Cap'n Nick wrote:Actually, if you're referring to the fathers of The Reformation, the reformers did keep it. However, when it was no longer mandatory it waned in popularity to the point of virtual extinction.
I seem to remember Luther favored keeping it for those who needed it, but did not personally think it was necessary. Of course it's been a few years since I last studied Luther, so I may have that wrong.
Zarm Ishtare wrote:While I won't divulge the details of our conversation(becuase if I'd wanted public confession, I could have waited till a Penance service) But it was nowhere near as dramatic or formal as they make it out to be in the movies. Instead, I went to the private chapel, sat down with the priest, and confessed all of the things which had troubled me for the last several years. He listened, and gave me some solid advice about how to handle things, asked more questions, and then prayed over me (After I asked that it be a sacramental confession). As penance (A ritual which was supposed to show that the one participating was pentient, not supposed to be a punishment like I've always heard it made out to be) He requested that I read Psalm 51 and pray it like a prayer. After all of that (Which took forty minutes or so) It was time to go (I'm living on a military base right now, and they have to change out for different chapel services) and I shook his hand and rode my bike back to my place.
I'm really glad I went. I enjoyed service (even if they don't do alot of contemporary music, alot of the hymns...wow....) And took a small fellowship afterwards. All in all, a very good day(And it wasn't even ruined by the fact that I have to pedal 40 minutes each way on my bike to get there...)
So, I'm plannng on making it my church for the duration of my stay, and enjoy and learn as much as I can. I really can't wait for saturday evening mass though...I'll get to meet the actual priest (the one who I took the Rite with fills in around this area, espcially when other priests get deployed) And aquaint myself with the church as people.
I'm glad you found the experience spiritually rewarding, and I hope that you continue to do so as you look into it. We don't really have public pennance in the Catholic Church. It could be done if the penitent insisted, but he or she would be advised against it. "Pennance Services" are a formal affair where everyone gets together, but the confessions themselves are still private.
I understand some disagree with the idea of confession, so, I'd like to clarify that Catholics don't think that the Priest gets this power on his own say so, but rather believe that Christ gave this authority to his disciples (John 20: 22-23) and it passed down through their successors. So while the priests are the ones to whom the sin is confessed, acting n the person of Christ, the forgiveness comes from God.