I can't help but think that confession's reconciling and healing graces are not fully appreciated in the comments that some of our brethren bearing the various Protestant faith icons posted. We, as Catholic Christians, believe and teach that confession is an essential element of the Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation, which consists in telling ones sins to the priestly minister. And that confession of sins, even from a simply human point of view, frees us and facilitates our reconciliation with others. Through honest disclosure of one's wrong doing and faults a person looks squarely at the sins they are guilty of, takes responsibility for them, and thereby opens themselves again to God and to the communion of the Church in order to make a new future possible. The council of Trent observed thatand saint Augustine wroteWhen Christs faithful strive to confess all the sins that they can remember, they undoubtedly place all of them before the divine mercy for pardon. But those who fail to do so and knowingly withhold some, place nothing before the divine goodness for remission through the mediation of the priest, for if the sick person is too ashamed to show his wound to the doctor, the medicine cannot heal what it does not know.So in confession a Christian recognises the sin that is destroying themselves and those around them and begs God for mercy and forgiveness and in doing this the first step away from sin and towards God is made. This is the healing grace of confession at work. And when we sincerely repent of sins we seek to set to rights the harm we have done to others and this too is a work of grace as the council of Trent observedWhoever 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.So even though many Christians do not recognise the sacrament of confession they nevertheless seek to avail themselves of God's graces associated with it by having "accountability partners" to whom they confess faults and sins in order to both be held accountable by another and to receive help and advice from another because others can see things in us and in our conduct that we cannot see for ourselves unaided.The satisfaction that we make for our sins, however, is not so much ours as though it were not done through Jesus Christ. We who can do nothing ourselves, as if just by ourselves, can do all things with the cooperation of him who strengthens us. Thus man has nothing of which to boast, but all our boasting is in Christ... in whom we make satisfaction by bringing forth fruits that befit repentance. These fruits have their efficacy from him, by him they are offered to the Father, and through him they are accepted by the Father.
God bless.
Why would we beg God for what we already have?
Upvote
0

