The
Minister of Confession
From the September
2001 "Messenger"
For many months now, this space has been devoted to a discussion
of the sacrament of confession. We have looked at it from various
points of view. In this final installment, we will consider this
most important question: "Who administers the sacrament of confession?"
The apparent answer is of course "the priest." After all, the priest
is the one to whom we make the confession, right? He is the one
who gives us absolution. He is the one who offers us words of counsel
or imposes a penance, correct? If this was your answer and you did
not immediately qualify it, you would flunk your course in Orthodox sacramental
theology.
The traditional Roman Catholic theology of the priesthood emphasized that
at ordination, God gives a new priest the "power" to effect the sacraments.
Thus, for instance, in the case of the eucharist, the priest receives
the "power" to change bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ.
In the case of confession, the priest is granted the authority to forgive
sins. This is based on the words of Jesus recorded in the Gospel
of John: "Whoever's sins you remit, they are remitted to them, and whoever's
sins you retain, they are retained" (John 20:23). Certainly,
this verse seems to demonstrate the very thing that Roman Catholic theology
asserts: that Christ has delegated the authority to forgive sins (first
to the apostles, and through them to their successors, priests and bishops).
The Orthodox Church views this matter in a different way. Listen
to the exhortations the priest says to the penitent in the Greek text
of the confession service. Before the penitent makes his confession,
"My brother, inasmuch as you have come to God and to me, be not ashamed,
for you speak NOT TO ME, BUT TO GOD, before whom you stand." And
then after the penitent has made his confession, "My spiritual child,
who has confessed to my humble self, I, humble and a sinner, have NOT
power on earth to forgive sins, but God alone . . ." and then the text
goes on to quote John 20:23 (Emphasis mine).
This shows that the Orthodox Church does not view the priest as the minister
of confession. The confession is made TO GOD, and GOD alone grants
forgiveness. If this is true, then what is the role of the priest?
In the Orthodox view, it is God who effects all the sacraments through
Christ in the Holy Spirit. In fact, Christ exercises his ministry
to the Church through the ministry of the priesthood. Thus, Christ
rules the church and exercises his teaching ministry through the bishops.
He presides at the eucharist through the celebrant of the Liturgy.
He absolves and remits sins through the absolution of the priest.
He joins the couple through the blessing of the priest in marriage.
In every case, it is not the priest exercising an autonomous power he
has received from God, but Christ exercising his ministry through the
priest. It is a critical difference. The priest is but
the visible icon of Christ who works invisibly in his Church.
In confession, this means we are acknowledging our sins to God, not to
the priest. One does not "confess to the priest." One confesses
to God in the presence of the priest. "Why go to confession at all,
then?" some may ask. "Why not just confess to God in private?"
While we have discussed this previously, in this context, the answer is
"because Christ exercises his power of forgiveness through the ministry
of the priest." Because He has formed the Church as Christ's body,
God interacts with us through the words, actions, physical things, and
living touch of others, not alone in isolation from others.
It is Christ himself, then, that is the minister of confession. This fact
is all-important for how we approach the sacrament. We are to approach
it in a Christ-centered way. Things such as the person of our priest,
what he is going to think, whether he is going to forgive us, should not
be our primary concerns. When we approach confession, we are headed to
an encounter with Jesus Christ, and our hearts and minds should be oriented
toward that.
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RECOMMENDED READING:
The
Forgotten Medicine: The Mystery of Repentance
by Archimandrite Seraphim Aleksiev
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Confession:
A Series of Lectures on the Mystery of Repentance
by Metropolitan Anthony
(paper, $7.95)
If
We Confess Our Sins
by Fr. Thomas Hopko
(paper, $3.95)
A
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by the Antiochian Archdiocese of North America
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