By Fr. Tom Washburn, OFM
The Boston Pilot, Feb. 26, 2010
I would love to have t-shirts made up that I could hand out as people leave the confessional proclaiming the same joyful sentiment -- today, I am sin free! This young girl was able to proclaim something that I think many of us miss when it comes to this sacrament -- that it is a sacrament of joy and a sacrament of freedom. One of the challenges in our modern times is that too often we have turned Reconciliation in our own minds from this great moment of rejoicing into an experience of the Divine Courtroom. The modern construct views us as entering a courtroom (the confessional), guilty of a crime (sin), standing before the judge (the priest) and placing ourselves at the mercy of the court. Our greatest hope is to receive a light sentence.
This isn’t the image that God intends. The image we get over and over again in Scripture is an image of joy and freedom. As we hear in John’s Gospel, “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him.” (John 3.17) It is the same with the parable of the Lost Sheep, the Woman Caught in Adultery, the Prodigal Son, and so on -- these are images of freedom from our sins and the joy that comes from unity again with our God. “Today, we get to be sin free!”
Read the rest here: Today, I get to be sin free! Published in the 2/26/2010 edition of The Pilot