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Penance
is administered at the following times:
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Saturday
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3:00 PM to 4:00
PM |
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Monday through Friday
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On request at
the Parish Office during office hours. |
Excerpt
from The Vatican's "Catechism of the Catholic Church" on
Penance
"Those who approach the
sacrament of Penance obtain pardon from God's mercy for the
offense committed against him, and are, at the same time,
reconciled with the Church which they have wounded by their sins
and which by charity, by example, and by prayer labors for their
conversion."
It is called the sacrament of conversion because it makes
sacramentally present Jesus' call to conversion, the first step in
returning to the Father from whom one has strayed by sin.
It is called the sacrament of Penance, since it consecrates the
Christian sinner's personal and ecclesial steps of conversion,
penance, and satisfaction.
It is called the sacrament of confession, since the disclosure or
confession of sins to a priest is an essential element of this
sacrament. In a profound sense it is also a "confession"
- acknowledgment and praise - of the holiness of God and of his
mercy toward sinful man.
It is called the sacrament of forgiveness, since by the priest's
sacramental absolution God grants the penitent "pardon and
peace."
It is called the sacrament of Reconciliation, because it imparts
to the sinner the live of God who reconciles: "Be reconciled
to God." He who lives by God's merciful love is ready to
respond to the Lord's call: "Go; first be reconciled to your
brother."
"You were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and in the Spirit of our
God." One must appreciate the magnitude of the gift God has
given us in the sacraments of Christian initiation in order to
grasp the degree to which sin is excluded for him who has
"put on Christ." But the apostle John also says:
"If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the
truth is not in us." And the Lord himself taught us to pray:
"Forgive us our trespasses," linking our forgiveness of
one another's offenses to the forgiveness of our sins that God
will grant us.
Conversion to Christ, the new birth of Baptism, the gift of the
Holy Spirit and the Body and Blood of Christ received as food have
made us "holy and without blemish," just as the Church
herself, the Bride of Christ, is "holy and without
blemish." Nevertheless the new life received in Christian
initiation has not abolished the frailty and weakness of human
nature, nor the inclination to sin that tradition calls
concupiscence, which remains in the baptized such that with the
help of the grace of Christ they may prove themselves in the
struggle of Christian life. This is the struggle of conversion
directed toward holiness and eternal life to which the Lord never
ceases to call us.
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