CONFESSION…THERE’S AN APP FOR THAT

I don’t know if you heard the news  today.  The Vatican has released an I-tunes application called Confession, for $1.99; it has been billed as “the perfect aid for every penitent”.  It lets you pick a commandment and list all your sins, keeping a running tally to bring into the confession booth with you.  Why couldn’t I have thought of that?

If you can’t find your particular transgression on the sin scroll,  no worries.  You are able to add you own specific misdeed, customize your very own naughty list.  In fact, the app walks the user through the sacrament of reconciliation (the more recent title for the sacrament of confession).

You can examine your conscience based on personalized factors such as age, sex, or marital status.

It’s actually quite brilliant.  In an age when the number of Catholics that actually go to confession on a regular basis has been steadily declining, this may very well be the fresh air that blows the cob webs out of the confessional.

While the Roman Catholic Church has been unapologetically slow in moving into other areas of mainstream modernity (women as religious leaders, married clergy, birth control, to name a few), it has decidedly embraced the toys of  technology and blessed the good works of social networking.

In 2007, the Vatican launched its own YouTube channel.  Two years later, it created a Facebook application that lets users send virtual postcards featuring the pontiff.

Pope Benedict XVI, in his World Communications Address on Jan. 24th, said it was not a sin to use social networking sites, “I invite young people above all to make good use of their presence in the digital world.”    While the pope sanctioned these new tools for salvation, he added, “It is important to remember that virtual contact cannot and must not take the place of direct human contact with people at every level of our lives.”

Words of wisdom to be sure.

Yet, with information flying at us, all clamoring for our attention, “Confession” is designed to keep the user mindful of one’s individual and personal Catholic faith journey.  For instance, for reviewing the 1st Commandment, “I am the Lord thy God, thou shall have no other Gods before me”, you are given a check list that includes these questions, “Do I not give God time every day in prayer?”, “Do I not seek to love Him with  my whole heart?”, “Have I been involved with superstitious practices or have I been involved with the occult?”, and “Do I not seek to surrender myself to God’s Word as taught by the Church?”

As a sinner myself, I know my own too human tendency to let myself off the hook, to not only forgive my trespasses, but simply just forget ’em. Perhaps daily prompts on an I-phone could get us one step closer to holiness?  Personally, I’m all for ways for us to engage in our faith journeys more fully and daily…and if these ways are fun and include colorful graphics, all the better.

And one more plus, it was  made in the US of A (Indiana to be exact…America’s heartland).  Gotta love it.

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2 replies
  1. Taufiq Khalid
    Taufiq Khalid says:

    Dear Kat,
    Faith if its not colourful and graphic is a poor manifestation when we look out of our window and see the beauty of creation. It is my lifelong struggle, a quest, if you would call it, to see Faith in what must be its real embodiment of all that is good, wonderful AND fascinating about this world and us human beings.
    Yes, you are right – any thing that brings colour and enhances interaction with your inner self is a good thing. With the right discipline married to passion, it will take any seeker far. I am not good in such things, you know. I have what you call self-control issues. Hehehe.
    But as a chap told me yesterday, if you cannot master yourself, how will you ever be a servant? I think God wants us to be masterly, but only over our own selves, and no one else. To everyone else, we are suppose to be servants. And if you are a servant of God, then necessarily, you MUST be a servant of all…
    Well, Kat, the Egyptians have done it! Now they must make the right and often hard decisions about where they wish to bring their nation to. I think you, me and the cat named Moses, we wish them all the best ahead of this new journey.
    I hope you are keeping well and in good health. Its warm here now and I am still a bit under the weather.
    God be with ye.
    TK.

    • katmon1
      katmon1 says:

      Hi Taufiq, Are you feeling better? Have I told you lately how much I love getting your witty responses? You and me both Taufiq, have self-control issues!! I think the biggest one I’m struggling with lately is my mouth…not everyone cares or needs to hear my every thought…Yikes! In my evening meditations, I sometimes cringe at things that never should have been spoken. Oh, well, the fact that I am still here, means I have another opportunity to watch my conversation, to say no thanks to the third or fourth cookie, etc. etc.! I am so very happy for Egypt, but worried to, and now Bahrain and Libya, exciting and scary both… May peace reign today in “your neck of the woods”, Katherine

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