Holy Mysteries
Why confess to a priest instead of only confessing directly to God?
Confession Is Still Made To God
In Orthodox confession, the person confesses sins to God in the presence of the priest. The priest does not replace God. He stands as witness, spiritual father, and minister of absolution.
Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them.
Why Speak Out Loud?
Sin becomes easier to hide when it remains vague. Speaking plainly helps the person stop bargaining with the conscience. A priest can also help distinguish sin from fear, give practical counsel, assign repentance if needed, and guide the person back toward Communion.
Why A Priest?
Christ gave the apostles pastoral authority to bind and loose, forgive and retain, heal and restore. The priest serves within that apostolic ministry. Confession is personal, but it is also ecclesial because sin wounds the person and the Body of Christ.
A Visitor's Starting Point
If you are not Orthodox, you can still ask the priest for guidance. He can explain what sacramental confession is, when it applies, and what the path into the Church would require.
- Sacraments of Repentance and Confession, CopticChurch.net. Ritual-theology explanation of repentance, verbal confession before the priest, and absolution.
- Confession to a Priest, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer on confession before God in the presence of the priest.
- Repentance and Confession, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer connecting confession, repentance, spiritual guidance, and healing.
- Confession and Absolution, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer on repentance, confession, and receiving absolution.
- The Seven Sacraments, Servants Preparation Program, SUSCopts. Doctrine lesson explaining the sacraments as visible mysteries through which the faithful receive grace.
Orthodox: Right worship and right belief, naming the Church's received apostolic faith and the life of worship that preserves it.
Confession: The sacrament of repentance in which a person confesses sins before God in the presence of the priest and receives absolution and guidance.
Absolution: The priestly prayer of forgiveness and release, prayed by the authority Christ gave His Church for repentance and reconciliation.
Holy Communion: The faithful receiving the true Body and Blood of Christ in the Eucharist, after baptismal life, repentance, confession, fasting, reconciliation, and pastoral preparation.
