redpomegranates
Member
Peter Robins wrote:
'so, yes, it does seem you can get a plenary indulgence on those 3 dates, a partial one on other dates, and a plenary one if you die en route.
Perhaps it only applies to Spanish-speakers?? '
I wrote this facetiously, but now I'm wondering whether in fact outside holy years the cathedral has clergy who can hear confessions in languages other than Spanish/Galician? I know they draft in outsiders for holy years, but in normal years? Anyone any experience?
Peter, you will forgive me for displacing your comments, but that thread had become too lengthy and cumbersome. Plus, your question deserves an entirely new home...where we can curtsy and snap with our many handy Latin maxims
My experience has been that most popular pilgrim sites have at least one priest who understands English (except the Holy Land, where in two whole weeks I could not find ANYONE to hear my confession :shock: )
Besides Greek, Latin, and Hebrew studies, all priests in the seminary learn Italian...so that comes in handy. Most priests I know also speak another language besides Italian, usually French, Spanish or German. I remember the most complex confession I ever made was in Notre Dame, to a young Polish priest who spoke about as much english as I did polish. We tried to speak in italian, but his italian was mostly polish and mine mostly english, and when we'd get desperate we'd recourse to Latin! :?
My understanding is that if there is no other priest who speaks your language and that is available for confession, you can confess to any priest (in your own tongue) and he can absolve you even if he doesnt understand (the main point being honesty before God). So you could confess anyway.
:?: any takers?
ps. If I walk to Santiago 3 times, does that amount to a plenary indulgence?
'so, yes, it does seem you can get a plenary indulgence on those 3 dates, a partial one on other dates, and a plenary one if you die en route.
Perhaps it only applies to Spanish-speakers?? '
I wrote this facetiously, but now I'm wondering whether in fact outside holy years the cathedral has clergy who can hear confessions in languages other than Spanish/Galician? I know they draft in outsiders for holy years, but in normal years? Anyone any experience?
Peter, you will forgive me for displacing your comments, but that thread had become too lengthy and cumbersome. Plus, your question deserves an entirely new home...where we can curtsy and snap with our many handy Latin maxims
My experience has been that most popular pilgrim sites have at least one priest who understands English (except the Holy Land, where in two whole weeks I could not find ANYONE to hear my confession :shock: )
Besides Greek, Latin, and Hebrew studies, all priests in the seminary learn Italian...so that comes in handy. Most priests I know also speak another language besides Italian, usually French, Spanish or German. I remember the most complex confession I ever made was in Notre Dame, to a young Polish priest who spoke about as much english as I did polish. We tried to speak in italian, but his italian was mostly polish and mine mostly english, and when we'd get desperate we'd recourse to Latin! :?
My understanding is that if there is no other priest who speaks your language and that is available for confession, you can confess to any priest (in your own tongue) and he can absolve you even if he doesnt understand (the main point being honesty before God). So you could confess anyway.
:?: any takers?
ps. If I walk to Santiago 3 times, does that amount to a plenary indulgence?