"The world looks to the priest, because it looks to Jesus! No one can see Christ; but everyone sees the priest, and through him they wish to catch a glimpse of the Lord! Immense is the grandeur of the Lord! Immense is the grandeur and dignity of the priest!" (Bl. John Paul II, Rome, Italy, October 13, 1979)
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Apostolic Exhortation on the Formation of Priests in the Circumstances of the Present Day - Pope John Paul II (1992) Part 36
The Major Seminary - A Formation Community
60. The need for the major seminary - and by analogy for the
religious house - for the formation of candidates for priesthood, was affirmed
with authority by the Second Vatican Council (188) and has been reaffirmed by
the synod as follows: "The institution of the major seminary, as the best
place for formation, is to be certainly reaffirmed as the normal place, in the
material sense as well, for a community and hierarchical life, indeed as the
proper home for the formation of candidates for the priesthood, with superiors
who are truly dedicated to this service. This institution has produced many
good results down the ages and continues to do so all over the
world."(189) The seminary can be seen as a place and a period in life. But
it is above all an educational community in progress: It is a community
established by the bishop to offer to those called by the Lord to serve as
apostles the possibility of re - living the experience of formation which our
Lord provided for the Twelve.
In fact, the Gospels present a prolonged and
intimate sharing of life with Jesus as a necessary premise for the apostolic
ministry. Such an experience demands of the Twelve the practice of detachment
in a particularly clear and specific fashion, a detachment that in some way is
demanded of all the disciples, a detachment from their roots, from their usual
work, from their nearest and dearest (cf. Mk. 1:16-20; 10:28; Lk. 9:23, 57-62;
14:25-27). On several occasions we have referred to the Marcan tradition which
stresses the deep link that unites the apostles to Christ and to one another:
Before being sent out to preach and to heal, they are called "to be with
him" (Mk. 3:14 ).
In its deepest identity the seminary is called to be, in its
own way, a continuation in the Church of the apostolic community gathered about
Jesus, listening to his word, proceeding toward the Easter experience, awaiting
the gift of the Spirit for the mission. Such an identity constitutes the
normative ideal which stimulates the seminary in the many diverse forms and
varied aspects which it assumes historically as a human institution, to find a
concrete realization, faithful to the Gospel values from which it takes its
inspiration and able to respond to the situations and needs of the times.
The seminary is, in itself, an original experience of the
Church's life. In it the bishop is present through the ministry of the rector
and the service of co - responsibility and communion fostered by him with the
other teachers, for the sake of the pastoral and apostolic growth of the
students. The various members of the seminary community, gathered by the Spirit
into a single brotherhood, cooperate, each according to his own gift in the
growth of all in faith and charity so that they may prepare suitably for the
priesthood and so prolong in the Church and in history the saving presence of
Jesus Christ, the good shepherd.
The human point of view, the major seminary should strive to
become "a community built on deep friendship and charity so that it can be
considered a true family living in joy."(190) As a Christian institution,
the seminary should become - as the synod fathers continue - an "ecclesial
community," a "community of the disciples of the Lord in which the
one same liturgy (which imbues life with a spirit of prayer) is celebrated; a
community molded daily in the reading and meditation of the word of God and
with the sacrament of the Eucharist, and in the practice of fraternal charity
and justice; a community in which, as its life and the life each of its members
progresses, there shine forth the Spirit of Christ and love for the
Church."(191) This ecclesial aspect of the seminary is confirmed and
concretized by the fathers when they add: "As an ecclesial community, be
it diocesan or interdiocesan, or even religious, the seminary should nourish
the meaning of communion between the candidates and their bishop and
presbyterate, in such a way that they share in their hopes and anxieties and
learn to extend this openness to the needs of the universal Church."(192)
It is essential for the formation of candidates for the
priesthood and the pastoral ministry, which by its very nature is ecclesial,
that the seminary should be experienced not as something external and
superficial, or simply a place in which to live and study, but in an interior
and profound way. It should be experienced as a community, a specifically
ecclesial community, a community that relives the experience of the group of
Twelve who were united to Jesus.(193)
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Agnus Dei - Pastoral Work of our Papal Nuncio and Irish Bishops: Jesus Speaks To the Church Leaders - Gospel of th...
Agnus Dei - Pastoral Work of our Papal Nuncio and Irish Bishops: Jesus Speaks To the Church Leaders - Gospel of th...: Gospel Reading of the Day from: Matthew 23:23-26 Jesus said, ‘Alas for you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You who pay your...
Monday, August 26, 2013
Agnus Dei - Pastoral Work of our Papal Nuncio and Irish Bishops: Twenty new seminarians to commence Priesthood stud...
Agnus Dei - Pastoral Work of our Papal Nuncio and Irish Bishops: Twenty new seminarians to commence Priesthood stud...: Twenty new seminarians to commence priesthood studies at Saint Patrick’s College Maynooth “ … have the courage to go against the tide ...
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Apostolic Exhortation on the Formation of Priests in the Circumstances of the Present Day - Pope John Paul II (1992) Part 35
Pastoral Formation: Communion With the Charity of Jesus
Christ the Good Shepherd
57. The whole formation imparted to candidates for the
priesthood aims at preparing them to enter into communion with the charity of
Christ the good shepherd. Hence their formation in its different aspects must have a fundamentally pastoral character. The Council's decree Optatam Totius
states so clearly when speaking of major seminaries; "The whole training
of the students should have as its object to make them true shepherds of souls
after the example of our Lord Jesus Christ, teacher, priest and shepherd.
Hence, they should be trained for the ministry of the word so that they may gain
an ever - increasing understanding of the revealed word of God, making it their
own by meditation and giving it expression in their speech and in their lives.
They should be trained for the ministry of worship and sanctification so that
by prayer and the celebration of the sacred liturgical functions they may carry
on the work of salvation through the eucharistic sacrifice and the sacraments.
They should be trained to undertake the ministry of the shepherd, that they may
know how to represent Christ to humanity, Christ who 'did not come to have
service done to him but to serve others and to give his life as a ransom for
the lives of many ' (Mk. 10:45; Jn. 1 3:12-17), and that they may win over many
by becoming the servants of all (1 Cor. 9:19)."(179) The Council text
insists upon the coordination of the different aspects of human, spiritual and
intellectual formation. At the same time it stresses that they are all directed
to a specific pastoral end. This pastoral aim ensures that the human, spiritual
and intellectual formation has certain precise content and characteristics; it
also unifies and gives specificity to the whole formation of future priests.
Like all other branches of formation, pastoral formation
develops by means of mature reflection and practical application, and it is
rooted in a spirit, which is the hinge of all and the force which stimulates it
and makes it develop.
It needs to be studied therefore as the true and genuine
theological discipline that it is; pastoral or practical theology. It is a
scientific reflection on the Church as she is built up daily, by the power of
the Spirit, in history; on the Church as the "universal sacrament of
salvation,"(180) as a living sign and instrument of the salvation wrought
by Christ through the word, the sacraments and the service of charity. Pastoral
theology is not just an art. Nor is it a set of exhortations, experiences and
methods. It is theological in its own right, because it receives from the faith
the principles and criteria for the pastoral action of the Church in history, a
Church that each day "begets" the Church herself, to quote the
felicitous expression of the Venerable Bede: "Nam
et Ecclesia quotidie gignit Ecclesiam."(181) Among these principles and
criteria, one that is specially important is that of the evangelical
discernment of the socio - cultural and ecclesial situation in which the
particular pastoral action has to be carried out.
The study of pastoral theology should throw light upon its
practical application through involvement in certain pastoral services which
the candidates to the priesthood should carry out, with a necessary progression
and always in harmony with their other educational commitments. It is a
question of pastoral "experiences," which can come together in a real
program of "pastoral training," which can last a considerable amount
of time and the usefulness of which will itself need to be checked in an
orderly manner.
Pastoral study and action direct one to an inner source,
which the work of formation will take care to guard and make good use of: This
is the ever - deeper communion with the pastoral charity of Jesus, which - just
as it was the principle and driving force of his salvific action - likewise,
thanks to the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the sacrament of orders, should
constitute the principle d driving force of the priestly ministry. It is a
question of a type of formation meant not only to ensure scientific, pastoral
competence and practical skill, but also and especially a way of being in
communion with the very sentiments and behavior of Christ the good shepherd:
"Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus"
(Phil. 2:5).
58. And so pastoral formation certainly cannot be reduced to
a mere apprenticeship, aiming to make the candidate familiar with some pastoral
techniques. The seminary which educates must seek really and truly to initiate
the candidate into the sensitivity of being a shepherd, in the conscious and
mature assumption of his responsibilities, in the interior habit of evaluating
problems and establishing priorities and looking for solutions on the basis of
honest motivations of faith and according to the theological demands inherent
in pastoral work.
Thanks to an initial and gradual experience of ministry,
future priests will be able to be inserted into the living pastoral tradition
of their particular church. They will learn to open the horizon of their mind
and heart to the missionary dimension of the Church's life. They will get
practice in some initial forms of cooperation with one another and with the
priests alongside whom they will be sent to work. These priests have a
considerably important role, in union with the seminary program, in showing the
candidates how they should go about pastoral work.
When it comes to choosing places and services in which
candidates can obtain their pastoral experience, the parish should be given
particular importance(182) for it is a living cell of local and specialized
pastoral work in which they will find themselves faced with the kind of
problems they will meet in their future ministry. The synod fathers have
proposed a number of concrete examples such as visits to the sick; caring for
immigrants, refugees and nomads; and various social works which can be
expressions of charitable zeal. Specifically, they write: "The priest must
be a witness of the charity of Christ himself who 'went about doing good' (Acts
10:38). He must also be a visible sign of the solicitude of the Church who is
mother and teacher. And given that man today is affected by so many hardships,
especially those who are sunk in inhuman poverty, blind violence and unjust
power, it is necessary that the man of God who is to be equipped for every good
work (cf. 2 Tm. 3:17) should defend the rights and dignity of man.
Nevertheless, he should be careful not to adopt false ideologies, nor should he
forget, as he strives to promote its perfecting, that the only redemption of
the world is that effected by the cross of Christ."(183)
These and other pastoral activities will teach the future
priest to live out as a "service" his own mission of
"authority" in the community, setting aside all attitudes of
superiority or of exercising a power if it is not simply that which is
justified by pastoral charity.
If the training is to be suitable, the different experiences
which candidates for the priesthood have should assume a clear
"ministerial" character and should be intimately linked with all the
demands that befit preparation to the priesthood and (certainly not neglecting
their studies) in relation to the services of the proclamation of the word, of
worship and of leadership. These services can become a specific way of
experiencing the ministries of lector, acolyte and deacon.
59. Since pastoral action is destined by its very nature to
enliven the Church, which is essentially "mystery,"
"communion" and "mission," pastoral formation should be
aware of and should live these ecclesial aspects in the exercise of the
ministry.
Of fundamental importance is awareness that the Church is a
"mystery," that is, a divine work, fruit of the Spirit of Christ, an
effective sign of grace, the prescience of the Trinity in the Christian
community. This awareness, while never lessening the pastor's genuine sense of
responsibility, will convince him that the Church grows thanks to the
gratuitous work of the Spirit and that his service - thanks to the very grace
of God that is entrusted to the free responsibility of man - is the Gospel
service of the "unworthy servant" (cf. Lk. 17:10).
Awareness of the Church as "communion" will
prepare the candidate for the priesthood to carry out his pastoral work with a
community spirit, in heartfelt cooperation with the different members of the Church:
priests and bishop, diocesan and religious priests, priests and lay people.
Such a cooperation presupposes a knowledge and appreciation of the different
gifts and charisms, of the diverse vocations and responsibilities which the
Spirit offers and entrusts to the members of Christ's body. It demands a living
and precise consciousness of one's own identity in the Church and of the
identity of others. It demands mutual trust, patience, gentleness and the
capacity for understanding and expectation. It finds its roots above all in a
love for the Church that is deeper than love for self and the group or groups
one may belong to.
It is particularly important to prepare future priests for
cooperation with the laity. The Council says: "They should be willing to
listen to lay people, give brotherly consideration to their wishes and
recognize their experience and competence in the different fields of human
activity. In this way they will be able to recognize with them the signs of the
times."(184) The recent synod too has insisted upon pastoral solicitude
for the laity: "The student should become capable of proposing and
introducing the lay faithful, the young especially, to the different vocations
(marriage, social services, apostolate, ministries and other responsibilities
in pastoral activity, the consecrated life, involvement in political and social
leadership, scientific research, teaching). Above all it is necessary that he
be able to teach and support the laity in their vocation to be present in and
to transform the world with the light of the Gospel, by recognizing this task
of theirs and showing respect for it."(185)
Lastly, awareness of the Church as a "missionary"
communion will help the candidate; for the priesthood to love and live the
essential missionary dimension of the Church and her different pastoral
activities. He should be open and available to all the possibilities offered
today for the proclamation of the Gospel, not forgetting the valuable service
which can and should be given by the media.(186) He should prepare himself for
a ministry which may mean in practice that his readiness to follow the
indications of the Holy Spirit and of his bishop will lead him to be sent to
preach the Gospel even beyond the frontiers of his own country.(187)
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