Penance web

The Sacrament of Penance

  • 325

    The Council Of Nicaea

    The Council Of Nicaea pu the forgivness of grave sins under the authority of the bishops.
  • 430

    Changes to the sacrament

    Later in the century, changes to the sacrament were being made even before Augustine died.
  • Jan 1, 650

    Council of Chalons-sur-Saône

    This council approved the Celtic monastic practice and tried to establish Episcopal control over it. The severity of penances led to fewer Christians practicing sacramental penance. Some found other persons who would take on the penance and prayers for them.
  • Jan 1, 1215

    Fourth Lateran Council

    They prescribed that all who had “reached the age of discretion should at least once a year faithfully confess all their sins in secret to their own priest” and receive communion.
  • Jan 1, 1439

    Council of Florence

    The Council of Florence defined what the sacrament of penance involved: The acts of the penitent should be:1. Contrition of heart including sorrow for committing the sin and resolve not to sin again.2. Oral confession of all sins that are remembered.3. Satisfaction for sins assigned by the priest ordinarilydoneby prayer, fasting and almsgiving.
  • Jan 1, 1551

    Council of Trent

    In response to the Reformers claim that sinners should renew baptismal justification by interior conversion, they pushed an extreme non-communal, individualistic approach to the sacramental rite of penance to effect reconciliation with God.
  • The Vatican II

    The Vatican II document Lumen Gentium emphasized that in addition to receiving pardon for their sins, penitents are reconciled with the Church which they have “wounded by their sins.”There became a renewed sense that sacramental penance reconciles sinners with God and with the Church community
  • Pope Paul VI

    Pope Paul VI in his document Ordo Paenitentiae (Order of Penance), introduced the new name “Sacrament of Reconciliation.”
  • Augustine

    Augustine distinguished three kinds of reconciliation with God through the Church:1. The remission of all previous sin through baptism.2. The daily remission through prayer and fasting of “light and smallsins.”3. The formal one-time remission of deadly and serious sin throughpublic penance.
  • Third Council of Toledo

    Third Council of Toledo tried to maintain the old system of reconciliation and remain with once-only reconciliation and rejected the Celtic monastic practice.