Ninety-four-year-old Grandma Ethel walks into her church one quiet morning and heads straight for the confession booth. She steps inside, settles onto the seat, and clears her throat.
On the other side of the screen, the priest smiles gently and says, “Welcome, my child. What would you like to confess?”
Ethel sighs dramatically. “Father, I have a confession. Last night, I went out with a 22-year-old man. He took me to dinner, we danced, we laughed, and then…” she pauses for effect, “…we went back to his place.”
The priest nearly drops his rosary. “My goodness,” he says carefully. “And… did something inappropriate happen?”
Ethel bursts into laughter, cackling so hard the booth shakes. “Oh no, Father,” she says between giggles. “Nothing like that.”
Relieved, the priest exhales. “Well then, what exactly are you confessing, my child?”
Ethel leans closer to the screen and whispers proudly, “I’m confessing that I lied to him about my age… and I’d do it again.”
The priest sits there stunned, then slowly starts laughing himself.
Sometimes the real sin isn’t what you did — it’s how confidently you got away with it.