The Lenten period for penance started this week with Ash Wednesday, and some Catholic priests are happily bracing for long lines outside the confessional. The faithful across the United States are embracing anew the sacrament that has shifted from embarrassing recitation of sin to cathartic quest for grace.
''They come to confession feeling as if they are terrible, but … they are displaying the fact that they want to be good,'' said the Rev. Patrick Gilger, a Jesuit priest in Chicago. ''The fact that somebody shows up to confession is a lived act that they desire holiness.''
Most faith traditions have rites of self-restraint, repentance and atonement, often in a prescribed annual period before major holidays.
For Catholics, the sacrament of penance and reconciliation is supposed to be a regular weekly or monthly practice. Penitents tell a priest their sins, pledge not to commit them again, receive forgiveness, and go on their way with a penance, able to receive Communion again since they're not supposed to without first confessing any grave sins.
''This becomes kind of a marker for Catholics. It's something they do, which their Protestant and other non-Catholic neighbors don't do,'' said James O'Toole, a Boston College professor emeritus and author of a new history of confession.
Old sins, new confessions
Until the last decades of the 20th century, Catholics knew the drill. Parishes and schools had lists of sins by grievousness — from the commandment-breaking mortal ones like adultery to venial offenses like talking in church.
Confession was often a quick affair — a recitation of how and how often one sinned, followed by an act of contrition, and a penance like saying 10 Hail Marys. Then came a rapid, steep decline in confession, O'Toole said. It was driven by the growth of psychology and the complexities it revealed in human behavior, major cultural changes on issues like sexual mores, and the clergy abuse scandals.