
Photo by Bree Dail.
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
I have been officiating sporting events for almost a decade now. Recently, I began to wonder, would I, as a layman ref/umpire, have any spiritual authority to bless either the field of\ play or the players prior to the game? (e.g. avoid injury, play cleanly and well, avert ominous weather) I am thinking that this might be similar to a father blessing his children, but I also figure that this is not a place to ask forgiveness…
That’s an interesting question.
I get the connection you have made about authority. The authority of a father over his children gives him a measure of ability to bless his children. This he would do as a father of physical children, not in the same way that a priest blesses.
I remind the readership of the distinction between constitutive and invocative blessings, a distinction that the ghastly “Book of Blessings” tried to eliminate. Constitutive blessings, impart a blessing or consecration that renders the thing, place or person a blessed thing in an enduring way. Examples: sacramentals like rosaries, cemeteries, and consecrated persons such professed religious and priests. These things are, in an enduring way, torn out of the authority of the Enemy, the “prince of this world” who dominates material creation since the Fall, and handed over to the King. An invocative blessing calls God’s blessing down here and now but not in such a way that the blessing “sticks”, as it were.
It is good to ask for the priest’s invocative blessing. It is good to ask the priest to bless (constitutive) your religious objects.
I am of the mind that asking for blessings is a good thing, no matter what the “results” are.
One of the reasons that we ask God to bless is to manifest our faith, hope and love for God. It is the right and normal stance for any child of God to ask for blessings and it is the desire of the Father to give them. The asking and the blessing is wholesome manifestation of the relationship.
Is the blessing of a referee or umpire for the field and players like the blessing of a father for his children? I don’t know. But whatever it is, it is not bad.
Can’t hurt. Might help.
One thing, however: don’t make the sign of the Cross over the field or players, in the manner of the priest.
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
Can confessors in any way act upon information they receive in
confession?While looking up information regarding the seal of confession, I came across a reference to a fifteenth-century English canonist, William Lyndwood. He states that Henry de Bohic “seems to adhere to the opinion of those theologians who say that even where future danger threatens, as, for instance, in the case of a heretic who proposes to corrupt the faith, or of a murder or of some other future temporal injury, the confessor ought to furnish a remedy (adhibere remedium) as far as he can without the revelation of the Confession, as, for instance, by moving those confessing to desist and otherwise using diligence to prevent the purpose of the person confessing. He may, too, tell the prelate to look rather diligently (diligentius) after his flock: provided that he does not say anything through which by word or gesture he might betray the person confessing.” (from newadvent.org)
I thought that a priest who was being pilfered could not change the locks on his moneybox if he were to learn, under the seal of confession, of a duplicate key made by the thief.
Is this not correct? What is the distinction?
Preserving the Seal confession is so important that one priest, St. John Nepomuk, who was the Queen’s confessor, was murdered by the King because the priest refused to reveal what the Queen had confessed.
CCC 1467 says that, with my emphases
Given the delicacy and greatness of this ministry [hearing confessions] 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. He can make no use of knowledge that confession gives him about penitents’ lives. This secret, which admits of no exceptions, is called the “sacramental seal,” because what the penitent has made known to the priest remains “sealed” by the sacrament.
Sounds pretty clear. Are there exception?
Let’s make some distinctions.
First, there is direct violation of the secret of the confessional, the Seal. Direct violation occurs when the confessor (or a person who overhears) reveals the identity of the penitent and the sin she committed. This is about as bad a crime and sin as there is and it incurs the censure of excommunication automatically (latae sententiae). The lifting of the censure is reserved to the Holy See.
Next, there is indirect violation. This happens when the confessor reveals some information which allows people to figure out who the penitent was and what the sin was. This is to be punished according to the seriousness of the crime.
Related to these, is making use of information learned in the confessional whether or not is has to do with sins that were confessed.
In a document from the Sacred Apostolic Penitentiary, the Church’s highest tribunal which concerns all matters of the internal forum, such as the confessional, we read – in reference to that CCC 1467 quote above – that… (my emphasis)…
The confessor is never allowed, for any reason whatsoever, “to betray in any way a penitent in words or in any manner” (CIC can. 983, §1), just as “a confessor is prohibited completely from using knowledge acquired from confession to the detriment of the penitent even when any danger of revelation is excluded” (CIC can. 984, §1). The doctrine also helped to further specify the content of the sacramental seal, which includes “all the sins of both the penitent and others known from the penitent’s confession, both mortal and venial, both occult and public, as manifested with regard to absolution and therefore known to the confessor by virtue of sacramental knowledge”. The sacramental seal, therefore, concerns everything the penitent has admitted, even in the event that the confessor does not grant absolution: if the confession is invalid or for some reason the absolution is not given, the seal must be maintained in any case.
So the sins are covered b y the Seal. Also, other information is covered by the obligation of secrecy.
Information learned in the confessional could be of two sorts: that related to the confessed sins of the penitent or that not related but nevertheless spoken of during confession.
For example, a rambling penitent who is a professional investor happens to reveal some insider trading point that could lead to a big profit. The confessor shouldn’t use that information for personal gain or tell anyone else about it if it is not public knowledge.
Otherwise, say a penitent who is sacristan at the church confesses in the confessional to the pastor of the parish that he was committing a sin by stealing money from the collection bags stored in the safe before they go to the bank. Should the priest change the combination? Some moralists would say that the secrecy of the confessional cannot be breached for any reason whatsoever. Others would say that the priest may not use any information learned in confession if the use of that information would harm the penitent (as above “to the detriment of the penitent”). Changing the combination would not harm the penitent. Nevertheless, the better path would be not to use the information. It’s the safer path.
Another distinction.
Some sins incur censures that cannot be lifted by a priest confessor without obtaining the faculty from, for example, the Holy See. One such sin would be throwing away or selling the Blessed Sacrament. In such a case the priest has to ask the penitent for permission to consult with the Sacred Penitentiary about lifting the censure. Even in his consultation the priest must avoid revealing precise names, etc.
How serious is the Seal and the obligation not to use information? Let’s take a couple of examples from, of all places, the talkies.
In the movie I Confess (fantastic) a man confesses to a priest that he committed a murder and then he frames the priest with the murder knowing that the priest couldn’t defend himself. The priest does not use the information to defend himself. He doesn’t violate the Seal. He suffers horribly as a result. See the movie. Amazing.
That example concerns a sin that has been committed. Another movie flips it around a little.
In the movie Calvary (not the best), a man confesses to the priest that he is going to murder the priest in a week’s time. In the movie, the argument is made that the priest is not bound by the Seal on this matter because it wasn’t about a crime that was committed but one which might be committed in the future (hence, nothing at all). In such a situation the priest must not give that potential murderer absolution, of course, because there is no sense of remorse of intention of amendment. Nevertheless, suitable for absolution or not, it is still the confessional and the Seal still applies.
Speaking of killing priests, in dialogue with a priest friend about this matter, he related the highly theoretical scenario in which the priest learns that he is to be murdered through poison in the wine for Mass. Can he accidentally on purpose drop the cruet? Or else, someone says that there is a time bomb in the church set to go off during Mass. Can Father come down with the cold and cancel Mass and lock the doors?
That said, on a lighter note. If, after absolution, as the penitent is on the way out, she mentions “Father, the toilet is running in the restroom”, can the priest inform the maintenance man?
The Church does not have specific rules about exceptions to the Seal. On the contrary, she is pretty clear that the Seal is of paramount importance. Priests should not use information learned in the confessional, whether it would be detrimental to the penitent or not. If there are such dire scenarios as the ones I just described, and the priest does, in fact, make use in some way of the information he learned in the confessional, once he has confessed it, his confessor could submit his case to the Sacred Apostolic Penitentiary for a judgment about any censure he might have incurred.
The one thing that you should take away from this, dear reader, is that what you confess in the confessional stays in the confessional.
You will probably be interested to know that – and this can be verified by talking to priests – priests barely remember anything about what they have heard in the confessional for even a few minutes. Time after time this is verified by my brethren. It is my own experience. It is as if it is going in one ear and out the other. And that is fitting, if you think about that. This is because, as the priest in the confessional is acting in persona Christi, Christ is the one who is hearing the confession.
Never worry that the priest is going to reveal your confession to anyone.
Never worry that he thinks badly of you. He is, more than likely, edified and humbled by your courage and sincerity.
GO TO CONFESSION!
Run, don’t walk, to today’s Crisis Magazine offering by Regis Martin.
Just DO IT.
A taste…
[…]
In thinking about [Heywood] Broun’s conversion [by then Fr. Fulton Sheen], it is important that we not lose sight of the fact that Sheen himself felt a great urgency to reach out—to try and win this man’s soul for God. His mission, of course, came directly from Christ, to whom he had given his whole life and priestly service. “If Jesus Christ thirsted for souls,” he asked, “must not a Christian also thirst? If he came to cast fire on the earth, must not a Christian be enkindled?”
It would seem almost a no-brainer, right? Isn’t this pretty much the job description for every Christian? Certainly for priests and bishops it is. Who among them would not wish to leave this world having first dispatched great numbers to the heavenly kingdom? Indeed, to be eulogized in words very much like those spoken by Saint John Chrysostom on the feast of the martyrdom of Saint Ignatius of Antioch [yesterday, 1Feb] —that here was “a soul seething with the divine eros”? Is there another, more credible way to give witness to the grace of priestly ordination? What else is there to light fire to the imagination and work of a priest and bishop, if not to save souls? “Unless souls are saved,” said Sheen, “nothing is saved.”They were certainly not chosen for administrative or managerial duties.
Or to exchange empty pleasantries over drinks with powerful politicians.
Is it too much to ask, therefore, that maybe one or two of them might begin with Joe Biden? Besides being their president, he happens also to be their brother in Christ, who stands in peril of losing his soul for his refusal—both obdurate and longstanding—to protect innocent, unborn human life. Does Joe Biden not have a phone number that they might use to call him up? Who knows, perhaps catch him on the fly next time he shows up for Mass?
[…]
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
Can a religious challenge coin (such as the St. Joseph Strong coin) be a sacramental? Whether or not it is or is not a sacramental, can you get a challenge coin blessed?
There is no reason why such a challenge coin could not be blessed, using at least the blessing “ad omnia“.
Would it be a sacramental? Yes, I suppose it would be. At that point you should never use it for some of the usual uses of challenge coins, such as drinking challenges in bars.
And speaking of challenge coins… I still have some from my 25th Anniversary. I am open to exchanges.
If I have any exchanges outstanding, let me know right away by email and I will make sure to get one to you. Sometimes things stack up on me and I get distracted.

Tomorrow is traditionally the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which is also known as Candlemas. There are references to light in the liturgy and we bless candles.
Candlemas is the conclusion of the Advent/Christmas cycle. We are 40 days from the Nativity of our Lord. The Law required that first-born sons were to be presented, offered in the Temple and the ritual purification of the mother took place. Mary and Joseph fulfilled the Law and encountered the prophetess Anna and old Simeon, who had been awaiting the Messiah. Simeon takes the Child in his arms and pronounced his Nunc Dimittis, which we repeat each night at Compline, and told Mary that a “sword” would pierce her heart.
Greek Christians call this Hypapanti or “encounter”, that is, of the young and old, Christ and Simeon, the New covenant and the passing Old.
Liturgically, the Marian Antiphon and response changes. We have been singing Alma Redemptoris Mater since the beginning of Advent. This ends on Candlemas. Hereafter we sing Ave Regina Caelorum through Lent until Spy Wednesday of Holy Week.
Because of the antiquity of the feast, there are many cultural traditions for its celebration. For example, in some French speaking regions it is customary to eat crêpes, in Mexico tamales.
There is some lovely poetry connected to Candlemas, such an evocative day. Robert Herrick has his “Ceremony Upon Candlemas Eve”, the last stanza of which was set to music by Kate Rusby. Christina Georgina Rossetti has her “A Candlemas Dialogue”. St. John Henry Newman wrote a poem “Candlemas”.
Here is “A Song For Simeon”, in free verse, by the greatest poet of the 20th century, T.S. Eliot:
Lord, the Roman hyacinths are blooming in bowls and
The winter sun creeps by the snow hills;
The stubborn season has made stand.
My life is light, waiting for the death wind,
Like a feather on the back of my hand.
Dust in sunlight and memory in corners
Wait for the wind that chills towards the dead land.
Grant us thy peace.
I have walked many years in this city,
Kept faith and fast, provided for the poor,
Have taken and given honour and ease.
There went never any rejected from my door.
Who shall remember my house, where shall live my children’s children
When the time of sorrow is come?
They will take to the goat’s path, and the fox’s home,
Fleeing from the foreign faces and the foreign swords.
Before the time of cords and scourges and lamentation
Grant us thy peace.
Before the stations of the mountain of desolation,
Before the certain hour of maternal sorrow,
Now at this birth season of decease,
Let the Infant, the still unspeaking and unspoken Word,
Grant Israel’s consolation
To one who has eighty years and no to-morrow.
According to thy word,
They shall praise Thee and suffer in every generation
With glory and derision,
Light upon light, mounting the saints’ stair.
Not for me the martyrdom, the ecstasy of thought and prayer,
Not for me the ultimate vision.
Grant me thy peace.
(And a sword shall pierce thy heart,
Thine also).
I am tired with my own life and the lives of those after me,
I am dying in my own death and the deaths of those after me.
Let thy servant depart,
Having seen thy salvation