A Catholic apologetics & formation system.

Whether confessing sins to a priest is necessary

protestant Introductory 2 objections Constantly raised
The Article

The Catholic Position

The Catholic Church teaches that Christ gave the apostles the authority to forgive and retain sins (John 20:22-23). This authority passes to ordained priests through apostolic succession. Sacramental confession is the ordinary means Christ established for the forgiveness of serious sin after baptism.

Against the Position

Objections Raised

Objection 1 Protestant Serious objection
Direct-access argument from 1 Timothy 2:5
We can go directly to God for forgiveness. No human mediator is needed. The priesthood of all believers means every Christian has direct access to God.
Objection 2 Protestant Moderate objection
Psalm 32 / Psalm 51 argument
David confessed directly to God and was forgiven. No priest was involved. This proves that direct confession to God is sufficient.
On the Contrary

The Historical Counter-Witness

Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.

The Response

I Answer That

The objection that confession to a priest is unbiblical collapses under examination of John 20:22-23. Jesus gives the apostles a specific authority: to forgive and to retain sins. This authority is meaningless unless sins are actually confessed to those who hold it. You cannot retain what you do not know.

The authority to bind and loose (Matt 18:18) reinforces this. James 5:16 instructs: 'Confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed.' Acts 19:18 records early Christians confessing and divulging their practices. The pattern of verbal confession to a person with authority runs throughout the New Testament.

The early Church practiced confession from the beginning. The Didache (c. AD 100) instructs: 'In the assembly you shall confess your transgressions.' Irenaeus describes Gnostic women confessing sins to the bishop. Tertullian, Origen, and Cyprian all attest to the practice of confessing to a priest who pronounces absolution.

Confessing to a priest IS going to God. The priest acts in persona Christi (in the person of Christ). God forgives; the priest is the instrument. Catholics can and do pray directly to God for forgiveness of venial sins. But for mortal sins, Christ established a sacramental means of reconciliation that provides the certainty of absolution.

Ad Singula

Reply to Each Objection

Reply to Objection 1

The priesthood of all believers (1 Pet 2:9) does not abolish the ordained ministerial priesthood, any more than the kingship of all believers abolishes earthly authority. Jesus chose twelve men and gave them specific authority. The universal priesthood and the ministerial priesthood coexist in the New Testament. Going to a priest IS going to God through the instrument Christ appointed.

Reply to Objection 2

David lived under the Old Covenant, before Christ established the sacraments. Under the New Covenant, Christ gave specific authority to the apostles that did not exist in the Old Testament. Nathan the prophet did confront David and pronounce God's forgiveness (2 Sam 12:13), which is precisely the pattern of a human agent mediating divine forgiveness.

History has always been on her side.

Explore verified claims across seven centuries of Church history.

Enter the Archive