YOUCAT Lesson 229
YOUCAT the catechism for Catholic youth
229 What prepares a person for repentance?
The insight into one’s personal guilt produces a longing to
better oneself; this is called contrition.
We arrive at contrition when we see the contradiction between God’s love
and our sin. Then we are full of sorrow
for our sins; we resolve to change our life and place all our hope in God’s
help. [1430-1433, 1490]
The reality of sin is often repressed. Some people even think that guilt feelings
should be dealt with in a merely psychological way. But genuine guilt feelings are
important. It is like driving an
automobile: When the speedometer indicates that the speed limit has been
exceeded, the speedometer is not responsible, but the driver is. The closer we come to God, who is all light,
the clearer our dark sides come to light also.
Yet God is not a light that burns but, rather, a light that heals. That is why repentance impels us to go into
the light in which we will be completely healed. 312
“Love covers a multitude of sins.” 1 Peter 4:8
INTERIOR PENANCE
…….1430
Jesus'
call to conversion and penance, like that of the prophets before him, does not
aim first at outward works, "sackcloth and ashes," fasting and
mortification, but at the conversion of the heart, interior
conversion. Without this, such penances remain sterile and false;
however, interior conversion urges expression in visible signs, gestures and
works of penance.(compare Joel 2:12-13; Isaiah 1:16-17; Matthew 6:1-6; Matt 16-18.)23 –Catechism of the Catholic
Church, Second Edition
…….1431
Interior
repentance is a radical reorientation of our whole life, a return, a conversion
to God with all our heart, an end of sin, a turning away from evil, with
repugnance toward the evil actions we have committed. At the same time it
entails the desire and resolution to change one's life, with hope in God's
mercy and trust in the help of his grace. This conversion of heart is
accompanied by a salutary pain and sadness which the Fathers called animi cruciatus (affliction
of spirit) and compunctio
cordis (repentance of heart).(compare Council Of
Trent (1551): Denzinger-Schönmetzer 1676-1678; 1705; compare Roman Catechism, II,V,4.)24 –CCC
…….1432
The
human heart is heavy and hardened. God must give man a new heart. (compare Ezekiel 36:26-27.)25 Conversion
is first of all a work of the grace of God who makes our hearts return to him:
"Restore us to thyself, O LORD, that we may be restored!" (Lamentations 5:21.)26 God
gives us the strength to begin anew. It is in discovering the greatness of
God's love that our heart is shaken by the horror and weight of sin and begins
to fear offending God by sin and being separated from him. The human heart is
converted by looking upon him whom our sins have pierced(compare John 19:37; Zechariah 12:10.)27
Let us fix our eyes on
Christ's blood and understand how precious it is to his Father, for, poured out
for our salvation it has brought to the whole world the grace of repentance.(St. Clement Of Rome, Ad Cor. 7,4:Patrologia Graeca 1,224.)28 –CCC
…….1433
Since
Easter, the Holy Spirit has proved "the world wrong about sin," (compare John 16:8-9.)29 i.e., proved that the world has not
believed in him whom the Father has sent. But this same Spirit who brings sin
to light is also the Consoler who gives the human heart grace for repentance
and conversion.(compare John 15:26; Acts of the
Apostles 2:36-38; John Paul
II, Dominum
et Vivificanum 27-48.)30 --CCC
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