YOUCAT Lesson 235
YOUCAT the catechism for Catholic youth
235 Can I make a confession even if I have not
committed any serious sin?
Confession is a great gift of healing that brings about
closer union with the Lord, even if, strictly speaking, you do not have to go
to confession. [1458]
Photo: …..Vietnamese Trappist
Cistercian monks. Having lived the full two-year
Trappist Cistercian novitiate myself in Utah, I understand the joy on the faces
of the above pictured religious men. In
the Trappist novitiate we went to confession weekly to root out imperfections. Now
58 years later having raised a family of six children and 21 years past
retirement, I seek the confessional about every 2 months. Usually my confession is before Mass during a
visit to Our Lady of Good Help Shrine at Champion, WI . Rose and I are headed
there again this Tuesday, February 21, my 87th birthday! …..235
In Taize, at Catholic conferences, at World Youth Day
celebrations-everywhere, you see young people being reconciled with God. Christians who take seriously their decision
to follow Jesus seek the joy that comes from a radical new beginning with God. Even the saints went to confession regularly,
if possible. They needed it in order to
grow in humility and charity, so as to allow themselves to be touched by God’s
healing light even in the inmost recesses of their souls.
We put off our conversion again and again until death, but
who says that we will still have the time and strength for it then?” St. John Vianney (1786-1859)
The
confession of sins
…….1458
Without
being strictly necessary, confession of everyday faults (venial sins) is
nevertheless strongly recommended by the Church.(compare Council of Trent: Denzinger-Schönmetzer 1680; Codex Iuris Canonici, can. 988 § 2.)59 Indeed the regular confession of our
venial sins helps us form our conscience, fight against evil tendencies, let
ourselves be healed by Christ and progress in the life of the Spirit. By
receiving more frequently through this sacrament the gift of the Father's
mercy, we are spurred to be merciful as he is merciful(compare Luke 6:36.)60 –Catechism of the Catholic
Church, Second Edition
Whoever confesses his sins . . . is already working
with God. God indicts your sins; if you also indict them, you are joined with God.
Man and sinner are, so to speak, two realities: when you hear "man" -
this is what God has made; when you hear "sinner" - this is what man
himself has made. Destroy what you have made, so that God may save what he has
made. . . . When you begin to abhor what you have made, it is then
that your good works are beginning, since you are accusing yourself of your
evil works. The beginning of good works is the confession of evil works. You do
the truth and come to the light.(St.
Augustine, In Jo. ev. 12,13:Patrologia Latina 35,1491.)61 --CCC
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