Confessing to Women

Confessing to Women

Photo credit: asiandelight, Shutterstock

[Editors’ note: Due to the sensitive nature of this post, the writer has requested to remain anonymous.]

“Bless me, Father, for I have sinned. It has been three months since my last confession.”

There I sat in a dimly-lit room in the back of my church, trying to think of how exactly to phrase my sins to this priest. I had several sins to confess, and one I wanted to confess was of a sexual nature. However, even sitting behind a screen, I was very uncomfortable going into much, if at any, detail about what had happened. So I simply said, “I went a little too far with a guy, and I did not have the best of intentions behind my actions,” then proceeded to the next sin. I listed another four or five: “I was not patient enough with my mom when I talked to her last,” “I gossiped about my friend and if she knew what I said she would be really hurt,” etc. The priest was silent until I finished my list, and when I finally did he immediately returned to the first sin that I had confessed.

“What kind of things did you do with that man?”

I knew he was going to come back to this. Even though I could have really used some advice on the other sins, it had been my experience in confession that priests became concerned with sexual acts when I confessed them. I was not sure if this was just my experience as a woman, but in this specific instance it would become very clear.

“What do you mean, Father?” I asked in a slow, confused manner. I looked behind me only to be reminded the door was shut. This was supposed to make me feel safe, but this privacy was beginning to provoke a fear inside of me.

I barely knew this priest. I was new to the church, a 22-year-old, first-year graduate student who had never lived anywhere near this small-town-Indiana parish.

I began to tell him more details about the sin I had just confessed, still using censored language. But I couldn’t help but have the feeling I was engaging in some sort of weird phone sex as I described my actions to the priest from behind a screen. I started to get the feeling he was somewhat enjoying hearing about my actions. So I stopped and said, “Sorry, I do not feel comfortable talking about this right now.”

“Tell me exactly everything you did with this man,” he repeated.

I froze. “No…” I began to say.

“I said, what kind of things did you do with this man?”

“I don’t feel comfortable telling you, and honestly I don’t need to tell you to be forgiven.”

The priest stopped talking, and an aura of defense sent in. He knew he had pushed too far, but he never apologized. He remained silent and gave me a lengthy penance. I said my Act of Contrition as quickly as possible and walked out of the church still stunned as to what had just happened. I have not gone back to confession since.

Some of you reading this may be shocked; others may not be shocked at all. And some of you reading this may have had a similar experience.

But for everyone reading this, whether you know it or not: this was sexual harassment.

I said “no,” I told him I was uncomfortable, and he kept insisting.

More than a year has gone by since this occurrence, and I have started to think, “What could be some solutions to sexual harassment in confession?” I knew that I was not the only woman this priest had done this to, and I knew he was probably not the only priest doing it.

My mind went right to, “Don’t confess sins of a sexual nature in confession next time.” That could be a solution. Then my mind went to, “Maybe just don’t commit sins of a sexual nature so you do not have to confess them.” And finally, I thought, “Maybe I should only go to priests who I know very well and trust would not do something like that to me”.

But those solutions I had automatically generated were both rooted in something the Church and society have been guilty of for far too long: victim blaming.

Both of these solutions focused on me, the person who was harassed, changing my behavior as if I did something to provoke the priest to ask these inappropriate questions, when confession was designed to be a safe space for a parishioner to talk openly. Solutions like these perpetuate rape culture by forcing the victim to look for solutions when nothing should have prompted the behavior in the first place.

As I rethought my solution, I came up with the idea of informing priests and other clergy more about what sexual harassment is and how to not engage in it. This was a better solution, I will give myself that. But to be frank, if a man who is so deeply rooted in God’s will, devoting his life to the Lord, had it in his heart to give into the temptation of having to know exactly every detail of what I did, then would a simple seminar really help? If this man had spent so much time praying and focusing on how to help humanity and give dignity to those who are oppressed, wouldn’t he have already known what he was doing is wrong? And if he didn’t know it was wrong, would education alone change the deeply rooted patriarchy in the Catholic Church that allows situations like this to occur at parishes around the world?

And that’s when it hit me. What if a woman had been on the other side of that screen?

It has been shown in literature that people with various identities – whether it be gender, race, sexual orientation, etc. – feel more comfortable disclosing information to counselors or other confidential figures with identities similar to their own. Although in counseling settings I had many times requested a female counselor, I had never considered the following: Could I request a nun or another female member of the church to hear my confession?

I am by no means saying that a woman could not act inappropriately when administering confession, and I am also not saying that all priests engage in sexual harassment. But what I am saying is that women in the Catholic Church have long been subjected to a power dynamic in the Church that has led to harassment and oppression, and for women who feel that they have been personally victimized in this way, it may feel safer if another woman were able to hear her confession.

Just like how women can request female Uber drivers, or female psychologists because they would feel more comfortable, shouldn’t women be able to request another woman hear her confession in order to feel more safe in this personal, one-on-one environment?

I am an advocate for women’s ordination in the Catholic Church, and I believe women should have the opportunity to administer all seven sacraments. However, the need for women to offer the sacrament of Reconciliation, especially, is urgent.  While it may seem like a small step, it is necessary in order to ensure the respect and safety of survivors of sexual harassment and assault in a church that has allowed these crimes and inappropriate behaviors to go on unchecked for far too long. I believe the Church can change and must change to become a safe place for survivors of power-based violence by allowing women the same opportunities that it has allowed men.

11 Responses

  1. Anne says:

    And especially if you are a survivor of sexual abuse, this type of behavior will feel even more invasive and abusive.

    • Amen, just another example of why we need discrimination against the female half of God’s nature within the Church to end.
      Since Vatican II Article 29 of the Pastoral Constitution Discrimination for race or sex has been declared as not the Will of God.
      Because those in positions of power have just continued over the years to ignore what they know is not right, fair or just, to the female half, the only solution it seems to me at this point, is to stop financially supporting that part of the discrimination, they can ignore our words but not our dollars!

  2. Joanne Bray says:

    An Important message. Thank you.

  3. Women need women priests, no question about it. But it is also true that men need women priests. It could be that men need women priests even more than women do. The natural complementarity of man and woman, when abused, becomes sexual harassment; when properly shared, becomes interpersonal communion. This is very clearly and beautifully explained in the Theologia Corporis. For this reason, and many other good reasons, I am also an advocate for the ordination of women in the Catholic Church.

  4. Peg says:

    Thank you for naming this more women should. Find a trusted holy woman and confess through her. It will be sacramental if you both believe it is. The Holy Spirit will guide you. She is love and grace!

  5. Walter G. Sandell, Jr. says:

    A nearby priest questioned a prepubescent girl about sexual activity she had not confessed. The mother confronted the pastor, who defended the violating priest.
    I now go to RCWP Masses.

  6. Rev. Erma Durkin says:

    I congratulate the writer for taking the time to write such a detailed description of her experience. I strongly suspect her story will resonate widely with women.

  7. kate mcnamara says:

    I’m not shocked at all – priests often live vicariously while hiding behind their position and partition.

    There is not one example in the Book of Acts of an apostle taking a confession. This practice was made up out of whole cloth.

    Confess straight to God – no middle man or woman required.

  8. Dorothy Corrigan says:

    The priest mentioned above sounds like he was trained in the old “species and number” school of confession, which seems to br making such a comeback. I have had male friends tell stories of the parish priest actually asking them to reveal the names of the with whom they had violated the 6th commandment. I agree with Luis that men would benefit from women confessors!

  9. Change will come when enough quit supporting with your dollars instead of just words they continue to ignore and will as long as they can get away with it!
    If you need to confirm with God’s Holy Spirit, as well as The Church’s real canon law go to Article 29 of the Pastoral Constitution on The Vatican Website. It’s been in Vatican II since 1965. “No more discrimination for race or sex…as not The Will of God for The Church”

  10. Violet writes says:

    I went to confession for the last time more than five decades ago. God needs some man to say my sins are forgiven? Oh please.
    John 20:23 says, “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.” Does this mean God does not forgive if you do not forgive? Possibly it means that if you do not forgive, then that burden of being unforgiving is retained on you. It has nothing to do with establishing a clerical caste or a sacrament.
    One of the major arguments in JPII’s Mulieris Dignitatem (against women priests) is that Jesus spoke to ‘apostles’ in John 20:19-23 re ‘confession,’ but no, Jesus spoke to ‘disciples.’ However, the NABRE, perhaps to support MD or the like, says, “The disciples: by implication from Jn 20:24 this means ten of the Twelve.” But no. In 20:24, Thomas as “one of the 12” just means Thomas was a member of the 12, not that other members were necessarily present. JPII confuses ‘apostles’ with modern day priests. Jesus did not make any priests. The Twelve were ‘appointed.’ The 70 (gender?) were also ‘appointed.’
    WOC would do well to sift through the Papal documents relating to women and ‘in persona’ clericalism, easily refuted. All of the ‘in persona’ stuff hinges on 2Co2:10 now revised in the Catholic NABRE to read “in the presence of Christ,” not “in the person of Christ.” NRSV-Catholic likewise has ‘’presence.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *