CHAPTER X.
God Compels the Church of Rome to Confess the
Abominations of Auricular Confession
THE Priests of Rome resort to various means in order to deceive the
people on the immorality resulting from auricular confession. One of
their favorite stratagems is to quote some disconnected passages from
theologians, recommending caution on the part of the priest, in
questioning his penitents on delicate subjects, should he see or
apprehend any danger for the latter of being shocked by his questions.
True, there are such prudent theologians, who seem to realize more than
others the real danger of the priest in confession. But those wise
counselors resemble very much a father who would allow his child to put
his fingers in the fire, while advising him to be cautious lest he
should burn those fingers. There is just as much wisdom in the one case
as there would be in the other. What would you say of a brutal parent
casting a young, weak and inexperienced boy among wild beasts, with the
foolish and cruel expectation that his prudence might save him from
injury?
Such theologians may be perfectly honest in giving such advice,
although it is anything but wise or reasonable. But those are far from
being honest or true who contend that the Church of Rome, in commanding
everyone to confess all his sins to the priests, has made an exception
in favor of sins against chastity. This is only so much dust thrown in
the eyes of Protestants and ignorant people, to prevent them from seeing
through the frightful mysteries of confession.
When the Council of Lateran decided that every adult, of either sex,
should confess all their sins to a priest, at least once a year, there
was no exceptions made for any special class of sins, not even for those
committed against modesty or purity. And when the Council of Trent
ratified or renewed the previous decision, no exception was made,
either, of the sins in question. They were expected and ordered to be
confessed, as all other sins.
The law of both Councils is still unrepealed and binding for all
sins, without any exception. It is imperative, absolute; and every good
Catholic, man or woman, must submit to it by confessing all his or her
sins, at least once a year.
I have in my hand Butler's Catechism, approved by several bishops of
Quebec. On page 62, it reads, "that all penitents should examine
themselves on the capital sins, and confess them all, without exception,
under penalty of eternal damnation."
The celebrated controversial catechism of Rd. Stephen Keenan,
approved by all the bishops of Ireland, positively says (page 186):
"The penitent must confess all his sins."
Therefore, the young and timid girl, the chaste and modest woman,
must think of shameful deeds and fill their minds with impure ideas, in
order to confess to an unmarried man whatever they may be guilty of,
however repugnant may be to them such confession, or dangerous to the
priest who is bound to hear and even demand it. No one is exempt from
the loathsome, and often polluting task. Both priest and penitent are
required and compelled to go through the fiery ordeal of contamination
and shame. They are bound, on every particular, the one to ask, and the
other to answer, under penalty of eternal damnation.
Such is the rigorous, inflexible law of the Church of Rome with
regard to confession. It is taught not only in works of theology or from
the pulpit, but in prayer-books and various other religious
publications. It is so deeply impressed in the minds of Romanists as to
have become a part of their religion. Such is the law which the priest
himself has to obey, and which puts his penitents at his own discretion.
But there are husbands with a jealous disposition, who would little
fancy the idea of bachelors confessing their wives, if they knew exactly
what questions they have to answer in confession. There are fathers and
mothers who don't like much to see their daughters alone with a man,
behind a curtain, and who would certainly tremble for their honor and
virtue if they knew all the abominable mysteries of confession. It is
necessary, therefore, to keep these people, as much as possible, in
ignorance, and prevent light from reaching that empire of darkness, the
confessional. In that view, confessors are advised to be cautious
"on those matters;" to "broach these questions in a sort
of covert way, and with the greatest reserve." For it is very
desirable "not to shock modesty, neither frighten the penitent nor
grieve her. Sins, however, must be confessed."
Such is the prudent advice given to the confessor on certain
occasions. In the hands or under the command of Liguori, Father Gury,
Scavani, or other casuists, the priest is a sort of general, sent during
the night, to storm a citadel or a strong position, having for order to
operate cautiously, and before daylight. His mission is one of darkness
and violence, and cruelty; above all, it is a mission of supreme
cunning, for when the Pope commands, the priest, as his loyal soldier,
must be ready to obey; but always with a mask or blind before him, to
conceal his object. However, many a time, after the place has been
captured by dint of strategy and secrecy, the poor soldier is left,
badly wounded and completely disabled, on the battle-field. He has paid
dearly for his victory; but the conquered citadel has also received an
injury from which it may never recover. The crafty priest has gained his
point: he has succeeded in persuading his lady penitent that there was
no impropriety, that it was even necessary for them to have a parley on
things that made her blush a few moments before. She is soon so well
convinced, that she would swear that there is nothing wrong in
confession. Truly this is a fulfillment of the words: "Abyssus
abyssum invocat," an abyss calls for another abyss.
Have the Romish theologians—Gury, Scavani, Liguori, etc—ever been
honest enough, in their works on confession, to say that the Most Holy
God could never command or require woman to degrade and pollute herself
and the priest in pouring into the ear of a frail and sinful mortal,
words unfit even for an angel? No; they were very careful not to say so;
for, from that very moment, their shameless lies would have been
exposed; the stupendous, but weak structure of auricular confession,
would fall to the ground, with sad havoc and ruin to its unholders. Men
and women would open their eyes, and see its weakness and fallacy.
"If God," they might say, "can forgive our most grievous
sins against modesty, without confessing them, He can and will certainly
do the same with those of less gravity; therefore there is no necessity
or occasion for us to confess to a priest."
But those shrewd casuists knew too well that, by such frank
declaration, they would soon lose their bold on Catholic populations,
especially on women, by whom, through confession, they rule the world.
They much prefer to keep their grip on benighted minds frightened
consciences, and trembling souls. No wonder, then, that they fully
endorse and confirm the decisions of the councils of Lateran and Trent,
ordering "that all sins must be confessed such as God knows
them." No wonder that they try their best or worst to overcome the
natural repugnance of women for making such confessions, and to conceal
the terrible dangers for the priests in hearing the same.
However, God, in his infinite mercy, and for the sake of truth, has
compelled the Church of Rome to acknowledge the moral dangers and
corrupting tendencies of auricular confession. In His eternal wisdom, He
knew that Roman Catholics would close their ears to whatever might be
said by the disciples of gospel truth, of the demoralising influence of
that institution; that they would even reply with insult and fallacy to
the words of truth kindly addressed to them, just as the Jews of old
returned hatred and insult to the good Saviour who was bringing them the
glad tidings of a free salvation. He knew that Romish devotees, led
astray by their priests, would call the apostles of truth, liars,
seducers, possessed of the devil, as Christ was constantly called a
demoniac, an impostor, and finally put to death by His false accusers.
That great God, as compassionate now as He was then, for the poor
benighted and deluded souls, has wrought a real miracle to open the eyes
of the Roman Catholics, and compel them, as it were, to believe us, when
we say, on His authority, that auricular confession was invented by
Satan to ruin both the priest and his female penitents, for time and
eternity. For, what we would never have dared to say of ourself to the
Roman Catholics with regard to what frequently happens between their
priests and their wives and daughters, either during or after
confession, God has constrained the Church of Rome to acknowledge
herself, in revealing things that would have seemed incredible, had they
come simply from our mouth or our pen. In this, as in other instances,
that apostate Church has unwittingly been the mouth-piece of God for the
accomplishment of His great and merciful ends.
Listen to the questions that the Church of Rome, through her
theologians, puts to every priest after he has heard the confession of
your wives or daughters:
1. "Nonne inter audiendas confessiones quasdam proposui
questiones circa sextum decalogi preoeceptum cum intentione libidinosa?
(Miroir du Clerge, p. 582.)
"While hearing confessions, have I not asked questions on sins
against the sixth (seventh in the Decalogue) commandment, with the
intention of satisfying my evil passions?"
Such is the man, O mothers and daughters, to whom you dare to unbosom
the most secret, as well as the most shameful actions. You kneel down at
his feet and whisper in his ear your most intimate thoughts and desires,
and your most polluting deeds; because your church, by dint of cunning
and sophistry, has succeeded in persuading you that there was no
impropriety or danger in doing so; that the man whom you choose for your
spiritual guide and confident, could never be tempted or tainted by such
foul recitals. But that same Church, through some mysterious providence,
is made to acknowledge, in her own books, her own lies. In spite of
herself, she admits that there is real danger in confession, both for
the woman and for the priest; that willingly or otherwise, and sometimes
both unawares, they lay for each other dangerous snares. The Church of
Rome, as if she had an evil conscience for allowing her priest to hold
such close and secret converse with a woman, on such delicate subjects,
keeps, as it were, a watchful eye on him, while the poor misguided woman
is pouring in his ear the filthy burden of her soul; and as soon as she
is off, questions the priest as to the purity of his motives, the
honesty of his intentions in putting the requisite questions. "Have
you not," she asks him immediately, "under the pretence of
helping that woman in her confession, put to her certain questions
simply in order to gratify your lust, and with the object of satisfying
your evil propensities?"
2. "Nonne munus audiendi confessiones suscepi, aut veregi ex
prava incontinentioe appettentia (Idem, p. 582.) "Have I not
repaired to the confessional and heard confessions with the intention of
gratifying my evil passions? (Miroir du Clerge, p. 582.)
O ye women! who tremble like slaves at the feet of the priests, you
admire the patience and charity of those good (?) priests, who are
willing to spend so many long and tedious hours in hearing the
confession of your secret sins; and you hardly know how to express your
gratitude for so much kindness and charity. But, hush, listen to the
voice of God speaking to the conscience of the priest, through the
Church of Rome!
"Have you not," she asks him, "heard the confession of
women simply to foster or gratify the grovelling passions of your fallen
nature and corrupt heart?"
Please notice, it is not I, or the enemies of your religion, who put
to your priests the above questions; it is God Himself, who, in His pity
and compassion for you, compels your own Church to ask such questions;
that your eyes may be opened, and that you may be rescued from all the
dangerous obscenities and the humiliating and degrading slavery of
auricular confession. It is God's will to deliver you from such bondage
and degradation. In His tender mercies He has provided means to drag you
out of that cesspool, called confession; to break the chains which bind
you to the feet of a miserable and blasphemous sinner called confessor,
who, under the pretence of being able to pardon your sins, usurps the
place of your Saviour and your God! For while you are whispering your
sins in his ear, God says to him through his Church, in tones loud
enough to be heard: "In hearing the confession of these women, are
you not actuated by lust, spurred by evil passions?"
Is this not sufficient to warn you of the danger of auricular
confession? Can you now, with any sense of safety or propriety, come to
that priest, for whom your very confession may be a snare, a cause of
fall or fearful temptation? Can you, with a particle of honor or
modesty, willingly expose yourself to the impure desires of your
confessors? Can you, with any sort of womanly dignity, consent to
entrust that man with your inmost thoughts and desires, your most
humiliating and secret actions, when you know from your own Church's
lips, that that man may not have any higher object in listening to your
confession than a lustful curiosity, or a sinful desire of exciting his
evil passions?
3. "Nonne ex auditis in confessione occasionem sumpsi
poenitentes utriusque sexus ad peccandum sollicitandi?" (Idem,
p. 582.)
"Have I not availed myself of what I heard in confession to
induce my penitents of both sexes to commit sin?"
I would run a great risk of being treated with the utmost contempt,
should I dare to put to your priests such a question. You would very
likely call me a scoundrel, for daring to question the honesty and
purity of such holy men. You would, perhaps, go as far as to contend
that it is utterly impossible for them to be guilty of such sins as are
alluded to in the above question; that never such shameful deeds have
been perpetrated through confession. And you would, maybe, emphatically
deny that your confessor has ever said or done anything that might lead
you to sin or even commit any breach of propriety or modesty. You feel
perfectly safe on that score, and see no danger to apprehend.
Let me tell you, good ladies, that you are altogether too confident,
and thus you are kept in the most fatal delusion. Your own Church,
through the merciful and warning voice of God speaking to the conscience
of your own theologians, tells you that there is a real and imminent
danger, where you fancy yourself in perfect security. You may never have
suspected the danger, but it is there, within the walls of the
confessional; nay, more, it is lurking in your very hearts, and that of
your confessor. He may hitherto have refrained from tempting you; he
may, at least, have kept within the proper limits of outward morality or
decency. But nothing warrants you that he may not be tempted; and
nothing could shield you from his attempts on your virtue, should he
give way to temptation, as cases are not wanting to prove the truth of
my assertion. You are sadly mistaken in a false and dangerous security.
You are, although unawares, on the very brink of a precipice, where so
many have fallen through their blind confidence in their own strength,
or their confessor's prudence and sanctity. Your own Church is very
anxious about your own safety; she trembles for your innocence and
purity. In her fear, she cautions the priest to be watchful over his
wicked passions and human frailty. How dare you pretend to be stronger
and more holy than your confessor is in the mind of your own Church? Why
should you so wilfully imperil your chastity or modesty? Why expose
yourself to danger, when it could be so easily avoided? How can you be
so rash, so devoid of common prudence and modesty as to shamelessly put
yourselves in a position to tempt and be tempted, and thereby incur your
temporal and eternal perdition?
4. "Nonne extra tribunal, vel, in ipso confess
ionis actu, aliuqia dixi aut egi cum Intenticne diabolica has
personas seducendi?" (Idem, idem).
"Have I not, either during or after confession, done or said
certain things with a diabolical intention of seducing my female
patients?"
"What arch enemy of our holy religion is so bold and impious as
to put to our saintly priests such an impudent and insulting
question?" may ask some of our Roman Catholic readers. It is easy
to answer. This great enemy of your religion is no less than a justly
offended God, admonishing and reproving your priests for exposing both
you and themselves to dangerous allurements and seductions. It is His
voice speaking to their consciences, and warning them of the danger and
corruption of auricular confession. It says to them: Beware! for ye
might be tempted, as surely you will be, to do or say something against
honor and purity.
Husbands and fathers! who rightly value the honor of your wives and
daughters more than all treasures, who consider it too precious a boon
to be exposed to the dangers of pollution, and who would prefer to lose
your life a thousand times, than to see those you love most on earth
fall in the snares of the seducer, read once more and ponder what your
Church asks the priest, after he has heard your wife and daughter in
confession: "Have you not, either during or after confession, done
or said something with a diabolical intention of seducing your female
patients?"
If your priest remains deaf to these words addressed to his
conscience, you cannot help giving heed to them and understanding their
full significance. You cannot be easy and fear nothing from that priest
in those close interviews with your wives and daughters, when his
superiors and your own Church tremble for him, and question his purity
and honesty. They see a great danger for both the confessor and his
penitent; for they know that confession has, many a time, been the
pretence of the cause of the most shameful seductions.
If there were no real danger for the chastity of women, in confessing
to a man their most secret sins, do you believe that your popes and
theologians would be so stupid as to acknowledge it, and put to
confessors questions that would be most insulting and out of place,
should there be no occasion for them?
Is it not presumption and folly, on your part, to think that there is
no danger, when the Church of Rome tells you, positively, that there is
danger, and uses the strongest terms in expressing her uneasiness and
apprehension?
Why! your Church sees the most pressing reasons to fear for the honor
of your wives and daughters, as well as for the chastity of her priests;
and still you remain unconcerned, indifferent to the fearful peril to
which they are exposed! Are you like the Jewish people of old, to whom
it was said: "Hear ye indeed, but understand not; and see ye
indeed, but perceive not?" (Isa. vi. 9).
But if you see or suspect the danger you are warned of; if the eye of
your intelligence can fathom the dreadful abyss where the dearest
objects of your heart are in danger of falling, then it behooves you to
keep them from the paths that lead to the fearful chasm. Do not wait
till it is too late, when they are too near the precipice to be rescued.
You may think the danger to be far off, while it is near at hand. Profit
by the sad experience of so many victims of confession who have been
irretrievably lost, irrecoverably ruined for time and eternity. The
voice of your conscience, of honor, of God Himself, tells you that it
may soon become too late to save them from destruction, through your
neglect and procrastination. While thanking God for having preserved
them from temptations that have proved fatal to so many married or
unmarried women, do not lose a single moment in taking the necessary
means to keep them from temptation and falls.
Instead of allowing them to go and kneel at the feet of a man to
obtain the remission of their sins, lead them to the dying Saviour's
feet, the only place where they can secure pardon and peace everlasting.
And why, after so many unfruitful attempts, should they try any longer
to wash themselves in a puddle, when the pure waters of eternal life are
offered them so freely through Christ Jesus, their only Saviour and
Mediator?
Instead of seeking their pardon from a poor and miserable sinner,
weak and tempted as they are, let them go to Christ, the only strong and
perfect man, the only hope and salvation of the world.
O poor deluded Catholic women! listen no longer to the deceiving
words of the Church of Rome, who has no pardon, no peace for you, but
only snares; who offers you thraldom and shame in return for the
confession of your sins! But listen rather to the invitations of your
Saviour, who has died on the cross, that you might be saved; and who,
alone, can give rest to your weary souls.
Hearken to His words, when He says to you: "Come unto Me, O ye
heavily laden, crushed, as it were, under the burden of your sins, and I
shall give you rest. . . I am the Physician of your souls. . . Those who
are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. . . Come,
then, to Me, and ye shall be healed. . . I have not sent back nor lost
any who have come to Me. . . invoke My name. . . believe in Me. . .
repent. . . love God, and your neighbor as yourself, and you shall be
saved. . . For all who believe in Me and call upon My name, shall be
saved. . . .When I am raised up between heaven and earth, I shall draw
every one to Me. . . ."
Oh, mothers and daughters, instead of going to the priest for pardon
and salvation, go to Jesus, who is so pressingly inviting you! and the
more so as you have more need of divine help and grace. Even, if you are
as great a sinner as Mary Magdalene, you can, like her, wash the feet of
the Saviour with the flowing tears of your repentance and your love, and
like her, receive the pardon of your sins.
To Jesus, then, and to Him alone, go for the confession and pardon of
your sins; for there, only, you can find peace, light, and life for time
and eternity!
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