We Are All Responsible for Priestly Vocations
41. The priestly vocation is a gift from God. It is
undoubtedly a great good for the person who is its first recipient. But it is
also a gift to the Church as a whole, a benefit to her life and mission. The
Church, therefore, is called to safeguard this gift, to esteem it and love it.
She is responsible for the birth and development of priestly vocations.
Consequently, the pastoral work of promoting vocations has as its active
agents, as its protagonists, the ecclesial community as such, in its various
expressions: from the universal Church to the particular church and, by
analogy, from the particular church to each of its parishes and to every part
of the People of God.
There is an urgent need, especially nowadays, for a more
widespread and deeply felt conviction that all the members of the Church,
without exception, have the grace and responsibility to look after vocations.
The Second Vatican Council was quite explicit in this regard: "The duty of
fostering vocations falls on the whole Christian community, and they should
discharge it principally by living full Christian lives."(112) Only on the
basis of this conviction will pastoral work on behalf of vocations be able to
show its truly ecclesial aspect, develop a harmonious plan of action, and make
use of specific agencies and appropriate instruments of communion and co -
responsibility.
The first responsibility for the pastoral work of promoting
priestly vocations lies with the bishop,(113) who is called to be the first to
exercise this responsibility even though he can and must call upon many others
to cooperate with him. As the father and friend of his presbyterate, it falls
primarily to the bishop to be concerned about "giving continuity" to
the priestly charism and ministry, bringing it new forces by the laying on of
hands. He will be actively concerned to ensure that the vocational dimension is
always present in the whole range of ordinary pastoral work, and that it is
fully integrated and practically identified with it. It is his duty to foster
and coordinate various initiatives on behalf of vocations.(114)
The bishop can rely above all on the cooperation of his
presbyterate. All its priests are united to him and share his responsibility in
seeking and fostering priestly vocations. Indeed, as the Council states,
"it is the priests' part as instructors of the people in the faith to see
to it that each member of the faithful shall be led in the Holy Spirit to the
full development of his own vocation."(115) "This duty belongs to the
very nature of the priestly ministry which makes the priest share in the
concern of the whole Church lest laborers should ever be wanting to the People
of God here on earth."(116) The very life of priests, their unconditional
dedication to God's flock, their witness of loving service to the Lord and to
his Church - a witness marked by free acceptance of the cross in the spirit of
hope and Easter joy - their fraternal unity and zeal for the evangelization of
the world are the first and most convincing factor in the growth of
vocations.(117)
A very special responsibility falls upon the Christian
family, which by virtue of the sacrament of matrimony shares in its own unique
way in the educational mission of the Church - teacher and mother. As the synod fathers wrote: "The Christian family, which is truly a 'domestic Church'
(Lumen Gentium, 11), has always offered and continues to offer favorable
conditions for the birth of vocations. Since the reality of the Christian
family is endangered nowadays, much importance should be given to pastoral work
on behalf of the family, in order that the families themselves, generously
accepting the gift of human life, may be 'as it were, a first seminary'
(Optatam Totius, 2) in which children can acquire from the beginning an
awareness of piety and prayer and love for the Church.(118) Following upon and
in harmony with the work of parents and the family, the school is also called
to live its identity as an "educating community" by providing a
correct understanding of the dimension of vocation as an innate and fundamental
value of the human person. In this sense, if it is endowed with a Christian
spirit (either by a significant presence of members of the Church in state
schools, following the laws of each country, or above all in the case of the
Catholic school), it can infuse "in the hearts of boys and young men a
desire to do God's will in that state in life which is most suitable to each
person, and never excluding the vocation to the priestly ministry."(119)
The lay faithful also, and particularly catechists,
teachers, educators and youth ministers, each with his or her own resources and
style, have great importance in the pastoral work of promoting priestly
vocations: The more they inculcate a deep appreciation of young people's
vocation and mission in the Church, the more they will be able to recognize the
unique value of the priestly vocation and mission.
With regard to diocesan and parish communities, special
appreciation and encouragement should be given to groups which promote
vocations, whose members make an important contribution by prayer and
sufferings offered up for priestly and religious vocations, as well as by moral
and material support.
We should also remember the numerous groups, movements and
associations of lay faithful whom the Holy Spirit raises up and fosters in the
Church with a view to a more missionary Christian presence in the world.
These
various groupings of lay people are proving a particularly fertile field for
the manifestation of vocations to consecrated life, and are truly environments
in which vocations can be encouraged and can grow. Many young people, in and
through these groupings, have heard the Lord's call to follow him along the
path of priestly ministry(120) and have responded with a generosity that is
reassuring. These groupings, therefore, are to be utilized well, so that in
communion with the whole Church and for the sake of her growth they may make
their proper contribution to the development of the pastoral work of promoting
vocations.
The various elements and members of the Church involved in
the pastoral work of promoting vocations will make their work more effective
insofar as they stimulate the ecclesial community as such, starting with the
parish, to sense that the problem of priestly vocations cannot in any way be
delegated to some "official" group (priests in general and the
priests working in the seminary in particular), for inasmuch as it is "a
vital problem which lies at the very heart of the Church,"(121) it should
be at the heart of the love which each Christian feels for the Church.
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