Annual
Confessions
If Easter were prolonged to Pentecost, you
would not go to Confession until Pentecost, or if the latter did not come
around for ten years, you would go to Confession only every ten years. Indeed,
if the Church did not give you a commandment about it, you would not go to
Confession until death. What do you think of that, my dear brethren? Does it
not mean that you have neither regret for having offended God, Who requires you
to go to Confession, nor love for God, Who requires you to make your Easter
Communion?
Ah you will say to
me, that's all very well. We do not make our Easter duty without knowing why.
Ah! You know
nothing at all about it! You do it from habit, to be able to say you have made
your Easter duty, or, if you would prefer to speak the truth, you would say
that you have added a new sin to your old ones. It is not, therefore, either
love of God or regret for having offended Him which makes you go to Confession
or make your Easter duty, or even the desire to lead a more Christian life. And
here is the proof of it: if you loved God, would you consent to commit sin with
such ease, and even with so much enjoyment? If you had a horror of sin, as you
should have, would you be able to keep it for a whole year on your conscience?
If you had a real desire to live a more Christian life, would we not see at
least some little change in your way of living?
No, my dear
brethren, I do not wish to talk to you today about those unfortunate people who
tell only half their sins through fear of not making their Easter duty or of
being refused Absolution -- perhaps even for the sake of covering up their
shameful lives with the veil of virtue and who, in this state, approach the
altar and are going to complete their dreadful work by handing over their God
to the Devil and precipitating their sacrilegious souls into Hell.
No, I dare to hope
that this does not concern you, but I will continue, nevertheless, to tell you
that going to Confession only once a year is not something about which you
should feel any peace or satisfaction.
By
Saint John Vianney
Photo
taken from Wikimedia Commons
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