Showing posts with label Confession. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Confession. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

QUOTATION: Confession

Fulton J. Sheen
Let those who say that the confessional was instituted by a priest try sitting in the stuffy confessional boxes of our churches for five or six hours on Saturdays and on the eves of the feast days and of the First Fridays, listening to the routine misgivings and failings of human nature, and he will know it is the most trying of all the priest’s labors—yet sweet because he knows and feels that he is carrying on the blessed ministrations Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

--Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, Peace of Soul, 1949

Monday, April 25, 2016

QUOTATION: Confession

Mother Teresa of Calcutta
We called it penance, but really it is a sacrament of love, a sacrament of forgiveness. That is why it should not be a place of talking for long hours about our difficulties. It is a place where I allow Jesus to take away from me everything that divides, that destroys.

--Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Where There is Love, There is God, Brian Kolodiejchuk, M.C., Ed.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

QUOTATION:Guilt

Pope Benedict XVI
Guilt must not be allowed to fester in the silence of the soul, poisoning it from within. It needs to be confessed. Through confession we bring it into the light, we place it within Christ’s purifying love. In confession, the Lord washes our soiled feet over and over again and prepares us for table fellowship with him.

--Pope Benedict XVI

Saturday, September 12, 2015

QUOTATION: Guide to Confession

St. Peter Julian Eymard

1. Tell your sins in all simplicity, confessing them as you know them and are affected by them at the moment.

2. Accuse yourself with propriety, in becoming words, through respect for the priest and for yourself. Enter into no detail upon the way in which you committed the sin. The way falls not under the law of accusation. It is even prohibited when there is question of sins against chastity. Tell the nature of sins of thought without recounting them in detail, without explaining them, which is never obligatory. Mention your sins of words, but without repeating the words. Be satisfied with mentioning their species, namely, against charity, or authority, or chastity. As to sins of act, tell the nature of the sin, its grievousness. In sins of omission, state what duty you have omitted.

3. Accuse yourself with humility, as a guilty man who tells his fault to Him who already knows it better than he does himself, but who wishes by making him repeat it to test his sincerity and repentance. Let your humility consist in seeing and telling your faults truthfully, and not exaggerating them. Exaggeration is often the fruit either of sloth which does not want the trouble of examining, or of tepidity which clothes itself with false contrition.

--St. Peter Julian Eymard

Friday, May 22, 2015

QUOTATION: Confessing Venial Sins

St. Peter Julian Eymard
It is, however, as says the Council of Trent, a laudable and salutary custom to confess all the venial sins that we remember. But what I wish is that you do not go too much into detail, be not too punctilious in your accusations. God does not exact so rigorous an examen. It is that rigor which exposes you to the loss of liberty and peace of mind, of sweet and gentle piety of heart.

--St. Peter Julian Eymard

Friday, May 8, 2015

QUOTATION: The Futility of Putting Off Repentance

St. Peter Julian Eymard
Men have not enough horror for sin, and when they commit it, they have not sufficient courage to do penance for it as they should. They  hope, and they say: " When I get sick, I will go to confession. I will make a good act of contrition, and secure my salvation that way. " No, no! Illusion! Our Lord has promised to come to us like a thief. He will laugh at us, and frustrate all our plans.

--St. Peter Julian Eymard

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

QUOTATION: Confession

St. Philip Neri
When we go to confession, we should accuse ourselves of our worst sins first, and of those things which we are most ashamed of, because by this means we put the devil to greater confusion, and reap more fruit from our confession.

--St. Philip Neri

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

QUOTATION: Regular Confession

Pope Benedict XVI
It is very helpful to confess with a certain regularity. It is true our sins are always the same; but we clean our homes, our rooms, at least once a week even if the dirt is always the same, in order to live in cleanliness, in order to start again. Otherwise, the dirt might not be seen, but it builds up.

--Pope Benedict XVI

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

QUOTATION: Confession

St. Faustina Kowalska
My daughter, just as you prepare in My presence, so also you make your confession before Me. The person of the priest is, for Me, only a screen. Never analyse what sort of a priest it is that I am making use of; open your soul in confession as you would to Me, and I will fill it with My light.

--Apparition of Jesus Christ to St. Faustina Kowalska

Sunday, October 20, 2013

QUOTATION: Confession Requires Humility

St. Faustina Kowalska
A soul does not benefit from the sacrament of confession if it is not humble. Pride keeps it in darkness. The soul neither knows how, nor is it willing, to probe with precision the depths of its own misery. It puts on a mask and avoids everything that might bring it recovery.

--St. Faustina Kowalska

Sunday, October 13, 2013

QUOTATION: Confession

Pope Francis
The confessional is not a torture chamber, but the place in which the Lord’s mercy motivates us to do better.

--Pope Francis

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

QUOTATION: Prayer before the Examination of Conscience

St. Alphonsus LiguoriMother of my God, who art so charitable to sinners that desire to repent, assist me by thy intercession. My guardian angel, who hast been a spectator of all my crimes, help me to discover the sins which I have committed against my God. All ye saints of heaven, pray for me, that I may bring forth fruits of penance. Amen.

--St. Alphonsus Liguori, The Holy Eucharist

Thursday, July 11, 2013

QUOTATION: The Devil's Shaming

St. John Bosco
The usual snare with which the devil catches the young is to fill them with shame when they are about to confess their sins. When he pushes them to commit sins, he removes all shame, as if there were nothing wrong with it, but when they are going to confession, he returns that shame magnified and tries to convince them that the priest will be shocked by their sins and will no longer think well of them. Thus the devil tries to drive souls to the brink of eternal damnation. Oh, how many lads does Satan steal from God – sometimes forever – by this trick.

--St. John Bosco

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

QUOTATION: Charity Begins with Oneself

St. John of GodHave charity first towards our own souls, cleansing them by confession and penance; then charity towards our neighbors and our brethren, wishing them that which we desire ourselves.

--St. John of God

Sunday, December 9, 2012

QUOTATION: Severe Self-Judgement

There are, again, some who think that it is penitence to abstain from the heavenly sacraments. These are too cruel judges of themselves, who prescribe a penalty for themselves but refuse the remedy, who ought to be mourning over their self-imposed penalty, because it deprives them of heavenly grace.

--St. Ambrose of Milan, On Repentance, Book 2

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

QUOTATION: Confession

In failing to confess, Lord, I would only hide You from myself, not myself from You.

--Saint Augustine

Friday, July 29, 2011

QUOTATION: Confession

He who conceals a grave sin in confession is completely in the devil's hands.

--St. Philip Neri

Sunday, February 13, 2011

QUOTATION: Penance

I must say that we Christians, even in recent times, have often avoided the word ‘penance,’ which seemed too harsh to us. Now, under the attacks of the world that speaks to us of our sins, we see that being able to do penance is a grace and we see how it is necessary to do penance, that is, to recognize what is mistaken in our life, to open oneself to forgiveness, to prepare oneself for forgiveness, to allow oneself to be transformed. The pain of penance, that is to say of purification and of transformation, this pain is grace, because it is renewal, and it is the work of Divine Mercy.


-- Pope Benedict XVI

Saturday, December 25, 2010

QUOTATION: Confession

There are many souls stretched out on a psychoanalytic couch today who would be far better off if they brought their conscience to the confessional box.

--Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Peace of Soul