Anthony Bloom
(Metropolitan of Sourozh (1914- 2003))
2nd sermon
26th September 1999
In the Name of the Father, the Son
and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
I have been asked to give a couple of
sermons on Confession. This is my second sermon on the subject.
When we come to Confession we come to
meet a friend face to face. We are not coming to be judged and condemned. We do
not come in terror of what will happen. We come to the One who, being God,
beyond suffering, beyond death, has chosen, for the love of us, to become Man,
to take upon Himself all our human destiny and to give His life for us. His
life, His death are to us evidence that we are so loved of God that we can come
up to Him whether we are good or bad with hope that He will receive us with
open arms; that if anyone is to cry over our unworthiness and our sins it is
Him, for compassion, for pity, for love - with a readiness, as He said in a
vision to one of the saints, that if there was only one sinner in the world He
would again become Man and again die for him, because He cannot endure the
thought of anyone perishing.
This is the God, the Christ, to Whom
we come when we come to Confession - to the One who is open to us with all His
life and death; One who waits for us to come to be healed, to be consoled, to
be supported - not to be condemned, not to be judged.
And then, what is the role of the
priest? In the prayer which is read before Confession we are told, 'I am but a
witness'. What does it mean? A witness to what? To the fact that you have come?
That would not be enough. But if you think of what witnesses are: there are
accidental, occasional witnesses. You are present in the street when an
accident takes place. You are asked: what did happen? You are neither in favour
of the ones or the others. You are just telling what your eyes have seen. It's
for others to judge and to know.
There are other forms of witness. At
times a friend of ours is brought to judgement. And we come to defend him, to
testify for him, to save him. That's another kind of witness.
And then there is the witness which
the Holy Gospel mentions speaking of St. John the Baptist: as the friend of the
Bridegroom, the one who comes to the wedding, invited both by the bride and the
bridegroom, because he is the nearest, the closest, to them both. And he is
there to share their joy, the miracle of their encounter, the miracle of a
blessing that will come upon them and out of two make one, unite them so that
they are inseparable for ever in the mystery of eternal love, of divine love shared
with them.
This is the position of the priest.
He is called by Christ to be before the person, the sinner, a witness to the
fact that he, the sinner, is loved, that Christ is there, that He has no other
desire or intention but the salvation and the joy eternal of the one who has
come today. And the priest comes also in the name of the sinner saying: Christ,
my God, our Lord, this person has sinned, yes, but look, he trusts in You, he
believes in You, we all love him with the same love as You possess. We are
prepared to give our lives for him to be reconciled and find peace and joy and
be at one with You, our Lord, our God, our Saviour, our Lover.
When you come to Confession next
time, think of these things. Think of the way you come: not with fear of
punishment or of rejection but with open heart to pour out everything evil or
doubtful there is in this heart. And Christ will receive you. Your confession
may be to Him a new crucifixion but He accepts it. He doesn't reject it. He
does not reject you. Come, open your heart, speak in all truth to Him, knowing
that you are loved beyond judgement, to the point of sacrifice and death: His
death, and your life - life in time and life eternal. Amen.
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