PART I
General reflections
The inestimable gift of the Holy Spirit, for the remission of sins,
reaffirmed by the Risen Lord on Easter evening, given generously to the
ministry of the Church for the reconciliation and peace of all the
faithful, finds its realization especially in the Sacraments of Baptism
and Penance. Unfortunately in the common judgment of pastors of souls
and of experts in the pastoral field, the latter sacrament is still
going through a moment of particular difficulties. These are generally
motivated among the faithful by an inadequate and incomplete, if not
distorted, catechetical preparation, which in its turn is directly
related to an unjustified alienation and disappointing lack of esteem on
the part of many pastors. It is not our intention to go into the
diagnosis of the reasons for this estrangement, even if we can assert
with good grounds that generally the indifference and apathy that
surround such an important event of salvation, are due to not knowing it
well, to having misunderstood it, to the decline of faith, and to
mistaken conceptions of sin.
What is even more distressing is to see that when it is a question of
its celebration with subjects who are children or adolescents, things
become worse. A real sea of partial information, deficient and
distorted, restricts on all sides correct understanding and true
celebration of this sacrament. Now there are some people who, judging by
things heard or read, are moved to action along catechetical and
pastoral lines calculated to increase the harm coming from such a state
of affairs, more than to avoid it and to put it right. What is even more
saddening is that not a few among the catechists themselves, who support
the pastoral behaviour in question, move in the uncertain atmosphere
constituted by loss of the true meaning of the sacrament. So the spiral
of confusion is perpetuated and consolidated.
History of confession for children
Everyone knows that the "confession" of children has a
particular history of its own. But let it be quite clear that this
history moves in the sphere of the apostolate, not in that of dogmatic
theology, since for all subjects of the sacrament, fundamentally, the
reality that counts is the same. To have an idea of what we affirm here,
it would be sufficient to glance through the best known and most widely
circulated manuals on pastoral work, both classical and popular manuals.
One may see in them the intertwining of problems—of
moral theology, psychology and didactic pedagogy particularly,
catechesis and even canonical legislation—which
concern the problem of the "confession" of children. It is not
our intention to discuss at length the myriad of objections (but it is a
question only of objections!) which are put forward, at various levels,
to the practice of "confession" for children. These objections
could all be refuted one by one both from a theoretical point of view
and from a practical, pastoral one. As regards the latter sphere, it
would be enough—to go to the heart
of the matter—to put forward the
practice of yesterday and today, characteristic of holy pastors and
educators. It is they who must lay down the law in the attainment and
deepening of the holiness of the Church, which is realized eminently
also with the event of the sacrament of Penance.
It is our intention just to offer ideas for reflection, almost in
scattered order, in order to try to emerge from the "mare
magnum" of sacramental confusion into which the discussion on the
"confession" of children has fallen.
Significant principles
The constitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum Concilium
(SC) contains some very significant principles for our subject.
The first is gradualness in initiation to liturgical
celebrations. The principle is sanctified "ex professo" with
regard to liturgical life and with reference to adults (SC 10);
but it is obvious that if being introduced gradually into understanding
of holy rites and deep participation in them, holds good for adult
persons, already committed on the Christian plane, "a
fortiori" it holds good for those who must be helped to grow and
mature in faith and in its reality.
The second principle refers more directly to pastors of souls. The
latter, aware of their obligations as regards the fulfilment of one of
the main functions delegated to them, must endeavour with zeal and
patience to teach the faithful intelligent and active participation,
both internally and externally, in the liturgy, keeping in mind
the fact that they must lead them to do so non verbo tantum, sed
etiam exemplo (SC 19). In other words, the Christian educator
must be a witness who lives the deep meaning of liturgical reality. The
educator, or the one who forms the liturgical and sacramental climate
in souls, must help the pupil sedulo ac patienter to take
with living and increasing participation the path of sacramental life.
He must nourish in him an originality which challenges the trend of the
environment. He must make him aware that liturgical and sacramental life
is highly stimulating in its requirements and extremely fruitful for the
individual Christian as well as for the structure of the Church in which
he is incorporated. Example must be rooted in deep convictions on the
reality of the sacrament of Penance. In order to possess them and foster
them, the educator and pastor must obtain the knowledge and prudence
necessary for this purpose, especially with prayer, meditation,
aggiornamento and assiduous study, under the guidance of the Magisterium
of the Church (cf. Ordo Paenitentiae, 10).
Relation to the liturgy
To these principle, it must be added that the liturgical celebration,
while it calls for preparation and adequate initiation, introduces, in
its turn, to understanding of the rites and to deep participation in
them (cf. SC 18); a cyclic rhythm occurs, as a result of which
the effort to educate to the liturgy is at at the same time a process of
being educated to the liturgy. It will not be quite useless, however, to
pay attention to the fact that the liturgy, as a wise educator, is not
consciously concerned with educating. It is well aware that an educator
concerned to assume the "tone of an educator", starts out
wrongly from the outset. The liturgy does not climb into the chair
arrayed in a gown and with a haughty expression. It comes naturally to
it to be an educator. This simplicity and naturalness in educating is
forgotten by those who scorn the celebration, postponing it "sine
die" or in any case delaying it, even for futile reasons. The
believer is thus deprived of an irreplaceable aid to instil, and cause
to blossom in practice, confidence in the tender kindness of God,
Creator and Father, who loves us, and who, in his Son, communicates to
us his forgiveness by virtue of the Holy Spirit.
With the celebration of the sacrament of Penance the liturgy also
prepares children: to receive with fruit the gift of love and
forgiveness; to give due worship to God; to put charity into practice
(cf. SC 59), causing the deeper sense of pietas to blossom
in them and nourishing it (cf. SC 107); to cultive compactness
and unity between the attitudes of the body and those of the Spirit (cf.
SC 90). The time of our supernatural development lasts as long as
life does, and throughout our life we need to receive the means to grow
in the way that corresponds best to the gift and to the expectations of
God.
Preparation and celebration
Let no one be under the illusion that the remedies to find again the
real sense of sin and, more fundamentally, to acquire again the living
sentiment of God's presence in the believer's life, can come from
compliance with, and assimilation of, the predominant and permissive
worldly mentality. It will rather be precisely preparation and
celebration of the sacrament of Penance that will root, also in the
person of the child and of the adolescent in formation, clear, awareness
of Christian originality and progressive maturity in bearing witness to
the faith with prophetic courage. The harmonious whole of the constant
capacities of love and good expressed in the responsible behaviour of
the person, is a result that comes from a slow and laborious work of
unification and coordination of his own tendencies and aptitudes,
carried out by the subject. He does this in view of a consistent answer
to the Father, in the concreteness of his own life in Christ,
amalgamated and given drive by the Spirit: and all this in the Church,
with the Church and for the Church.
The earlier the child is helped, in order to start him on his way and
assist him in the formation of his Christian moral personality, the
easier it will be to reach the goal. It is by walking that the paths to
be taken are found. Now the unification of one's own aptitudes and
commitment, in view of a project of good, in order to live a consistent
moral life, is not a fruit only, or primarily, of human effort,
but it is a gift of the Lord. This is equivalent to recalling that the
subject of the sacrament of Penance, the Christian, is a person in whose
existence all the "laws of grace" have already entered and are
active. Their evaluation escapes the control of every science and of
every human yardstick, and their implications in the individual believer
are such that priority must always be attributed to God's action.
It is impossible to understand, therefore, how easily it can be
forgotten that God's action in history takes on concrete shape with
those personal and ecclesial, human and divine, interventions which are
the sacraments; endowed with visible and significant elements and
bestowing invisible realities, fruitful on the operational plane. Nor is
it possible to understand that widespread way of thinking and proposing
that the only ideal subjects of the sacraments are adults, as if
children are not the centre of the love, a concrete love, a love made
visible, a historical and existential love, of the Father. He,
overflowing with Love, in his Son loves all human persons, regardless of
age and capacities, and, if anything, shows preference for the smallest
ones. Before God in his plan of salvation, there are no disabled or
handicapped persons.
The liturgy, the interpreter of this divine pedagogy, testifies to us
that, in all rites and in all times, it considers, spiritually speaking,
the subject of the liturgical celebration always as an adult. Or, if you
prefer: spiritually speaking, for the liturgical celebration we are at
the same time adults and "quasi modo geniti infantes" (cf. 1
Pet 2:2), just because we are always in a position of growth until we
reach eschatological fullness. And here again it is necessary to recall
the methodological principle of gradualness, of which we spoke above.
Then, too, from the psychologico-charismatic point of view, what is
commonly called an adult, could be presented as a "puer centum
annorum...": an adult chronologically, socially, psychologically,
intellectually, but spiritually an infant (incapable of
"speaking"). Likewise, on the contrary, one who is commonly
called a "non-adult", might present himself with such a
spiritual capacity and (if I may use the term) "degree of
grace" as to be very well prepared to understand and comprehend
sacramental reality better and to live it even more deeply. It is a
question in practice of a concrete application of the principle "quidquid
recipitur, ad modum recipientis recipitur" in the life of the
spirit. Augustine would express himself as follows: "Cape per quod
sis capax" (Sermo 216, 15 and elsewhere "Et capias hoc
non a me sed ab illo qui at me fecit et te" (In Joann. Ev.
18, 7).
Need of catechesis
It is not permissible for anyone, therefore, to prevent or delay for
petty reasons, even if dressed up in "scientific" disguise,
the growth towards the capacity of love and good to which the child,
too, must open up. Everyone, in fact, must be concerned to offer each
one, as soon as possible, the greatest possibility of changing for the
better and of improving in the penitential dynamism which is started up
by the baptized person on approaching the sacrament of Penance.
In so saying, we are very far, however, front instrumentalizing the
celebration, as if it can be reduced merely to a methodological,
didactic stage, as if it were a "teacher" who teaches how to
live and were not, on the contrary, life itself. On the contrary, just
because the celebration is life of the Christian's life, in addition to
a thorough preparation about the value of the sacrament, an equally
thorough catechesis is necessary on the importance of a commitment of
life for a constructive response to the Father by means of dedication to
others. Such a catechesis which will help the believer from the tender
age of childhood to emerge from a deep-rooted minimal tradition which,
concerned with observing some norms and with not sinning seriously, has
gradually extinguished all impetus towards real growth in Christ.
Set in community
Mindful of the apostolic teaching: "Let the righteous still do
right, and the holy still be holy" (Rev 22:11), the Liturgy in fact
aims at the individual set in a liturgical community, whether he be a
child or an adult being "educated" (= led out of... towards...
) until he reaches the fullness of Christ (cf. Eph 4:13). It is a
question of forming new generations, beginning as soon as possible, and
in a correct way, to make them feel and live Christian moral life, which
is a life of love, and in love, in continual progression. In these
realities what is important is not age measured chronologically, or
evaluated psychically, or tested intellectually, but the elusive
spiritual life: the life that obeys primarily the "laws of
grace" and not so much the laws of biology or psychology. Since the
action with which God reconciles man to himself, by means of Christ, in
the Spirit, entails an interior rebirth which changes those who benefit
from it into new creatures (cf. 2 Cor 5:17; Gal 6:15), reconciliation
transcends the mere commitment of his will aided by grace. It is a
mystery of participation in divine life, of which the Holy Spirit is the
author.
It would be a manifest sin to oppose his action, which is the supreme
and total norm of life, with the barriers of methodological principles
which, if restricted to the horizon of the so-called
"positive" investigation, are naturally partial and debatable.
And it would be to expose oneself to a responsibility the extent of
which can be evaluated only in terms of loss of the life of grace.
"Science" is a good thing: but only when it is harnessed to
collaboration with Wisdom.
PART II
CONFESSION AND COMMUNION
It is far easier to launch a new idea than to undermine a wrong one
that is widespread. Thus anyone who wished to begin the discussion on
the confession of children or adolescents, starting from inaccurate
ideas as regards the celebration of the sacrament or from wrong ways of
realizing it, would end up by being involved in casuistry...
There is no doubt that many negative factors of different origin
threaten the authenticity of the celebration of the sacrament of Penance
with regard to younger subjects: widespread disappointment with a style
of celebration that is already usual, a diffused and mechanical routine,
an inadequate catechesis that does not help to form a real sense of sin,
a certain apathy of ministers indifferent to their ecclesial mission;
and so on. Added to this is a type of pastoral methodology, which thinks
it must start out from an alleged fact, to arrive subsequently at a
supposed theoretical justification.
This is the method of those who, instead of starting from the
Christian "qualis esse debet", start from man "qualis est".
They therefore fall into a spiral of misunderstandings which conclude in
a precarious and sterile horizontalism which cuts the apostolate off
from its truest outlet.
It happens that such an apostolate, supported by catechetical
methodologies that are unilaterally anthropocentric, does in fact admit,
on the plane of abstract principle, the legitimacy of the so-called
confession "of devotion", but then when it is a question of
concrete application, it twists the meaning. Everyone agrees that in the
sacramental practice of Penance care must be taken to give quality
primacy over quantity, in the sense that every celebration
of the sacrament must be, in the first place, a salvific religious
event, a meeting, realized in the Church, with the love of the Father in
the Son thanks to the Holy Spirit; a paschal event of reconciliation and
conversion, of personal commitment and response to the gift of Trinity
in the struggle against sin. It is a question of the primacy of the deep
reality and operational dynamics of the sacrament of Penance. But this
primacy cannot be considered contrary to the favour to be attributed to
the spreading and practice of the sacrament among younger subjects. All
the more so in that the primacy of quality will be reached only
gradually, precisely through suitable catechesis and with the
irreplaceable help of the frequency of celebration.
Child's natural right
It is not our task here to go into the question whether or not the
child is capable of sinning. It can be solved (let us say incidentally)
by keeping in mind the primacy of the "laws of Grace" without
forgetting the laws of man's bio-psychological growth. It seems to us,
however, that the mass of solutions that have been put forward ("quot
capita, tot sententiae") cannot disregard the elementary fact that
also the Christian child is constitutionally capable of celebrating
fruitfully the ecclesial act of the reconciliation and love of a
merciful God.
Just because of the fact that he is baptized, he has a natural right
to celebrate this Sacrament. Certainly, it is up to the Pastor, in
collaboration with the family, to help the child to enjoy this right,
without postponing it for petty or mistaken reasons. It is up to
catechesis to make the child become aware of this right. To put forward
what we recall here, is already to instil into young minds not so much
the standpoint of a duty, which has sometimes been misunderstood as a
weight, as rather the consciousness that, owing to a merciful gift of
the Trinity, an innate requirement of living in grace belongs to the
Christian. It is to help formation of a Christian conscience that lives
far from sin.
It is not always easy to judge whether it is a question in the child
merely of a venial sin or of a sin of frailty (negative aspect). Now it
is known, even over and above this fact, that in many concrete cases the
practice of the confession of children always constitutes a marvellous
ecclesial test (positive aspect) of the celebration of a sacrament which
can through its efficacy help the subject to turn away from the negative
situation, from the series of habits and inclinations (psychology, too,
testifies to their presence in very young subjects) against which the
Christian of any age or my capacity will always, have to struggle.
Let it be added that the child has a frail psychology. He is, in
fact, afraid of many things; he suffers fears and anxieties that are
sometimes groundless; he is overcome by uncertainties that are often
tormenting; he may often be in the grip of qualms, or think
something is a sin which is not, etc. For all this, too, help to
celebrate the sacrament of penance authentically, is a reality which is
highly beneficial to the individual and therefore to the good of the
Church.
It always remains true, on the other hand, that it is highly
instructive to make people understand that the celebration of this sacrament
is not at all necessarily bound up with cases of really mortal sin,
because, as can be divined, that could foster an adverse judgment of
principle against those who frequent it which would gradually lead to
abandonment of the practice of the sacrament.
It is clear that all our reasoning presupposes both adequate
catechesis of children and the pastoral preparation of the minister for
the correct celebration of the sacrament for these specific subjects. It
would not be just, however, to put forward the lack of these or other
requisites, or wrong practice, to argue absolutely against the
confession of children.
It is likewise clear that, once the instrumentalization of the
sacrament as a mere catechetical phase has been avoided, if the
articulation of the sacramental economy is presented correctly and
precisely so that the specific and distinct aims of Penance and of Holy
Eucharist are understood, there will result thereby an automatic
adaptation also to that law of human psychology which proves the
impossibility of simultaneous concentration on the various aspects and
phases of the Mystery of Christ, which the Christian celebrates in
distinct typical circumstances of his life.
Psychology speaks of the "dimension of attention" with
various specifications regarding the range, the depth, the concentration
both from the global and from the elementaristic point of view.
Well, the celebration of the sacraments of Penance and of the Eucharist
will leave room in order that the child's attention, so much more
unstable and frail than that of the adult, will not stray continually
and so easily. In other words, by obeying the law of the distribution of
the exercise, the phenomenon of the satiety and fatigue of the attention
will be prevented. The child will be helped more quickly in the personal
growth of his personality as a member of the faithful. And also the
well-observed frequency of this sacrament is in accordance with the
psychological law of the cyclicity of learning, as a result of which,
learning refers simultaneously to experiences through which the subject
passes, to his interior or exterior activities, preceding or concomitant
with the action. Hence the subject acts and reacts to the situation,
creating in himself an experience of a unique type, whenever he
celebrates the sacrament as it should be celebrated. The subject, in
fact, learns; consequently the subject is led to change his behaviour in
conformity with what he learns. This happens slowly. The sooner a start
is made, the better. It is certain that the celebration of Penance
nourishes, forms, and perfects the Christian, under the impetus of the
Holy Spirit, up to the fullness of Christ.
Respect for child’s personality
Respect for the personality of the child, which is still in
formation, will lead sacramental practice to consideration of his
concrete possibilities, the originality of his stage of evolution, his
real capacity for interiorization and integration, and the dynamism of
his human and Christian development. What it is important to keep in
mind is precisely the unquestionable fact that the local community is
called upon with all its forces to create the concrete conditions for
the celebration of the sacrament of Penance also for children. The ideal
conditions are a goal at which to strive with might and main. If the
effort to attain it is already going on, the community (among which the
children's parents must have an outstanding role) shows that it is
already on its way to that progressing development which makes up to a
certain extent for the possible immaturity of the subject.
Here there would be indicated broad considerations of a pedagogical
and pastoral type in which we must keep in mind the necessity of
knowledge of the subjects, and of their psyche, with the different
conditionings of environmental-family-scholastic type; etc. It will
therefore be necessary to mobilize in the service of their Christian
education all the educational factors available (family, school,
catechesis, parish life, etc.) and integrate the sacraments as
privileged moments in the span of the whole dynamic process of growth
and development, so that there will be a real correspondence with the
subject's personal capacity. We must be certain of one thing: real
religious possibilities exist at every age and in every subject; and the
celebration of the sacrament of Penance is a propitious and unrepeatable
opportunity which we must not let slip but must (if I may rise the term)
exploit from all points of view.
Personal opinions
Let us consider, finally, in actual fact the practice of preceding
first communion with confession, a practice which has been instilled and
warmly supported by the competent authority even recently.
It is impossible to understand how there are still some people who
wish their own opinion to prevail over the always more objective one of
the competent authority. The latter, in the broad framework of the
methodological lines of the overall apostolate, instils a practice which
has its basis both in psychology and in motivations of a pastoral and
catechetical type as well as in the practice of the great Christian
educators.
These are all convincing arguments which we do not wish to emphasize.
We would like, on the contrary, to add merely a little reflection of the
theologico-liturgical type which will serve to throw further light on
the apostolate.
Starting from the testimony of the whole production of catechetical
type and of pastoral and pedagogical type regarding the necessity of
gradualness in the preparation and in the ritual style of ceremonies for
first confession, we will recall that this practice will be excellent if
it follows the lines of preparation for baptism, the reality and the
salvific significance of which is given new life by the sacrament of
Penance.
There is certainly no question of falling into the error of
understanding Penance as one of the sacraments of what is commonly, but
improperly called Christian initiation, which comprises exclusively the
triad: Baptism-Confirmation-Eucharist.
But it would not be a bad thing if the celebration of the sacrament
of Penance... assumed the tone of a baptismal memorial (let there be no
misunderstanding). The classical course of the lines of force
characteristic of Baptism and common to the sacrament of Penance, would
be reconstituted. Stress would be laid on the fact that both sacraments
are not only for the remission of sins and for the life of grace
(descending dimension), but in the economy of salvation are ordained
even more to worship (ascending dimension), living and celebrating from
specific angles the one great event of the paschal mystery.
It is a question, therefore, of strengthening the relationship of
every sacramental reality with the one and complete act of worship, from
which the repetitions perpetuated in the course of the centuries by the
will of Christ, take force and value. We should deal here with the one
reality of worship present in Christ's paschal mystery as dispensed in
the individual sacraments with special modalities, tonalities, points of
view and stresses. By way of conclusion we will just mention that the
sacrament of Penance also possesses something which is exclusively its
own, that is, the religious renewal of sacraments previously celebrated.
Thus the baptized person who celebrates the sacrament of Penance brings
new life and the splendour of "newness" to the dynamism of
Baptism and prepares more adequately for the celebration of the
Eucharist; he renews, so to speak, the unitary relationship existing
between Baptism (Confirmation) and Eucharist.
Real unitedness
It is well known that, historically, there was a slow process of
transition from the ontological and ritual unity characteristic of the
three above-mentioned sacraments in ancient times to their present
distinct celebration.
From the ritual distinction of celebration with its historical and
pastoral motives, there should be a decisive trend towards recovery of
real unitedness. Such recovery, entrusted on the plane of ideas to
catechesis and on the plane of operation to the apostolate, would find
its practical test in the celebration of the sacrament of Penance
proposed to, and lived by, the child as a meeting with the Risen Christ
who, in the name of the Father, renews him in the life of the Spirit and
causes him to relive Baptism sacramentally in order to lead him to
complete communion with Christ-Church in the Eucharist.
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