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Taking Sin Seriously – Nic Rowan

For most Catholics in late medieval England, confession was an annual affair undertaken during Lent. Lines were long, and priests and penitents alike were impatient to get it over with. “Pastoral realism therefore demanded that the confession be kept within manageable dimensions,” wrote the Irish historian Eamon Duffy in 1992. “In a time-honoured formula the penitent was to be brief, be brutal, be gone.”

James M. O’Toole, a church historian at Boston College, finds that well into the 20th century, American Catholics held to that same formula. Though they confessed more frequently than their 14th-century counterparts, they were encouraged to be just as brief and brutal—to think of themselves as accuser, prosecutor, and witness in their own two-minute trials, while the priest, acting as mediator for God, played judge. Confession was a serious matter, and for a long time, O’Toole argues in a new book titled For I Have Sinned, the Rite of Penance stood “at the center of what it meant to be an American Catholic.” 

Then, in the 1970s, confession collapsed. 

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