The
Sacrament of Reconciliation
The sacrament of reconciliation is celebrated
on Saturday afternoons from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and Saturday evenings from after
the 5:30 p.m. Mass until 7:00 p.m. or until all confessions are heard. In
addition, a communal service is celebrated during both the Advent and the Lenten
Seasons. The sacrament can also be celebrated individually by appointment. There
is also preparation for children to understand and celebrate the sacrament
before their First Communion and for Adults during the RCIA instructions.
If the Church is to fulfill in its entirely her task of saving mankind
she needs the power to forgive sins. It is a power essentially different from her mission
to preach the Gospel and baptize. In baptism, indeed all sins and the punishment due to
them are remitted. Baptism is the first justification. But the first justification is also
the first entry into the realm of the supernatural which works entirely by God's grace and
which asks of the person baptized no more than that he turn away from sin and turn in
faith to Christ.
Penance is something different. A baptized person who sins again, sins against God to
whom, since his baptism in the name of the Most Holy Trinity, he belongs. He also betrays
the Church of which he is now a member. Thus, the new atonement assumes the character of a
legal trial, with accusation, sentence and satisfaction.
The practice of penance has varied considerably down the centuries. In very early days
satisfaction, usually in the form of public penance, was very much to the fore.
Re-acceptance into the Church community normally took place only after completion of the
penance imposed. More and more, however, penance has withdrawn from the public domain and
today only the private administration of the sacrament is still in use.
The development of the system of confession shows that misunderstanding easily arises
above the nature of penance. In the face of all attacks - by Wycliffe, the Reformers,
liberal dogmatic historians and modernists - the Church has always maintained the judicial
character of the sacrament of penance and drawn the necessary conclusion.
THE CHURCH TEACHES: The Church has the power to forgive all sins. This forgiveness of sins is a true
sacrament instituted by Christ, different from baptism, particularly on account of its
judicial form. Sins are forgiven only by the sacrament of penance. Sins are forgiven by
absolution which can only be given by an authorized priest. It is a real judicial pardon.
The Church has the power to reserve certain cases.
On the part of the sinner contrition, confession and satisfaction are required.
Contrition is aversion to the sins committed. Perfect contrition remits sin even before
confession if it is joined with the intention to confess. Imperfect contrition (attrition)
is sufficient if there is confession, and is a good and salutary thing.
Confession must cover all mortal sins committed since baptism and not previously
confessed. Venial sins, and sins already confessed can validly be confessed. And
satisfaction. The effect of the sacrament is reconciliation with God, that is, the
remission of sins and the eternal punishment but not all the temporal punishment.
For more information,
read the Catechism on Reconciliation here.
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