BY Ian Dunn | March 24 2017 | comments icon 0 COMMENTS     print icon print

1-POPE-FRANCIS

Priests should hear Confession every day

Pope Francis tells conference that priests should hear Confession any time they are asked

Pope Francis has told priests to hear Confession every day if parishioners ask for it. “Please, let there never be those signs that say, ‘Confessions: Mondays and Wednesdays from this time to that time,’” he told hundreds of confessors at a Vatican conference on Confession last week.

“Hear Confession every time someone asks you,” he said. “And if you are sitting there, praying, leave the confessional open because God’s heart is open.”

Confession ‘is a pastoral priority,’ and is a daily call to head to the ‘peripheries of evil and sin—and this is an ugly periphery,’ he said.

“I’ll confess,” he told his audience, that the Apostolic Penitentiary ‘is the tribunal that I really like because it is a tribunal of mercy, where one goes to get that indispensable medicine for our souls, which is divine mercy.’ A good confessor, he said, has begged God for ‘the gift of a wounded heart, capable of understanding others’ wounds and of healing them’ with God’s mercy.

They should accompany men and women ‘with prudent and mature discernment and with true compassion for their suffering, caused by the poverty of sin,’ he added.

 

Guidance

So much harm is done to the Church and human souls when a confessor is not guided by prayer and the Holy Spirit in discerning what God wants to be done, the Pope said.

‘The confessor never follows his own will and doesn’t teach his own doctrine,’ but is called to be God’s servant in full communion with the Church.

Be ready to use confession as an opportunity to evangelise and remind people of the basic, essential truth of Faith and morality. Pray to God for the gift of humility and the recognition of one’s own sins that God fully pardoned, he told the conference.

This kind of prayer is not only ‘the prime guarantee for avoiding every harsh approach that fruitlessly judges the sinner and not the sin,’ he said, it also reminds confessors they are ‘simple, albeit necessary, administrators’ of God’s free gift. “And he will certainly be pleased if we make extensive use of his mercy,” the Holy Father added.

Pope Francis also asked confessors to be very careful in discerning whether a person may be suffering from a mental disorder—‘which must be verified through a healthy cooperation with experts’—or from demonic influence or possession.

Whenever a confessor recognises the presence of evil spirits, he said, never hesitate to refer to an exorcist, who is charged with ‘this sensitive and necessary ministry’ in each diocese.

 

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