July 10, 2016
Luke 7.36-8.3
Luke 7.36-8.3
+ It has been a long, difficult
violent week in the world. But, to lighten things a bit, this past week, our
Senior Warden, Cathy McMullen, posted a wonderful little photo on Facebook.
Under the heading “This busy priest
doesn’t have time for your long-winded confessions” was a photo of a sign that
read:
“Confessions today…will be until
exactly 5:30 pm. There is only one priest available for confession
today. Make your confession direct to the point and confess only your sins
and offenses. No need to explain why you did it. Thank you very much.”
I loved it! But it did seem a bit legalistic, shall we
say. And there was an interesting conversation that ensued, in which people
said they were glad we were “Protestant” and didn’t need to make
confession. I won’t get into all that “Protestant”
talk this morning, though some of you know where I stand on that.
But, actually, we as Episcopalians
do have an opportunity for confession. And, I guess, according to the responses
in that Facebook posting, so do Lutherans, though I never ever heard of it in
the years I was a Lutheran, nor have any of my immediate Lutheran relatives.
But, for us, yes, we Episcopalians do
have confession. And some of you have taken advantage of it over the years. On
a regular basis. If you doubt this fact
that Confession is a valid aspect of being Episcopalian—and no doubt some of you
are this morning—I invite you to take a quick perusal of your Book of Common
Prayer. It’s right there on page 447. The
service for “The Reconciliation of a Penitent” is a service very few of us here
this morning has probably ever taken advantage of. And that’s all right. It’s
not all that big of a deal. But it is an
important service and it is one that certainly deserves our attention, even if
we have no desire to take advantage of that service.
Confession in the Episcopal Church
is often described in this way:
“All can, some should, no one must.”
And it’s nice to take a look at it
at a time other than Lent, when we are almost overwhelmed with talk of sin and
forgiveness. The service of Reconciliation
is a service in which a person seeking to ask forgiveness of whatever
shortcomings they have goes to a priest (and in the Episcopal Church only a
priest can grant absolution) and having prayerfully and thoughtfully shared
these sins, received words of comfort and counsel and then is given absolution
by the priest. It really is just like
Confession is in the Roman Catholic Church, though for us we don’t go into a
little cubicle and whisper our sins through a screen to a priest. So, on those occasions when we describe the
Episcopal Church as “Catholic lite,” and we get the inevitable question of
whether or not we have “Confession,” we can say yes, we do, but then quickly
add that it’s not a requirement.
I think few of us want to take advantage of this service, but, occasionally, we sometimes do find the need. And, as I said, it is not a requirement for any of us, though it is a very vital and, at times, helpful service
I think few of us want to take advantage of this service, but, occasionally, we sometimes do find the need. And, as I said, it is not a requirement for any of us, though it is a very vital and, at times, helpful service
Not a lot of people know that I take
advantage of it on a fairly regular basis. Actually, I hadn’t for a couple of
years, because the clergy person I regularly confessed to had made themselves
unavailable. And then, a few weeks ago,
I had a situation arise in which I desperately needed to partake of confession.
Before you start letting your minds
race with unsavory thoughts about why I needed confession, it was nothing
scandalous. It was simply an unpleasant situation with some members of my
family in which I lost my cool and allowed myself to get a bit angry and say a
few things I later regretted. This was not to my mother, I also want to make
clear as well. But I ended up finding a
new clergy person who is actually a wonderful confessor. And after the rite, I really felt so much
better. There really is something very positive and good about being open and
honest about one’s shortcomings, about sharing those shortcomings with someone
else, about getting some practical and helpful council and advice and then
hearing from that person that I am forgiven for the wrongs I have done.
For us, we find Confession best summarized
on page 446 in our Prayer Book:
“The ministry of reconciliation, which has been committed by Christ to his Church, is exercised through the care each Christian has for others, through the common prayer of Christians assembled for public worship, and through the priesthood of Christ and his ministers declaring absolution.”
So, as we’ve just heard, we realize that Confession is not something the Church and bunch of male priests invented. It was something commended to us by Jesus, who knew full well how important it was for us to confess and to hear –actually hear—the words of forgiveness.
As a priest, one of the most important responsibilities I have has always been to be a confessor. On that night that I was ordained, as part of the ordination service, the Bishop declared to me that among my responsibilities as a priest was “to declare God’s forgiveness to penitent sinners…” Now, that may sound like some “special” power we priests have.
“The ministry of reconciliation, which has been committed by Christ to his Church, is exercised through the care each Christian has for others, through the common prayer of Christians assembled for public worship, and through the priesthood of Christ and his ministers declaring absolution.”
So, as we’ve just heard, we realize that Confession is not something the Church and bunch of male priests invented. It was something commended to us by Jesus, who knew full well how important it was for us to confess and to hear –actually hear—the words of forgiveness.
As a priest, one of the most important responsibilities I have has always been to be a confessor. On that night that I was ordained, as part of the ordination service, the Bishop declared to me that among my responsibilities as a priest was “to declare God’s forgiveness to penitent sinners…” Now, that may sound like some “special” power we priests have.
But, more than anything, what a
priest does when she or he declare God’s forgiveness is just that:
We declare God’s forgiveness.
Nothing magical. We just state a fact. But, it IS an important fact. It is important to hear. It is important to
hear that we are forgiven. It is important to hear, when we fall short in any
way in our lives, to hear those words, “You are forgiven.”
Hearing those words, I can say, is a
truly powerful experience. There is a
sense of a weight being lifted. There is
a sense that something which was bound up has been loosened and released. To
hear those words of pardon and forgiveness are important to us because we sometimes
do need to hear that we are forgiven.
Without those words of forgiveness,
we may continue on in our self-pitying and our self-loathing. Guilt can weigh heavily on us. Those words of pardon and absolution restore
us. They help us rise above the wrongs
we have done so we can live fully and completely.
When we hear Jesus say to that penitent woman in today’s Gospel, “Your sins are forgiven…Your faith has saved you. Go in peace,” we can almost feel the weight being lifted from her. Whatever shortcomings that woman brought with her into that place, we know are gone from her as she leaves. This is the power of confession.
When we hear Jesus say to that penitent woman in today’s Gospel, “Your sins are forgiven…Your faith has saved you. Go in peace,” we can almost feel the weight being lifted from her. Whatever shortcomings that woman brought with her into that place, we know are gone from her as she leaves. This is the power of confession.
At the end of “Form Two” of
Confession in the Prayer Book, the service is concluded when the priest,
echoing this very Gospel reading, says,
“Now there is rejoicing in heaven; for you were lost, and are found; you were dead, and are now alive in Christ Jesus our Lord. Go in peace. The Lord has put away all your sins.”
To which the penitent replies, “Thanks be to God.”
Those are words that cause us to continue on, despite whatever we have done. The forgiveness of our sins transforms us and changes us. It frees us from whatever might hold us down.
“Now there is rejoicing in heaven; for you were lost, and are found; you were dead, and are now alive in Christ Jesus our Lord. Go in peace. The Lord has put away all your sins.”
To which the penitent replies, “Thanks be to God.”
Those are words that cause us to continue on, despite whatever we have done. The forgiveness of our sins transforms us and changes us. It frees us from whatever might hold us down.
So, let us together strive, when we
have done wrong, to seek those words of forgiveness. Some of us might actually
wish to seek out the Sacrament of Reconciliation as found in the Book of Common
Prayer. I encourage you to do so. It is good to have a regular
confessor—to take time to confess your faults and failings to some one. It is good psychologically and it is good
spiritually. Certainly, as your priest,
I am always available for this service, but any priest will do. Any priest can
grant absolution.
But you do not have to be a priest
to remind people of God’s
forgiveness and love. All
of us can carry those words
of forgiveness from Jesus close to our hearts when we do fail and we do fall
short in our relationships, and when others wrong us.
Let us humble ourselves, but let’s
not despair in those moments. Let us
come before God and seek that forgiveness that lifts us up from our tears. Let us unloose from within us whatever is
holding us captive so that we may be truly free to love God and love others
with no regrets, no recriminations, no undue guilt.
Jesus’ words to each of us are “go in peace.” That peace we find in this forgiveness is truly a liberating peace. It is a peace that destroys not only what others do to us, but we do to ourselves and to others, which sometimes can be much worse. That peace we find in reconciliation truly does liberate. So, let us take the peace offered to us by Jesus and go forth in that peace of God. And doing so, let us rejoice in the freedom that peace gives us. Amen.
Jesus’ words to each of us are “go in peace.” That peace we find in this forgiveness is truly a liberating peace. It is a peace that destroys not only what others do to us, but we do to ourselves and to others, which sometimes can be much worse. That peace we find in reconciliation truly does liberate. So, let us take the peace offered to us by Jesus and go forth in that peace of God. And doing so, let us rejoice in the freedom that peace gives us. Amen.
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