Celebration of Discipline: Confession

book cover - Celebration Of Discipline

Blog read­ers: Chi Alpha @ Stan­ford is engag­ing in our annu­al sum­mer read­ing project. As we read through an anno­tat­ed trans­la­tion of Pascal’s Pensees called Chris­tian­i­ty For Mod­ern Pagans, I’ll post the thoughts I’m email­ing the stu­dents here (which will large­ly con­sist of excerpts I found insight­ful). They are all tagged sum­mer-read­ing-project-2020. The read­ing sched­ule is online.

This week we’re talk­ing about con­fess­ing our sins to oth­er peo­ple. Bib­li­cal­ly, we always con­fess our sins to the Lord in prayer and then we usu­al­ly also con­fess direct­ly to those we have wronged. Some­times in addi­tion we con­fess our sins to oth­er believ­ers for the sake of their or our spir­i­tu­al health. As an exam­ple of con­fess­ing for the sake of some­one else’s spir­i­tu­al health, I might con­fess a sin while preach­ing about how growth comes in a cer­tain area. As an exam­ple of con­fess­ing for my own spir­i­tu­al health, I might con­fess a sin to a friend while request­ing their coun­sel.

“Con­fes­sion is a dif­fi­cult Dis­ci­pline for us because we all too often view the believ­ing com­mu­ni­ty as a fel­low­ship of saints before we see it as a fel­low­ship of sin­ners. We feel that every­one else has advanced so far into holi­ness that we are iso­lat­ed and alone in our sin. We can­not bear to reveal our fail­ures and short­com­ings to oth­ers. We imag­ine that we are the only ones who have not stepped onto the high road to heav­en. There­fore, we hide our­selves from one anoth­er in live in veiled lies and hypocrisy.”

Richard Fos­ter, Cel­e­bra­tion of Dis­ci­pline, p 145 9

A few thoughts about con­fes­sion:

  • Fos­ter’s advice is spot-on when he says, “…we must be pre­pared to deal with def­i­nite sins. A gen­er­al­ized con­fes­sion may save us from humil­i­a­tion and shame, but it will not ignite inner heal­ing” (page 151). This relat­ed quote has often run through my mind, “We con­fess our lit­tle faults to per­suade peo­ple that we have no large ones” (Rochefou­cauld). If we con­fess in a way that makes us look good, there’s some­thing amiss. When you con­fess, don’t mere­ly con­fess that you are not per­fect. Draw atten­tion to one or more of your par­tic­u­lar imper­fec­tions. Not sim­ply “I can be greedy some­times”; rather, “I have been so con­sumed with desir­ing that new iPhone that I almost stole mon­ey from my mom’s purse. I was shocked at my lev­el of greed.”
  • I said we usu­al­ly con­fess to the per­son we have wronged. That is not always the case, how­ev­er. For exam­ple, if you’ve been star­ing lust­ful­ly at some­one, it’s gen­er­al­ly unwise to tell that to the per­son you’ve been lust­ing after. You are reliev­ing your emo­tions by bur­den­ing theirs. It’s self­ish.
  • To whom do you con­fess when you are not con­fess­ing direct­ly to some­one you have wronged? Fos­ter’s coun­sel is wise: “The key qual­i­fi­ca­tions are spir­i­tu­al matu­ri­ty, wis­dom, com­pas­sion, good com­mon sense, the abil­i­ty to keep a con­fi­dence, and a whole­some sense of humor” (page 153).
  • In uni­ver­si­ty min­istry I some­times observe two extremes: a com­mu­ni­ty where no one con­fess­es any­thing to any­one else (usu­al­ly because of fear) or a com­mu­ni­ty whose wor­ship ser­vices some­times become pub­lic con­fes­sion cer­e­monies. I have thoughts about both:
    • A com­mu­ni­ty where no one con­fess­es any­thing to any­one else is held in bondage to sin. Peo­ple con­vince them­selves they strug­gle alone, and as result half of Satan’s work is done for him. He desires to iso­late Chris­tians as a pre­lude to destroy­ing us, and yet we fool­ish­ly iso­late our­selves.
    • A com­mu­ni­ty where peo­ple reg­u­lar­ly con­fess their sins in a pub­lic forum runs the risk of indi­rect­ly ele­vat­ing sin. If you’ve nev­er seen this done it is hard to describe, but I have seen it sev­er­al times. Some­one heads to the micro­phone and asks if they can share some­thing that they feel like they have to get off their chest. And then they con­fess a sin. And then some­one else wrestling with that same sin or a relat­ed sin makes a bee­line for the micro­phone after this. And then the dam breaks and it takes over the entire ser­vice. This is some­times a gen­uine response to the guid­ing of the Holy Spir­it (we see an exam­ple of this in Acts 19:18–19), but some­times it is an indi­ca­tor that healthy inter­per­son­al con­fes­sion is not hap­pen­ing and so this sub­sti­tute is emerg­ing as a replace­ment. The dan­gers are (a) it can make sin seem more per­va­sive than it is (5% of the peo­ple spend­ing 95% of the time talk­ing about their biggest mis­takes cre­ates a dis­tort­ed impres­sion of the com­mu­ni­ty), and (b) with­out wise pas­toral lead­er­ship the nor­mal emo­tions that accom­pa­ny pub­lic con­fes­sion can be mis­tak­en for the work­ing of the Holy Spir­it.
    • That’s in a wor­ship ser­vice. It’s usu­al­ly a healthy thing when this hap­pens in a small group (although here, too, it can some­times nor­mal­ize sin and min­i­mize the trans­form­ing pow­er of grace).

Here is my sug­ges­tion to you: today or tomor­row exam­ine your con­science and iden­ti­fy a spe­cif­ic sin to con­fess. Med­i­tate upon the sin until you clear­ly see its wrong­ness. Then this week find a fel­low believ­er (per­haps in Chi Alpha, per­haps in your church) and con­fess the sin to them. Then ask them to pray for you that God will lib­er­ate you from the pow­er of that sin. See what hap­pens and iter­ate mov­ing for­ward.

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