The Sin Box
Why have Catholics stopped lining up at the confessional?
The biggest barrier between Catholics and the confessional, however, may be the real effort it requires. Unloading your transgressions on the Internet takes a few computer clicks—you can do it on your coffee break. But done right, Catholic confession demands a rigorous examination of conscience and real contrition, to say nothing of the prayers you may be assigned for penance and the thinking a priest may ask you to do about the ways you've let yourself and God down. No wonder we are more comfortable with the Eucharist service, which demands only that we line up like consumers and accept something for free. Dorothy Day wrote of having to "rack your brain for even the beginnings of sin." That's work.
Andrew Santella's essays and reviews have appeared in the New York Times Book Review and GQ.
Photograph of hands on Slate's home page by O Brien Productions/PictureArts.



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