Almost every Catholic who goes to confession has the same experience. Dread on the way there. Lightness on the way home. The mind imagines exposure, judgement, embarrassment. The reality is mercy. A priest sitting in a small room, listening, then absolving in the words of Christ himself: I absolve you from your sins, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
If it has been months, or years, or decades, this article is for you.
Confession, also called Reconciliation or Penance, is a sacrament Christ gave the Church on Easter evening. He breathed on the apostles and said, Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven (John 20:22-23). Every priest who hears confession does so by the authority handed down from that moment. The priest is not your judge. He is the instrument by which Christ takes your sins away.
Bishop Davies has written this many times, but most often when he speaks of his own ongoing conversion in this 175th anniversary year:
Let us be attentive to the reality of the Eucharist which contains the Church's entire spiritual wealth, Christ Himself; and aware of our constant need of grace and conversion in the Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation.
Bishop Davies, on Re-awakening Eucharistic Faith.
In 2015, Pope Francis called the Jubilee Year of Mercy. Bishop Davies remembered it in his tribute to the late Pope:
We might think of the Year of Mercy he called in 2015 which saw many return to sacramental confession.
That return is still happening. The 171 candidates at the 2026 Rite of Election in Shrewsbury Cathedral are a sign of it. So are the men and women coming back after twenty years away. The Church does not run out of mercy. It runs out of people brave enough to claim it.
If you forget the form, the priest will guide you. That is part of his job.
Lent is the natural season for this. Bishop Davies has written about it as a season of conversion for everyone:
It is by striving to live our own conversion that we can best support a new generation of converts.
Pastoral Letter for Lent 2026.
If 171 adults will be received into the Church in our diocese this Easter, the rest of us cannot afford to drift. The new converts are evangelising us. Confession is how we keep up.
You are not the first. Most people are. Three things help.
The Catechism puts it simply: Those who approach the sacrament of Penance obtain pardon from God's mercy (CCC 1422). Pardon. Not interrogation. Not shame. Pardon.
Pick a day. Go.
You will walk out lighter than you have been in years.