One of the greatest blessings and
gifts that flows out of the loving and pierced Sacred Heart of Our Lord and
savior Jesus Christ is His mercy expressed most deeply through the Sacrament of
Confession, also called Sacrament of Pardon, Reconciliation, Penance as well as
Sacrament of God’s Mercy.
Words that produce inexplicable
peace, joy, consolation and hope are the words that the Catholic priest
expresses in the words of absolution at the end of the Sacrament of Mercy: “And I absolve you of your sins: in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. My son, your sins
are forgiven; go in peace!” The
interior knowledge that all of my sins have been totally and completely erased,
obliterated, wiped out and forgiven by the Blood that Jesus shed for me on
Calvary produces a joy and peace that goes beyond the ability that human words
can express!
The two most important and sublime
gestures that a Catholic can do on earth are the following: to receive with
faith, devotion and burning love the Sacrament of the most Holy Eucharist---
the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of the Lord Jesus Christ; then the second
is to confess one’s sins to the priest (who represents Jesus the Healer and
Friend) and receive sacramental absolution and forgiveness of sins. This being the case, we should strive with
all of the energy and fiber of our being to improve our interior disposition to
receive these sacraments better every time we do receive them. In a word, each reception of both of
these sacraments should be better and more fervent then the prior
reception! That should be our ideal and
constant goal! May God assist us!
Therefore, this brief article is on
the Sacrament of God’s mercy with the goal of enhancing within us a greater
appreciation for this great Sacrament which flows from the loving Heart of
Jesus pierced with the lance from which flowed His Precious Blood and Water
that first Good Friday. (Jn. 19:34)
Therefore, this article expresses an
original perspective and dimension in this sense that it is totally and purely
Biblical. Actually ten Biblical passages
will be cited manifesting ten different fruits, effects, blessings, and the
overall spiritual reality of this great Sacrament of the mercy and love of
Jesus the Redeemer.
It is our hope, especially in this
Year of God’s infinite mercy, that everybody will be moved to have a limitless
trust in the greatest of all of the attributes or virtues burning in the Heart
of the loving Redeemer and have confidence to make a good Sacramental
Confession. The Lord is waiting for you with love.
The greatest sinners can become the
greatest saints if they simply trust in the mercy of Jesus. That which wounds
most the Sacred Heart of Jesus, even more than sin itself, is the lack of trust
in His mercy. Saint Paul encourages us with these words: “Where sin abounds the
mercy of God abounds all the more.”(Romans 5:20) Saint Augustine reiterates the same concept
with his famous Happy fault statement. God allows evil in the world only so that He
can bring even greater good from that evil. Adam and Eve committed the Original
Sin—the Happy fault! But as a consequence of this so called Happy fault God the Father sent the
loving and merciful Redeemer Jesus the Lord to save us! The Incarnation, life,
death and Resurrection of Jesus far surpasses the fall of our first parents.
Therefore as the Prophet Isaiah
reminds us: “Even though your sins be as
red as scarlet, they will become as white as the snow.”(Is. 1:18) Bring your moral misery to the merciful Heart
of the Lord and you will be spiritually transformed into a totally new creature
through the merciful grace of the Redeemer who forgives us through the
Sacrament of Confession, the Sacrament of His mercy! Following we present ten
Biblical passages related to the Sacrament of Confession but each in a unique
way. Pray over these; meditate on them;
trust in God’s mercy and them make the best confession in your life so as to
experience: “Taste and see the goodness of the Lord.”(Psalm 34:8)
1.
PRODIGAL SON Luke 15:11-32—Read and pray over the Parable of the Prodigal Son before going to
Confession. Beg for the grace to understand what God really wants you to learn
from this spiritual masterpiece. Every time you read and meditate upon this
spiritual gem and masterpiece God will enrich with new and deeper insights.
However, in all times and places the central message is that the Father is God,
the Father who is full of love, mercy and compassion to all those who trust
Him. Saint Pope John Paul II wrote and entire encyclical on this one Parable: Dives in Misericordia. Nov. 30. 1980.
Read it and meditate it!
2.
PSALM 51--- Pray before and after going to confession Psalm 51. This is the heart-felt Act of Contrition that
King David prayed after he committed adultery with Bathsheba and then murdered
Urias the innocent man. Beg for the
grace to have true repentance for your sins. True sorrow, true and heartfelt
contrition, is essential to making a good confession. David humbly admits that
his sin is his own doing and blames nobody except himself. May we own up to our
own sins and blame only ourselves always, like David, trusting in God’s
infinite mercy!
3.
JOHN 20:21-23. Read and pray over the
Institution of the Sacrament of Confession that first Easter night when the Apostles
were in the Upper Room and Jesus breathed on them the Holy Spirit and said: “Receive the Holy Spirit: whose sins you
shall forgive they shall be forgiven; whose sins you shall bind shall be held
bound.” Be exceedingly thankful for
this great gift bestowed upon the Church and its members the same day we
celebrate His victorious triumph over death, the day of His Resurrection from
the dead. In fact, every time we go to confession we personally celebrate the
death to sin in our own person and rise to the new life of grace! Every
confession is a Paschal-Easter experience! The Lord Jesus is risen in us,
Alleluia!
4.
JOHN 21: 15-19. Read and meditate this conversation between Jesus and Peter. After the
Apostles have made the miraculous catch of fish Jesus walks with Peter along
the shore and asks him three times if Peter really loves Him. Peter is repairing for the three times that he
denied Jesus three times shortly after the Last Supper. Pray for the grace to
truly be repentant for your sins and make a perfect act of
contrition—Contrition of love! Love
covers a multitude of sins. You become the repentant Peter; tell the Lord you
are truly sorry for your sins and how much you really love the Lord.
5.
LK. 15:1-7. The Good Shepherd leaves the 99
to pursue the one lost sheep. Recognize that you are the lost sheep and you
have great value in God’s eyes. Your soul has infinite value in the eyes of
God. You were redeemed not by the blood of lambs or goats, nor bought back by
gold or silver, but redeemed and ransomed by the Blood of the Lamb of God who
takes away the sins of the world. (I Pet. 1:18-19)
6.
Jn. 10. Jesus is the Good Shepherd that
goes after the lost sheep. However, once you have experienced the loving
embrace of Jesus the Good Shepherd then it is up to you to be a Good Shepherd
for the sheep that Jesus has put in your charge. The key for us to be a Good Shepherd is that
we must first be a good sheep of the Good Shepherd, to hear His voice and
follow Him. After we have experienced: Taste
and see the goodness (Ps. 34:8) of the
Lord in Confession, then let us bring others to the loving embrace of the
Good Shepherd!
7.
Luke 23:39-43—Jesus and the Good Thief. In this passage firmly believe that the worst
of all sinners can actually become the greatest of all saints if we simply
trust. JESUS I TRUST IN YOU…JESUS I
TRUST IN YOU…JESUS I TRUST IN YOU.
Venerable Fulton J. Sheen poignantly asserts: “And
the good thief died a thief because He stole heaven.” Proclaim from the
rooftops the infinite mercy of God, even to those who believe that there sin
goes beyond His mercy! A truly inspiring experience is to read the Diary of Mercy in my soul, by Saint
Maria Faustina.
8.
Mt. 8:1-4 HEALING OF THE LEPER. Every Sacrament has a specific
sacramental grace—that of Confession is
HEALING! Jesus came to cure and heal the sick, all of the sick that
trusted in Him. We have to see ourselves
in the leper; sin is leprosy and all of us are sinners. As Jesus touched and healed the leper, so He
can touch and heal me if I allow Him.” ”Though
your sins be as scarlet, I will make them as white as the snow.” Saint
Damien who worked with the lepers on the island of Molokai in Hawaii suffered
most because he had no priest to heal his own spiritual leprosy of sin. Thank
God that you have access to priests who can heal your spiritual leprosy through
Confession!
9.
GALATIANS 5:16-26. Saint Paul contrasts those who
live according to the flesh and those who live according to the spirit. Those
who live according to the flesh will have a harvest of corruption and death;
those who live according to the spirit will experience the fruits of the spirit
and experience eternal life. Confession helps us to put to death the works of
the flesh and to be led by the Holy Spirit. May we form the habit of frequent
confession, conquer the desires of the flesh and conquer them and live the true
freedom of the sons and daughters of God.
10. Jn 11. LAZARUS EXPERICIENCE.
Saint Augustine compares Confession to Lazarus. Lazarus was dead and
buried for four days and Jesus came and brought him back to life. What happens spiritually
in Confession is the same: we leave our old life of sin, our spiritual death in
the Confessional (the bandages—symbolically our sins) and we rise to new life
in the spirit. We pray and we hope that these Biblical passages will shed new
light on the precious gem, diamond, gift that the merciful Jesus has given to
you and to me and serve as a jumping board to launch us into the confessional
so as to experience the infinite ocean of God’s mercy. “Give thanks to the Lord for He is good, for His mercy endures
forever.” (Psalm 118)