Cardinal Mauro Piacenza, who heads the Apostolic Penitentiary, said the book was written to help pastors and Catholic faithful "discover the beauty and efficacy" of confession.

The book has 60 entries beginning with "accoglienza" -- on the importance of giving a warm "welcome" to penitents when they arrive for confession -- to "viaticum," which refers to the Eucharist given to a person about to die.

The entry on divorced and civilly remarried Catholics noted that their eventual admission to the sacraments has been the subject of theological and public debate. But, even citing Pope Francis' apostolic exhortation on the family, the book said such couples cannot receive absolution in confession and Communion without an annulment of their original marriage or without abstaining from sexual relations in their new union.

Msgr. Livio Melina, president of Rome's Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family, wrote the dictionary's entry, which insisted divorced and civilly remarried Catholics are still members of the church and are to be welcomed, accepted and accompanied.

Like Pope Francis, Msgr. Melina said the personal situation of each couple must be examined and dealt with in a way appropriate to that couple. However, he wrote, even if a divorced and civilly remarried Catholic is "not subjectively culpable" for violating his or her sacramental marriage vows, objectively the person is living in a state of sin and cannot receive the sacraments.

Not everyone agrees with his assessment. For example, Austrian Cardinal Christoph Schonborn of Vienna, whom Pope Francis chose to present "Amoris Laetitia" ("The Joy of Love") to the public in April, said, "It is possible, in certain cases, that the one who is in an objective situation of sin can receive the help of the sacraments."

In an interview in July with La Civilta Cattolica, a Jesuit journal reviewed by the Vatican prior to publication, the cardinal said the pope's exhortation "takes greater account of those elements that suppress or attenuate imputability" of a Catholic in a second union and seeks a path that would move that person closer to the fullness of what the Gospel demands. Absolution and Communion could be the medicine such a person needs, he said.

Less controversially, the Apostolic Penitentiary's book includes detailed instructions for pastors who encounter a penitent confessing a sin whose absolution is reserved to the Holy See. Those sins, which result in automatic excommunication, include: profanation of the Eucharist, violation of the seal of confession, absolving someone the priest had sex with, a physical attack on the pope, the consecration of a bishop without papal mandate and the attempted ordination of a woman.

The confessor must write to the Apostolic Penitentiary for authorization to absolve the penitent and lift the excommunication; usually, it said, the office will mail a response within 24 hours. Delivery time, of course, depends on the local post office.

The book suggested the letter be written on a typewriter or computer to guarantee it is legible. It can be written in any language, but the office is best with "Italian, English, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Polish, Slovakian or Latin," it said.

To preserve the secret of the confessional, "cases are always presented with fictitious names," the book instructed.

And, it said, "recourse to this tribunal is absolutely free, and voluntary offerings are not accepted."

While the vast majority of Catholics will never have any direct contact with the Apostolic Penitentiary, each year tens of thousands of people receive the sacrament of reconciliation from a priest who answers directly to the office: the full-time confessors who offer the sacrament in a dozen languages at St. Peter's Basilica and the Rome basilicas of St. Mary Major, St. John Lateran and St. Paul Outside the Walls.

For Pope Francis, getting people to confession is a key part of the Year of Mercy. "Even in the darkness of sin, a minimum of openness to divine grace can be truly important for our inner transformation," he wrote in the book.

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