
The Forgotten Medicine 
The Orthodox Church identifies confession
with a kiss of Christ! Catherine Doherty,
whose cause for canonization has been introduced
in the Church, once wrote that when her mother
used to send her to confession, she would
tell her, "Catherine, it's time for
you to go to confession and be kissed by
Jesus."
"My mother very gently and simply explained
it. I had committed a fault and knew God
wouldn't like them so I sort of ran towards
him, and sitting in his lap and putting my
arms around his neck, I would kiss him -
like I did my father - and tell him how sorry
I was for having done something he didn't
like. In my imagination, Christ hugged me
and said something like: 'That's all right,
little girl. I know it's not easy to always
do the right thing.' Then he would kiss me
and bless me and say, 'now go and play...'
Beautiful. We do stupid things. We sin. We
harm ourselves and others and his only response?
A kiss! "His lips touch ours, and fire
and flame enter our hearts and cleanse them."
It is heartbreaking to witness that while
the secular world is discovering 'confession'
we Christians are frequenting this sacrament
less and less. This is most under-appreciated
and underutilized sacrament in the Catholic
Church. On the contrary, in the secular world
'confession' is a fast expanding phenomenon.
Fee-based phone services and internet sites
allow customers to record their confessions
namelessly - anything from admissions of
trivial theft to adultery and even murder.
After the first year of business, one such
Confession Line, reportedly made 17 million
dollars!
Perhaps it is time to return to sacramental
confession on a more frequent basis. Confessing
our sins is even good for the body, because
what wrecks our inner psyche is concealing
things from others. The Church is a good
mother and provides a sacrament that not
only gives us the opportunity to admit our
sins and speak about them to someone, but
she also goes a step forward and in Jesus
Christ gives us forgiveness, a chance to
start again.
Some do not approach confession because they
claim their sins are too serious. They perhaps
forget that "The Doctor is all powerful,
and the Medicine given by Him is all-powerful."
Our capacity for sinning is finite but God's
mercy is infinite! The un-confessed sin leaves
an incurable wound on the soul. The confessed
sin opens the heart of God that is filled
to capacity with compassion
Others argue that there is no point in going
to confession, if one knows one is going
to sin again. Weird reasoning. We do wash
our clothes even if we know we are going
to dirty them again. We put gas in our car
even if we know that we are going to empty
the gas tank again. God understands our weakness
and through frequent confession we acquire
a desire to desist from sinning. Never underestimate
the power of the sacrament.
Conversion is not a once-in-a-lifetime moment
but an ongoing process that brings us ever
closer to the holiness of God. A celebration
of mercy.
Perhaps the real problem is that we have
lost the sense of sin. We justify our adulteries,
abortions, gossip, cohabitating, grumbling,
cursing…Basically we think we are ok persons.
The story goes that the Prussian king Frederick
the Great was once touring a prison. The
inmates fell on their knees before him to
declare their innocence - except for one
man, who remained quiet. Frederick called
to him, "Why are you here?" "Robbery,
Your Majesty," was the reply. "And
are you guilty?" "Yes, I did it."
Accordingly the king sent for the jailer
and ordered him to release the thief "because
otherwise he will corrupt all these splendid
innocent people who live in it."
Sin is the wound. Repentance is the medicine!
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
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