CHAPTER II
The Nature andMission of the
Ministerial Priesthood
The Nature and
A Look at the Priest
11. "The eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on
him" (Lk. 4:20 ). What the
evangelist Luke says about the people in the synagogue at Nazareth
that Sabbath, listening to Jesus' commentary on the words of the prophet Isaiah
which he had just read, can be applied to all Christians.
They are always
called to recognize in Jesus of Nazareth the definitive fulfillment of the
message of the prophets: "And he began to say to them, 'Today this
Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing"' (Lk. 4:21 ). The "Scripture" he had read was this:
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach
good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and
recovery of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim
the acceptable year of the Lord" (Lk. 4:18-19; cf. Is. 61:1-2). Jesus thus
presents himself as filled with the Spirit, "consecrated with an
anointing," "sent to preach good news to the poor." He is the
Messiah, the Messiah who is priest, prophet and king.
These are the features of Christ upon which the eyes of
faith and love of Christians should be fixed. Using this
"contemplation" as a starting point and making continual reference to
it, the synod fathers reflected on the problem of priestly formation in present
- day circumstances. This problem cannot be solved without previous reflection
upon the goal of formation, that is, the ministerial priesthood, or more
precisely, the ministerial priesthood as a participation - in the Church - in
the very priesthood of Jesus Christ. Knowledge of the nature and mission of the
ministerial priesthood is an essential presupposition, and at the same time the
surest guide and incentive toward the development of pastoral activities in the
Church for fostering and discerning vocations to the priesthood and training
those called to the ordained ministry.
A correct and in - depth awareness of the nature and mission
of the ministerial priesthood is the path which must be taken - and in fact the
synod did take it - in order to emerge from the crisis of priestly identity. In
the final address to the synod I stated: "This crisis arose in the years
immediately following the Council. It was based on an erroneous understanding
of - and sometimes even a conscious bias against - the doctrine of the
conciliar magisterium. Undoubtedly, herein lies one of the reasons for the
great number of defections experienced then by the Church, losses which did
serious harm to pastoral ministry and priestly vocations, especially missionary
vocations.
It is as though the 1990 synod - rediscovering, by means of the many
statements which we heard in this hall, the full depth of priestly identity -
has striven to instill hope in the wake of these sad losses. These statements
showed an awareness of the specific ontological bond which unites the
priesthood to Christ the high priest and good shepherd. This identity is built
upon the type of formation which must be provided for priesthood and then
endure throughout the priest's whole life. This was the precise purpose of the
synod."(18)
For this reason the synod considered it necessary to
summarize the nature and mission of the ministerial priesthood, as the Church's
faith has acknowledged them down the centuries of its history and as the Second
Vatican Council has presented them anew to the people of our day.(19)
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