47. An essential element of spiritual formation is the
prayerful and meditated reading of the word of God (lectio divina), a humble
and loving listening of him who speaks. It is in fact by the light and with the
strength
of the word of God that one's own vocation can be discovered and
understood, loved and followed, and one's own mission carried out. So true is
this that the person's entire existence finds its unifying and radical meaning
in being the terminus of God's word which calls man and the beginning of man's
word which answers God. Familiarity with the word of God will make conversion
easy, not only in the sense of detaching us from evil so as to adhere to the
good, but also in the sense of nourishing our heart with the thoughts of God,
so that the faith (as a response to the word) becomes our new basis for judging
and evaluating persons and things, events and problems.
Provided that we approach the word of God and listen to it
as it really is, it brings us into contact with God himself, God speaking to
us. It brings us into contact with Christ, the Word of God, the truth, who is
at the same time both the way and the life (cf. Jn. 14:6). It is a matter of
reading the "scriptures" by listening to the "words,"
"the word" of God, as the Council reminds us: "The sacred
Scriptures contain the word of God, and because they are inspired, are truly
the word of God."(138) The Council also states: "By this revelation,
then, the invisible God (cf. Col. 1:15; 1 Tm. 1:7), from the fullness of his love,
addresses people as his friends (cf. Ex. 33:11; Jn. 15:14-15), and moves among them (cf. Bar. 3:38), in order to invite and receive them into
his own company.(139)
A loving knowledge of the word of God and a prayerful
familiarity with it are specifically important for the prophetic ministry of
the priest. They are a fundamental condition for such a ministry to be carried
out suitably, especially if we bear in mind the "new evangelization"
which the Church today is called to undertake. The Council tells us: "All
clerics, particularly priests of Christ and others who, as deacons or
catechists, are officially engaged in the ministry of the word, should immerse
themselves in the Scriptures by constant sacred reading and diligent study. For
it must not happen that anyone becomes 'an empty preacher of the word of God to
others, not being a hearer of the word of God in his own heart' (St.
Augustine, Sermon 179, 1: PL 8:966)."(140)
The first and fundamental manner of responding to the word
is prayer, which is without any doubt a primary
school of Jesus
at prayer if he himself has been trained in it and continues to receive its
formation. This is what people ask of the priest: "The priest is The man
of God, the one who belongs to God and makes people think about God. When the
letter to the Hebrews speaks of Christ it presents him as 'merciful and
faithful high priest in the service of God' (Heb.
2:17)....
Christians expect to find in the priest not only a man who welcomes them, who
listens to them gladly and shows a real interest in them, but also and above
all a man who will help them to turn to God, to rise up to him. And so the
priest needs to be trained to have a deep intimacy with God. Those who are
preparing for the priesthood should realize that their whole priestly life will
have value inasmuch as they are able to give themselves to Christ and through
Christ to the Father."(141)
value and demand of spiritual
formation. Prayer should lead candidates for the priesthood to get to know and
have experience of the genuine meaning of Christian prayer, as a living and
personal meeting with the Father through the only - begotten Son under the
action of the Spirit, a dialogue that becomes a sharing in the filial
conversation between Jesus and the Father. One aspect of the priest's mission,
and certainly by no means a secondary aspect, is that he is to be a
"teacher of prayer." However, the priest will only be able to train
others in this
A necessary training in prayer in a context of noise and
agitation like that of our society is an education in the deep human meaning
and religious value of silence as the spiritual atmosphere vital for perceiving
God's presence and for allowing oneself to be won over by it (cf. 1 Kgs.
19:11ff.).
48. The high point of Christian prayer is the Eucharist, which
in its turn is to be seen as the "summit and source" of the
sacraments and the Liturgy of the Hours. A totally necessary aspect of the
formation of every Christian, and in particular of every priest, is liturgical
formation, in the full sense of becoming inserted in a living way in the
paschal mystery of Jesus Christ, who died and rose again, and is present and
active in the Church's sacraments. Communion with God, which is the hinge on
which the whole of the spiritual life turns, is the gift and fruit of the
sacraments.
At the same time it is a task and responsibility which the
sacraments entrust to the freedom of the believer, so that one may live this
same communion in the decisions, choices, attitudes and actions of daily
existence. In this sense, the "grace" which "renews"
Christian living is the grace of Jesus Christ, who died and rose again, and
continues to pour out his holy and sanctifying Spirit in the sacraments. In the
same way, the "new law" which should guide and govern the life of the
Christian is written by the sacraments in the "new heart." And it is
a law of charity toward God and humanity, as a response and prolonging of the
charity of God toward humanity signified and communicated by the sacraments. It
is thus possible to understand at once the value of a "full, conscious and
active participation"(142) in sacramental celebrations for the gift and
task of that "pastoral charity" which is the soul of the priestly
ministry.
This applies above all to sharing in the Eucharist, the
memorial of the sacrificial death of Christ and of his glorious resurrection,
the "sacrament of piety, sign of unity, bond of charity, (143)the paschal
banquet "in which Christ is received, the soul is filled with grace and we
are given a pledge of the glory that is to be ours."(144) For priests, as
ministers of sacred things, are first and foremost ministers of the sacrifice
of the Mass:(145) The role is utterly irreplaceable, because without the priest
there can be no eucharistic offering.
This explains the essential importance of the Eucharist for
the priest's life and ministry and, as a result, in the spiritual formation of
candidates for the priesthood. To be utterly frank and clear, I would like to
say once again: "It is fitting that seminarians take part every day in the
eucharistic celebration, in such a way that afterward they will take up as a
rule of their priestly life this daily celebration.
They should, moreover, be
trained to consider the eucharistic celebration as the essential moment of
their day, in which they will take an active part and at which they will never
be satisfied with a merely habitual attendance. Finally, candidates to the
priesthood will be trained to share in the intimate dispositions which the
Eucharist fosters: gratitude for heavenly benefits received, because the
Eucharist is thanksgiving; an attitude of self - offering, which will impel
them to unite the offering of themselves to the eucharistic offering of Christ;
charity nourished by a sacrament which is a sign of unity and sharing; the
yearning to contemplate and bow in adoration before Christ, who is really
present under the eucharistic species."(146)
It is necessary and very urgent to rediscover within
spiritual formation the beauty and joy of the sacrament of penance. In a
culture which - through renewed and more subtle forms of self justification -
runs the fatal risk of losing the "sense of sin" and, as a result,
the consoling joy of the plea for forgiveness (cf. Ps. 51:14) and of meeting
God who is "rich in mercy" (Eph. 2:4), it is vital to educate future
priests to have the virtue of penance, which the Church wisely nourishes in her
celebrations and in the seasons of the liturgical year, and which finds its
fullness in the sacrament of reconciliation. From it flow the sense of asceticism
and interior discipline, a spirit of sacrifice and self - denial, the
acceptance of hard work and of the cross. These are elements of the spiritual
life which often prove to be particularly arduous for many candidates for the
priesthood who have grown up in relatively comfortable and affluent circumstances
and have been made less inclined and open to these very elements by the models
of behavior and ideals transmitted by the mass media; but this also happens in
countries where the conditions of life are poorer and young people live in more
austere situations.
For this reason, but above all in order to put into
practice the "radical self - giving" proper to the priest following
the example of Christ the good shepherd, the synod fathers wrote: "It is
necessary to inculcate the meaning of the cross, which is at the heart of the
paschal mystery. Through this identification with Christ crucified, as a slave,
the world can rediscover the value of austerity, of suffering and also of
martyrdom within the present culture, which is imbued with secularism, greed
and hedonism."(147)