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Forgiven by Jesus! |
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THERE are
two women who ought to be constant objects of the compassion of the disciples
of Christ, and for whom daily prayers ought to be offered at the mercy-seat—the
Brahmin woman, who, deceived by her priests, burns herself on the corpse of
her husband to appease the wrath of her wooden gods; and the Roman Catholic
woman, who, not less deceived by her priests, suffers a torture far more
cruel and ignominious in the confessional-box, to appease the wrath of her
wafer-god. |
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For I do
not exaggerate when I say, that for many noble-hearted, well-educated,
high-minded women, to be forced to unveil their hearts before the eyes of a
man, to open to him all the most secret recesses of their souls, all the most
sacred mysteries of their single or married life, to allow him to put to them
questions which the most depraved woman would never consent to hear from her
vilest seducer, is often more horrible and intolerable than to be tied on
burning coals. |
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More than
once, I have seen women fainting in the confessional-box, who told me
afterwards, that the necessity of speaking to an unmarried man on certain
things, on which the most common laws of decency ought to have for ever
sealed their lips, had almost killed them! Not hundreds, but thousands of
times, I have heard from the lips of dying girls, as well as of married
women, the awful words; "I am forever lost! All my past confessions and
communions have been so many sacrileges! I have never dared to answer
correctly the questions of my confessors! Shame has sealed my lips and damned
my soul!" |
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How many
times I remained as one petrified, by the side of a corpse, when these last
words having hardly escaped the lips of one of my female penitents, who had
been snatched out of my reach by the merciless hand of death, before I could
give her pardon through the deceitful sacramental absolution? |
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I then
believed, as the dead sinner herself had believed, that she could not be
forgiven except by that absolution. |
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For there
are not only thousands but millions of Roman Catholic girls and women whose
keen sense of modesty and womanly dignity are above all the sophisms and
diabolical machinations of their priests. They never can be persuaded to
answer "Yes" to certain questions of their confessors. They would
prefer to be thrown into the flames, and burnt to ashes with the Brahmin
widows, rather than allow the eyes of a man to pry into the sacred sanctuary
of their souls. Though sometimes guilty before God, and under the impression
that their sins will never be forgiven if not confessed, the laws of decency
are stronger in their hearts than the laws of their cruel and perfidious
Church. No consideration, not even the fear of eternal damnation, can
persuade them to declare to a sinful man, sins which God alone has the right
to know, for He alone can blot them out with the blood of His Son, shed on
the cross. |
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But what a
wretched life must that be of those exceptional noble souls, which |
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I have
known only too many of these noble-hearted women, who, when alone with God,
in a real agony of desolation and with burning tears, had asked Him to grant
them what they considered the greatest favor, which was, to lose so much of
their self-respect as to be enabled to speak of those unmentionable things,
just as their confessors wanted them to speak; and, hoping that their
petition had been granted, they went again to the confessional-box,
determined to unveil their shame before the eyes of that inexorable man. But
when the moment had come for the self-immolation, their courage failed, their
knees trembled, their lips became pale as death, cold sweat poured from all
their pores! The voice of modesty and womanly self-respect was speaking
louder than the voice of their false religion. They had to go out of the
confessional-box unpardoned—nay, with the burden of a new sacrilege on their
conscience. |
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Oh! how
heavy is the yoke of Rome—how bitter is human life—how cheerless is the
mystery of the cross to those deluded and perishing souls! How gladly they
would rush into the blazing piles with the Brahmin women, if they could hope
to see the end of their unspeakable miseries through the momentary tortures
which would open to them the gates of a better life! |
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I do here
publicly challenge the whole Roman Catholic priesthood to deny that the
greater part of their female penitents remain a certain period of time—some
longer, some shorter—under that most distressing state of mind. |
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Yes, by
far the greater majority of women, at first, find it impossible to pull down
the sacred barriers of self-respect which God Himself has built around their
hearts, intelligences, and souls, as the best safeguard against the snares of
this polluted world. Those laws of self-respect, by which they cannot consent
to speak an impure word into the ears of a man, and which shut all the
avenues of the heart against his unchaste questions, even when speaking in
the name of God—those laws of self-respect are so clearly written in their
conscience, and they are so well understood by them, to be a most Divine
gift, that, as I have already said, many prefer to run the risk of being
forever lost by remaining silent. |
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It takes
many years of the most ingenious (I do not hesitate to call it diabolical)
efforts on the part of the priests to persuade the majority of their female
penitents to speak on questions, which even pagan savages would blush to
mention among themselves. Some persist in remaining silent on those matters
during the greater part of their lives, and many prefer to throw themselves
into the hands of their merciful God, and die without submitting to the
defiling ordeal, even after they have felt the poisonous stings of the enemy,
rather than receive their pardon from a man, who, as they feel, would have
surely been scandalized by the recital of their human frailties. All the
priests of |
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Not a
single Roman Catholic priest will dare to deny what I say on this matter; for
they know that it would be easy for me to overwhelm them with such a crowd of
testimonies that their grand imposture would forever be unmasked. |
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I intend,
at some future day, if God spares me and gives me time for it, to make known
some of the innumerable things which the Roman Catholic theologians and
moralists have written on this question. It will form one of the most curious
books ever written; and it will give unanswerable evidence of the fact that,
instinctively, without consulting each other, and with an unanimity which is
almost marvellous, the Roman Catholic women, guided by the honest instincts
which God has given them, shrink from the snares put before them in the
confessional-box; and that everywhere they struggle to nerve themselves with
a superhuman courage, against the torturer who is sent by the Pope, to finish
their ruin and to make shipwreck of their souls. Everywhere woman feels that
there are things which ought never to be told, as there are things which
ought never to be done, in the presence of the God of holiness. She
understands that, to recite the history of certain sins, even of thought, is
not less shameful and criminal than to do them; she hears the voice of God
whispering into her ears, "Is it not enough that thou hast been guilty
once, when alone in My presence, without adding to thine iniquity by allowing
that man to know what should never have been revealed to him? Do you not feel
that you make that man your accomplice, the very moment that you throw into
his heart and soul the mire of your iniquities? He is as weak as you are, he
is not less a sinner than yourself; what has tempted you will tempt him; what
has made you weak will make him weak; what has polluted you will pollute him;
what has thrown you down into the dust, will throw him into the dust. Is it
not enough that My eyes had to look upon your iniquities? must My ears,
to-day, listen to your impure conversation with that man? Were that man as
holy as My prophet David, may he not fall before the unchaste unveiling of
the new Bathsheba? Were he as strong as Samson, may he not find in you his
tempting Delilah? Were he as generous as Peter, may he not become a traitor
at the maid-servant's voice?" |
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Perhaps
the world has never seen a more terrible, desperate, solemn struggle than the
one which is going on in the soul of a poor trembling young woman, who, at
the feet of that man, has to decide whether or not she will open her lips on
those things which the infallible voice of God, united to the no less
infallible voice of her womanly honor and self-respect, tell her never to
reveal to any man! |
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The
history of that secret, fierce, desperate, and deadly struggle has never yet,
so far as I know, been fully given. It would draw the tears of admiration and
compassion of the whole world, if it could be written with its simple,
sublime, and terrible realities. |
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How many
times have I wept as a child when some noble-hearted and intelligent young
girl, or some respectable married woman, yielding to the sophisms with which
I, or some other confessor, had persuaded them to give up their self-respect,
and their womanly dignity, to speak with me on matters on which a decent
woman should never say a word with a man. They have told me of their
invincible repugnance, their horror of such questions and answers, and they
have asked me to have pity on them. Yes! I have often wept bitterly on my
degradation, when a priest of |
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But alas!
I had soon to reproach myself, and regret those short instances of my
wavering faith in the infallible voice of my Church; I had soon to silence
the voice of my conscience, which was telling me, "Is it not a shame
that you, an unmarried man, dare to speak on these matters with a woman? Do
you not blush to put such questions to a young girl? Where is your
self-respect? where is your fear of God? Do you not promote the ruin of that
girl by forcing her to speak with a man on such matters? |
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I was
compelled by all the Popes, the moral theologians, and the Councils, of Rome,
to believe that this warning voice of my merciful God was the voice of Satan;
I had to believe in spite of my own conscience and intelligence, that it was
good, nay, necessary, to put those polluting, damning questions. My
infallible Church was mercilessly forcing me to oblige those poor, trembling,
weeping, desolate girls and women, to swim with me and all her priests in
those waters of Sodom and Gomorrah, under the pretext that their self-will
would be broken down, their fear of sin and humility increased, and that they
would be purified by our absolutions. |
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With what
supreme distress, disgust, and surprise, we see, to-day, a great part of the
noble Episcopal Church of England struck by a plague which seems incurable,
under the name of Puseyism, or Ritualism, and bringing again—more or less
openly—in many places the diabolical and filthy auricular confession among
the Protestants of England, Australia and America. The Episcopal Church is doomed
to perish in that dark and stinking pool of Popery—auricular confession, if
she does not find a prompt remedy to stop the plague brought by the disguised
Jesuits, who are at work everywhere, to poison and enslave her too
unsuspecting daughters and sons. |
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In the
beginning of my priesthood, I was not a little surprised and embarrassed to
see a very accomplished and beautiful young lady, whom I used to meet almost
every week at her father's house, entering the box of my confessional. She
had been used to confess to another young priest of my acquaintance, and she
was always looked upon as one of the most pious girls of the city. Though she
had disguised herself as much as possible, in order that I might not know
her, I felt sure that I was not mistaken—she was the amiable Mary * * |
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Not being
absolutely certain of the correctness of my impressions, I left her entirely
under the hope that she was a perfect stranger to me. At the beginning she
could hardly speak; her voice was suffocated by her sobs; and through the
little apertures of the thin partition between her and me, I saw two streams
of big tears trickling down her cheeks. |
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After much
effort, she said: "Dear Father, I hope you do not know me, and that you
will never try to know me. I am a desperately great sinner. Oh! I fear that I
am lost! But if there is still a hope for me to be saved, for God's sake, do
not rebuke me! Before I begin my confession, allow me to ask you not to
pollute my ears by questions which our confessors are in the habit of putting
to their female penitents; I have already been destroyed by those questions.
Before I was seventeen years old, God knows that His angels are not more pure
than I was; but the chaplain of the Nunnery where my parents had sent me for
my education, though approaching old age, put to me, in the confessional, a
question which at first I did not understand, but, unfortunately, he had put
the same questions to one of my young class-mates, who made fun of them in my
presence, and explained them to me; for she understood them too well. This
first unchaste conversation of my life plunged my thoughts into a sea of
iniquity, till then absolutely unknown to me; temptations of the most
humiliating character assailed me for a week, day and night; after which, sins
which I would blot out with my blood, if it were possible, overwhelmed my
soul as with a deluge. But the joys of the sinner are short. Struck with
terror at the thought of the judgments of God, after a few weeks of the most
deplorable life, I determined to give up my sins and reconcile myself to God.
Covered with shame, and trembling from head to foot, I went to confess to my
old confessor, whom I respected as a saint and cherished as a father. It
seems to me that, with sincere tears of repentance, I confessed to him the
greatest part of my sins, though I concealed one of them, through shame, and
respect for my spiritual guide. But I did not conceal from him that the
strange questions he had put to me at my last confession, were, with the
natural corruption of my heart, the principal cause of my destruction. |
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He spoke
to me very kindly, encouraged me to fight against my bad inclinations, and,
at first, gave me very kind and good advice. But when I thought he had
finished speaking, and as I was preparing to leave the confessional-box, he
put to me two new questions of such a polluting character that, I fear
neither the blood of Christ, nor all the fires of hell will ever be able to
blot them out from my memory. Those questions have achieved my ruin; they have
stuck to my mind like two deadly arrows; they are day and night before my
imagination; they fill my very arteries and veins with a deadly poison. |
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"It
is true that, at first, they filled me with horror and disgust; but alas! I
soon got so accustomed to them that they seemed to be incorporated with me,
and as if becoming a second nature. Those thoughts have become a new source
of innumerable criminal thoughts, desires and actions. |
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"A month
later, we were obliged by the rules of our convent to go and confess; but by
this time, I was so completely lost, that I no longer blushed at the idea of
confessing my shameful sins to a man; it was the very contrary. I had a real,
diabolical pleasure in the thought that I should have a long conversation
with my confessor on those matters, and that he would ask me more of his
strange questions. |
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"In
fact, when I had told him everything without a blush, he began to interrogate
me, and God knows what corrupting things fell from his lips into my poor
criminal heart! Every one of his questions was thrilling my nerves, and
filling me with the most shameful sensations. After an hour of this
criminal tete-a-tete with my old confessor (for it was nothing else
but a criminal tete-a-tete), I perceived that he was as depraved as I
was myself. With some half-covered words, he made a criminal proposition,
which I accepted with covered words also; and during more than a year, we
have lived together on the most sinful intimacy. Though he was much older
than I, I loved him in the most foolish way. When the course of my convent
instruction was finished, my parents called me back to their home. I was
really glad of that change of residence, for I was beginning to be tired of
my criminal life. My hope was that, under the direction of a better
confessor, I should reconcile myself to God and begin a Christian life. |
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"Unfortunately
for me, my new confessor, who was very young, began also his interrogations.
He soon fell in love with me, and I loved him in a most criminal way. I have
done with him things which I hope you will never request me to reveal to you,
for they are too monstrous to be repeated, even in the confessional, by a
woman to a man. |
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"I do
not say these things to take away the responsibility of my iniquities with
this young confessor, from my shoulders, for I think I have been more
criminal than he was. It is my firm conviction that he was a good and holy
priest before he knew me; but the questions he put to me, and the answers I
had to give him, melted his heart—I know it—just as boiling lead would melt
the ice on which it flows. |
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"I
know this is not such a detailed confession as our holy Church requires me to
make, but I have thought it necessary for me to give you this short history
of the life of the greatest and most miserable sinner who ever asked you to
help her to come out from the tomb of her iniquities. This is the way I have
lived these last few years. But last Sabbath, God, in His infinite mercy,
looked down upon me. He inspired you to give us the Prodigal Son as a model
of true conversion, and as the most marvellous proof of the infinite
compassion of the dear Saviour for the sinner. I have wept day and night
since that happy day, when I threw myself into the arms of my loving merciful
Father. Even now, I can hardly speak, because my regret for my past
iniquities, and my joy that I am allowed to bathe the feet of the Saviour
with tears, are so great that my voice is as choked. |
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"You
understand that I have forever given up my last confessor. I come to ask you
to do me the favor to receive me among your penitents. Oh! do not reject nor
rebuke me, for the dear Saviour's sake! Be not afraid to have at your side
such a monster of iniquity! But before going further, I have two favors to
ask from you. The first is, that you will never do anything to ascertain my
name; the second is, that you will never put to me any of those questions by
which so many penitents are lost and so many priests forever destroyed. Twice
I have been lost by those questions. We come to our confessors that they may
throw upon our guilty souls the pure waters which flow from heaven to purify
us; but instead of that, with their unmentionable questions, they pour oil on
the burning fires which are already raging in our poor sinful hearts. Oh!
dear father, let me become your penitent, that you may help me to go and weep
with Magdalene at the Saviour's feet! Do respect me, as He respected that
true model of all the sinful, but repenting women! Did our Saviour put to her
any question? did He extort from her the history of things which a sinful
woman cannot say without forgetting the respect she owes to herself and to
God! No! you told us not long ago, that the only thing our Saviour did, was
to look at her tears and her love. Well, please do that, and you will save
me!" |
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I was then
a very young priest, and never had any words so sublime come to my ears in
the confessional-box. Her tears and her sobs, mingled with the frank
declaration of the most humiliating actions, had made such a profound
impression upon me that I was, for some time, unable to speak. It had come to
my mind also that I might be mistaken about her identify, and that perhaps
she was not the young lady that I had imagined. I could, then, easily grant
her first request, which was to do nothing by which I could know her. The
second part of her prayer was more embarrassing; for the theologians are very
positive in ordering the confessors to question their penitents, particularly
those of the female sex, in many circumstances. |
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I
encouraged her in the best way I could, to persevere in her good resolutions,
by invoking the blessed Virgin Mary and St. Philomene, who was, then, the Sainte
a la mode, just as Marie Alacoque is to-day, among the blind slaves of |
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The very
same day, I went to my own confessor, the Rev. Mr. Baillargeon, then curate
of |
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My
confessor seemed to be much perplexed about what he should answer. "He
asked me to come the next day, that he might review some of his theological
books, in the interval. The next day, I took down in writing his answer, which
I find in my old manuscripts, and I give it here in all its sad crudity:— |
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"Such
cases of the destruction of female virtue by the questions
of the confessors is an unavoidable evil. It cannot be helped; for
such questions are absolutely necessary in the greater part of the cases with
which we have to deal. Men generally confess their sins with so much
sincerity that there is seldom any need for questioning them, except when
they are very ignorant. But St. Liguori, as well as our personal observation,
tells us that the greatest part of girls and women, through a false and
criminal shame, very seldom confess the sins they commit against purity. It
requires the utmost charity in the confessors to prevent those unfortunate
slaves of their secret passions from making sacrilegious confessions and
communions. With the greatest prudence and zeal he must question them on
those matters, beginning with the smallest sins, and going, little by little,
as much as possible by imperceptible degrees, to the most criminal actions.
As it seems evident that the penitent referred to in your questions of
yesterday, is unwilling to make a full and detailed confession of all her
iniquities, you cannot promise to absolve her without assuring yourself by
wise and prudent questions, that she has confessed everything. |
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"You
must not be discouraged when, through the confessional or any other way, you
learn the fall of priests into the common frailties of human nature with
their penitents. Our Saviour knew very well that the occasions and the
temptations we have to encounter, in the confessions of girls and women, are
so numerous, and sometimes so irresistible, that many would fall. But He has
given them the Holy Virgin Mary, who constantly asks and obtains their
pardon; He has given them the sacrament of penance, where they can receive
their pardon as often as they ask for it. The vow of perfect chastity is a
great honor and privilege; but we cannot conceal from ourselves that it puts
on our shoulders a burden which many cannot carry forever. St. Liguori says
that we must not rebuke the penitent priest who falls only once a month; and
some other trustworthy theologians are still more charitable." |
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This
answer was far from satisfying me. It seemed to me composed of soft soap
principles. I went back with a heavy heart and an anxious mind; and God knows
that I made many fervent prayers that this girl should never come again to
give me her sad history. I was hardly twenty-six years old, full of youth and
life. It seemed to me that the stings of a thousand wasps to my ears would
not do me so much harm as the words of that dear, beautiful, accomplished,
but lost girl. |
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I do not
mean to say that the revelations which she made, had, in any way, diminished
my esteem and my respect for her. It was just the contrary. Her tears and her
sobs, at my feet her agonizing expressions of shame and regret her noble
words of protest against the disgusting and polluting interrogations of the
confessors, had raised her very high in my mind. My sincere hope was that she
would have a place in the |
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At the
appointed day, I was in my confessional, listening to the confession of a
young man, when I saw Miss Mary entering the vestry, and coming directly to
my confessional-box, where she knelt by me. Though she had, still more than
at the first time, disguised herself behind a long, thick, black veil, I
could not be mistaken; she was the very same amiable young lady in whose
father's house I used to pass such pleasant and happy hours. I had often
listened, with breathless attention, to her melodious voice, when she was
giving us, accompanied by her piano, some of our beautiful Church hymns. Who
could then see and hear her without almost worshipping her? The dignity of
her steps, and her whole mien, when she advanced towards my confessional,
entirely betrayed her and destroyed her incognito. |
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Oh! I
would have given every drop of my blood in that solemn hour, that I might
have been free to deal with her just as she had so eloquently requested me to
do—to let her weep and cry at the feet of Jesus to her heart's content; Oh!
if I had been free to take her by the hand, and silently show her the dying
Saviour, that she might have bathed His feet with her tears, and spread the
oil of her love on His head, without my saying anything else but "Go in
peace: thy sins are forgiven. " |
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But,
there, in that confessional-box, I was not the servant of Christ, to follow
His divine, saving words, and obey the dictates of my honest conscience. I
was the slave of the Pope! I had to stifle the cry of my conscience, to
ignore the inspirations of my God! There, my conscience had no right to
speak; my intelligence was a dead thing! The theologians of the Pope, alone,
had a right to be heard and obeyed! I was not there to save, but to destroy;
for, under the pretext of purifying, the real mission of the confessor,
often, if not always, in spite of himself, is to scandalise and damn the
souls. |
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As soon as
the young man who was making his confession at my
left hand, had finished, I, without noise, turned myself towards her, and
said, through the little aperture, "Are you ready to begin your
confession?" |
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But she
did not answer me. All that I could hear was: "Oh, my Jesus, have mercy
upon me! I come to wash my soul in Thy blood; wilt thou rebuke me?" |
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During several
minutes she raised her hands and her eyes to heaven, and wept and prayed. It
was evident that she had not the least idea that I was observing her; she
thought the door of the little partition between her and me was shut. But my
eyes were fixed upon her; my tears were flowing with her tears, and my ardent
prayers were going to the feet of Jesus with her prayers. I would not have
interrupted her for any consideration, in this, her sublime communion with
her merciful Saviour. |
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But after
a pretty long time, I made a little noise with my hand, and putting my lips
near the opening of the partition which was between us, I said in a low
voice, "Dear sister, are you ready to begin your confession?" |
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She turned
her face a little towards me, and said with trembling voice, "Yes, dear
father, I am ready." |
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But she
then stopped again to weep and pray, though I could not hear what she said. |
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After some
time of silent prayer, I said, "My dear sister, if you
are ready, please begin your confession." She then said, "My
dear father, do you remember the prayers which I made to you, the other day?
Can you allow me to confess my sins without forcing me to forget the respect
that I owe to myself, to you, and to God, who hears us? And can you promise that
you will not put to me any of those questions which have already done me such
irreparable injury? I frankly declare to you that there are sins in me that I
cannot reveal to anyone, except to Christ, because He is my God, and that He
already knows them all. Let me weep and cry at His feet: can you not forgive
me without adding to my iniquities by forcing me to say things that the
tongue of a Christian woman cannot reveal to a man?" |
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"My
dear sister," I answered, were I free to follow the voice of my own feelings
I would be only too happy to grant your request; but I am here only as the
minister of our holy Church, and bound to obey her laws. Through her most
holy Popes and theologians she tells me that I cannot forgive your sins if
you do not confess them all, just as you have committed them. The Church
tells me also that you must give the details which may add to the malice or
change the nature of your sins. I am also sorry to tell you that our most
holy theologians make it a duty of the confessor to question the penitent on
the sins which he has good reason to suspect have been voluntarily or
involuntarily omitted." |
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With a
piercing cry, she exclaimed, Then, O my God, I am lost-forever lost!" |
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This cry
fell upon me like a thunderbolt; but I was still more terror-stricken when,
looking through the aperture, I saw she was fainting; I heard the noise of
her body falling upon the floor, and of her head striking against the sides
of the confessional- box. |
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Quick as
lightning I ran to help her, took her in my arms, and called a couple of men
who were at a little distance, to assist me in laying her on a bench. I
washed her face with some cold water and vinegar. She was, as pale as death,
but her lips were moving, and she was saying something which nobody but I
could understand— |
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"I am
lost—lost forever!" |
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We took
her home to her disconsolate family, where, during a month, she lingered
between life and death. Her two first confessors came to visit her; but
having asked every one to go out of the room, she politely, but absolutely,
requested them to go away, and never come again. She asked me to visit her
every day., "for," she said, "I have only a few more days to
live. Help me to prepare myself for the solemn hour which will open to me the
gates of eternity!" |
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Every day
I visited her, and I prayed and I wept with her. |
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Many
times, when alone, with tears I requested her to finish her confession; but,
with a firmness which, then, seemed to be mysterious and inexplicable, she
politely rebuked me. |
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One day,
when alone with her, I was kneeling by the side of her bed to pray, I was
unable to articulate a single word, because of the inexpressible anguish of
my soul on her account, she asked me, "Dear father, why do you
weep?" |
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I
answered, "How can you put such a question to your murderer! I weep
because I have killed you, dear friend." |
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This
answer seemed to trouble her exceedingly. She was very weak that day. After
she had wept and prayed in silence, she said, "do not weep for me, but
weep for so many priests who destroy their penitents in the confessional. I
believe in the holiness of the sacrament of penance, since our holy Church
has established it. But there is, somewhere, something exceedingly wrong in
the confessional. Twice I have been destroyed, and I know many girls who have
also been destroyed by the confessional. This is a secret, but will that
secret be kept forever? I pity the poor priests the day that our fathers will
know what becomes of the purity of their daughters in the hands of their
confessors. Father would surely kill my two last confessors, if he could know
how they have destroyed his poor child." |
|
I could
not answer except by weeping. |
|
We remained
silent for a long time; then she said, "It is true that I was not
prepared for the rebuke you have given me, the other day, in the
confessional; but you acted conscientiously as a good and honest priest. I
know you must be bound by certain laws." |
|
She then
pressed my hand with her cold hand and said, "Weep not, dear father,
because that sudden storm has wrecked my too fragile bark. This storm was to
take me out from the bottomless sea of my iniquities to the shore where Jesus
was waiting to receive and pardon me. The night after you brought me, half
dead, here, to father's house, I had a dream. Oh, no! it was not a dream, it
was a reality. My Jesus came to me; He was bleeding; His crown of thorns was
on His head, the heavy cross was bruising his shoulders. He said to me, with
a voice so sweet that no human tongue can imitate it, "I have seen thy
tears, I have heard thy cries, and I know thy love for Me: thy sins are
forgiven; take courage; in a few days thou shalt be with me!" |
|
She had
hardly finished her last word, when she fainted; and I feared lest she should
die just then, when I was alone with her. |
|
I called
the family, who rushed into the room. The doctor was sent for. He found her
so weak that he thought proper to allow only one or two persons to remain in
the room with me. He requested us not to speak at all: "For," said
he, the least emotion may kill her instantly; her disease is, in all
probability, an aneurism of the aorta, the big vein which brings the blood to
the heart: when it breaks, she will go as quick as lightning." |
|
It was
nearly ten at night when I left the house, to go and take some rest. But it
is not necessary to say that I passed a sleepless night. My dear Mary was
there, pale, dying from the deadly blow which I had given her in the
confessional. She was there, on her bed of death, her heart pierced with the
dagger which my Church had put into my hands! and instead of rebuking, and
cursing me for my savage, merciless fanaticism, she was blessing me! She was
dying from a broken heart, and I was not allowed by my Church to give her a
single word of consolation and hope, for she had not made her confession! I
had mercilessly bruised that tender plant, and there was nothing in my hands
to heal the wounds I had made! |
|
It was
very probable that she would die the next day, and I was forbidden to show
her the crown of glory which Jesus has prepared in His kingdom for the
repenting sinner! |
|
My
desolation was really unspeakable, and I think I would have been suffocated
and have died that night, if the stream of tears which constantly flowed from
my eyes had not been as a balm to my distressed heart. |
|
How dark
and long the hours of that night seemed to me! |
|
Before the
dawn of day, I arose to read my theologians again, and see if I could not
find some one who would allow me to forgive the sins of that dear child,
without forcing her to tell me everything she had done. But they seemed to
me, more than ever, unanimously inexorable, and I put them back on the
shelves of my library with a broken heart. |
|
At |
|
With
a really angelic smile she extended her hand towards me, that I might press
it in mine; and she said, "I thought, last evening, that the dear
Saviour would take me to Him, but He wants me, dear father, to give you a
little more trouble; however, be patient, it cannot be long before the solemn
hour of the appeal will ring. Will you please read me the history of the
suffering and death of the beloved Saviour, which you read me the other day?
It does me so much good to see how He has loved me, such a miserable
sinner." |
|
There was a calm and a solemnity in her words which struck me
singularly, as well as all those who were there. |
|
After I
had finished reading, she exclaimed, "He has loved me so much that He
died for my sins!" And she shut her eyes as if to meditate in silence,
but there was a stream of big tears rolling down her checks. |
|
I knelt
down by her bed, with her family, to pray; but I could not utter a single
word. The idea that this dear child was there, dying from the cruel
fanaticism of my theologians and my own cowardice in obeying them, was as a
mill-stone to my neck. It was killing me. |
|
Oh! if by
dying a thousand times, I could have added a single day to her life, with
what pleasure I would have accepted those thousand deaths! |
|
After we
had silently prayed and wept by her bedside, she requested her mother to
leave her alone with me. |
|
When I saw
myself alone, under the irresistible impression that this was her last day, I
fell on my knees again, and with tears of the most sincere compassion for her
soul, I requested her to shake off her shame and to obey our holy Church,
which requires every one to confess their sins if they want to be forgiven. |
|
She
calmly, but with an air of dignity which no human words can express, said,
"Is it true that, after the sin of Adam and Eve, God Himself made coats
and skins; and clothed them, that they might not see each other's
nakedness?" |
|
"Yes,"
I said, this is what the Holy Scriptures tell
us." |
|
"Well,
then, how is it possible that our confessors dare to take away from as that
holy, divine coat of modesty and self respect? Has not Almighty God Himself made,
with His own hands, that coat of womanly modesty and self-respect, that we
might not be to you and to ourselves, a cause of shame and sin?" |
|
I was
really stunned by the beauty, simplicity, and sublimity of that comparison. I
remained absolutely mute and confounded. Though it was demolishing all the
traditions and doctrines of my Church, and pulverizing all my holy doctors
and theologians, that noble answer found such an echo in my soul, that it
seemed to me a sacrilege to try to touch it with my finger. |
|
After a
short time of silence, she continued, "Twice I have been destroyed by
priests in the confessional. They took away from me that divine coat of
modesty and self-respect which God gives to every human being who comes into
this world, and twice, I have become for those very priests a deep pit of
perdition, into which they have fallen, and where, I fear, they are forever
lost! My merciful heavenly Father has given me back that coat of skins, that
nuptial robe of modesty, self-respect, and holiness, which had been taken
away from me. He cannot allow you or any other man, to tear again and spoil
that vestment which is the work of His hands." |
|
These
words had exhausted her; it was evident to me that she wanted some rest. I
left her alone, but I was absolutely beside myself. Filled with admiration
for the sublime lessons which I had received from the lips of that
regenerated daughter of Eve, who, it was evident, was soon to fly away from
us, I felt a supreme disgust for myself, my theologians, and—shall I say it?
yes, I felt in that solemn hour a supreme disgust for my Church, which was so
cruelly defiling me, and all her priests in the confessional-box. I felt, in
that hour, a supreme horror for that auricular confession, which is so often
a pit of perdition and supreme misery for the confessor and penitent. I went
out and walked two hours on the |
|
At |
|
I said,
"Yes, madam: let me pass a few minutes alone with our poor dear child,
that I may prepare her for the last sacraments." |
|
When alone
with her, I again fell on my knees, and, amidst torrents of tears, I said,
'Dear sister, it is my desire to give you the holy viaticum and the extreme
unction; but tell me, how can I dare to do a thing so solemn against all the
prohibitions of our |
|
"
You know that I cherish and respect you as if you were
an angel sent to me from heaven. You told me the other day, that you blessed
the day that you first saw and knew me. I say the same thing. I bless the day
that I have known you; I bless every hour that I have spent by your bed of
suffering; I bless every tear which I have shed with you on your sins and on
my own; I bless every hour we have passed together in looking to the wounds
of our beloved, dying Saviour; I bless you for having forgiven me your death!
for I know it, and I confess it in the presence of God, I have killed you,
dear sister. But now I prefer a thousand times to die than to say to you a
word which would pain you in any way, or trouble the peace of your soul.
Please, my dear sister, tell me what I can and must do for you in this solemn
hour." |
|
Calmly,
and with a smile of joy such as I had never seen before, nor seen since, she
said, "I thank and bless you, dear father, for the parable of the
Prodigal Son, on which you preached a month ago. You have brought me to the feet
of the dear Saviour; there I have found a peace and a joy surpassing anything
the human heart can feel; I have thrown myself into the arms of my Heavenly
Father, and I know He has mercifully accepted and forgiven His poor prodigal
child! Oh, I see the angels with their golden harps around the throne of the
Lamb! Do you not hear the celestial harmony of their songs? I go—I go to join
them in my Father's house. I SHALL NOT BE LOST!" |
|
While she
was thus speaking to me, my eyes were really turned into two fountains of
tears; I was unable, as well as unwilling, to see anything, so entirely
overcome was I by the sublime words which were flowing from the dying lips of
that dear child, who was no more a sinner, but a real angel of Heaven to me.
I was listening to her words; there was a celestial music in every one of
them. But she had raised her voice in such a strange way, when she had begun
to say, "I go to my Father's house," and she had made such a cry of
joy when she had let the last words, "not be lost," escape her
lips, that I raised my head and opened my eyes to look at her. I suspected
that something strange had occurred. |
|
I got upon
my feet, passed my handkerchief over my face to wipe away the tears which
were preventing me from seeing with accuracy, and looked at her. |
|
Her hands
were crossed on her breast, and there was on her face the expression of a
really superhuman joy; her beautiful eyes were fixed as if they were looking
on some grand and sublime spectacle; it seemed to me, at first, that she was
praying. |
|
In that
very instant the mother rushed into the room, crying, My God! my God! what
does that cry 'lost' mean?"—For her last words, "not to be
lost," particularly the last one, had been pronounced with such a
powerful voice, that they had been heard almost everywhere in the house. |
|
I made a
sign with my hand to prevent the distressed mother from making any noise and
troubling her dying child in her prayer, for I really thought that she had
stopped speaking, as she used so often to do, when alone with me, in order to
pray. But I was mistaken. That redeemed soul had gone, on the golden wings of
love, to join the multitude of those who have washed their robes in the blood
of the Lamb, to sing the eternal Alleluia. |
|
|
|
From: The
Priest, the Woman and the Confessional, written by Charles Chiniquy, CHICAGO:
A. CRAIG & CO., PUBLISHERS, 1880, pages 21-58 |