Only 10 minutes before hearing confessions March 14, Holmer, wanting to prevent the sharing of common surfaces such as kneelers, chairs and doorknobs among his parishioners, came up with the idea for drive-thru confessions.
Grabbing his purple stole, a chair and some orange traffic cones, Holmer went outside and set up an outdoor confessional. Seminarian Joe McHenry helped direct cars one by one up to the priest and told Holmer when to blindfold himself when the penitent asked for an anonymous confession.
“This is where we priests have to be creative about how to bring Christ to people when we can’t do that in our church buildings,” Holmer said. “We need to bring Christ to people now, to bring Him to others in a safe way that won’t increase infection.”
Penitents only have to leave their car when there is more than one person in the car and they can line up behind the car and move into the driver seat when it is their turn for confession.
“That little car becomes the little confessional seat,” Holmer said.
The strategy is just one of many as churches grapple with how to continue celebrating the sacraments. In the Archdiocese of Toronto, communal Reconciliation has been banned but individuals can contact a priest for the sacrament. It is to be celebrated in a room outside the confessional “where confidentiality may be ensured and where distance required by health officials can be maintained,” Cardinal Thomas Collins said in a statement.
Holmer said reactions to his parking lot confessional have been positive and he plans to continue each day during the regularly scheduled Mass times. In the event of rain, there will be no confessions.
“We’re flying by the seat of our pants here, just trying to figure out how to do this,” he told the Catholic Standard, newspaper of the Archdiocese of Washington.
In a time when there is so much uncertainty about the future, Holmer said he encourages people to remain hopeful.
“We’re in a time when we’re scattered, but there will also be a time when we’re gathered together again,” he said. “Keep hope on that time when we will return.”
This period away from the Mass, Holmer said, will hopefully spark “greater gratitude” in the hearts of many.
“Right now we’re going through Lent, but eventually Pentecost is going to return and we will be together — just wait,” Holmer said.
In addition to the drive-through confessions, Holmer and McHenry also are going out each day for a eucharistic procession through different sections of Bowie, blessing each house with the sign of the cross and the Monstrance.
With all the uncertainty that lies ahead, Holmer said he encourages families to pray together, read Scripture and pray the rosary together.
He sees this time as a “desert experience,” but he says people have the opportunity to make an active, purposeful choice to devote their time to God.
“God is increasing our longing for the sacraments and the ability to share them in a radically new way,” Holmer said. “In their absence, (we are) realizing how much we desire them (the sacraments).”