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I took his advice. I sought a recommendation from my rector, who said, "I know just the person for you," and he pointed me to the great priest who is still my confessor. I was open to his suggestion, but knowing the priest in question, I wondered how vulnerable and exposed I would feel in the confessional, to reveal my brokenness to someone I so admired. We debated whether it would be better for me to choose a confessor who knew me or whether I might be less inhibited by a priest I did not know. There is safety and comfort, after all, in anonymity. After much debating back and forth, I decided that I wanted my confessor to know me, so that he could offer me counsel and guidance over the long haul that would speak to my unique situation, my own set of virtues and foibles. If confession was supposed to be a regular spiritual discipline, shouldn't my guide know my patterns of sin and misguidedness?
So, like many adolescents of a bygone age, I prepared for my first confession, which took place on 17 December 2010. I obviously cannot reveal what was spoken in that space of sacred trust between confessor and penitent, but suffice it to say, I arrived with a very long list of sins and trespasses. In the end, I prioritized and focused on the ones I thought were the most grievous. We talked about them; the priest offered me spiritual advice; and I recited the psalm he assigned to me as penance, or rather, as nourishment. The fascinating thing is that my confessor is so well practiced in the art of hearing confessions that he always seems to know the psalm, canticle, or reading that will be most useful to me to engage in that state of brokenness. I find to my amazement that the teaching of the particular psalm sticks to me for weeks afterward, marinating in my mind and heart as I seek to lead a better life. I am grateful that my confessor has come to know me, because I seem to return to the confessional with the same set of sins and struggles that separate me from God and my neighbor. Thanks to his help, I have come to recognize the sinful patterns in my thinking, feeling, and behavior, which has improved my mindfulness and discipline. In this way, confession complements the work I do with my spiritual director.
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I now go to confession about four times a year, although I used to go monthly, which I think is a much better schedule, matching the regular grounding I get in spiritual direction. Perhaps that should be one outcome of my Lenten preparation this year. Another should be to teach the faithful about the theology and benefits of the sacrament of reconciliation. And a third is to encourage each other as priests to embrace this sacrament by hearing each others' confessions and by developing mentoring and apprenticeship relationships between seasoned confessors and priests inexperienced in this role. So, to those priests of an earlier generation: we are eager to learn from you. Teach us. We are ready, for the harvest is great, but the laborers are few.
Prayers for a holy and transformative Lent.
Ethan+