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VOL. 2 = The Penitent Christian
ELEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
The Nature of the Examen of Conscience
“He hath made both the deaf to hear and the dumb to speak.” Mark 7: 37
After the light of the Holy Ghost has been implored by fervent prayer, the next requisite for a good confession is the examen of conscience, or the effort to find out what sins we have committed. As many confessions are not made properly because of a lack of this requisite, remember, my brethren,
1. That he who wishes to make a good confession must examine his conscience himself; and
II. That he who wishes to make a good confession must examine his conscience with proper diligence and care.
I. He who wishes to make a good confession must examine his conscience. This is required by the nature and essentials of the Sacrament of Penance, which has been instituted by our Lord as a kind of judgment. In civil courts of justice, no one is questioned unless he has been caught in the act of committing a crime, or has been accused by someone else. Otherwise, the accused need not confess his guilt. Nay, he can deny it unless it is proved against him. It is quite different with the Sacrament of Penance; the criminal must accuse himself, without being questioned, or having his crime proved against him. Of his own free will, he must make known his own evil deeds. He is at the same time the criminal, the accuser, and the witness. The judge who sits in the holy tribunal in the place of God, has to pronounce sentence only on what he learns from the penitent’s self accusation. How can a man accuse himself, when he does not know of what he has been guilty? And how can he know that, unless he has thought of, and examined into, and remembered what he has done against the law of God? From this, it is evident, that they act very wrongly and foolishly who rush into the confessional without any preparation, trusting solely to the questions of the confessor. Would it not be a foolish thing for you to accuse a man in judgment, saying to the judge: This man has committed a great crime; but you must ask me what he has done? What could you expect as the result of an accusation of that kind? Still more unreasonable is your conduct when you go to confession, and say to the priest: Father, I have sinned; please question me. You yourself must declare in what and how often you have sinned. The priest is not sitting there to ask you questions, but to hear what you have to say against yourself. He is not sitting there to accuse you, but to judge you according to the sins you confess to him; and, if you are worthy, to give you absolution from them.
It may sometimes occur that through weakness, or illness, or stupidity, or simplicity,
one cannot undertake the examen of conscience, or knows not how to set about it.
In a case of that kind, charity obliges the confessor to help his penitent as far
as possible, and to supply for his incapacity by asking him questions. But God does
not require much in the way of examination from people of the kind; and therefore,
theologians say that it is enough for an ignorant, uneducated man, who cannot recollect
anything particular, to excite himself to sorrow for all his past sins, and to be
prepared, when he enters the confessional, to answer all the questions put to him
by the confessor, and to declare honestly what has been his condition, occupation,
and mode of life hitherto. But when a man has common sense enough in matters relating
to his family, or business concerns, and can remember the good or the evil that others
have done him, if he were to pretend ignorance or forgetfulness in what concerns
the all-
Besides, it is a well-
I have sinned, you say to your confessor: Father, please question me. And what is
he to question you about? How does he know what you have done? Has he seen your thoughts
during the week, month, quarter, or half year that has elapsed since your last confession?
Has he heard all you have said during that time at home and in company? Has he been
here, there, and everywhere with you, like the omnipresent God himself? Generally
speaking, he does not even know who you are; he has never been in company with you,
and perhaps has never seen you before. And remember well, it is not enough merely
to go through the commandments of God and of the Church; but each one has to pay
particular attention to his state and occupation, because, generally speaking, there
is a difference between the sins committed by married people and those who are unmarried;
by masters and mistresses, and by servants; by officials and superiors, and by subjects
and inferiors; by merchants and shop-
II. With due care and diligence.
No general rule can be laid down with regard to the amount of time and care that are to be employed in the examination of conscience before confession; for penitents differ widely in their conditions and capabilities, and some require more time and care than others. According to circumstances each one must employ what can be called, in the general acceptation of the term, a reasonable diligence. The Council of Trent says distinctly that diligence should be used in the examen of conscience; “all mortal sins that one finds on his conscience after a diligent examination must be declared in confession.” And farther on, speaking of the obligation of confessing all mortal sins, it says, “which occur to the memory after due and diligent reflection.” But the Council does not specify the amount of time or diligence required.
The safest rule to follow, is, for one to employ as much time and diligence, according
to his state of life, as all sensible people would employ in any other matter of
great importance. To make this clearer, I will explain it by a simile. You have an
important account to render in which there is question of a large sum of money. If
you give in your accounts every week or fortnight regularly, the matter is easy
enough, and does not require much trouble on your part. All you have to do, is to
look at your account-
Are your accounts clear, correct, and in good order? If so, then you need not be afraid. You need not spend much time, nor be too scrupulous in examining your conscience before confession. If you happen to commit a mortal sin, there is no danger of your forgetting it. As to venial sins, you are not bound to tell them in confession; so that, even if you forget them by the thousand, or deliberately refuse to mention them, that does not interfere with the validity of your confession. All you have to do is to mention some sin of your past life, for which you can excite yourself to sorrow, and your confession is valid; your account is approved of by the almighty God, who signs it by giving you the grace of the Sacrament. There are many who make a great mistake, and cause themselves unnecessary anxiety by the useless trouble they take in the examination of their consciences, so that they turn the confessional into a rack to torture their souls, and make the sweet burden of Jesus Christ insupportable. These people, although they cannot remember having committed any mortal sin since their last confession (and they go regularly and frequently during the month), yet spend half and even whole hours sometimes thinking of what they will say. They make sins where there is no sin at all, and they doubt about everything. The more they try to examine their consciences, the more disturbed they become; and at last, they are obliged to acknowledge that, after having spent hours in all sorts of distractions and fancies, they are just as wise as before, and have not learned anything about the state of their consciences. The most useful, necessary, and excellent preparation for confession is a lively faith, a great hope and confidence in God, a true sorrow for sin, a firm purpose of amendment, a careful examination and selection of the means and manner in which one may lead a better life, lessen one’s daily faults, serve God with more zeal, do more good works, and have more will to do them. That is what most of the time should be spent in.
Are you one of those whose accounts are not in order? One of those tepid Christians,
who sin by wholesale, and lead careless lives; who pay little attention to their
souls, go to confession one, two, three, or four times a year, and meanwhile commit
sin whenever the occasion offers, without much hesitation; allow full liberty to
eyes, ears, tongues, hands, thoughts, and desires; seldom or never examine their
consciences; easily forget their sins, and the number and circumstances of them;
or, if they go to confession every month, commit sins that are of a peculiarly dangerous
character, and are likely to be the occasion of more sin; such as a long-
The penitent David says: “And I meditated in the night with my own heart, and I was
exercised, and I swept my spirit” (Ps. 76: 7). What do you do, when you wish to sweep
out your room, so as to have it perfectly clean? You go through every corner of it;
you put all the chairs arid tables to one side, and move the furniture, so that no
dust may remain concealed behind it. So must you act, sinner, if you wish to do sincere
penance. Enter the chamber of your conscience; seek out all its hidden recesses;
examine, as far as you can, all your thoughts, desires, words, and actions, to see
if you can detect a mortal sin in any of them. Move all the chairs and tables; that
is: consider the habits, business, and occupations that engage your attention from
morning till night, the places and houses you frequent, the company you keep, the
obligations of your state, and how you have fulfilled them, so as to see whether
and how often you have sinned against God and your neighbor, and what effects, injury,
or scandal have followed from those sins, which you foresaw and could easily have
prevented. If, on account of a long-
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