The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 200: The Confession of Sins (2024)
Episode Date: July 18, 2024When we confess our sins, we’re not telling God something he doesn’t know; we’re giving God access to something he doesn’t have: permission to heal our wounds. Today we learn why the act of co...nfessing our sins is an essential part of the sacrament of Reconciliation. Fr. Mike also clarifies the difference between absolution, penance, and satisfaction. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 1455-1460. This episode has been found to be in conformity with the Catechism by the Institute on the Catechism, under the Subcommittee on the Catechism, USCCB. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/ciy Please note: The Catechism of the Catholic Church contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
Transcript
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in a Year podcast
where we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, revealed in scripture and passed down
through the tradition of the Catholic faith.
The Catechism in a Year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity
and God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home.
This is day 200 out of 365.
Congratulations.
We are reading paragraphs 14, 55 to 1460.
As always, I'm using the Ascension edition of the Catechism, which includes
the foundations of faith approach.
You can follow along with any recent version of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church.
You can also download your own Catechism in a year reading plan by visiting
ascensionpress.com slash C I Y for these last 165 and sixty five days and you can click follow or subscribe in your podcast
after daily updates and daily notifications.
Also quick thank you.
It's been 200 days 200 amazing blessed incredible days and I cannot begin to thank all of the
people who have prayed for each other prayed for me prayed for all of the people who are
producing this podcast those who have offered financial gifts so we can keep making this podcast for free.
Honestly, could not do this without you. Couldn't get to day 200, much less day
365 without you. Thank you so much. We have been talking about the sacrament of
healing, sacrament of forgiveness, the sacrament of reconciliation. Yesterday we
talked about the acts of the penitent, right? That we have to have contrition.
Now there are two more acts of the penitent, two more things that we all
bring to confession. It's not only contrition. Now, there are two more acts of the penitence, two more things that we all bring to confession.
It's not only contrition, that sorrow for sins
and a determination to resolve, to turn away from sin,
but also, secondarily, the confession of sins.
We actually have to disclose our sins.
And thirdly, satisfaction.
At some point, we desire to make reparation.
At some point, we recognize that our sin
has cost something.
And sometimes that thing is a physical thing. Sometimes it's a material thing, right? Where, okay, I need to make reparation at some point we recognize that our sin has cost something and sometimes that thing is a physical thing
Sometimes it's a material thing right where okay. I need to make satisfaction if I stole
50 bucks from bob I need I owe bob 50 bucks even though i'm forgiven
I still have to make restitution as much as I possibly can if i've hurt someone emotionally if i've damaged the reputation
I need to strive to do something to make that right
And if i've hurt myself like I've hurt my I wounded my soul
Well, we do penance as a way to
Heal the soul not as it was so much as a way to embrace punishment as much as it is to embrace healing
We'll talk about that today. So as we launch into today
Let's call upon our God and pray in His presence call upon His name and pray the Father in heaven
We thank you. We thank you
so much for this day. We thank you for leading us and walking us through these teachings of your
holy catholic church that you established in Jesus Christ and have continued to guide by the power
of the Holy Spirit. Please Lord, help us today to once again approach your teaching, the teaching of
your church, not as simply more data gathering, not just simply
as another kind of item of interest, something to learn, but something to penetrate our hearts
and minds and transform the way we live.
Lord God, let this be transformation, let this be an opportunity for conversion, in
this day particularly.
I ask you to please move all the hearts of those who have been away from confession for a long time
Help all of us to bring our sins before you to trust you to trust your mercy to trust your love
And to trust the grace of your sacrament
We make this prayer in the mighty name of Jesus Christ our Lord in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
The Holy Spirit amen it is day 200 and we're reading paragraphs
1455 to 1460.
The Confession of Sins
The confession or disclosure of sins, even from a simply human point of view, frees us
and facilitates our reconciliation with others. Through such an admission, man looks squarely
at the sins he is guilty of, takes responsibility
for them, and thereby opens himself again to God and to the communion of the Church
in order to make a new future possible. Confession to a priest is an essential part of the sacrament
of penance. As the Council of Trent states, all mortal sins of which penitence, after
a diligent self-examination, are conscious, must be recounted by them in
confession, even if they are the most secret and have been committed against the last two
precepts of the Decalogue.
For these sins sometimes wound the soul more grievously and are more dangerous than those
which are committed openly.
When Christ's 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.
According to the Church's command, after having attained the age of discretion,
each of the faithful is bound by an obligation faithfully to confess serious sins at least once
a year. Anyone who is aware of having committed a mortal sin must not receive Holy Communion,
even if he experiences deep contrition, without having first received sacramental absolution,
unless he has a grave reason for receiving communion and there is no possibility of going to confession.
Children must go to the sacrament of penance before receiving Holy Communion for the first
time.
Without being strictly necessary, confession of everyday faults, venial sins, is nevertheless
strongly recommended by the Church.
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.
As St. Augustine says, whoever confesses his sins is already working with God.
God indicts your sins. If you also indict them, 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. Satisfaction
Many sins wrong our neighbor. One must do what is possible in order to repair the harm.
For example, return stolen goods, restore the reputation of someone slandered, pay compensation
for injuries.
Simple justice requires as much.
But sin also injures and weakens the sinner himself, as well as his relationships with
God and neighbor.
Absolution takes away sin, but it does not remedy all the disorders sin has caused.
Raised up from sin, the sinner must still recover his full spiritual health by doing
something more to make amends for this sin.
He must make satisfaction for or expiate his sins.
This satisfaction is also called penance.
The penance the confessor imposes must take into account the penitent's personal situation
and must seek his spiritual good.
It must correspond as far as possible with the gravity and nature of the sins committed.
It can consist of prayer, an offering, works of mercy, service of neighbor, voluntary
self-denial, sacrifices, and above all, the patient acceptance of the cross we must bear.
Such penances help configure us to Christ who alone expiated our sins once for all. They allow us to become co-heirs
with the risen Christ, provided we suffer with him. As the Council of Trent states,
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. All right there we have it, day 200 all
about confession of sins and satisfaction paragraphs 1455 to 1460.
Where do you even begin? Well it starts with contrition, right? It starts with
this sorrow for sin and a desire to turn back to the Lord has to be expressed
through the disclosure of our sins, the confession of our sins. And I love how the Catechism reminds us that even from simply human point of view,
confession or disclosure of the brokenness frees us and facilitates our reconciliation with others.
I mean, think about any human relationship. At some point, if there's just hiding, if there's
just deception, if there's this wound that exists and no one's gonna talk about it, then there's no possibility for forgiveness, there's
no possibility for reconciliation. Therefore, what we have to do just simply
as human beings is we have to disclose our sins. Now, one of the things that
people can argue at sometimes is like, well, doesn't God already know all my
sins? Why would I have to say them in confession? Well, first of all, we would
say, of course God knows all your sins. Yes, definitely. God
knows everything. When we go to confession, we're not telling God
something he doesn't know. We are giving him access to something he doesn't have.
In fact, there's this quote from St. Jerome that Council Trent quoted, that
the catechism quoted today, where it says, if the sick person is too ashamed to show
his wounds to the doctor, the medicine cannot
heal what it does not know.
That sense that here we are, we have to be willing to give God access to our wounds,
we have to be willing to give that access to our sickness, to our sin.
And if we're not willing to give him access, then no matter how much God knows, no matter
how much he knows the entire story way better than even we know, if we don't allow him
to transform our hearts with his mercy,
with his forgiveness, with his grace, then he can't. In fact, that is why the one
sin that is unforgivable, right? The sin against the Holy Spirit, as Jesus
describes it. The one sin against the Holy Spirit, the one unforgivable sin, is
any sin that we do not allow God to forgive. It's the refusal to allow God
to forgive our sins. It's the refusal, in some ways, you could say, to disclose our sins to the Heavenly Father, who forgives us through the power of Jesus
Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit, right? So this realization. So what we need to do, of course,
in 1456, is not merely reconcile with our brother and our sister. That's important. But confession
to a priest is an essential part of the sacrament of penance. And what do we have to confess?
Well, very clearly, all mortal sins that we are aware of.
We have to confess all mortal sins.
So what are the requirements for a sin to be mortal?
You might know this already.
It has to be grave matter, right?
The content of the sin is grave.
Secondly, I have to know that it's a grave sin.
And thirdly, I have to freely choose to do it.
So these are the three elements or three aspects
of what constitutes a mortal sin.
Grave matter, serious sin, I knew it was a serious sin,
and I freely chose to do it anyways.
Why are these important?
Well, they're all important because a venial sin
or a minor sin, you might say like in some ways like this,
or everyday sin, not all sins are grave.
In fact, St. John talks about this.
He says there are some sins that lead to death
and there are some sins that don't lead to death
We call those mortal sins and venial sins
There are some sins that are grave and there are some sins that are less grave
If I don't know a sin is grave if I don't know a sin is that category of serious sin then
Am I really?
Committing it in the sense that that sounds more like an accident, right? If I didn't know this, I was, I was unaware. I was ignorant.
Now there's such a thing as invincible ignorance and invincible ignorance.
There's the ignorance that I should have known and there's the ignorance that's
like, I had no way of knowing this. I, no one ever told me. For example,
we've talked about this a couple of times.
Now maybe you didn't know that if you're conscious of mortal sin,
that we ought not to,
we must not receive Holy Communion until we go to confession first.
Now, that is a consistent teaching of the church for, you know, forever.
And yet you might not have known that.
And it might have been like, no, you didn't harden your heart to that.
You didn't try to avoid that teaching.
You just didn't know.
Well, in that case, yes, the sin has been committed,
but I'm not culpable of that sin, right?
Yes, that's a grave matter.
That's a big deal sin, but I'm not responsible for that sin
because I didn't even know.
It was more like an accident.
It was more like a mistake.
So first, grave matter.
Secondly, I knew it was grave matter.
I knew it was a big deal sin.
The third thing is I freely chose to do it anyways.
So let's go back to like the whole issue
of Sunday mass attendance
Sunday mass attendance is a big deal if I intentionally skip mass or exempt myself from Sunday mass that is a
Mortal sin, but what if here you're living in northern Minnesota say for example
I don't know anyone who lives up there up here in northern Minnesota
And you go out to your car to get to mass on on a Sunday And you're like I'm gonna go to the 6 p.m. mass on Sunday no
big deal no problem and you get out there and your car won't start and you
do everything you possibly can you call a neighbor that can was not working you
see if anyone else is going to mass doesn't work and you're you're basically
prohibited for going to mass or maybe a more common example for people around the
world is yeah you're getting ready to go to mass and all of a sudden you have a child
and the child starts throwing up all over the place or you have a baby and your
baby is sick. In those cases, yes, you didn't go to mass,
but in that case you're not freely choosing to do this. You're not freely saying,
you're not saying, remember the definition of sin. God,
I know what you want me to do. I don't care. I want to do what I want to do.
In the cases of a sick child, you're there to care for your sick child. That's not the same thing
as saying, oh you know it's cold outside, I don't want to, I'm not gonna go to mass.
You know what I should do instead? I should go to Walmart or something like that, right?
So we'll talk more about that when we get to the actual decalogue and the
commandment about honoring the Lord and keeping holy the Sabbath. But just as an
example, when it comes to mortal sins, we have to confess
all mortal sins that we know of. And mortal sins involve grave matter, they involve full knowledge,
and free consent of the will. And so that's the piece. We are obliged to reveal all of those sins
that we know. And I love how the Council of Trent states this. It says, when Christ's faithful,
strive to confess all the sins that they can remember The undoubtedly place all of them before the divine mercy for pardon
But those who failed to do so and knowingly withhold some place nothing before the divine goodness for the remission through the mediation of the priest
That's important for us to understand because the temptation is okay. I'm going to confess these sins, but ah, that's an embarrassing sin
I'm not gonna say that one all confess these sins, but that one over there. I'm gonna to confess these sins, but ah, that's an embarrassing sin. I'm not going to say that one. I'll confess these sins, but that one over there I'm going to hold on to.
What the church is saying here is if I confess all these other mortal sins, but I knowingly withhold
even one, ultimately I'm really placing nothing before God's mercy. I'm not forgiven essentially
of any of them. Why? Because if I'm going to go Why because if I'm gonna go back home
I have to go back home like really if remember the reference the parable of the prodigal son the other day
The son returns to the father. He doesn't kind of keep a place in this far-off land and say I'm gonna go back over there
He returns to his father fully
He lives in his father's house
And so if we're going to come back home, we have to actually come back home. If we're gonna return to the father,
we have to actually return to the father.
And I have to reveal all the sins,
all the mortal sins that I'm aware of.
We have to do all of them,
or else I'm revealing none of them.
Now, if I didn't knowingly withhold,
but I just accidentally forgot
that I meant to confess this sin, that sin,
and the other sin, but I forgot the second one, all the sins are forgiven. Yet, when I go to confess this sin, that sin, and the other sin, but I forgot the second one.
All the sins are forgiven. Yet, when I go to confession, the next time I should bring that sin and say, oh father, by the way, I forgot to mention this sin in my last confession.
Because there's a huge difference, right? One is I'm withholding this. I'm not
letting God have access to it. The other one is I simply forgot that.
And one is I'm hardening my heart. God, I what you want but I don't care what I want. The other is God
I know what you want and I want to do it all but I'm weak. I'm forgetful. I
sometimes don't do it perfectly and God makes up for our weakness. He makes up
for our lack but he can't or he won't. He won't un-harden a hardened heart. He
won't force his way in. Does that make sense? Hope that makes sense
Okay, a couple last things before we move on paragraph 14 58 has this beautiful quote by st Augustine and I love this whoever confesses his sins is already working with God
God indicts your sins if you also indict them you're joined with God and I love this he uses these terms man and sinner
He says man and sinner are so to speak two realities. When you hear man, that's what God has made. When you hear sinner, that's what man
himself has made. So destroy what you have made so that God may save what he has made. I love that.
It's incredible. So beautiful. The last thing here is satisfaction. We recognize, we've mentioned
this in the intro, that whenever I have sinned against my neighbor, I must do what is possible in order to repair the harm.
So the examples they give here in 1459, if I've stolen something,
returned stolen goods, if I've hurt the reputation of someone,
restore the reputation at best I can.
If someone's been injured to pay compensation for the injuries that I've given to them.
And that's, that's simple justice.
In fact, the Catechism says simple justice requires that much. So keep that in mind. I'm not going above and beyond
if I take something from someone, if I injure someone and I pay them back or
try to make restitution. That's not above and beyond. That is simple justice. At
the same time my sin always injures myself. My sin always weakens my own soul
as well as my relationship with God and other people
Therefore I have to do something to restore that now keep this in mind absolution takes away all sins. Yes
But there's always the consequence of sin. We all we all have to endure the consequence
Sometimes that consequence is outside of ourselves
So yeah, I said that really cruel and mean thing to my friend. And now I may be forgiven, but there's a consequence there.
I can say, oh, oh friend, I went to confession.
It's okay, I'm forgiven.
Like, okay, but no, no, no.
We have to work to restore what I broke
when I said that cruel thing.
So, absolution takes away the sins,
but there's consequences we experience.
The example that I always like to think of is,
imagine you had a torn ACL or some kind of injury
that no matter how much rehab you do,
it will not heal on its own.
So what do you have to have?
You have to have this invasive surgery.
So you have a torn knee and I have this invasive surgery.
Now my knee is fixed, right?
My knee has, the ACL has been reattached to the knee.
Awesome, great.
So something that I could not do myself
has been done for me, right?
That's like, I go to confession,
and Jesus, by his power, by his grace, he heals me.
He forgives me in a way that I could not do on my own.
At the same time, if you've ever had surgery like this,
you know you can't automatically go back
onto the basketball court or go for a run.
You have to do physical therapy.
Now yes, your knee has been healed.
The surgery has been successful. But in order to be able to run again, in order to be able to jump
again, you have to get strong again. Sin wounds us in such a way that only God's grace can
heal us. That's in the sacrament of reconciliation. But we've also been wounded in such a way
that now I walk with a limp, but now I love with a limp. Let's it like that. And so what we do is what we're given the sacrament of reconciliation
We're given a penance to do and that penance is not meant to be punishment that penance is meant to be remedial
It's meant to strengthen the knee, right?
It's meant to strengthen us so that we can run again so that we can have that relationship
Re-established in us even stronger way than it was before.
Again, absolution takes away the sins.
We're healed.
But oftentimes, we experience the consequences of our sins.
And that's what the penance is for.
And it says here in 1460 that the penance the confessor imposes must take into account
the penitent's personal situation and must seek his spiritual good.
It goes on to say, it must correspond as far as possible with the gravity and nature of the sins committed. And so yes that's
that's the ideal and a lot of times we know that the real is not always that.
For example, maybe you go to confession and you confess some big deal sin that
you didn't realize is a big deal sin and the priest says okay three our fathers
and then the next time you go to confession and you confess something
that's much more minor you maybe you're confessing your venial sins and he says
okay three our fathers like wait a second that doesn't really correspond
with the the severity or the seriousness of the first set of sins and versus the
second set of sins ultimately the priest ought to take into account the personal
situation and seek the spiritual good it should correspond as far as possible
with the gravity and nature of the sins committed.
So you might have, you know, someone comes and they confess something along the lines of
something that has wounded their own trust in the Lord, something like that. Or maybe they come and they bring
sins of pride
to confession.
It would make sense to say, okay, I want you, I would like you to pray the litany of humility.
That makes sense, right?
Because if I'm confessing pride, well, how about this?
Grow in humility.
If it's a matter of, yeah, I've been really short tempered
with my family members.
Appendance could be, I would like you,
before the end of the day, as far as possible,
to say three kind things to your family members.
Something like that, right?
I'm just making this up as I'm going along
But it should correspond as far as possible with the gravity and nature of sins because right if I've had knee surgery
The physical therapist is not gonna work on my elbow. They're gonna work on the knee
If I've been wounded in the area of of lust then my penance should work on the area of love
lust, then my penance should work on the area of love. If I've been wounded in the area of anger,
and I've acted out in anger,
then my penance should consist of maybe patience, right?
Does that make sense?
That's the goal.
Again, the way it actually shakes out in real life
isn't always that way.
Sometimes us priests are less than creative
when it comes to our penances,
and sometimes it's just, you know,
what we're trying to do is take into account
the fact that here's a person,
they are asking for God's mercy.
I don't wanna add any extra burden to them.
Instead, I just want them to be able to be free.
For example, when I mentioned the other day,
when I went to confession and the priest said,
okay, your penance, he gave me my penance,
it was super easy.
And his penance he took on himself was fasting for 30 days. He was communicating to me, I want you to trust
in the Lord's mercy more than I want you to maybe fool yourself into thinking
you're earning his mercy. Right? Sometimes we can be convinced of like I have a
really hard penance then yeah I'm doing my best to earn this and if the priest
has a sense of all the penitent here is trying to earn forgiveness
Maybe they'll say actually what I want you to do is I'm simply you know, pray one Hail Mary
you're like wait, I need something harder like well, I
think you have a tendency to
Devalue God's mercy and overvalue your work
If that's the case
Maybe an easier lighter penance will be the kind
of thing that pierces the heart more to learn how to trust in God's freely
given grace and trust less my own ability to kind of quote-unquote earn
that grace because we can't earn grace. Does that make sense? Anyways, this is
this is the point of paragraph 1460 and it says the satisfaction we make for our
sins is not ours
as though we're done without Christ.
We can do nothing ourselves.
We do it all with Jesus.
Even our physical therapy, we do with Jesus.
Wow, you guys, today, another long day.
When you get me started on confession, you guys,
I don't even know when to stop
because it is an incredible sacrament
and I want everyone to know not only the overarching,
the heart of confession, but also the nuts and bolts.
So the next time you go to confession,
you and I can experience just absolute grace, freedom,
no fear, and be able to lay down every one of our sins
before our heavenly Father, Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit,
who loves you and loves me so much.
I am praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name's Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.