Uber Eats driver asks priest to hear confession after delivering food order
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As some Catholic sacraments have to be delivered in person, drive-thru confessions have been taking place amid the coronavirus pandemic.
But one was a little unique: delivery with a side of confession.
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A Virginia priest ordered Chinese food on Uber Eats, but when the driver arrived, the priest got a second knock on the door.
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"Are you a priest? A Catholic priest?" the man asked Father Dan Beeman of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in the Virginia city of Newport News on Wednesday night.
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"It was an incredible thing," Beeman told Ed Henry on "America's Newsroom" Friday. "He was wearing a mask and a hat. I have no idea who he was...when a priest opened a door I don't think he expected that."
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He tweeted about the unique exchange on April 22 with the hashtag, "#UberConfess":
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"Uber eats drops off food. I close door. Driver knocks again one minute later. I think he must have given me the wrong order. 'Are you a priest? A Catholic priest?' - Yeah, this is the rectory. 'Well can I go to confession before you eat?'"
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Not discussing any particulars about the man's confession, Beeman confessed himself to Fox News Channel that he ordered chicken and broccoli as a healthy option and was uber grateful he was able to help the man.
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"Priests are to be available at all times for all people," Beeman added. "It was a neat encounter."
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And, like many faith leaders, he believes there will be a spiritual awakening amid the pandemic.
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"Especially with the sacraments of the church, when you realize you can't have something that you've always had," he concluded, "it makes your heart aware of it [in] a very powerful way and praise God for it."