Pope to Priests: ‘Don’t Get Tired of Forgiving!’

Priests who are good confessors must recognize their own sins in order to forgive and comfort penitents, the Holy Father said in his homily Feb. 9 at Mass with Capuchin Franciscan friars from around the world.

Father John Paul, the chaplain of EWTN News’ Rome office, with a papal mandate in hand. On Ash Wednesday, Feb. 10, Father John Paul will become a ‘missionary of mercy’ by special papal commission and with his blessing.
Father John Paul, the chaplain of EWTN News’ Rome office, with a papal mandate in hand. On Ash Wednesday, Feb. 10, Father John Paul will become a ‘missionary of mercy’ by special papal commission and with his blessing. (photo: CNA Instagram)

VATICAN CITY — Priests who are good confessors must recognize their own sins in order to forgive and comfort penitents, Pope Francis said one day before the start of the Lenten season.

“I speak to you as a brother, and through you, I would like to speak to all confessors, especially in this Year of Mercy: The confessional is for forgiveness,” the Pope said in his homily Feb. 9 in St. Peter’s Basilica. He celebrated the Mass with Capuchin Franciscan friars from around the world.

Even if priests cannot give absolution in some cases, the Pope told them, “Please, do not beat up on the penitent.”

Someone who comes to the confessional is seeking “comfort, pardon and peace in his soul.”

“Let him find a father who embraces him and says, ‘God loves you’ and makes the penitent feel that God really does,” the Pope said.

Reflecting on the Capuchin Franciscan tradition as one of giving forgiveness, he cited the many well-known Capuchin confessors, like St. Leopold of Mandic and St. Pio of Pietrelcina, more commonly known as Padre Pio.

Relics of both saints, including the body of Padre Pio, have been brought to Rome as a special initiative for the Catholic Church’s Year of Mercy. The Pope’s Tuesday morning Mass marked these special events.

He said these saints are good confessors “because they feel like sinners”; they are forgiven when they know how to ask for it in prayer.

When someone forgets the necessity of being forgiven, they slowly forget God, the Pope explained. They forget to ask for forgiveness, and they don’t know how to forgive. The humble priest, the one who feels like a sinner, is a great forgiver in the sacrament of penance. Others who wrongly feel themselves pure “only know how to condemn.”

“Don’t get tired of forgiving!” the Pope exhorted. “Be men of forgiveness, reconciliation and peace.”

Pope Francis suggested that a penitent’s coming to the confessional is a telling gesture.

“If a person comes to me in the confessional, it’s because he feels burdened by something heavy, and wants to remove it,” he said.

“If this person comes it’s because he wants to change, not to do it again,” he continued.

He noted that many times penitents cannot change because of their psychological conditions, the circumstances of their lives or their situations.

He encouraged confessors to be “great forgivers,” not condemners. He noted that the Bible depicts Satan as “the great accuser.”

The Pope told priests: “Forgiveness is a seed, a caress of God. Trust in the forgiveness of God.”