Can someone with Alzheimer’s be forgiven in confession?

Michie

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Question: Given the dramatic rise in Alzheimer’s and the necessity of remembering our sins in order to properly confess them, what is your take on those people who haven’t been to confession in decades and now can’t remember that far back in order to make a valid confession? God’s mercy is endless, but so is his justice. Do you think their souls are in mortal danger?

— Janet Cooper, San Diego, California

Answer: It is the instinct of the Church to work with people at every stage of their journey and trust in God’s mercy. Even when people are comatose, the priest seeks to reach them, asking them to call to mind any sins and to call on the Lord. A priest may even lead such a person in a brief examination of conscience on the possibility that, though unable to communicate with us, they can still hear to some extent and, in the depth of their soul, God is still prompting them to repentance and faith. The priest then gives the absolution, and the person receives it to the degree that they can or are needful. Priests also anoint people in such conditions and, if they are near death, give the apostolic pardon. Thus, the Church, for her part, trusts in God’s mercy and unfailingly extends the offer of that mercy unto the very end, even to those who have clinically died, but the body still has some warmth.

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