouds for their failings in their handlings [sic] of the decades’ long clergy sexual abuse tragedy in our church. To the failing of protecting our children from clergy abuse many will now be adding another: the failure to protect clear and simple — and meaningful — English in our mass liturgies from an assault by ideologically led bishops.

Here is how Ferrone concludes her remarkable Commonweal analysis:

[…]

Ferrone, whom I may look at more closely in another entry, goes on to sneer at the new translation along the same tired lines, concluding that people might get used it the new texts eventually but, she adds ominously, they shouldn’t.
Tom, Rita… I agree wholeheartedly!   If you don’t like the new, corrected translation, just say no.

Your best approach is to promote the widespread use of Latin so that no one is forced to suffer with the horrible new English translation.  Eh-vur.

In any event, this opening in the Fishwrap article was a good example of how liberals work.  If they don’t like someone or something they will make  a connection – no matter the stretch – with the sexual abuse issue, or will perform some other fan dance of moral equivalency.
Conservatives generally resist this sort of smear tactic.  They opt instead to stick to arguments rather than ad hominem attacks or these false comparisons.
Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Biased Media Coverage, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Drill, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , ,
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Reactions from priests to the Guide for Confessors

About the Guide for Confessors… I asked priests for some comments.

Here is one I thought was very good.

Here’s my thoughts:  an “awesome” (as the kids say) echo and complement to Misericordia Dei.  My favorite lines tend to occur in the intro, actually, as nice handy phrases:

Whenever a confessor is available, sooner or later a penitent will arrive. And if the confessor continues to make himself available, even stubbornly so, sooner or later many penitents will arrive!

-Amen!  “People don’t come, so I only do 15 mins-30 mins” is a lame, lame, lame excuse.

“Our rediscovery of the Sacrament of Reconciliation, both as penitents and as ministers, is a measure of authentic faith in the saving action of God which shows itself more clearly in the power of grace than in human strategic or pastoral initiatives which sometimes overlook this essential truth.”

-I read this as “You have some programs.  That’s nice and helpful, but not enough.  Confession gets to the heart of the matter!”  [I read it also as “Hey priests!  To understand the sacrament of penance, you have to use the sacrament yourself.”]

“In the generous celebration of the Sacrament of Divine Mercy, each priest is called to experience for himself the uniqueness and the indispensability of the ministry entrusted to him. Such an experience will help him to avoid the “ever-changing sense of identity” which so often marks the existence of some priests.”

-Highlight, italicize it: “GENEROUS.”  And yes, we come to see we are ministers of grace, not accountants, plant managers, counselors, human resource managers, but priests of Christ.

The “filling out” and explanation of the role and method of a spiritual director is also a nice, handy, and valuable summary, as well as the need for our own spiritual care (lest we forget we are priests, or think that *we* are the ones who are doing all this great work of mercy, save as instruments of God.

That point about spiritual direction is good.  I noticed that the Guide makes a distinction between confession and spiritual direction, though they are obviously related, and in a deep way.  First, they both involve what is called the internal forum, which is under the Seal, and which involves a solemn responsibility.  But people – priests included – sometimes confuse confession time for spiritual direction time.  It can be, but not always.   While it is true that a regular confession will involve some small element also of “spiritual direction”, in the normal course of hearing confessions with lines of people waiting, a longer conversation is not always possible.   So, all squares are rectangles but not rectangles are squares.

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QUAERITUR: Extraordinary Form Latin-Spanish resources

From a priest.   Can the readership help?

Do you know of any resources, similar to the three-volume “Rituale
Romanum” put out by the FSSP, that have the extraordinary form
sacramental rites in Latin and Spanish? I am involved in Spanish-language ministry and some families have requested I baptize their children in according to the Extraordinary Form. I would like to say in Spanish the parts that are permitted in the vernacular, but am
having a difficult time finding any resources.

Anyone?

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, Brick by Brick, Mail from priests, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged ,
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Card. Levada opines about the upcoming Assisi meeting

The Assisi inter-faith meeting for peace.   All you have to do is mention it in some circles and the fireworks begin.

Benedict XVI, Pope of Christian Unity, has slated another meeting in Assisi, also an inter-faith gathering for peace.   It will without question have a different tenor to it than that original confab.

There is a story on ZENIT today:

Cardinal Levada Clarifies Assisi Event

Says the Path of Peace Is the Church’s Path

VATICAN CITY, JULY 8, 2011 (Zenit.org).- The prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is offering a clarification on the upcoming meeting in Assisi, where Benedict XVI will gather with representatives of the world’s religions and non-believers to promote justice and peace.

The meeting, to be held in October, follows upon two similar events hosted by Blessed John Paul II. All three of the meetings have caused a stir among certain ecclesial circles, with some people accusing the Popes of syncretism, or giving the impression that all religions are equal.

Cardinal William Levada, who succeeded the German Pontiff in heading the doctrinal congregation, acknowledged the misinterpretations that have been leveled against the Popes. And he questions why Benedict XVI would carry on with the initiative in such a context.

In short it is not a question of hiding the faith for the sake of a superficial unity, but of confessing — as John Paul II and the Ecumenical Patriarch then did — that Christ is our peace, and that precisely because of this the path of peace is the path of the Church, the cardinal said.

In his statement, published Wednesday, Cardinal Levada draws from then-Cardinal Ratzinger’s reflections as well as the Second Vatican Council in clarifying the intention of the Assisi event.

Because ‘all men are called to union with Christ’ (Lumen Gentium, 3), the Church must be leaven of this unity for the whole of humanity: not only with the proclamation of the Word of God, but with the lived testimony of the profound union of Christians with God. This is the authentic path of peace, he noted.

Moreover, the cardinal added, the title chosen for the next Day of Assisi — Pilgrims of Truth, Pilgrims of Peace — gives us a second indication [as to the motives]: to be able realistically to hope in the building together of peace, it is necessary to put truth as criterion.

The original bond between ethos and logos, and between religion and reason, lies ultimately in Christ, the divine Logos: precisely because of this, Christianity is able to restore this bond to the world, he said.

Peace without truth is not possible, Cardinal Levada stated, and the flip-side is also true: the attitude to peace constitutes an authentic ‘criterion of truth.’

I refer the readers to the Holy Father’s first Letter for the World Day for Peace of 1 Jan 2006 and also to the CDF’s 2000 document Dominus Iesus and Pius XI’s indispensable Mortalium animos.

Posted in Pope of Christian Unity | Tagged , , ,
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Changes in the rubrics for music in the new, corrected translation.

My friend Jeffrey Tucker of the estimable The Chant Cafe has a fascinating post about changes in the noew, corrected translation of the Missale Romanum which will affect sacred music in our worship.

Here is his piece, which I am cutting down so that you will be forced also to go to his place and read the rest… as I am sure you will want to do anyway.

My emphases and comments.

Dramatic Changes in Music Rubrics for New Missal
Posted by Jeffrey A. Tucker

Some of the most advanced thinkers in the world of music and liturgy have long identified the critical problem in Catholic music today. They have pointed out that the Mass itself provides for the texts and the music for the Mass, but in the General Instruction on on the Roman Missal, there appears a loophole. Musicians can sing what is appointed, or (“option 4”) they can sing something else, and that something else is limited only by what the musicians themselves deem as “appropriate.” What this has meant, in effect, is: anything goes. This is why it often seems that when it comes to music at Mass that, well, anything goes.  [Thus the texts of Mass, the actual texts, are in large part ignored, unknown, and the sense is implanted firmly that we can do anything we want to the Church’s official worship.]

I’m happy to report that the legislative ground has just shifted, and dramatically so. The new translation of the General Instruction removes the discretion from the music team to sing pretty much whatever it wants. The new text, which pertains to the new translation of the Missal that comes into effect on Advent this year, makes it clear beyond any doubt: the music of the Mass is the chanted propers of the Mass. There are options but these options all exist within the universe of the primary normative chant. There can be no more making up some random text, setting it to music, and singing it as the entrance, offertory, or communion.

I have no doubt that the practice of singing non-liturgical texts will continue but it will now continue only under a cloud. If I’m reading this correctly, any text other than an appointed text for the Mass will now fall outside the boundaries provided for by the authoritative document that regulates the manner in which Mass is to proceed.  [Thus, we shall see that many people simply don’t care that they are violating the rubrics on yet another level.  Will ecclesiastical authority do anything about that?  Sure!  They will probably place more roadblocks for traditional expressions of our liturgical worship.]

[This is good…] We can be sure that gigabytes of digits will be produced with the intention of explaining to me and everyone why what we can clearly read below does not really mean what it seems to be saying, that there has been some mistake in phrasing, that taking this literally is only the penchant of “traditionalists,” and that the prevailing practice surely has equal normative status. Nonetheless, the text is there, clear as a bell, and will be printed in all editions of the Missal that is now in preparation.

Catholic musicians of the world, the GIRM would like you to meet a new friend: the propers of the Mass.

Let us compare old and new:  [Hey!  Great idea to do that!  Maybe someone should do this with the prayers too!]

The Entrance

2003 GIRM:

47. After the people have gathered, the Entrance chant begins as the priest enters with the deacon and ministers. The purpose of this chant is to open the celebration, foster the unity of those who have been gathered, introduce their thoughts to the mystery of the liturgical season or festivity, and accompany the procession of the priest and ministers.

48. The singing at this time is done either alternately by the choir and the people or in a similar way by the cantor and the people, or entirely by the people, or by the choir alone. In the dioceses of the United States of America there are four options for the Entrance Chant: (1) the antiphon from the Roman Missal or the Psalm from the Roman Gradual as set to music there or in another musical setting; (2) the seasonal antiphon and Psalm of the Simple Gradual; (3) a song from another collection of psalms and antiphons, approved by the Conference of Bishops or the Diocesan Bishop, including psalms arranged in responsorial or metrical forms; (4) a suitable liturgical song similarly approved by the Conference of Bishops or the Diocesan Bishop.

2011 GIRM

48. This chant is sung alternately by the choir and the people or similarly by a cantor and the people, or entirely by the people, or by the choir alone. In the Dioceses of the United States of America, there are four options for the Entrance Chant: (1) the antiphon from the Missal or the antiphon with its Psalm from the Gradual Romanum, as set to music there or in another setting; (2) the antiphon and Psalm of the Graduate Simplex for the liturgical time; (3) a chant from another collection of Psalms and antiphons, approved by the Conference of Bishops or the Diocesan Bishop, including Psalms arranged in responsorial or metrical forms; (4) another liturgical chant that is suited to the sacred action, the day, or the time of year, similarly approved by the Conference of Bishops or the Diocesan Bishop.

Comment: There are several crucial differences. The new version clearly elevates the antiphons from the Roman Gradual or the Roman Missal as the core text. The old version had a mistake that had been confusing for years: it referred only to the Psalm from the Gradual. The new version clearly states that it is the antiphon and Psalm that are applicable from both books. Option three makes it clear that we are not talking about any song; we are talking about the liturgical chant, and there is a huge difference. Finally, option four blasts away the vague word “song” and again emphasizes chant, and with this important proviso: “suited to the sacred action, the day, or the time of year.” One would have to be deliberately obtuse not to see that this refers to the proper text of the day in question.

[…]

For the sake of length I will slice this off here.  Do go read over there as well.

Posted in The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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WDTPRS POLL: Movie credits

Given that during the summer many new movies are released, and given that these releases are often on Friday, here is a WDTPRS POLL about your movie viewing habits.

Feel free to comment in the combox!

At a movie in a theater, do you stay for the credits?

View Results

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