Home/Stay Informed/All Diocesan Articles

All Diocesan Articles

Reconciliation on the Rise? Catholics Coming Back to Confession, Poll Suggests

Posted on October 11, 2024 in: News

Reconciliation on the Rise? Catholics Coming Back to Confession, Poll Suggests

Despite the Catholic Church’s requirement that Catholics go to confession at least once a year — with more frequent confession highly encouraged, and required if a Catholic is conscious of mortal sin and wishes to receive Communion — Catholics in the U.S. don’t go to confession very often.

Polling from EWTN News/RealClear Opinion Research (EWTN is CNA’s parent company) has consistently shown that over half of U.S. Catholics go to confession either less than once a year or not at all.

Yet within this year’s nationally representative EWTN poll results was one rather surprising detail: The number of Catholics who reported going to confession regularly is going up.

Although 18% of the Catholics surveyed this year said they never go to confession and 24% go less than once a year, this actually represents an increase over poll numbers from 2022. That year, 28% of respondents said they went to confession less than annually and 35% said they never went at all.

Fully 42% of the Catholics surveyed in 2024 said they go to confession at least once a year — in line with the Church’s requirements — while 16% go to confession at least once a month.

In the 2022 survey, just 10% of respondents that year said they went to confession monthly.

‘Leaving the light on’

In some corners of the country — in dioceses that have consciously sought to promote the sacrament of confession in recent years — the statistics were a welcome sign that their efforts are working.

The Archdiocese of Washington and the Diocese of Arlington, Virginia — both of which share the bulk of the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area — jointly created an initiative more than a decade ago designed to promote the sacrament of confession called “The Light Is On for You.”

The idea, which has since been copied by more than a half-dozen other dioceses nationwide, is a simple one: During the penitential seasons of Lent and Advent, every parish in the diocese opens its doors for several hours each Wednesday evening to allow people the opportunity to seek God’s mercy. 

In Arlington and Washington, the dioceses have promoted the initiative widely with ads on buses, radio, and TV spots, and other media that are designed to have a broad reach beyond Catholics who are regularly in the pews. 

Father Donald Planty, the pastor at St. Charles Borromeo Parish in Arlington, told CNA he has seen the initiative lead to an increased demand for confessions — so much so that at his parish they decided to continue offering confessions every Wednesday night of the year. 

And the results have been positive: Planty said he and his fellow priests at the parish have heard an estimated 25,000 total confessions on Wednesday nights since 2014. And that doesn’t count all the confessions heard on the other four days of the week they offer it at St. Charles. 

Planty said they’ve found a simple but winning formula to get people to come back to the sacrament: Make confession more available and preach on it at Mass.

“It’s like a field of dreams: If you build it, they will come. If you offer it, they will come. It’s very simple,” he said. 

He emphasized for fellow priests the importance of putting people at ease when they arrive in the confessional, especially if they’ve been away from the sacrament for a while. He said he welcomes penitents to the confessional with a variation on the phrase he also preaches on during Mass, assuring them that the Lord welcomes them “with open arms.”

“‘In the sacrament of penance, the Lord Jesus welcomes you with open arms. He forgives your sins, and he forgets them. And you start a new life with his love, with his grace in your heart,’” Planty said, reciting the typical phrase he offers in his homilies. 

“I often add, especially when I’m preaching: ‘There is no unforgivable sin. There is no unforgivable sin. There is no unforgivable sin.’ I repeat it three times. There’s nothing to be afraid of, and everything to gain [by coming to confession],” Planty explained.

Variations on the “Light Is On for You” initiative have been implemented in dioceses all across the country: for instance in DallasGrand Rapids, MichiganPortland, MaineToledo, OhioScranton, PennsylvaniaFort Wayne-South Bend, Indiana; and Erie, Pennsylvania. It has even inspired bishops abroad

Danielle Cummings, chancellor and communications director for the Diocese of Syracuse, New York, similarly told CNA that they have seen a marked increase in demand for confessions since they began offering “The Light Is On for You” several years ago. 

And like in Washington and Arlington, the Syracuse Diocese buys time in major media markets to promote the initiative in the hopes that people who have been away from the sacrament for a while will come back. 

Cummings said they have found that people far and wide see and hear the ads inviting them back to confession and it “resonates in their heart” as something they ought to be doing.

It’s not a typical “penance service,” she added — it’s just an open church building with a prayerful atmosphere inside and priests available to hear confessions when people are ready. 

Every year after the initiative takes place, Cummings said she asks pastors for anecdotal stories about how it went. She said she has heard remarkable reports, including Catholics returning to confession after 50 years away and parishes adding permanent confession times due to increased demand after participating. 

“It has been just an overwhelming experience here in the diocese. I would recommend it to any diocese to begin this initiative,” Cummings said. 

“What it really [does] is make people remember going to confession and remember how relieved, how the burden has been lifted, when they walk out of the confessional.”

Similar to Planty, Cummings said they have found that the best advice they can give for dioceses wanting to replicate their success is: “Keep it simple.” 

“I would be very surprised to hear that any diocese [that has done this] has not seen a change in the number of confessions being sought after doing this kind of initiative,” Cummings said. 

Rediscovering the sacrament 

Father Wade Menezes, CPM, a Father of Mercy and a frequent contributor to EWTN, wrote a book on sin and God’s mercy titled “Overcoming the Evil Within: The Reality of Sin and the Transforming Power of God’s Grace and Mercy.” 

In a chapter dedicated to the sacrament of confession, Menezes lays out some of the most common reasons that Catholics avoid the sacrament: for example, they fear being judged or scolded for their sins; they don’t realize the importance of confession; or they consider confession unnecessary. 

But Menezes said he believes that regular confession and Eucharistic participation are essential for spiritual maintenance and growth, contributing to a person’s overall sanctity as well as his or her peace of mind.

“These two sacraments, confession and Eucharist, are precisely the two of the seven that sustain us in our daily vocation and walk in life — regardless of what that may be: single, married, widowed, consecrated religious, diocesan priest, etc. It’s a tragedy that some Catholics stay away from confession for so long,” he commented to CNA.

“I’m a huge advocate of monthly confession, 12 times a year, faithfully … The main purpose of a monthly confession is precisely to have only venial sins to confess. Hopefully, those who go monthly won’t have mortal sins to confess, at least not often. In other words, it’s the practice of monthly confession, per se, that’s helping to keep them away from committing mortal sin.”

Oftentimes, a big factor keeping people from seeking the sacrament is unavailability, Menezes noted.

While acknowledging that many priests are overwhelmed and may not feel they can offer confession more frequently, he encouraged priests to make more time for this sacrament anyway, assuring them that God will lighten their workload in other ways.

“We need to make ourselves more available as priests. This is why the programs that do exist that really promote confession, like [‘The Light Is On for You’], that several dioceses have taken on, is a wonderful, wonderful thing,” he said.

“Regarding the pastor who’s alone with no associate pastors to aid him — hopefully he’ll feel compelled to make more time to administer the sacrament of reconciliation; in doing so, I’m confident that he will discover that God cannot be outdone in his generosity,” he said. 

“God will help lighten up his schedule in other ways if he makes time to hear the confessions of the souls of his parishioners, because he’s first and foremost the guardian and caretaker of the souls in his parish.”

Laying out the nine chief benefits of going to confession, Menezes reiterated in his book how beneficial it is to go to the sacrament monthly, if possible. He encouraged Catholics to make use of an examination of conscience brochure available on the Fathers of Mercy website, which serves as both a guide for self-reflection and a mini-catechism, helping individuals prepare for confession effectively. 

His order distributes about 600,000 of these brochures annually, Menezes said.

“Monthly confession also brings you great peace with your past … Each monthly confession literally only looks back on that past four- to five-week period of your life. And there’s nothing more great than having that solidified, moral compass that, ‘Yes, I’m totally, totally at peace with my past,’” he explained to CNA.

“Regular Eucharist and regular confession helps create that solid moral compass in your life. There‘s no need to ever look back anymore.”

By Jonah McKeown


Most Viewed Articles of the Last 30 Days

Comment by Sept. 20th - Connecticut Dept. of Health Proposes Changing Abortion Regulations - Catholic Conference in Strong Opposition
CONNECTICUT DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH PROPOSES CHANGING ABORTION REGULATIONS CATHOLIC CONFERENCE IN STRONG OPPOSITION Open Comment Period Ends September 20th Click here for more information on the revisions. Public Comments: Click here to send an email to the Public Health Commissioner. A prewritten email, which you can edit, is provided.   Background: The revised regulations go beyond the originally purposes stated by the Department of Public Health by including the elimination of significant sections of the regulations that have existed for d...

Read More

Pope Francis Bestows a Blessing on Cathedral of St. Patrick
The Holy Father Francis cordially imparts the requested Apostolic Blessing to the Rector Rev. Msgr. Anthony S. Rosaforte and all the faithful of the Saint Patrick Cathedral on the occasion of the 145th Dedication Anniversary of the Church and, through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, invokes an abundance of divine graces. Norwich, Connecticut ~ September 28, 2024   As the Diocese of Norwich celebrates the 145th anniversary of the dedication of St. Patrick Church on September 28th, we reflect on the history and significance of this remarkable bui...

Read More

Nuclear Engineer Says Latest Research Confirms First-Century Date of Shroud of Turin
For centuries Christians have attributed a first-century date to the Shroud of Turin. Nuclear engineer Robert Rucker says that his latest research on the shroud verifies that. “The Shroud of Turin is the second-most valuable possession of the human race next to the Bible itself,” Rucker told CNA. The shroud is currently preserved in the Chapel of the Holy Shroud adjacent to St. John the Baptist Cathedral in Turin (Torino), Italy. For more than 10 years, Rucker has studied the physics of the disappearance of the body of Jesus and its imprint on the shr...

Read More

A Prayerful Witness - 40 Days for Life Begins
Homilist, Rev. Brian Maxwell delivers an inspiring message at the September 24th vigil Mass to kick off the 40 Days for Life campaign in the Diocese of Norwich. This year, the 40 DAYS FOR LIFE campaign runs from Wednesday, September 25th through Sunday, November 3rd. It is hoped that you will join pro-life people of all faiths by praying, fasting, and signing up to attend the 40 DAYS FOR LIFE peaceful prayer vigil held outside Planned Parenthood, 12 Case St., Norwich. Never done it before? There’s nothing to be afraid of. It’s not a protest. Here&rsquo...

Read More

Feeding Hope and Building Community

Posted on September 18, 2024 in: News

628

Feeding Hope and Building Community
If you want to gauge the level of need in our local community, stop by the St. Vincent de Paul Place Norwich meal site and food pantry. While there, you’ll also be able to see the immense good this mostly volunteer group does daily out of the old St. Joseph School building on Cliff Street in Norwich to help the neediest among us. It’s at the core of the SVdPP ministry. Established by the Diocese of Norwich in 1979, St. Vincent de Paul Place’s goal is to provide food, companionship, and advocacy for anyone in need, regardless of race or religion. It&r...

Read More

 Knights of Columbus Dedicate Pro-Life Holy Family Statue in Colchester
On Sunday, September 22, 2024, a special Dedication and Blessing ceremony took place at Guardian Angels Roman Catholic Church in Colchester for the new Pro-Life Holy Family Statue. This beautiful statue, a gift from the men of the Knights of Columbus Francis Cardinal Spellman Council #6107, stands as a powerful symbol of the Knights' unwavering commitment to the sanctity of life. Affiliated with both Guardian Angels Roman Catholic Church and St. Mary Ukrainian Catholic Church, the council’s members generously funded the statue as part of their ongoing support f...

Read More

Annual Catholic Appeal

ACA DONATE

English

Español

 

Latest Articles
Recently Added Galleries
Click to view album: 40 Days for Life 2024
Click to view album: Blessing of the Fleet 2024
Click to view album: Mass of Ordination for Fr. Eric Carl Hosmer, Fr. Julian Felipe Cuervo-Lozada and Fr. Alexander James Pandolfe
Click to view album: Norwich Diocesan Council of Catholic Women (NDCCW) 46th Annual Layette
Signup for Weekly Newsletter

     

    Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich
    201 Broadway
    Norwich, CT 06360-4328
    Phone: 860-887-9294