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Confession
Confession
Confession
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Confession

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In this second edition of her profound book on confession, which theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar calls ""one of her most central works"", Adrienne von Speyr discusses the moral and practical aspects of this sacrament in great depth. The most complete spiritual treatise on confession ever written, the book covers conversion, scruples, contrition, spiritual direction, laxity, frequency of confession, confessions of religious and lay people, and even confessions of saints. 

The most intriguing element in von Speyr's understanding of confession, fully developed in this volume, is its trinitarian and christological basis. The Cross is the archetypal confession, and Christian sacramental confession is thus an imitation of Christ in the strict sense. Confession examines the enormous fruitfulness of this dogmatic basis from many perspectives, giving a wealth of suggestions that both the theological expert and the layman will find very helpful. Its practical applicability to one's own confession emerges from every page.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 13, 2017
ISBN9781681497600
Confession
Author

Adrienne von Speyr

Adrienne von Speyr (1902–1967) was a Swiss medical doctor, a convert to Catholicism, a mystic, and an author of more than sixty books on spirituality and theology. She collaborated closely with theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar, her confessor for twenty-seven years, and together they founded the Community of Saint John. Among her most important works are Handmaid of the Lord, Man before God, Confession, and her commentaries on the Gospel of Saint John.

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    Confession - Adrienne von Speyr

    FOREWORD

    Some years ago I had an experience with the sacrament of penance that I will never forget. It was a Saturday morning, and my parish was celebrating the first confessions of our second graders. As the children confessed their sins, their parents waited and prayed in the church. The parents seemed to be staring intently at their son or daughter, and the looks on their faces were unlike ones I had noticed in years past. No doubt, part of the reason for their staring was the shock that their children were that old all of a sudden. There was more, though. There seemed to be a look of longing in the faces of the mothers and fathers. It was as if I could see in parent after parent a desire to be there, in that seat, talking to a priest, having the chance to begin all over again, to start anew. Statistically, after all, scores of adults in the Church, for whatever reason, do not avail themselves of this great gift of mercy and are weighed down with guilt and fear.

    One child came and, as is common, had written his confession on a piece of paper. I do not remember what he confessed, but I certainly remember what happened next. When he finished, I asked if I could have the paper upon which he had written his sins. He handed it to me, and I began to tear it up into small pieces. As soon as I began to do this, the boy began to cry, and he said in a tone that was full of relief and joy, Wow! He understood what had just happened in this sacrament. God had forgiven him, removed his guilt, given him the chance to begin again. And this was a second grader!

    The following Sunday, I shared this story with the parish during Mass. Sure enough, as I had hoped and prayed, a good number of people who had been away from confession found their way into the confessional. One person had not been to confession in quite some time. When I asked her what had moved her to come back after all these years, she said, I wanted to see my paper torn up.

    The amazing truth, though, is that the Lord God had desired to tear up her sins even more than she had. Over and over again in the Scriptures, God reveals this surprising reality: he loves to forgive, he loves to show mercy.  ‘Come now, let us reason together, says the Lord: though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall become like wool’  (Is 1:18). Who is a God like you, pardoning iniquity and passing over transgression for the remnant of his inheritance? He does not retain his anger for ever because he delights in mercy (Mic 7:18). The scribes and Pharisees complained about Jesus, This man receives sinners and eats with them (Lk 15:2).

    I have been a priest for more than twenty years, and for ten of them I resisted going to confession. I think it is important for lay people to know that priests struggle with the same issues everyone else does: fear, pride, embarrassment, and more. The evil one tries to isolate us and to make us feel as though we are all alone, the only one burdened by some particular sin. Adrienne von Speyr helped me more than anyone else to know that there is not only a communion of saints in the Church but a communion of sinners. I am not alone in my weaknesses, she showed me, and I therefore have no need to be afraid of confession.

    I first came across von Speyr when I was in the seminary in the early 1990s. Few writers have impacted me the way she has. A friend of mine gave me a copy of John: The Birth of the Church, and from page one I was hooked. The Passion of Jesus has always been central to my prayer, and I had never come across anyone who had such insights into those moments in Jesus’ life and who propelled me to prayer the way she did. Shortly after I finished John, I bought a copy of Confession, and it similarly made a significant impact on me. I still have that first copy, and it is dog-eared, underlined, and highlighted to no end. I still use it every year in RCIA when it comes time to teach on this great gift that Jesus left to the Church on the day he rose from the dead.

    There are countless passages in Confession that have made a lasting impact on me, but by far the most powerful is this one:

    The sinner lives more or less in a state of sin; he does not really believe he can break with sin, but he feels its burdens and yearns—at least in certain moments—to be rid of it. . . . Confession catches the sinner in his fall away from God. All the sacraments do this in their own way and, in so doing, reveal something of the essence of the Church as a whole, namely, that she can be the means and the path of conversion. Confession, however, does this to an especially high degree and is thus a particularly clear symbol for the essence of the Church. It makes visible the fact that the Church turns to all sinners. Communion, accessible as it is to the purified, would have been too exclusive by itself and too alarming for sinners. I as a sinner know that I taint the communion of saints. I have been baptized, but I do not live according to the rule of baptism. I have been confirmed, but I am no apostle of Christ. I do attend Mass, but it remains incomprehensible to me. The sermon is either too sublime or too flaccid for me; I cannot relate to it. I recognize all the Church’s efforts on my behalf; she encourages, consoles, and admonishes me, but it does me no good. I have a great deal of experience with myself, and I know what I can and cannot do. Saints are shown to me, but I am simply not one. I live in sin, and as a sinner I can always have the last word with the Church. But if I am told that the confessional is reserved for sinners, then I know that here finally is a place for me; it is precisely I who am meant. The pew there was made especially for me (106-7).

    Whether you go to confession frequently or have been away for many years, I pray that this book will profoundly change your life. Whatever your struggles, you are not alone. God does indeed love to forgive and to show mercy; he loves to tear up our sins and to drown them in the Precious Blood he so lovingly poured out on the Cross for us; he loves to welcome us home and to give us all the chance to begin again. Give thanks to the Lord for he is good! His mercy endures for ever! (Ps 136:1).

    Father John Riccardo

    January 5, 2017

    EDITOR’S FOREWORD

    A glance at all her previous publications clearly shows that Adrienne von Speyr’s book on confession is one of her most central works. Not only the great commentary on John, but also the book on prayer, that on Mary, that on the Passion in Matthew, indeed all her books revolve around the act and attitude of confession, around the personal and ecclesial-sacramental encounter between sinner and God, around that total openness that is the prerequisite for all blessing, mission, and prayer.

    The new element in the author’s understanding of confession—an element fully developed in this volume—is its trinitarian and particularly its christological basis. The Cross (and with it the entire Incarnation of the Son) is the archetypal confession, and Christian sacramental confession thus is imitation of Christ in the strict sense. The present volume examines the enormous fruitfulness of this dogmatic basis from many perspectives. The author gives us less a closed system than a wealth of suggestions that both the theological expert and the layman will want to pursue.

    This trinitarian-christological basis of necessity broadly discloses the ecclesial dimension. Here the author encounters the contemporary dogmatic and historical discussion, to which her own fundamental ideas enable her to contribute in a fruitful and original way. Her brief concluding chapter concerning one particular crux theologorum—the confession of the saints—shows how well-placed her accents are from the very beginning. Considered in the light of her exposition, this problem no longer causes any embarrassment whatever. In two places the editor has pointed out that the actual development of the author’s ideas concerning both the confessional attitude of the saints and the infinitely diverse manifestations of this attitude within the Church can be found in another work.¹ Similarly, the relationship between baptism and confession—a relationship not treated here—will find expression elsewhere.

    The quality of the present volume is also manifested in its dual character: speculative and profound, on the one hand, practical and simple, on the other. Its practical aspect, its applicability to one’s own confession, emerges from every page.

    It is fashionable today to speak of a sacrament of penance instead of confession. In a certain superficial historical sense this may be correct to the extent that in the first centuries confession was present in Christian consciousness primarily under the aspect of penance. However, everyone knows that in reality this was only an initial seed and not the full-grown plant. Indeed, it was a seed that scarcely suggested the dogmatic basis just mentioned, a basis whose center is expressed by confession (Augustine’s confessio, to admit or confess). Thus there is no real reason to dispense with the traditional word.

    Hans Urs von Balthasar

    Editor

    1. INTRODUCTION: THE SEARCH

    FOR CONFESSION

    In all events that are not inevitable and in whose course freedom and inclination can intervene, a person usually searches for a solution or a way out and often for a reason or cause as well—though the way out usually suggests itself more readily than the cause. He tries to find out what he could do to improve his situation, to have a more satisfying existence and enjoy more success. Only when this success fails to materialize according to his wish does he look for the causes behind the failure, and it is in this search that he first encounters the question concerning the state of his own life. He tries to understand his situation and to justify it, and in doing so he may have to recognize that circumstances are stronger than he and that he can do nothing to change his condition because he must struggle with forces more powerful than he. Yet it is precisely when he justifies himself and concludes that he is innocent that his deeper discomfort—the feeling of a hidden guilt—begins.

    Generally he is not able to perform this analysis of his fate on his own. He needs and seeks dialogue, not so much to listen to what the other person has to say—and that person is rarely able to explain his situation to him adequately—as to have the opportunity to express properly what is bothering him. Perhaps he seeks also—and even above all—to allow his own words to strengthen his opinion, as if what is expressed acquired a kind of final correctness by means of some mysterious power of formulation, or as if he were saved by the process of self-expression, or as if his own condition were outlined and stabilized by the words he simultaneously speaks and hears. Even if these words in and of themselves do not change his condition, they at least offer that peculiar kind of relief inherent in order and in the necessity of this is the way things are.

    For many people, this self-expression through discussion is so important as a rescue device that they sink into a certain hopelessness once it has been employed. Discussion was their last hope, and its failure proves that they can expect absolutely nothing. Thus, after this discussion has taken place under the wrong conditions, they often become even more indifferent than before by completely running aground in resignation.

    Of course, this discussion is often arranged in such a way that, considered objectively, it offers no possibility whatever for success; its outcome is settled in advance because the person speaking, while claiming the desire to change his condition, does not really want to change anything at all. He chooses his partner in such a way that the partner cannot really contribute effectively; his role is merely to nod and to offer mute confirmation. If the partner is chosen in such a way that he is not really permitted to express his own opinion and can only passively accept what is said—if for no other reason than that the speaker has carefully selected what is to be confided and, therefore, the image conveyed simply does not correspond to reality—then any discussion naturally remains unsuccessful. Nevertheless, there are people who have perhaps confided in a neighbor or in some other peer and who then suddenly turn to someone they consider to be of higher rank: to the physician, for example, who is set apart because of his knowledge, his position, and his habit of dealing with people. The physician’s office is probably the place where most discussion of this sort takes place. What is said to the physician, however, is usually quite one-sided, precisely because only very few of those who speak with him want to hear unexpected advice. Almost all of them want confirmation, and only in the case of the smallest details are they willing to change anything. Indeed, they often only want to use the physician’s advice as a trump card against a third person in order to change that person’s behavior more than their own.

    Most people justify themselves. They like nothing better than to hear someone say, At some point your daughter really ought to see that. . . or, It’s high time your husband. . . . They are grateful for every new weapon offered them in their struggle with their environment, and they interpret their own fate in such a way that one understands: nothing essential can really be changed. Their lives have a kind of necessity. A woman, for example, does not enjoy her husband’s company because she is too tired in the evening. She does not like to go to the movies with him because she does not see well. The same holds true for her shortcomings and errors: they are unavoidable because even as it is she is doing the best she can. Such people stand perched on a teetering, precarious scaffold, and if anyone should shake it even a little, they would plunge to their death. My nerves couldn’t stand another confrontation with my husband. . . . The judgments they make about their surroundings are inevitably false, because they have never gone to the trouble to understand inwardly the lives of others and to share life with them in love. Yet they feel the urge to talk about how badly things are going for them, about how strenuous and difficult their own lives are. They want to be pitied, and they want support precisely in their rejecting attitude toward others. To be sure, they need to express themselves in discussion, but they supply their own norms for this discussion. They speak repeatedly about wanting to talk everything out some time, and they associate this with all sorts of vague expectations of some general improvement in their condition, but they care nothing about real change. Because they subject themselves to no other norm than their own, they feel perfectly free to express their troubles as they see fit without granting their partner any right to interrupt. They speak without first considering what they say and without being seriously responsible for it. Thus, most encounters of this sort are nothing but so much prattle about oneself and about what one believes to be one’s own state of affairs. Talk itself is the most important thing, not responsible dialogue. This is why so many falsely conceived conversations take place and so many people place themselves in the hands of those who are uneducated, incompetent, or unprincipled. The result is perhaps a vague relief, but one that in no way corresponds to real change or alteration.

    If one were to outline for such people the contours of real confession, with the preparation and interior insight that it requires in order to give rise to genuine guidance, either they would see in confession a mere variation of what they call discussion, or they would be mortally terrified at the prospect of seeing themselves as they really are. After all, this would mean subjecting their entire being to a norm from which an unrelenting and unpredictable challenge might issue. What they call dialogue remains in a sphere external to their own being, and even if the necessity of which they speak is an interior affair, during dialogue it slides to the periphery. Thus this necessity remains unexamined as regards both its source and its content. Their loneliness is one with their incapacity for genuine expression in dialogue.

    Anyone who deals with the problems of others as a profession and who in addition treats these problems as something interesting will certainly find a clientele. He may possess simply the art of listening and can elicit trust just because of that, so that people flock to him and tell him the most incredible stories. For them consolation and success are already contained in the time spent on them. They are elated that they were received and were permitted to express themselves. Above and beyond this, there are methods and techniques such as those of psychoanalysis that, in the interest of help and relief, reach back to something already present in the person and construct a whole out of the inevitable echo. These methods reveal the life of the instincts and erotic impulses in their more or less conscious expressions, in order to interpret the patient’s entire behavior from this perspective and to lend it a significance issuing completely from his impulses, but which leaves behind in the patient the feeling that he has been understood in a completely new fashion. Because this kind of treatment lasts a long time, the patient feels genuinely uplifted for a time; and if the treatment coincides with his more acute difficulties, he will later believe that it helped him in an effective and lasting fashion. People released from treatment as healed are often those to whom something about the most primitive things has been explained, and explained in such a way that in the future they will refer back to this explanation whenever conflicts arise. At the same time, however, they have become blind to anything that does not fit into the scheme of impulsive or instinctive factors. Rather than opening up the richness and fullness of the real world to them, this self-expression abbreviates and explains away everything that does not fit into the rigid method of analysis. Not every method or technique has to be as narrow as that of classical psychoanalysis, and there are many ways in which one may try to help people. One can guide them to a more socially oriented attitude, or one can disclose aspects of existence previously hidden to them. In the final analysis, however, all these techniques remain human techniques, prescriptions someone has invented, to be applied in a more or less flexible or rigid fashion to as many cases as possible. They are things invented by human beings, and as such they necessarily can view, comprehend, and cure only a very limited side of the human Thou. This would hold equally true of a technique that expressly made use of religious factors, such as prayer, as methodological aids.

    Ultimately, only the Creator of the human soul will be able to treat it so that it becomes the soul he needs. Only he can heal it, and he does this in ways that only he knows and discloses and prescribes for healing. Other relationships between those who lead and those who are led are based no doubt on need. But the decisive way of God—confession—is based on obedience: more specifically, on the obedience to God both of the person led and of the person leading. A person may very well feel a need to confess, but if he actually confesses, he does so in obedience to God. Even less does the confessor listen to someone else’s sins out of some need; he does it primarily and exclusively in obedience to God. God himself has decisively pointed out the locus where he intends to practice psychoanalysis on sinners: the locus of the Cross and of confession established after the Cross. It is a central act of obedience to God to set forth on this path, the path he has pointed out as the only correct one and only really healing one.

    This does not mean that every conversation concerning one’s own spiritual affairs conducted outside confession and the office of the Church is useless or harmful. But if the need for this conversation arises in the right place and is acted upon properly, that conversation will lead—in the long or short run, directly or by indirect paths—to the act of confession. Of course, peripheral matters can be dealt with quite adequately by means of peripheral techniques.

    If a person—in however primitive a fashion—comprehends himself as standing before God, and if he knows that he, like Adam, was created by God and redeemed by Christ and that Christ opens for him the way to the Father and the doors of heaven, then between the two poles of his existence, birth and death, where he unconditionally feels himself to be a sinner, he will expect confession with a kind of necessity. He will expect that God offers him the possibility to return again and again to a center that God himself points out and makes accessible. Every person understands in some fashion that things can’t go on as they are. From this angle of vision, he encounters the question of how things might go on and, perhaps, of how things ought to go on considered from God’s perspective. How has God pictured his life, not only as a whole but at this moment? Does God have any particular expectation that he could and should fulfill in a particular way suggested by God himself? He feels perhaps that if he can rely only on his own freedom, or only on other men who live in the same kind of freedom as he, he cannot do justice to God’s expectation. He senses that to talk something out according to his own or someone else’s formula and to burden someone else with the problem is not enough if he wants to find his way back to that most profound correctness, the straight line connecting his birth and death. Everything he may accomplish outside confession in the way of self-expression and discussion may indeed offer momentary relief; but even the most simple person will see that this moment of relief remains merely one moment among others in life and that it is necessary to comprehend all these moments as a unity.

    Let us assume you are my friend, and I say to you, I can’t go on like this. We discuss the situation together; perhaps we discover where I got off the track, and perhaps we even refer to my childhood. What we find will help me to make a new start. In every discussion of this sort, however, the individual is viewed as an isolated person, and it does not become clear that he lives in a community both of saints and sinners. Only God knows the laws both of the community of saints and of the community of sinners. In confession I am, of course, this individual sinner, but I am simultaneously a part of humanity, one of its fallen members. Thus conceptual factors are completely different in confession from what they are in analysis. They are both personal and social; indeed, they comprise a totality that draws into focus the world as a whole, its relationship to God, and the first and last things, even if this larger context only falls into our field of vision momentarily and is experienced only indirectly. And since the situation is different, so also are the means of healing. The truth of God is involved, not the truth of man or the truth of his soul, his existence, or the structure of his deeper being, but decisively the truth of God. None of the human techniques takes this divine truth seriously; at most they save it for the hour of death, and they do not help a man to become the kind of person he will need to be in that hour.

    As long as aid for the human being is offered by other human beings and is mobile within the human sphere, it can operate only with human means. Everything approaching a person from external sources can be considered only as accidental and external and be supplied with a positive or negative label; the unity between interior and exterior, however, cannot be effected. The psychological session can offer me only modes of behavior applicable to the present, which themselves can and must change under altered conditions. Confession, on the other hand, brings a person face to face with his divine destiny and places him directly within it—within that which is final and ultimate.

    As long as a person is not confessing, he feels free to speak or keep silent about whatever he wishes. What he then hates in confession is not the humbling experience of revealing himself and not the fact that he is a sinner—he already knows that somehow—but the necessity of capitulating before and within total confession, the fact that the freedom of selection has been withdrawn and that the only choice remaining is to reveal everything or nothing. He is sick as a whole person and must be healed as such, and not eclectically. That is the first humbling experience. The second is that he is only one of many and has to accept the same conditions as do the others, even external conditions such as having to appear at the confessional at an appointed hour: a kind of marked condition, the elimination of all external differentiation—the factory owner and the watchman, the lady and her cook, all on equal footing. Precisely when one confesses that which is most intimate, one no longer has a choice or selection, is put on a level with all other sinners, and is merely one penitent in the line of other sinners. The peculiarities of my particular case, which made it seem so interesting to me and which I would so gladly have explained to the listener, do not matter at all any more. Confession [Beichten] is above all precisely that: a confession [Bekenntnis] not only of my sins but also a confession to God and to God’s precepts and institutions, indeed to his Church, with her own weakness and her myriad ambiguous, even disturbing, aspects.

    The act of speaking with someone about my life does not oblige me further. Afterward, I can experience a certain feeling of gratitude or of awkwardness toward the person who has listened to me, but I remain the free person who can detach himself again. Confession is not an individual act in

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