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Recovering
a Sense of Sin
by Douglas Sousa
In the early 90s, a Catholic group
conducted a survey about modern attitudes toward the Sacrament
of Reconciliation. Different groups offered different reasons
as to why there has been a decline in confession. Bishops
tended to identify the lack of a sense of sin as the cause,
while priests blamed confusion over whether sins were mortal
or venial. In contrast, laypeople responded that opportunities
for forgiveness outside the Sacrament of Reconciliation, such
as personal prayer or the Kyrie at Mass, made the
confessional less necessary. Whatever the cause, there is
no doubt that, while the Church’s teaching has remained
constant, popular attitudes toward sin and the need for the
Sacrament of Reconciliation have changed significantly over
the past 40 years.
In my work with catechists, one of the frustrations they
experience is the lack of a sense of sin in young people.
They generally agree with the bishops in identifying it as
the primary obstacle keeping young people from turning to
the Sacrament of Reconciliation.
In his 1984 apostolic exhortation Reconciliatio
et Paenitentia (Reconciliation and Penance), Pope
John Paul II defined “sense of sin” in these terms:
Over the course of generations, the Christian mind has
gained from the Gospel as it is read in the ecclesial community
a fine sensitivity and an acute perception of the seeds
of death contained in sin, as well as a sensitivity and
an acuteness of perception for identifying them in the thousand
guises under which sin shows itself. This is what is commonly
called the sense of sin. (no. 18)
And so, by the term, “sense of sin,” we mean
the ability to recognize sin for what it is—a grave
offense to the holiness and love of God and a detriment to
the life of the Church. It also means understanding ourselves
as sinners in need of God’s mercy.
The reasons for this diminished sense of sin are many and
varied. What I would hope to accomplish in this article is
to look at ways the concept of sin has been taught, based
on my work with catechists, so as to chart a way toward reclaiming
an understanding of it that is closer to the Gospel and the
teaching of the Church and that would foster a desire for
repentance and reconciliation. The teaching of the magisterium
on sin has been constant. What we will be looking at is how
that teaching gets communicated in the classroom.
Following the Law
In speaking with catechists and reviewing their class materials,
I have identified two predominant models for teaching about
sin—a legal model and a relational model.
The legal model treats sin as the breaking of a rule. When
this model is followed, the actions, intentions, and thoughts
that constitute sin are clearly listed either in the Bible
or in Church documents. When asked why a certain action is
sinful, the catechist following this model can simply reply,
“Because it breaks God’s commandment.” The
predominant image of God is that of a judge who grants absolution
through the priest once the sin is confessed.
This legal model of sin has many advantages. It is easy to
teach. There is no debate about what is a sin and what is
not. And there is no debate about the need to go to Confession.
The image of God is consistent with Scripture and helps to
reinforce the Sacrament of Reconciliation as the place where
the guilt for sin can be lifted. In this context, with sin
understood as an offense against God, God’s willing
mercy can also be experienced and appreciated. It further
underlines the need for Christ’s death on the Cross
as the source of expiation for sin.
However, like any model, the legal model has limitations
as well. It tends to focus on the practice of religion as
avoiding sin rather than doing good. And it tends to focus
more on condemnation than on grace and redemption. It also
can lead people to associate the Sacrament of Reconciliation
with fear, guilt, and scrupulosity.
I Can Relate
In contrast to a legal model of sin is a relational model.
Under this model, Jesus is a friend, and sin is an action
that damages our friendship with Him. This approach tends
to focus more on feelings rather than on lists of sins. Religion
is understood as an active friendship with God through Jesus.
This approach has the advantage of recognizing religion as
a relationship with God marked by love and friendship. It
is also easy to relate this to everyday life and experience.
And the concept of sin as a rupture in our relationship with
God finds strong backing in Scripture. By encouraging students
to think and talk about what makes an action sinful rather
than simply memorizing a list of rules, this approach aids
the development of conscience.
Unfortunately, this model also has profound drawbacks. The
emphasis on feelings tends to make people believe that they
have not sinned if they do not feel guilty. Likewise, there
is no reason to confess to a priest if you feel forgiven after
praying to Jesus. If religion is just about Jesus and me,
why bring a priest into the equation? Further, if sin is no
longer a serious matter, then neither is the power of God’s
forgiveness and neither is the death of Jesus on the Cross.
As we have seen, the legal and relational models have advantages
and disadvantages. Is there a way that we can catechize an
understanding of sin that emphasizes the best of these different
approaches? Is there a context in which we can talk about
sin that is more faithful to Scripture and which also draws
people into a deeper understanding of God’s mercy and
love?
Best of Both Worlds
I believe that we have such a model in the biblical concept
of covenant.
The term “covenant” has a rich history in Scripture.
Genesis recounts that God made covenants with individuals
(Noah and Abraham), and Exodus describes the covenant which
was eventually established between God and the people of Israel.
“Covenant” is the name given to the offer of friendship
that God proposed to the Israelite people. It is expressed
in the simple formula, “I will be your God, and you
will be my people.” This relationship with God gave
a sense of identity to Israel. In this context, they understood
that their God was different from the golden and wooden idols
of other nations. Because of this, they also had to be different
from other peoples. They had to be holy as their God was holy.
This relationship with God was regulated through the Torah,
the Law, most especially the Ten Commandments. This Law was
not an arbitrary list of rules or a burdensome imposition,
but a way of understanding how the chosen people were to live
in relationship to their God in the land He had given them.
Sin, therefore, meant not only breaking a rule, but rupturing
the covenant relationship with God. Since this relationship
gave the people of Israel their identity, sin not only affected
the individual but weakened the whole people. We see this
in Psalm 51, King David’s prayer for forgiveness. Though
his sin is personal and he prays primarily for his own forgiveness,
he ends the psalm with a prayer for the restoration of Jerusalem,
because he saw his sin as a threat not only to himself but
to the whole nation.
After Israel spent years struggling under the Law, God promised
a new covenant written on the heart (see Jer. 31:31–34;
32:38–40). God also planned to make His people a light
to the nations, extending His salvation to the ends of the
earth.
We find the fulfillment of this new covenant in the person
of Jesus. Jesus is careful to teach that He did not come to
do away with the Law, but to fulfill it. He did not come to
do away with the people of Israel, but to fulfill God’s
promise that Israel would be a means of drawing all peoples
to salvation. Finally, Jesus takes upon Himself the punishment
for sin by dying on the Cross. In this way, sin could be forgiven
and could not threaten to permanently unravel the unity of
God’s new people.
In the Context of Covenant
Understood in the context of the covenant, sin takes on a
communal as well as a personal dimension. Because the covenant
creates a relationship among believers, we are accountable
not only to God for our sins but to each other. It helps us
to understand that there is no such thing as a “victimless”
sin, but that our failings undermine the whole community.
And so we need some forum (the Sacrament of Reconciliation!)
wherein we can mend not only our fractured relationship with
God, but with each other.
The concept of covenant also helps us to understand the importance
of laws for the ordering of our relationship with God and
with each other. In any friendship there are unwritten rules.
We never think that our love for our friends, spouses, or
children makes any action on our part acceptable. In our covenant
relationship with God and with each other, there are also
rules. They can be found in the Scriptures, in the Church
Fathers, in canon law, and in a variety of church documents
and spiritual writings. Our love for God and for our neighbor
does not give us license to break these rules. Rather, our
laws and traditions tutor us in what it means to love God
and neighbor. Whether we feel guilty or not after having broken
a rule does not change the fact that by doing so we have ruptured
that covenant relationship.
Another important strength of this concept is that it leads
naturally to a discussion of the sacraments. We are introduced
to this covenant relationship through Baptism, in which we
are made sons and daughters of God. The Eucharist is the feast
of the new covenant community. The Sacrament of Reconciliation
is where we mend that covenant relationship which we fracture
by our sinfulness. Marriage binds a man and a woman in a relationship
that is meant to mirror the covenant love of Christ for His
Church. Holy Orders consecrates men as mediators of this covenant
relationship. Covenant can be a useful concept not only for
understanding sin, but for any aspect of the Christian life.
To the Classroom and Beyond
When I have discussed with catechists the use of the covenant
as a context in which to teach the concept of sin, I am often
met with the argument that the term is antiquated, with no
real parallels in everyday life. It is not a word that can
be easily understood and related to, especially by young people.
Nonetheless, I think that the unfamiliarity of the term offers
an opportunity for the creative catechist. It helps to convey
the idea that this relationship with God and with the Church
is unlike any other friendship we can have. It is so unique
that there is a special name for it.
The unfamiliarity of the term also means that we can form
the concept in the minds of young people without having to
battle any preconceived ideas. It is an image without any
cultural baggage. When we tell young people, for example,
that God is their friend, there is the risk that they will
look at the casual nature of their friendships and think of
God in the same light. “My friend Tony doesn’t
mind if I steal candy from the store, so God must not mind
either.” By calling the relationship a “covenant,”
we can describe exactly what we mean by the term without the
risk of cultural contamination.
The ability to identify sin both in society and in ourselves
is a prerequisite to opening up to God’s saving grace.
That this sense of sin has been lost or diminished is not
so much the fault of catechetical models of sin, whether they
be legal or relational, as it is a symptom of a culture that
focuses on the individual rather than the communal and tends
to treat religion as a private matter. Recovering a healthy
and holy sense of sin cannot only be achieved by catechizing
individuals, but by evangelizing the culture at large. Using
the biblical concept of covenant to emphasize a sacramental
relationship to God that is governed by laws and rules is
just one step toward reaching that end.
Douglas Sousa holds a license in moral theology from the
Pontifical Alphonse Academy in Rome and a bachelor’s
degree in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University.
He has worked as a director of religious education in several
parishes and has been involved in pastoral care in area hospitals.
He blogs at http://songnewa.blogspot.com
and currently lives in Somerset, Massachusetts, where he works
as a real estate appraiser.
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