Continuing to display
humility and leadership by example, Pope Francis went to confession
before a regular and ordinary priest, much to the shock of the congregation
present in St. Peter's Basilica over the weekend.
Pope Francis' cordon sanitaire might be already
used to him breaking protocol since he assumed the post as top spiritual leader
of the Roman Catholic church on March 2013. But his escorts and people working
for him still find it surprising every time he does break tradition.
Pope Francis on Friday led a penitential liturgy
at St. Peter's Basilica. After reading a sermon at the service, he will take
his place at a confessional box to hear people's confessions.
As Msgr Guido Marini, master of papal liturgical
ceremonies, showed him which confessional box he would be using, Pope Francis
stalled and pointed to another confessional nearby. Not because he wanted to be
seated there but that he himself wanted to go to confession first.
Without fanfare, the pope walked to the
confessional box and knelt before a priest before a very shocked public. He
confessed his sins for the whole world to see.
"Francis confessed his sins with his back
to the camera, so it was not possible to read lips or hear what he said,"
the AP said. "At one point, the priest hearing his confession appeared to
chuckle."
"Francis, solemn-faced, then rose and
started hearing confessions himself."
Pope Francis' confessional display seemed to
concretize his earlier sermon in which he stressed the importance of confession
in the Catholic faith.
"Who can say he is not a sinner? Nobody. We
all are," the pope, dressed in a simple white alb and purple stole, told
the thousands present at the penitential liturgy rites.
The priest spent about three minutes hearing the
pope mention his sins and then gave him the necessary absolution. Surely
shocked to his core, but the priest still managed to clasp the pope's hands and
kiss his simple silver ring, in what seemed a testament that he fully knows the
individual penitent who knelt before was the Holy Father of the Catholic
church.
The pope plus 61 other priests then moved into
the confessional boxes or to the chairs placed against the walls to perform the
confession rites to individual penitents.
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