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The
Sacrament of Repentance developed early in the Church's history in the
time of the persecutions of the 3rd and 4th Centuries, when many people,
giving in to the threats of the persecutors, apostasized and fell away
from the Church. Apostasy was considered to be a very serious sin; many
held the extreme position that such could not be received back into the
Church in their lifetime, while others held that those who had lapsed
should be re-baptized - that is, their sins should be washed away by a
second baptism. Moderation, in the course of time, prevailed and a penitential
discipline - the Sacrament of Repentance - developed, taking on the meaning
of Second Baptism; for this reason it was eventually numbered among the
Sacraments of the Church.
After the end of the persecutions, the Sacrament of Repentance remained,
so that in the event of sins committed after Baptism, forgiveness could
be obtained and the sinner reconciled to the Church. This Sacrament acts
also as a cure for the healing of a soul, since the Priest also confers
spiritual advice to the Penitent.
Since all sin is not only against God, but also against one's neighbor,
confession and the penitential discipline in the early Church were a community
affair and took place publically before the whole local Christian community.
In time, however, Confession has developed into a private action between
the Priest and the Penitent, and the Priest is forbidden to reveal to
any third party what he has learned in Confession.
In ancient times, before the beginning of Confession, it was appointed
to read an entire series of Psalms from which Psalm 51 has been preserved
in the present rite, being known as the Penitential Psalm. Then the Priest
reads certain prayers, the first of which recalls King David who repented
before Nathan the Prophet when he had caused the death of Uriah, the husband
of Bathsheba whom David loved. After being rebuked by Nathan, David confessed,
I have sinned against the Lord! Upon hearing David's repentance, Nathan
proclaimed God's forgiveness, The Lord also has put away your sin; you
shall not die (2 Sam. 12:13).
After this, begins the second part of the Sacrament - the Confession itself-before
which the Priest speaks of himself as being "only a witness,"
Christ standing invisibly before the Penitent. The Confession itself consists
of questions put by the Priest to the Penitent regarding his sins, his
attitude towards the Faith, fleshly temptations, thoughts and words. Thoughts
are considered to be the beginning of sin, according to the words of the
Savior, for in speaking of adultery, for example, He says, I say to you,
that every one who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery
with her in his heart (Matt. 5:28). The Sacrament of Confession here aids
in revealing these thoughts and the struggle against them that follows.
After the Confession, the Priest may, if he deems necessary, impose a
penance, but this is not an essential part of the Sacrament and is often
omitted. After this, the Priest lays his epitrachelion (stole) on the
Penitent's head and says the Prayer of Absolution, which differs in the
Russian and Greek practices. In the Greek practice, the Priest says: "Whatever
you have said to my humble person, and whatever you have failed to say,
whether through ignorance or forgetfulness, whatever it may be, may God
forgive you in this world and the next.... Have no further anxiety; go
in peace." The Slavonic formula of absolution, introduced by Peter
Moghila, Metropolitan of Kiev and adopted by the Russian Church in the
18th Century, is as follows: "May Our Lord and Cod, Jesus Christ,
through the grace and bounties of His love towards mankind, forgive you,
my Child [Name] all your transgressions. And I, an unworthy Priest, through
the power given me by Him, forgive and absolve you from all yours sins."
In the ancient Church, not all Priests had the right to hear Confessions;
special Confessors, often experienced Monks, were entrusted with this
responsibility. From the 16th Century, however, it was accepted that every
Priest could be a Confessor once he had reached a mature age. In many
monasteries an experienced Monk who was not even a Priest was often the
Confessor (such is the practice in many places on Mt. Athos), but the
Penitent was always sent to a Priest for the Sacramental Absolution. In
modern times it is also the custom for a baptized person to begin receiving
this Sacrament when he or she reaches the age of moral discernment, usually
around the age of six or seven.
Repentance - the Road to the Kingdom of Heaven
Man
is weak, and thus sins and falls often, again and again falling into the
same pits, driving the soul to utter despair. The urge here is to give
in to one's sinful nature and to cease resisting the powerful forces of
sin. There is, however, an answer to this. A disciple came to a certain
Elder, one day, and said, "Father, I have fallen!" The Elder
answered, "Get up!" Again and again he came to the Elder and
said, "I have fallen!" and the Elder invariably answered, "Get
up!" "Until when must I continue getting up?" the disciple
asked, and the Elder answered, "Until the day when you give up your
soul to God!" Thus, every time when we feel that we have fallen,
the Sacrament of Repentance tells us to get up.
When one wishes to partake of the Sacrament of Repentance, it is good
to consider the meaning of sin and repentance, for sin is what separates
us from God. Sin plunges the soul into darkness and we often lose peace,
joy, and the courage to address ourselves to the Lord God. According to
St. John the Evangelist, If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves,
and the truth is not in us (1 John 1:8), for every man sins and falls
short before the glory of God.
God, Who reads the heart of man, knows not only our everyday affairs,
but also our thoughts and intentions. Everything is open to Him. In response
to sin, Our Lord Jesus Christ says. Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven
is at hand (Matt. 3:2). Thus He expects from us true, heart felt faith
and true, heartfelt repentance. But what does repentance mean and what
kind of repentance is agreeable to God and serves for our salvation?
To repent means to be fully aware of our sins and our iniquities and of
their consequences - of all that is pernicious to man, all that insults
God and excludes us from His love, of all that creates discord in family
life, in society, and of all that disturbs the soul's peace and tranquility.
When we become aware of our sinful state, and consider ourselves at fault
before God, then our heart sorrows and is full of contrition. This heartfelt
contrition is, according to St. Paul, that godly grief [which] produces
a repentance that leads to salvation (2 Cor. 7:10), that is, true repentance.
Tears of contrition are the only means of purifying the soul, so that
it may rise up, become cleansed, luminous, joyful, capable of good deeds
and of attaining perfection.
St. John says that if we confess our sins, [God] is faithful and just,
and will forgive our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness (1 John
1:9). It is not easy, however, to confess, not easy to mourn over one's
iniquities; for each of us has a sense of pride and, sometimes, also a
coarse and stony heart that interferes with the sincerity of our repentance
before God. Prayer, fasting, and mutual forgiveness, however, soften our
hardened hearts and dispose our soul to true repentance. Then, in the
Sacrament of Repentance we can, "without shame or fear," confess
our sins with faith to our Father Confessor, so that nothing vile or unclean
should remain in us that could interfere with our lifelong striving to
attain with all the Saints to the longed - for Kingdom of Heaven. |