Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Sermon for fifth mid-week Lent service - What is Confession?

 

What is Confession?

                                                                                       3/20/24

 

          How many sacraments are there?  You may be surprised to learn that the Book of Concord – the confessions of the Lutheran Church - provides two different answers.  “Sacrament” is not a word that we find in the Bible.  Instead, it is a term that the Church uses to organize our thought about the content of Scripture.  So how you define what a Sacrament is will determine how many Sacraments there are.

          If you define a Sacrament as something that has been instituted by Christ, has the promise of forgiveness, and uses a physical means, then there are two Sacraments: Holy Baptism and the Sacrament of the Altar.  However, if you define a Sacrament as something that has been instituted by Christ and has the promise of forgiveness, then there are three Sacraments: Holy Baptism, the Sacrament of the Altar, and Holy Absolution.

          For the most part, the two Sacrament definition has been dominant in the Lutheran Church.  It is probably not hard to understand why.  The physical means of water, and bread and wine give Holy Baptism and the Sacrament of the Altar a distinct and obvious character.

          Yet in spite of this, Holy Absolution is Christ’s gift that cannot be ignored.  It is sometimes described as a return to baptism.  In the Small Catechism the section “How Christians should be taught to confess” comes immediately after the portion that deals with Baptism. 

          Holy Absolution is the gift that the risen Lord has given to his Church. After our Lord’s resurrection he appeared to the disciples in the locked room and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit.  If you forgive anyone his sins, they are forgiven; if you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven.”

          We are about to enter into Holy Week.  We hear in our reading of the Passion of Our Lord tonight that as Jesus hung on the cross there was darkness over the land from the sixth hour to the ninth hour.  This was the sign of God’s end time judgment. Christ, the sinless One, was numbered with the transgressors.  He took our sin and received God’s judgment against it.  He was the object of God’s wrath in order to give us forgiveness.

          But on the third day, God raised Jesus from the dead.  He appeared to the disciples in that locked room.  He demonstrated that he was alive as he showed them his hands and his side.  And then he instituted Holy Absolution.  He commanded his disciples to forgive sins – to apply the forgiveness that he had just won by his death and resurrection.

          The Small Catechism teaches us that confession has two parts.  First, we confess our sins.  We admit our sins before God.  The Psalmist said, “I acknowledged my sin to you, and I did not cover my iniquity; I said, "I will confess my transgressions to the LORD.”

          The Small Catechism goes on to say that the second part is “that we receive absolution, that is forgiveness, from the pastor as from God Himself, not doubting but firmly believing that by it our sins are forgiven before God in heaven.”  Notice that this an audible word.  It is a word of forgiveness spoken to us.

          The pastor speaks this forgiveness.  However, it is not the person of the pastor that matters here.  Instead, Christ has instituted his Office of the Holy Ministry to administer his Means of Grace.  He works through his Church to place a man in this Office of the Ministry. And so when the pastor speaks, he speaks for God.  It is Christ who is speaking.  That is why the pastor announces absolution by saying that he speaks “as a called and ordained servant of Christ, and by his authority.”

          Christ says through the pastor “I forgive you all your sins.”  Holy Absolution can be described as the Gospel in its purest form.  The Gospel tells us that Jesus Christ died on the cross and rose from the dead in order to win forgiveness for us.  Then in Holy Absolution we hear God speak to us in the first person singular and say “I forgive you all your sins.”  We hear God speak directly to us as he forgives our sins.  You can’t get any more direct than that.

          We are used to hearing Holy Absolution at the beginning of the Divine Service each Sunday.  Here Confession and Absolution takes place in the corporate setting of worship.  However, that is actually not the setting that the Small Catechism addresses.  Instead it is speaking about Confession in a private setting.

          At the time of the Reformation, private confession had become a source of many abuses in the life of the Church.  The priest was present in the role of an examiner who was seeking to discover sins and determine whether they were mortal. Christians were required to confess all sins.  Confession was made, absolution was spoken, and then the priest assigned a penance that had to be done.

          The Lutheran Church returned confession to being a Gospel gift. The pastor was there to hear confession, not to examine and seek out sin.  The Christian was called upon to confess only those sins they knew.  And penance was eliminated, because Holy Absolution is a word of pure Gospel. Where Christ’s forgiveness has been spoken, there is nothing more that needs to be done.

          In answer to the question “What sins should we confess?” the Small Catechism says, “Before God we should plead guilty of all sins, even those we are not aware of, as we do in the Lord’s Prayer; but before the pastor we should confess only those sins which we know and feel in our hearts.” 

          Private confession provides blessings that are notable and important.  It gives us the opportunity to confess sins that trouble us.  Before God, sin is sin.  However, the devil is able to use some sins more than others in order to trouble us and cause us to doubt God’s forgiveness. When we keep these sins inside, the guilt and anxiety they produce can be very harmful.  Private confession provides the opportunity to rid ourselves of these sins – it gives us the chance to “get them off our chest.”

          And then, we get to hear God speak forgiveness to us as an individual.  God says “I forgive you all your sins”, and he speak it to you alone.  This is a powerful experience and a profound way in which the Gospel is received.

          People may feel hesitant to use private confession for several reasons.  First there may be the concern about whether sins confessed will be revealed to others.  However, at his ordination, and at very subsequent installation the pastor takes an oath that he will never divulge the sins confessed to him.  The seal of confession is recognized even by our legal system.  I was on the witness stand in a federal court in Chicago and refused to answer a question because it involved information shared with me in private confession.  The judge acknowledged this right, and told the questioner to move on to a different subject.

          People may also feel hesitant because they worry about what the pastor will think of him or her.  Here it is necessary to recognize that you are not going to shock your pastor. Apart from murder, I cannot think of a sin that I have not heard confessed.  You are not going to confess something the pastor hasn’t heard before.

          More importantly, you need to realize that no one spends more time thinking about sin than a pastor.  It is his calling to consider how the Law is applied to others in order to reveal sin and bring people to repentance.  But this also means that that he is deeply aware of how the Law reveals his own sins.  He knows himself to be a sinner as he listens to others confess their sin. 

          The pastor is not there to judge.  Instead, he is there to apply the Gospel.  He has been placed by God in the Office of the Holy Ministry to speak absolution to all who confess their sin.  His voice is Christ’s voice which says “I forgive you all your sin.”  We receive absolution, that is forgiveness, from the pastor as from God himself, not doubting but firmly believing that by it our sins are forgiven before God in heaven.    

         

           

         

           

 

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