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CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY
DIRECTORY
ON THE MINISTRY AND LIFE
OF PRIESTS
LIBRERIA EDITRICE VATICANA
00120 CITTA DEL VATICANO
INTRODUCTION
The rich experience of the Church concerning the ministry and
life of priests, condensed in various documents of the Magisterium,(1) has
received in our days a new impulse thanks to the teachings contained in the
post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis.
The publication of this document, in which the Supreme Pontiff
has wanted to unite his voice as the Bishop of Rome and Successor of Peter to
that of the synodal Fathers,(2) represents for priests and for the entire Church,
the beginning of a faithful and fruitful way of deepening and applying its
contents.
"Today, in particular, the pressing pastoral task of the
new evangelization calls for the involvement of the entire People of God and
requires new fervour, new methods and a new expression for the proclaiming and
witnessing of the Gospel. This task demands priests who are deeply and fully
immersed in the mystery of Christ and capable of embodying a new style of
pastoral life".(3)
Those primarily responsible for this new evangelization of The
third Millennium are the priests, who, however, in order to realize their
mission, need to nourish in themselves a life which is a pure reflection of
their identity, and to live a union of love with Jesus Christ Eternal High
Priest, Head and Master, Spouse, and Pastor of his Church. They should
strengthen their own spirituality and ministry with a continuous and complete
formation.
This Directory, requested by numerous Bishops during the Synod
of 1990 and in a general consultation of the Episcopate promoted by our
Congregation, was conceived in order to respond to these needs.
In order to outline the content, the suggestions of the entire
world episcopate - consulted on purpose - , the results of plenary sessions of
the Congregation held in the Vatican in October of 1993, as well as the
considerations of many theologians, and experts on the matter from diverse
geographical areas and involved in current pastoral work were taken into
account.
Effort was made to offer pratical elements for employing
initiatives in the most unitary way possible, while avoiding specific conditions
which are proper to a particular Diocese or Episcopal Conference. With this in
mind, it appeared proper that this Directory recall only those doctrinal
elements which are the basis of the identity, spirituality and continuous
formation of priests.
The document, therefore, does not intend to offer an
exhaustive exposition on the priesthood, nor a mere repetition of what has
already been authentically declared by the Magisterium of the Church, but rather
to respond to the principal questions of a doctrinal, disciplinary and pastoral
nature, placed upon the priests by the demands of the new evangelization .
Thus, for example, there was a need to clarify the true
priestly identity, as the divine Master has willed and as the Church has always
seen; it is not reconcilable with those tendencies which would like to empty or
annul the reality of the ministerial priesthood. Particular emphasis was given
to the theme of communion, a demand especially felt today, with its imminent
presence in the life of the priest. The same can be said of priestly
spirituality which, in our times, has suffered many contradictions, above all,
due to secularism and an erroneous anthropologism. Therefore, it is necessary to
offer some counsels for an adequate and permanent formation which may help the
priests joyfully and responsibly live their vocation.
The text is directed of course, through the Bishops, to all
the priests of the Church of the Latin Rite. The directives contained here
concern, in particular, the secular diocesan clergy, although with due
adaptations, they can also help priests of religious institutes and of societies
of apostolic life.
It is hoped that this Directory be a help for every priest in
deepening his identity and in growing in his spirituality; an encouragement in
the ministry and permanent formation — for which each one is primarily
responsible —, and a point of reference for a rich and authentic apostolate
for the good of the Church and of the entire world. From the Congregation for
the Clergy, Holy Thursday 1994.
JOSÉ Card. SANCHEZ
Prefect
+ CRESCENZIO SEPE
Titular Archbishop of Grado
Secretary
Chapter I
THE IDENTITY OF THE PRIEST
1. Priesthood as a gift.
The entire Church participates in the priestly anointing of
Christ in the Holy Spirit. In the Church, in fact, "all the faithful form a
holy and royal priesthood, offer spiritual sacrifices through Jesus Christ and
proclaim the greatness of him who has called you out of darkness into his
marvellous light" (cf 1 Pet 2:5. 9).(4) In Christ, his entire
Mystical body is united to the Father through the Holy Spirit for the salvation
of all men.
However, the Church cannot carry out this mission alone: all
of her work intrinsically needs communion with Christ, the Head of his Body.
Indissolubly united to her Lord, she continuously receives from Him the effects
of grace and truth, of guidance and support so that she may be for all and for
each one "a sign and instrument, that is, of communion with God and of
unity among all men".(5) The ministerial priesthood finds its reason for
being in light of this vital and operative union of the Church with Christ. As a
result, through this ministry the Lord continues to accomplish among his People
the work which as Head of his Body belongs to Him alone. Thus, the ministerial
priesthood renders tangible the actual work of Christ, the Head, and gives
witness to the fact that Christ has not separated Himself from his Church;
rather He continues to vivify her through his everlasting priesthood. For this
reason, the Church considers the ministerial priesthood a gift given to Her
through the ministry of some of her faithful.
This gift which was instituted by Christ to continue his own
salvific mission was conferred upon the Apostles and remains in the Church
through the Bishops and their successors.
2. Sacramental Roots.
Through the sacramental ordination conferred by the imposition
of hands and the consecratory prayers of the Bishop, "a specific
ontological bond which unites the priest to Christ, High Priest and Good
Shepherd" (6) is established.
Thus, the identity of the priest comes from the specific
participation in the Priesthood of Christ, in which the one ordained becomes, in
the Church and for the Church, a real, living and faithful image of Christ the
Priest, "a sacramental representation of Christ, Head and Shepherd".(7)
Through consecration, the priest "receives a spiritual 'power' as a gift
which is a participation in the authority with which Jesus Christ, through his
Spirit, guides the Church".(8) This sacramental identification with the
Eternal High Priest specifically inserts the priest into the trinitarian mystery
and, through the mystery of Christ, into the ministerial Communion of the Church
so as to serve the People of God.(9)
3. In Communion with the Father, the
Son and the Holy Spirit.
If it is true that each Christian, by means of Baptism, is in
communion with God, One and Triune, it is equally true that by the power of the
consecration received with the Sacrament of Holy Orders, the priest is placed in
a particular and specific relation with the Father, with the Son and with the
Holy Spirit. In fact, "Our identity has its ultimate source in the charity
of the Father. He sent the Son, High Priest and Good Shepherd, and we are united
sacramentally with the ministerial priesthood through the action of the Holy
Spirit. The life and the ministry of the priest are a continuation of the life
and the action of the same Christ. This is our identity, our true dignity, the
fountain of our joy, the certainty of our life".'·
Therefore, the identity, the ministry and the existence of the
priest are essentially related to the three divine Persons for priestly service
to the Church.
4. In the Trinitarian Dynamics of
Salvation.
The priest, "as a visible continuation and sacramental
sign of Christ in his own position before the Church and the world, as the
enduring and ever-new source of salvation'',(11) finds himself inserted into the
trinitarian dynamics with a particular responsibility. His identity springs from
the ministerium verbi et sacra-mentorum, which is in essential relation
to the mystery of salvific love of the Father (cf Jn 17:6-9. 24; 1 Cor
1:1; 2 Cor 1:1), to the priestly being of Christ, who personally chooses
and calls his ministers to be with him (cf Mk 3:15), and to the gift of
the Spirit (cf Jn 20:21), who communicates to the priest the necessary
power for giving life to a multitude of sons of God, united in the one ecclesial
body and oriented towards the Kingdom of the Father.
5. Intimate Relation with the Trinity.
From this, one perceives the essentially "relational"
characteristic (Jn 17:11. 21) (12) Of the priest's identity.
The grace and the indelible character conferred with the
sacramental unction of the Holy Spirit,(13) place the priest in personal
relation with the Trinity since it is the fountain of the priestly being and
work. Therefore, the priest must live this relationship in an intimate and
personal manner, in a dialogue of adoration and of love with the three divine
Persons, conscious that he has received this gift for the service of all.
Christological Dimension
6. Specific Identity.
The Christological dimension, like the Trinitarian dimension,
springs directly from the sacrament which ontologically configures the priest to
Christ the Priest, Master, Sanctifier and Pastor of his People.(14) The faithful
who, maintaining their common priesthood, are chosen and become part of the
ministerial priesthood are granted an indelible participation in the one and
only priesthood of Christ. This is a participation in the public dimension of
mediation and authority regarding the sanctification, teaching and guidance of
all the People of God. On the one hand, the common priesthood of the faithful
and the ministerial or hierarchical priesthood are necessarily ordered one for
the other because each in its own way participates in the only priesthood of
Christ and, on the other hand, they are essentially different.(15)
In this sense the identity of the priest is new with respect
to that of all Christians who through Baptism participate as a whole in the only
priesthood of Christ and are called to give witness to Christ throughout the
earth.(16) The specificity of the ministerial priesthood lies in the need that
the faithful have of the mediation and dominion of Christ which is made visible
by the work of the ministerial priesthood.
In this unique identity with Christ, the priest must be
conscious that his life is a mystery totally grafted onto the mystery of Christ
and of the Church in a new and specific way and that this engages him totally in
pastoral activity and rewards him.(17)
7. In the Heart of the People of God
Christ associates the Apostles to his own mission. "As
the Father has sent me, I also send you" (Jn 20:21). In Holy
Ordination itself, the missionary dimension is ontologically present. The priest
was chosen, consecrated and sent to carry out effectively in our time this
eternal mission of Christ; he becomes his authentic representative and messenger:
"He that hears you, hears me; he that despises you, despises me; and he
that despises me, despises him that sent me" (Lk 10:16)
One can therefore say that the configuration to Christ,
through sacramental consecration, defines the role of the priest in the heart of
the People of God, making him participate in his own way in the sanctifying,
magisterial and pastoral authority of Jesus Christ himself, Head and Pastor of
the Church.(l8)
Acting in persona Christi capitis, the priest becomes
the minister of the essential salvific actions, transmits the truths necessary
for salvation and cares for the People of God, leading them towards sanctity.(19)
Pneumatological Dimension
8. Sacramental Character.
In priestly Ordination, the priest has received the seal of
the Holy Spirit which has marked him by the sacramental character in order to
always be the minister of Christ and the Church. Assured of the promise that the
Consoler will abide "with him forever" (Jn 14:16-17), the
priest knows that he will never lose the presence and the effective power of the
Holy Spirit in order to exercise his ministry and live with charity his pastoral
office as a total gift of self for the salvation of his own brothers.
9. Personal Communion with the Holy
Spirit.
It is also the Holy Spirit who by Ordination confers on the
priest the prophetic task of announcing and explaining, with authority, the Word
of God. Inserted in the communion of the Church with the entire priestly order,
the priest will be guided by the Holy Spirit whom the Father has sent through
Christ. The Holy Spirit teaches him everything and reminds him all Jesus has
said to the Apostles. Therefore, the priest with the help of the Holy Spirit and
the study of the Word of God in the Scriptures, with the light of Tradition and
of the Magisterium,(20) discovers the richness of the Word to be proclaimed to
the ecclesial community entrusted to him.
10. Invocation of the Holy Spirit.
Through the sacramental character and the identification of
his intention with that of the Church, the priest is always in communion with
the Holy Spirit in the celebration of the liturgy, especially in the Holy
Eucharist and the other sacraments.
In fact, in each sacrament, Christ invoked by the priest who
celebrates in persona Christi acts through the Holy Spirit with his
efficacious power on behalf of the Church.(21)
Thus, the sacramental celebration finds its efficacy in the
Word of Christ who has instituted it and in the power of the Holy Spirit which
the Church invokes frequently in the epiclesis.
This is particularly evident in the Eucharistic Prayer in
which the priest, invoking the power of the Holy Spirit on the bread and on the
wine, pronounces the words of Jesus and actualizes the mystery of the Body and
of the Blood of Christ, really present through transubstantiation.
11. Strength to Guide the Community.
It is thus in the communion with the Holy Spirit that the
priest finds the strength to guide the community entrusted to him and to
maintain it in the unity wanted by the Lord.(22) The prayer of the priest in the
Holy Spirit can be patterned on the priestly prayer of Jesus Christ (Jn
17). Therefore, he must pray for the unity of the faithful so that they may be
one in order that the world may believe that the Father has sent the Son for the
salvation of all.
Ecclesial Dimension
12. 'In' and 'in front of the Church'.
Christ, the permanent and always new origin of salvation, is
the mysterial font from which is derived the mystery of the Church, his Body and
his Bride, called by his Spouse to be a sign and instrument of redemption.
Through the mystery of Christ, the priest lives his multiple
ministries and is inserted also into the mystery of Church which "becomes
aware in faith that her being comes not from herself but from the grace of
Christ in the Holy Spirit".(23) In this sense, while the priest is in the
Church, he is also set in front of it.(24)
13. A Certain Participation in the
Spousal Nature of Christ.
The Sacrament of Holy Orders, in fact, makes the priest a
sharer not only in the mystery of Christ the Priest, Master, Head and Shepherd
but, in some way, also in Christ "Servant and Spouse of the Church".(25)
This is the "Body" of him who has loved and loves to the point of
giving himself for her (cf Eph 5:25); who renews her and purifies her
continually by means of the Word of God and of the sacraments (cf Ibid.
5:26); who works to make her always more beautiful (cf Ibid. 5:27), and
lastly, who nourishes her and treats her with care (cf Ibid. 5:29).
The priests, as collaborators of the Episcopal Order, form
with their Bishop a sole presbyterate26 and participate, in a subordinate degree,
in the only priesthood of Christ. Similar to the Bishop, they participate in
that spousal dimension in relation to the Church which is well expressed in the
Rite of the episcopal ordination when the ring is entrusted to them.(27)
The priest, who "in the individual local communities of
the faithful makes the Bishop present, so to speak, to whom they are united with
a faithful and great spirit" (28) must be faithful to the Bride and almost
like living icons of Christ the Spouse render fruitful the multi-form donation
of Christ to his Church.
By this communion with Christ the Spouse, the ministerial
priesthood is also founded — as Christ, with Christ and in Christ — in that
mystery of transcendent supernatural love of which the marriage among Christians
is an image and a participation.
Called to the act of supernatural love, absolutely gratuitous,
the priest should love the Church as Christ has loved her, consecrating to her
all his energies and giving himself with pastoral charity in a continuous act of
generosity.
14. Universality of the Priesthood.
The command of the Lord: go to all the nations (Mt
28:18-20) definitively expresses the place of the priest in front of the
Church.(29) Sent, - missus - by the Father by means of Christ, the priest
pertains "in an immediate way" to the universal Church.(30) which has
the mission to announce the Good News unto the "ends of the earth" (Acts
1:8).(31)
"The spiritual gift received by priests in Ordination
prepares them for a wide and universal mission of salvation".(32) In fact,
through Orders and the ministry received, all priests are associated with the
Episcopal Body and, in hierarchical communion with it, according to their
vocation and grace, they serve the good of the entire Church.(33) Therefore, the
membership to a particular Church, through incardination,(34) must not enclose
the priest in a restricted and particularistic mentality, but rather should open
him to the service of other Churches, because each Church is the particular
realization of the only Church of Jesus Christ, such that the universal Church
lives and fulfills her mission in and from the particular Churches in effective
communion with her. Thus, all the priests, must have a missionary heart and mind
and be open to the needs of the Church and of the world.(35)
15. Missionary Nature of the
Priesthood.
It is important that the priest be fully aware and profoundly
live this missionary reality of his priesthood, in total harmony with the Church
who feels the need to send her ministers to places where their mission is more
needed and to work toward a more equal distribution of clergy. (36)
This demand in the life of the Church in the world must be
felt and lived by each priest, above all and essentially as the gift of living
within the institution and being at her service.
Therefore, we cannot accept those opinions which arise from a
misunderstanding of particular cultures, that tend to distort the missionary
action of the Church, called to fulfill the same universal mystery of salvation
which transcends all cultures and should vivify them. (37)
It must be said that the universal expansion of the priestly
ministry today is related to the social-cultural features of the contemporary
world in which the need to eliminate all the barriers which divide people and
nations is felt and which, especially, through cultural exchange, wants to bind
people, despite the geographical distances separating them.
Consequently, today more than ever, the clergy must feel
itself apostolically bound to unite all men in Christ and in his Church.
16. Authority as 'amoris officium'.
Another sign of the priest placing himself in front of
the Church is his being a guide who works toward the sanctification of the
faithful entrusted to his ministry, which is essentially pastoral.
This reality, which has to be lived with humility and
coherence, can be subject to two opposite temptations.
The first is that of exercising his ministry in an overbearing
manner (cf Lk 22:24-27; 1 Pt 5:1-4), while the second is that of
disdaining the configuration to Christ Head and Shepherd because of an incorrect
view of community.
The first temptation was also strong for the disciples
themselves and was promptly and repeatedly corrected by Jesus; all authority is
exercised in the spirit of service, as amoris officium 38 and as an
unselfish dedication for the good of the flock (cf Jn 13:14; 10:11).
The priest must always remember that the Lord and Master
"did not come to be served but to serve" (Mk 10:45); he has
bent down to wash the feet of the disciples (cf Jn 13:5) before dying on
the Cross and before sending them out to the whole world (cf Jn 20:21).
The priests will give authentic testimony to the Resurrected
Lord, to whom was given "all power in heaven and on earth" (cf Mt
28:18), if they exercise their own power in a humble, authoritative service to
his own flock39 and with respect to the duties which Christ and the Church
entrusted to the lay faithful40 and to the consecrated faithful for the
profession of the evangelical counsels.(41)
17. Temptation of 'Democratism'.
It often happens that to avoid this first deviation, one falls
into the second, eliminating all the differences in the roles among the members
of the Mystical Body of Christ, which is the Church. This practically negates
the true doctrine of the distinction between the common and ministerial
priesthood.(42)
One of the dangers noticeable today is the so-called "democratism".
In respect to this, it should be remembered that the Church recognizes all the
merits and values which the democratic culture has brought to human society. At
the same time, the Church has always fought with all the means within its reach
for the recognition of the equal dignity among all men.
With this strong ecclesial tradition the Vatican Council II
openly spoke about the dignity of all the baptized in the Church.(43)
Nevertheless, it is still necessary to affirm that the
mentality and current practice in cultural and social-political trends of our
times cannot be transferred automatically to the Church. The Church, indeed,
owes its existence and structure to the salvific plan of God. She sees herself
as a gift from the benevolence of a Father who has saved her through the
humiliation of his Son on the cross. Therefore, the Church, through the Holy
Spirit, wants to be completely consonant and faithful to the free and liberating
will of its Lord Jesus Christ. This mystery of salvation makes the Church by its
specific nature, into a reality diverse from the simple human society.
Hence, the so-called "democratism" becomes a grave
temptation because it leads to a denial of the authority and capital grace of
Christ and to distort the nature of the Church; it would be almost just a human
society. Such a view damages the very hierarchical structure willed by its
Divine Founder as the Magisterium has always clearly taught and the Church
herself has lived from the start.
The participation in the Church is based upon the mystery of
communion which, by its nature, sees in itself the presence and action of the
ecclesiastical hierarchy.
Therefore, the mentality which confuses the duties of the
priests with those of the lay faithful cannot be permitted in the Church. It is
sometimes manifested in some ecclesial organisations of participation. In like
manner, it does not distinguish the proper authority of the Bishop from that of
the priests as collaborators of the Bishops, or denies the Petrine primacy in
the College of Bishops.
To this effect, it should be remembered that the presbyterate
and the Council of Priests are not an expression of the right of association of
the clergy, and even less can be understood according to views of a
syndicalistic nature which claim interests of parties foreign to the ecclesial
community.(44)
18. Distinction between Common an
Ministerial Priesthood.
The distinction between the common and ministerial priesthood,
far from creating division among the members of the Christian community,
harmonises and unifies the life of the Church. This, in fact, as regards the
Body of Christ, is an organic communion among all the members, in which each one
serves the community by fulfilling his own distinct role and specific vocation
(1 Cor 12:12 ff.).(45)
Therefore, no one may licitly change what Christ has wanted
for his Church. It is indissolubly linked with its Founder and Head who alone
may provide her, through the power of the Holy Spirit, with ministers in the
service of the faithful.
No community can take the place of Christ, who is the one who
calls, consecrates and sends forth ministers, through the legitimate Pastors
even in a situation of particular necessity, when it might consider granting
itself its own priest, in ways contrary to the dispositions of the Church.(46)
The solution to these cases of necessity is Jesus' prayer: "pray therefore
the Lord of the harvest, that he send forth labourers into his harvest" (Mt
9:38). If to this prayer done with faith, the fervent life of charity of the
community is added, we can be sure that the Lord will not fail to give pastors
according to his heart (cf Jer 3:15).(47)
19. Only the Priests are Pastors.
One way to avoid falling into this "democratistic"
mentality is to shun the so-called "clericalization" of the laity,(48)
which tends to diminish the ministerial priesthood of the priest. After the
Bishop, the term "pastor" can only be attributed in a proper and
univocal sense to the priest by virtue of the ministerial priesthood received
with the Ordination. The attribute "pastoral", in fact, refers both to
the potestas docendi et sanctificandi, and to the potestas regendi.(49)
It should be remembered that these tendencies do not favour
the true advancement of the laity because they frequently forget the authentic
ecclesial vocation and mission of the laity in the world.
Priestly Communion
20. Communion with the Trinity and
with Christ.
In light of the above-mentioned regarding the priest's
identity, the communion of the priest is fulfilled above all with the Father,
the ultimate origin of all his power; with the Son, in whose redemptive mission
he participates; with the Holy Spirit, who gives him the power for living and
fulfilling that pastoral charity which qualifies him in a priestly way.
In fact, "the nature and the mission of the ministerial
priesthood cannot be defined except in this multiple and rich network of
relations which spring from the Blessed Trinity and is prolonged in the
communion of the Church as a sign, in Christ, of the union with God and the
unity of the whole human race".(50)
21. Communion with the Church.
The priest's communion-relation with the Church in its aspect
of mystery and ecclesial community comes from this fundamental union-communion
with Christ and the Trinity.(51) In fact, it is within the mystery of the Church,
as a mystery of trinitarian communion with a missionary zeal that the identity
of every Christian is revealed and, therefore, the specific and personal
identity of the priest and of his ministry as well.
Precisely, the ecclesial communion of the priest is lived in
diverse ways. In fact, through sacramental Ordination, he develops special bonds
with the Pope, the Episcopal Body, his own Bishop,
other priests and the lay faithful.
22. Hierarchial Communion.
Communion as a characteristic of the priest-hood is based on
the unity of the Head, Shepherd and Spouse of the Church, who is Christ.(52)
In such ministerial communion some precise ties are shaped
with the Pope, the College of Bishops and each one's diocesan Bishop. "There
can be no genuine priestly ministry except in communion with the Supreme Pontiff
and the Episcopal College, especially with one's own diocesan Bishop, who
deserves that filial respect and obedience promised during the rite of
ordination".(53) Thus, this refers to a hierarchical communion, that is to
say, a communion in that hierarchy in the same way that it is structured within.
This communion, in virtue of participation subordinated to the
Bishops in the one ministerial priesthood and mission, also involves the
spiritual and organic-structural bond of priests with the entire Episcopal order,
their own Bishop,(54) the Roman Pontiff as Pastor of the universal Church (55)
and each particular Church. This is strengthened by the fact that the entire
Episcopal order as a whole and each Bishop individually must be in hierarchical
communion with the Head of the College.(56) This College, in fact, is composed
only of those consecrated Bishops who are in hierarchical communion with its
Head and members.
23. Communion in the Eucharistic
Celebration.
Hierarchical communion is vividly expressed in the Eucharistic
prayers; when the priest prays for the Pope, the College of Bishops and his own
Bishop, he not only expresses a sentiment of devotion, but attests to the
authenticity of his celebration as well.(57)
The Eucharistic concelebration itself, in the circumstances
and conditions foreseen,(58) especially when presided by the Bishop and with the
participation of the faithful, manifests well the unity of the priesthood of
Christ in his ministers, as well as the unity of the sacrifice of the People of
God.(59) Moreover, it contributes to the consolidation of sacramental fraternity
which exists among priests.(60)
24. Communion in the Ministerial
Activity.
Each priest should have a deep, humble and filial bond of
charity with the person of the Holy Father and adhere to his petrine ministry of
magisterium, of sanctification and of government, with exemplary docility.(61)
In his fidelity and service to the authority of his Bishop, he
lives the communion called for by the practice of his priestly ministry. For the
pastors with more experience it is easy to confirm the need to avoid any form of
subjectivism in his ministry and adhere with responsibility to pastoral programs.
Besides being an expression of maturity, such adhesion contributes to the
building of that unity in the communion which is indispensable for the work of
evangelization.(62)
With full respect for hierarchical subordination, the priest
will promote a genuine rapport with his Bishop, indicated by sincere confidence,
cordial friendship, and true effort towards consonance and convergence in ideals
and programs. Nothing should take away from the intelligent capacity for
personal initiative and pastoral enterprise.(63)
25. Communion in the Priesthood.
By virtue of the Sacrament of Holy Orders "every priest
is united to the other members of the priesthood by specific bonds of apostolic
charity, ministry and fraternity".(64) He is, in fact inserted into the Ordo
Presbyterorum constituting that unity which can be defined as a true family
in which the ties do not come from flesh nor from blood but from the grace of
Holy Orders.(65)
This membership in a specific presbyterate,(66) always comes
within the context of a particular Church, of an Ordinariate or of a personal
Prelature. In fact, unlike the case of the College of Bishops, it seems that
there are no theological foundations to affirm the existence of a universal
Presbyterate.
Priestly fraternity and membership to a presbyterate are,
therefore, elements characterising the priest. The rite of the imposition of the
hands by the Bishop and all of the priests present during the priestly
Ordination has special significance and merit because it points to the equality
of participation in the ministry, and to the fact that the priest cannot act by
himself; he acts within the presbyterate becoming a brother of all those who
constitute it.(67)
26. Incardination in Particular
Church.
Incardination in a particular Church (68) constitutes an
authentic juridical bond (69) which also has a spiritual value, since from it
springs "the rapport with the Bishop in the sole presbyterate, sharing in
the ecclesial solicitude, in dedication to the evangelical care of the People of
God in specific historical conditions and settings".(70) In this
perspective, the bond with the particular Church is rich in meaning for pastoral
action as well.
It should not be forgotten that the secular priests not
incardinated in the Diocese and the priest members of a religious institute or
of a society of apostolic life who live in the Diocese (71) and exercise some
office therein,(72) although still placed under their legitimate Ordinaries,
belong by full or a diverse title to the clergy of such Diocese (73) where
"they have the right to both an active and a passive voice in an election
to the council of priests".(74) The religious priests, in particular, by
unity of powers, share the pastoral care offering the contribution of specific
charisma and "with their presence inspiring the particular Church to live
more vividly its universal openness".(75)
The priests, then, incardinated in a Diocese, who are serving
an ecclesial movement approved by the competent ecclesiastical Authority,(76)
are aware of being members of the presbyterate of their Diocese and must
sincerely collaborate with it. The Bishop of incardination, on his part, must
respect the way of life required by the membership to a Movement, and it may be
fitting, by the norm of the law, to permit the priest to lend his services to
other churches, if this forms part of the charisma of the movement itself.(77)
27. The Presbyterate: a Place of
Santification.
The presbyterate is a privileged place in which the priest
should be able to find the means of sanctification and evangelization and of
being helped to overcome the limits and the weaknesses which are proper to human
nature and which are particularly felt today.
He will therefore make every effort to avoid living his own
priesthood in an isolated and subjectivistic way, and must try to enhance
fraternal communion in the giving and receiving — from priest to priest — of
the warmth of friendship, of affectionate help, of acceptance, of fraternal
correction, well aware that the grace of Orders "assumes and elevates human
relations, psychologically, affectionately, cordially and spiritually".(78)
All this is expressed in the liturgy of the Mass In Coena
Domini of Holy Thursday which shows how through Eucharistic communion —
born in the Last Supper — the priests receive the capacity to love one another,
as the Master loves them.(79)
28. Priestly Friendship.
The profound ecclesial sense of the presbyterate fosters the
personal responsibility of each priest in carrying out the particular ministry
entrusted to him by the Bishop.(80) The capacity to develop and profoundly live
priestly friendship is a source of serenity and joy in the exercise of the
ministry, a decisive support in difficulties and a valuable help in the growth
of pastoral charity. Priests must exercise this friendship in a particular way
precisely towards those brothers most in need of understanding, help and
support.(81)
29. Common Life.
A manifestation of this communion is also the common life
always supported by the Church, recently emphasised by the documents of Vatican
Council II (82) and of the successive Magisterium,(83) and applied in many
Dioceses with positive results.
Among the diverse forms of this (communal house, community of
table, etc.) one must look highly upon the communal participation in liturgical
prayer.(84) The diversity of forms must be encouraged according to the
possibilities and practical situations, without necessarily emphasising models
proper to religious life. Particularly praiseworthy are those associations which
support priestly fraternity, sanctity in the exercise of the ministry, and
communion with the Bishop and with the entire Church.(85)
It is necessary that parish priests be available to encourage
common life in the parochial house pastoral care. with their vicars,(86)
effectively considering them as their cooperators and sharers of the And the
vicars, in order to build priestly communion, must recognise and respect the
authority of the parish priest.(87)
30. Communion with the Lay Faithful.
As a man of communion, the priest cannot express his love for
the Lord and for the Church without transmitting it in a real and unconditional
love for all Christians, the object of his pastoral care.(88)
Like Christ, he must make Christ "visible in the midst of
the flock" entrusted to his care,(89) having a positive and encouraging
rapport with the lay faithful. Recognising in these their dignity as sons of God,
he develops his own role in the Church, and in their service he offers all his
priestly ministry and pastoral charity.(90) In the awareness of the profound
communion which binds him to the lay faithful and to the religious, the priest
will make every effort "to awaken and deepen co-responsibility in the one
common mission of salvation, with a prompt and heartfelt esteem for all the
charisma and tasks which the Spirit gives believers for the building up of the
Church".(91)
More specifically, the parish priest, in his continuous
concern for the common good in the Church, will encourage associations of the
faithful and movements,(92) embracing them all, and helping them to find among
themselves a unity of goals, prayer and apostolic action.
Insofar as he unites the family of God and brings about the
Church as communion, the priest becomes the bridge between man and God, making
himself a brother of men who wants to be their pastor, father and master.(93)
The priest will guide the man of today, in his search for the meaning of his
existence, to a personal encounter with Christ, an encounter which is realised
as a message and as a reality already present, although not in a definitive way,
in the Church. In such a way the priest, placed in the service of the People of
God, will present himself as an expert in humanity, a man of truth and of
communion, a witness of the solicitude of the Only Shepherd for each and every
member of his flock. The community will be able to count on his dedication,
availability, untiring work of evangelization and, above all, his devoted and
unconditional love.
Therefore, he will exercise his spiritual mission with
kindness and firmness, with humility and service,(94) opening himself to
compassion, participating in the sufferings which arise from the various forms
of poverty, spiritual and material, old and new. He will know also how to act
with humility and with mercy within the difficult and uncertain ways of the
conversion of sinners, to which he will exercise the gift of truth and patience
and the encouraging benevolence of the Good Shepherd, who does not reprove the
lost sheep, but carries it on his shoulders and celebrates for its return to the
fold (cf Lk 15:4-7).(95)
31. The Communion with Religious
Members of Institutes of Consecrated Life.
Particular attention will be reserved to relations with the
brothers and the sisters engaged in a life of special consecration to God in all
their forms, showing them a sincere appreciation and a real spirit of apostolic
collaboration, respecting and promoting their specific charisma. He will
co-operate, moreover, so that the consecrated life always appears more luminous
for the benefit of the entire Church and more persuasive and attractive to the
new generations.
In such spirit of esteem for the consecrated life, the priest
will give particular care to those communities which, for various reasons, are
greatly in need of good doctrine, of assistance and of encouragement in the
faith.
32. Pastoral Works and Vocations.
In his pastoral work, each priest will take particular care
concerning vocations, encouraging prayer for vocations, doing his best in the
work of catechetics, and taking care of the formation of the ministers. He will
promote appropriate initiatives through a personal rapport with those under his
care, allowing him to discover their talents and to single out the will of God
for them, permitting a courageous choice in following Christ.(96)
Above all, a clear knowledge of one's specific identity, a
unity of life, a transparent cheerfulness, and a missionary zeal are the
indispensable elements of the vocational work that must be an integral and
organic part of ordinary pastoral action.
The priest will always maintain relations of cordial
collaboration and of sincere affection with the seminary, for it is the cradle
of his vocation and the first place in which he experienced communal life.
It would be desirable that every priest be concerned with
inspiring at least one priestly vocation which could thus continue the ministry.
33. Political and Social Obligation.
The priest, as servant of the universal Church, cannot tie
himself to any historical contingency, and therefore must be above any political
party. He cannot take an active role in political parties or labour unions,
unless, according to the judgement of the ecclesiastical authority, the rights
of the Church and the defence of common good require it.(97) In fact, even if
these are good things in themselves, they are nevertheless foreign to the
clerical state since they can constitute a grave danger of division in the
ecclesial communion.(98)
Like Jesus (cf Jn 6:15 ff.), the priest "ought to
refrain from actively engaging himself in politics, as it often happens, in
order to be a central point of spiritual fraternity".(99) All the faithful,
therefore, must always be able to approach the priest without feeling inhibited
for any reason.
The priest will remember that "it does not fall on the
shoulders of the Pastors of the Church to intervene directly in political
activities and in social organisations. This task, in fact, forms part of the
lay faithful vocation, in which they work by their own initiative together with
their fellow citizens". (100) Nevertheless, he will not be absent "in
the effort to form in them an upright conscience".(101)
The reduction of his mission to temporal tasks, of a purely
social or political nature, is foreign to his ministry, and does not constitute
a triumph but rather a grave loss to the Church's evangelical fruitfulness.
Chapter II
PRIESTLY SPIRITUALITY
Current Historical Context
34. Interpreting the Signs of the
Times.
The life and ministry of priests always develop within a
particular historical context, at times replete with new problems and unforeseen
changes, in which the pilgrim Church lives.
The priesthood is not born of history, but of the immutable
will of God. However, it corresponds with historical circumstances and, to
remain always faithful to its nature, is configured, in specific choices,
through a critical relation and a demand of evangelical harmony with the "sign
of the times". Therefore, priests have the duty to interpret these "signs"
in the light of faith and subject them to prudent judgement. In any case, they
cannot ignore them, especially if they wish to effectively orient their own
lives in a way that will make their service and testimony more fruitful for the
kingdom of God.
In the current era of the life of the Church and society,
priests are called to live their ministry with depth, anticipating the ever more
profound, numerous and sensitive demands not only of a pastoral nature, but also
social and cultural, which they must face.(102)
Today these priests, therefore, are engaged in diverse areas
of apostolate which require complete dedication and generosity, intellectual
preparation and, above all, a mature and deep spiritual life rooted in pastoral
charity, which is their specific way to holiness and which also constitutes an
authentic service to the faithful through pastoral ministry.
35. The Demands of the New
Evangelization.
Thus it is clear that the priest is involved in a very special
way in the effort of the entire Church to carry out the new evangelization.
Based on faith in Jesus Christ, Redeemer of mankind, the priest is assured that
in him rests an "unfathomable richness" (Eph 3:8) which no
culture nor era can exhaust which men can always draw on for their enrichment.(103)
This is a time therefore for a renewal of our faith in Jesus
Christ, who is the same "yesterday, today and for ever" (Heb
13:8). Therefore "the call to the new evangelization is above all a call to
conversion''.(l04) At the same time, it is a call to that hope, "which
rests upon the promises of God, on the fidelity to his Word, and which has the
resurrection of Christ as an unshakeable certainty, his definitive victory over
sin and death, the first announcement and root of every evangelization,
foundation of every human advancement, the starting point of every authentic
Christian culture''.(l05)
In this context, the priest must above all revive his faith,
his hope and his sincere love for the Lord, in such a way as to be able to
present him for the contemplation of the faithful and all men as he truly is: a
living and fascinating Person, who loves us more than anyone else because He has
given his life for us; "greater love has no man than this, that a man give
his life for his friends" (Jn 15:13).
At the same time, the priest, conscious that each person is,
in diverse ways, looking for a love that is capable of bringing them beyond the
anguishes concomitant with human weakness and egoism, and above all with death
itself, must proclaim that Jesus Christ is the answer to all these anxieties.
In the new evangelization, the priest is called to be the herald
of hope. (106)
36. The Challenge of Sects and New
Cults.
The proliferation of sects and new cults, as well as their
diffusion also among the Catholic faithful, constitutes a particular challenge
to the pastoral ministry. At the root of these phenomena lie complex causes. At
all events, the priestly ministry is called to respond promptly and incisively
to the search for the sacred and for authentic spirituality which today is
emerging in a particular way.
In recent years, in effect, it has become evident that there
is an eminently pastoral necessity for the priest to be a man of God and a
teacher of prayer.
At the same time, this obliges the priest to be welcoming
towards the community entrusted to his pastoral care in such a way that no
member of the community would be made to feel anonymous or think themselves an
object of indifference.
This is a responsibility which indeed falls on all the
faithful, but in a special way on the priest, who is the man who brings about
communion.
If he knows how to receive each one who approaches him with
esteem and respect, appreciative of their value as persons, then he will
generate an authentic charity which will become contagious and will gradually
extend itself through the entire community.
To rise to the challenge of sects and new cults, a mature and
comprehensive catechesis is of particular importance. This, at the present time,
requires that the priest make a special effort to ensure that his faithful
really understand the meaning of their Christian vocation and of their Catholic
faith. The faithful must be educated, in a particular way, to understand well
the relationship between their specific vocation in Christ and their belonging
to his Church which must learn to love in a filial and tenacious way.
This will all come to pass if the priest, in his life and in
his ministry, avoids everything which could either be the cause of timidity or
coldness towards, or restrict the identification with the Church.
37. Lights and Shadows in Ministerial
Activity.
It is greatly comforting to note that today priests of all
ages and in the great majority carry out their ministry with joyful effort,
often the result of silent heroism, working with all their strength without
seeing at times, the fruits of their labour.
Through this effort, today they form a living expression of
that divine grace which, given freely in the moment of Ordination, continues to
grant an ever-renewing strength to their ministry.
Along with this light, there is no lack of shadows which tend
to weaken its beauty and render as less credible their testimony to the world.
Pastoral ministry is a fascinating undertaking, yet arduous,
open to misunderstanding and marginalisation, and, especially today, to fatigue,
challenge, isolation and, at times, solitude.
To rise to the challenge continuously presented him by the
secularist mentality, the priest must make every effort to protect the absolute
primacy of his spiritual life, his continuous presence with Christ and his
generous pastoral charity, intensifying his communion with all men and, above
all, with other priests.
Being with Christ in Prayer
38. Priority of Spiritual Life.
The priesthood was, so to speak, conceived in that long
prayer during which our Lord Jesus spoke with the Father about his Apostles and,
certainly, all those who in the course of time, would be made participants in
his very mission (cf Lk 6:12; cf Jn 17:15-20). The very prayer of
Jesus in Gethsemane (cf Mt 26:36-44), leading toward the priestly
sacrifice of Golgotha, manifests in a paradigmatic way "how our priesthood
should be profoundly linked to prayer: rooted in prayer".(107)
Born of these prayers and called to renew a Sacrifice
inseparable from these, priests maintain their ministry with a spiritual life to
which they give absolute pre-eminence, avoiding any neglect due to other
activities. Precisely in order to effectively carry out his pastoral ministry,
the priest must enter into a special and profound rapport with Christ the Good
Shepherd, who alone remains the principal protagonist in any pastoral action.
39. Means for the Spiritual Life.
Such a spiritual life must be embodied in each priest through
the liturgy, personal prayer, his lifestyle and the practice of the Christian
virtues, which contribute to the richness of ministerial action. The very
conformity to Christ requires one to breathe, so to speak, in a climate of
friendship and personal encounter with the Lord and in service to the Church,
his Body, for which the priest will show his love through the faithful
fulfilment and defence of the duties of pastoral ministry.(108)
It is necessary, therefore, that the priest program his life
of prayer in a manner which embraces: the daily Eucharistic celebration,(109)
with adequate preparation and thanksgiving; frequent confession (110) and
spiritual direction already practised in the seminary; (111) the complete and
fervent celebration of the liturgy of the hours,(112) on a daily basis; (113)
examination of conscience; (114) mental prayer; (115) divine readings; (116) the
prolonged moments of silence and prayer, above all inperiodical Spiritual
Exercises and Retreats; (117) the affectionate expression of Marian devotions,
like the Rosary; (118) the "Via Crucis" and other pious exercises;
(119) and the fruitful reading on lives of the saints.(120)
Each year during the Mass of Holy Thursday, as a sign of
enduring desire of fidelity, priests renew in the presence of the Bishop, and
together with him, the promises made in the moment of Ordination. (121)
The care for the spiritual life should be felt as a joyful
duty on the part of the priest himself, and also as a right of the faithful who
seek in him, consciously or not, the man of God, the counsellor, the
mediator of peace, the faithful and prudent friend, the sure guide to confide in
during the more difficult moments in life to find encouragement and security.(122)
40. Imitating Christ in Prayer.
Due to numerous duties stemming in large part from pastoral
activity, the priest's life is linked, now more than ever, to a series of
requests which could lead to a growing exterior activism, submitting that
life to a frenetic and disordered pace.
In light of such a "temptation", one must not forget
that the initial intention of Jesus in convoking the Apostles around him was
above all that they "remain with him" (Mk 3:14).
The Son of God himself has wished to leave us a testimony of
his prayer.
In fact, the Gospels frequently present us with Christ in
prayer: in the revelation of his mission by the Father (cf Lk 3:21-22),
before the calling of the Apostles (cf Lk 6:12), in giving thanks to God
in the multiplication of the bread (cf Mt 14:19; 15:36; Mk 6:41;
8:7; Lk 9:16;Jn 6:11), in the Transfiguration (cf Lk
9:28-29), the healing of the deaf-mute (cf Mk 7:34) and raising of
Lazarus (cf Jn 11:41 ff.), before the confession of Peter (cf Lk
9:18), when He teaches the disciples how to pray (cf Lk 11:1), and when
these return after completing their mission (cf Mt 11:25 ff.; Lk
10:21 ff.), in the blessing of the children (cf Mt 19:13) and in the
prayer for Peter (cf Lk 22:32).
All of his daily life is rooted in prayer. Thus, he retreated
to the desert or the mountain to pray (cf Mk 1:35; 6:46; Lk 5:16; Mt
4:1; Mt 14:23), rose early (cf Mk 1:35) and spent the entire night
in prayer to God (cf Mt 14:23-25; Mk 6:46-48; Lk 6:12).
Near the end of his life, at the Last Supper (cf Jn
17:1-26), in the agony of the garden (cf Mt 26:36-44) and on the Cross (cf
Lk 23:34-46; Mt 27:46; Mk 15:34), the divine Master
demonstrated that prayer gave life to his Messianic ministry and to his paschal
exodus. Risen from the dead, he lives forever and prays for us (cf Heb
7:25).(123)
Following the example of Christ, the priest must know how to
maintain the vivacity and abundance of the moments of silence and prayer in
which he cultivates and deepens his own essential relationship with the living
figure of Jesus Christ.
41. Imitating the Church in Prayer.
To remain faithful to the obligation of "being with
Christ", it is necessary that the priest know how to imitate the Church in
prayer.
In giving the Word of God, which he himself has received with
joy, the priest is reminded of the exhortation given by the Bishop on the day of
his Ordination: "Therefore, making the Word the object of your continual
reflection, always believe what you read, teach what you believe, carry out in
your life what you teach. In this way, through the doctrine which nourishes the
People of God and with life's upright testimony which comforts and sustains them,
you will become a builder of the temple of God, which is the Church".
Likewise regarding the celebration of the sacraments, and in particular the
Eucharist: "Be aware, then, of what you are doing, understand what is being
fulfilled and why you are celebrating the mystery of the death and Resurrection
of the Lord, bear the death of Christ in your body and walk in the newness of
life". And, finally, regarding the pastoral guidance of the People of God
so as to lead them to the Father: "Therefore, never turn your face from
Christ, the Good Shepherd, who has come not to be served, but to serve, and to
seek and save those who are lost''.(124)
42. Prayer as Communion.
Strengthened by the special bond with the Lord, the priest
will know how to confront those moments in which he could feel alone among men;
effectively renewing his being with Christ who in the Eucharist is his refuge
and best repose.
Like Christ, who was often alone with the Father (cf Lk
3:21; Mk 1:35), the priest also must be the man who finds communion with
God in solitude,(125) so he can say with St. Ambrose: "I am never less
alone than as when I am alone''.(126)
Beside the Lord, the priest will find the strength and the
means to bring men back to God, to enlighten their faith, to inspire commitment
and sharing.
Pastoral Charity
43. Manifestation of the Charity of
Christ.
Pastoral charity constitutes the internal and dynamic
principle capable of uniting the multiple and diverse pastoral activities of the
priest and, given the social-cultural and religious context in which he lives,
is an indispensable instrument for drawing men to a life in Grace.
Informed by such charity, the ministerial activity must be a
manifestation of the charity of Christ. With this charity the priest will
demonstrate in his bearing and conduct the total self-giving of himself to the
flock with which he has been entrusted.(127)
Assimilating the pastoral charity of Christ in such a way as
to make it part of his own life is a goal which requires continuous effort and
sacrifice by the priest, since this charity cannot be improvised, nor considered
acquired or attained definitively. The minister of Christ must feel obliged to
live and give testimony to this reality always and everywhere, even when, due to
his age, he be relieved of his specific pastoral assignments.
44. Functionalism.
Pastoral charity faces the danger, today especially, of being
emptied of its meaning through so-called "functionalism". It is not
rare, in fact, to perceive, even in some priests, the influence of an erroneous
mentality which reduces the ministerial priesthood to strictly functional
aspects. To merely play the role of the priest, carrying out a few services and
ensuring completion of various tasks would make up the entire priestly existence.
Such a reductive conception of the identity of the ministry of the priest risks
pushing their lives towards an emptiness, an emptiness which often comes to be
filled by lifestyles not consonant with their very ministry.
The priest, who knows how to be the minister of Christ and his
Spouse, will also find in prayer, in study and in spiritual reading, the
strength necessary to over-come these dangers.(128)
Preaching the Word
45. Fidelity to the Word.
Christ entrusted to the Apostles and to the Church the mission
of preaching the Good News to all men.
To transmit the faith is to reveal, to proclaim and to deepen
in the Christian vocation; thus, the calling which God addresses to each man in
showing him the mystery of salvation and, likewise, the place which he must hold
in reference to that mystery, as an adopted son in the Son. (129) This dual
aspect is succinctly brought to light in the Symbol of Faith, one of the most
revealing expressions with which the Church has always responded to the call of
God.(130)
Seen thus, the priestly ministry is presented with two demands
which are virtually the two sides of the same coin. In the first place, there is
the missionary character of the transmission of the faith. The ministry of the
Word cannot be abstracted or distanced from the life of the people; indeed, it
must make direct reference to the meaning of the life of man, of each man, and,
therefore, must have a role in the most pressing questions present in the human
conscience.
On the other hand there exists a demand of authenticity and of
conformity with the faith of the Church, guardian of the truths concerning God
and man. So it must be carried out with extreme responsibility, aware that it
entails a question of the greatest importance which concerns the life of man and
the meaning of his existence.
For an effective ministry of the Word, the priest, aware of
this context, will highlight the testimony of life, which reveals the power of
the love of God and gives authenticity to his words. Moreover, he will keep in
mind the explicit preaching of the mystery of Christ to the faithful, to
non-believers and to non-Christians; of the catechism, which is the ordered and
organic exposition of the doctrine of the Church; of the application of revealed
truth to specific cases.(131)
The awareness of the absolute necessity of being founded on
and of "remaining" faithful to the Word of God and Tradition in order
to be true disciples of Christ and to know the truth (cf Jn 8:31-32) has
always accompanied the history of priestly spirituality and has also been
authoritatively expressed by Vatican Council II.(132)
Above all for contemporary society, marked by theoretical and
practical materialism, by subjectivism and scepticism, it is necessary that the
Gospel be presented as "the power of God unto salvation to everyone who
believes" (Rom 1:16). Priests, remembering that "the faith
depends on hearing, and on hearing the Word of Christ" (Rom 10:17),
devote all of their energy to correspond to this mission which is primary in
their ministry. These, in fact, are not only witnesses, but also the heralds and
transmitters of the faith.(133)
Such ministry, developed within the hierarchical community,
enables him to authoritatively express the Catholic faith and give official
testimony of the faith of the Church. The People of God, in effect, "is
formed into one in the first place by the Word of the living God, which is quite
rightly sought from the mouth of priests".(134)
In order to be authentic, the Word must be transmitted "without
duplicity and without any dishonesty, but rather manifesting with frankness the
truth before God" (2 Cor 4:2). The priest will wisely avoid
falsifying, reducing, distorting or diluting the content of the divine message.
His role, in fact, "is not to teach his own wisdom but the Word of God and
to issue an urgent invitation to all men to conversion and to holiness".(135)
Preaching, therefore, cannot be reduced to the presentation of
one's own thought, to the manifestation of personal experience, to simple
explanations of a psychological,(136) sociological or humanitarian nature; nor
can it excessively concentrate on rhetoric, so often found in mass-communication.
It concerns proclaiming a Word which cannot be altered, because it has been
entrusted to the Church in order to protect, penetrate and faithfully transmit
it.(137)
46. Word and Life.
The awareness of one's own mission to proclaim the Gospel must
always find concrete expression in pastoral activity. Thus the diverse
situations and settings in which he carries out his ministry will be vivified in
the light of the Word of God.
In order to be effective and credible, the priest, within the
perspective of the faith and his ministry, and with a constructively critical
outlook, must be familiar with the ideology, language, cultural intricacies and
the typologies diffused in the mass media and which, to a large part, conditions
the attitudes of society.
Stirred by the Apostle who exclaimed: "Woe to me if I do
not preach the Gospel!" (1 Cor 9:16), he must know how to use all of
those means of communication which modern science and technology provide.
Certainly, not all depends on such means or human capacity,
since divine grace can achieve its effects independently of the works of man.
However, in the plan of God, the preaching of the Word is, normally, the
preferred channel for the transmission of the faith and for the mission of
evangelization.
For all those who today are removed or are far from the
message of Christ, the priest will hear the particularly urgent and anguished
plea: "How are they to believe him whom they have not heard? And how are
they to hear, if no one preaches?" (Rom 10:14).
To respond to such questions, he must feel personally bound to
cultivate, in a particular way, a knowledge of Holy Scripture with a sound
exegesis, principally patristic, and meditated on according to the various
methods supported by the spiritual tradition of the Church, in order to obtain a
living understanding of love.(138) Seen in this light, the priest will feel the
duty of paying particular attention to the preparation, be it remote or
proximate, of liturgical homilies, to their content, to the balance between the
theoretical and practical aspects, to the manner of teaching and to the
technique of delivery, even to good diction, respectful of the dignity of the
matter and of the listeners.(139)
47. Word and Catechetics.
Catechetics plays a prominent role in this mission of
evangelization, being the preferred instrument for the teaching and development
of the faith.(140)
The priest, as a collaborator with the Bishop, has received
the mandate and responsibility of encouraging, co-ordinating and directing the
catechetical activity of the community with which he has been entrusted. He must
know how to integrate such activity into an organic project of evangelization,
guaranteeing, above all, the communion of the catechesis of his community with
the person of the Bishop, with the particular Church and with the universal
Church.
In particular, he must know how to inspire precise and
opportune responsibility and in catechesis, be it with members of the Institutes
of Consecrated Life and societies of apostolic life, be it with the lay faithful,(141)
to be adequately prepared, showing these the recognition and esteem for the
catechetical task.
He must put special interest in caring for the initial and
permanent formation of catechists, of associations and movements. To the extent
possible, the priest must be the catechist of catechists, forming in
these a veritable community of disciples of the Lord which serves as a point of
reference for those receiving instruction.
Master (142) and educator of the faith,(143) the priest will
ensure that the catechism, especially where it concerns the sacraments, will be
a primary part in the Christian education of the family, in religious
instruction, in apostolic formation and movements, etc., and that it be brought
to all the faithful: children, adolescents, adults, the elderly. He will,
moreover, know how to transmit the catechetical teaching using all those means,
teaching aids and instruments of communication which can be of use to the
faithful, in a manner proper to their character, capacity, age and condition in
life, so as to teach them more fully the doctrine of the Church and to how apply
it in the most fitting way.(144)
To such end, the priest has the Catechism of the Catholic
Church as his principle point of reference. This text, in fact, contains the
sound and authentic norm of the teaching of the Church.(145)
The Sacrament of the Eucharist
48. The Eucharistic Mystery.
If the service of the Word is the foundational element of the
priestly ministry, the heart and vital centre of it is constituted, without a
doubt, in the Eucharist, which is, above all, the real presence in time of the
unique and eternal sacrifice of Christ.(146)
The sacramental memorial of the death and Resurrection of
Christ, the true and efficacious representation of the singular redemptive
Sacrifice, source and apex of Christian life in the whole of evangelization,(147)
the Eucharist is the beginning, means, and end of the priestly ministry, since
"all ecclesiastical ministries and works of the apostolate are bound up
with the Eucharist and are directed towards it". (148) Consecrated in order
to perpetuate the Holy Sacrifice, the priest thus manifests, in the most evident
manner, his identity.
There exists, in fact, an intimate rapport between the
centrality of the Eucharist, pastoral charity, and the unity of life of the
priest,(149) who finds in this rapport the decisive indications for the way to
the holiness to which he has been specifically called.
If the priest lends to Christ, Most Eternal High Priest, his
intelligence, will, voice and hands so as to offer, through his very ministry,
the sacramental sacrifice of redemption to the Father, he should make his own
the dispositions of the Master and, like him, live those gifts for his
brothers in the faith. He must therefore learn to unite himself intimately to
the offering, placing his entire life upon the altar of sacrifice as a revealing
sign of the gratuitous and anticipatory love of God.
49. Celebrating the Eucharist Well.
It is necessary to recall the irreplaceable value that the
daily celebration of the Holy Mass has for the priest,(150) be it in the
presence of other faithful or not. He must live it as the central moment of his
day and of his daily ministry, fruit of a sincere desire and an occasion for a
deep and effective encounter with Christ, and he must take the greatest care to
celebrate it with intimate participation of the mind and heart.
In a society ever more sensitive to communication through
signs and images, the priest must pay adequate attention to all of that which
can enhance the decorum and sacredness of the Eurcharistic celebration. It is
important that, in such ceremonies, proper attention is given to the
appropriateness and cleanliness of the place, the structure of the altar and
tabernacle,(151) the dignity of the sacred vessels, the vestments,(152) the
hymns,l153 the music,(154) the necessary silence,(155) etc. These are all
elements which can contribute to a better participation in the Eucharistic
Sacrifice. In fact, a lack of attention to the symbolic aspects of the liturgy
and, even more, carelessness and coldness, superficiality and disorder, empty
the meaning and weaken the process of strengthening the faith.(156) Those who
improperly celebrate the Mass reveal a weakness in their faith and fail to
educate the others in the faith. Celebrating the Eucharist well, however,
constitutes a highly important catechesis on the Sacrifice.
The priest, then, in order to place at the service of the
Eucharistic celebration all of his gifts and to render it vivifying in the
participation of all of the faithful, must follow the rite established in the
liturgical books approved by the competent authority, without adding, removing
or changing anything. (157)
All Ordinaries, Superiors of Institutes of Consecrated Life,
Moderators of societies of apostolic life and all other Prelates have the grave
duty, besides that of being the first in example, of watching over the
liturgical norms regarding the celebration of the Eucharist, so that they be
faithfully observed in all places.
Priests who celebrate and concelebrate are obliged to wear the
sacred vestments prescribed by the rubrics.(158)
50. Eucharistic Adoration.
The centrality of the Eucharist should be apparent not only in
the worthy celebration of the Sacrifice, but also in the proper adoration of the
Sacrament, so that the priest might be the model for the faithful also in devote
attention and diligent meditation — whenever possible — done in the presence
of our Lord in the tabernacle. It is hoped that the priests entrusted with the
guidance of communities dedicate long periods of time for communal adoration and
reserve the greatest attention and honour for the Most Blessed Sacrament of the
altar, also outside of Holy Mass, over any other rite or gesture. "Faith
and love for the Eucharist will not allow Christ to remain alone in his presence
in the tabernacle".(159)
A special time of Eucharistic adoration could be during the
celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours, which constitutes a true prolongation,
during the day, of the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving which has the Holy
Mass as its sacramental centre and source. The Liturgy of the Hours, in which
the priest, united to Christ, is the voice of the Church throughout the world,
will be celebrated, even in community, when this be possible and in a proper
way, so as to be "the interpreter and instrument of the universal voice
which sings the glory of God and prays for the salvation of man" (160)
An exemplary solemnity of this celebration will be reserved to
the canonical chapters.
Therefore, whether it be in communal or individual celebration,
the Liturgy of the Hours must never be reduced to a mere "duty" of
mechanically performing a simple and lukewarm reading, without the necessary
attention to the text's meaning.
The Sacrament of Penance
51. Minister of Reconciliation.
The Holy Spirit for the remission of sins is a gift from the
Resurrection to the Apostles: "Receive the Holy Spirit; whose sins you
shall forgive, they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are
retained." (Jn 20:21-23). God has exclusively entrusted the work of
reconciliation of man with God to his Apostles and to those who succeed them in
the same mission. Priests, then, by the will of Christ, are the only ministers
of the Sacrament of Reconciliation. Like Christ, they are invited to call
sinners to conversion and bring them back to the Father, by means of a merciful
judgement.
Sacramental Reconciliation re-establishes friendship with God
the Father and with all his sons in his family which is the Church, which, in
turn, is rejuvenated and edified in all of its dimensions: universal, diocesan,
parochial.(162)
In spite of the reality of a loss of the sense of sin, greatly
extended in the culture of our times, the priest must practice, with joy and
dedication, the ministry of the formation of consciences, pardon and peace.
It is necessary, therefore, that he know how to identify
himself, in a certain sense, with this sacrament, and assuming the disposition
of Christ, reach out with mercy, like the good Samaritan, to a wounded humanity,
and thus make known the Christian novelty of the redemptive dimension of Penance,
with its healing and pardon.(163)
52. Dedication to the Ministry of
Reconciliation.
Because of his office (164) and because of his sacramental
ordination, the priest must dedicate time and energy to hearing the confessions
of the faithful,(l65) who, as experience shows, come freely to receive this
sacrament as long as there are priests available. This goes even more so for
churches in more frequented areas and for sanctuaries. Here a fraternal and
responsible collaboration with elderly priests and religious is possible.
Every priest must follow the ecclesial norm which defends and
promotes the value of individual and personal confession, the upright accusation
of sins indirect colloquy with the confessor,'66 reserving the use of general
confession and absolution to only extraordinary cases which fulfil the required
conditions, in accord with the existing norms. (167) The confessor will have
away of enlightening the conscience of the penitent with words which, however
brief, will be appropriate for that particular situation, and thus enhance a
renewed personal orientation toward conversion and make a deep impression upon
his spiritual journey, also through the imposition of an opportune penance.(168)
In each case, the priest must know how to maintain the
celebration of Reconciliation on a sacramental level, overcoming the danger of
reducing it to a purely psychological or simply formalistic act.
This will be manifested by, among other things, faithfully
following the norms governing the place for hearing confession.(169)
53. The Necessity of Confession.
Like any good faithful, the priest also needs to confess his
own sins and weaknesses. He is the first to realise that the practice of this
sacrament reinforces his faith and charity toward God and his brothers.
In order to effectively reveal the beauty of Penance, it is
essential that the minister of the sacrament offer a personal testimony
preceding the other faithful in living the experience of pardon. This
constitutes the first condition for restoring the pastoral value of the
Sacrament of Reconciliation. In this sense, it is good for the faithful to see
and know that their priests go to confession regularly: (170) "the entire
priestly existence falls into decay if there is lacking, through neglect or for
any other motive, the periodic recourse, inspired by true faith and devotion, to
the Sacrament of Penance. In a priest who no longer went to confession or did so
poorly, his essence and action as priest would feel the effects very quickly, as
would the community of which he is pastor''.(171)
54. Spiritual Direction for the
Priest and for the Others.
Along with the Sacrament of Reconciliation, the priest must
also exercise the ministry of spiritual direction. The rediscovery and extension
of this practice, also in moments outside of the administration of Penance, is
greatly beneficial for the Church in these times.(172) The generous and active
attitude of priests in practising it also constitutes an important occasion for
identifying and sustaining the vocations to the priesthood and to the various
forms of consecrated life. In order to contribute to the improvement of their
spirituality it is necessary that they themselves practice spiritual direction.
By placing the formation of their soul in the hands of a wise fellow-member,
they will enlighten the conscience, from the first steps in the ministry, and
realise the importance of not walking alone along the paths of spiritual life
and pastoral duties. In making use of this efficacious means of formation, so
well-founded in the Church, priests will have full freedom in choosing the
person who will guide them.
Guide of the Community
55. Priest for the Community.
The priest is also called to meet demands, other than those
already seen, within another realm of his ministry. These demands concern the
caring for the life of the community with which he has been entrusted and which
is primarily expressed in his testimony of charity.
As pastor of the community, the priest exists and lives for it;
he prays, studies, works and sacrifices himself for the community. He is
disposed to give his life for it, loving it as Christ does, pouring out upon it
all his love and consideration,(173) lavishing it with all his strength and
unlimited time in order to render it, in the image of the Church, Spouse of
Christ, always more beautiful and worthy of the benevolence of God and the love
of the Holy Spirit.
This spousal dimension of the priest as pastor will help him
guide his community in service to each and every one of its members,
enlightening their consciences with the light of revealed truth, wisely guarding
the evangelical authenticity of the Christian life, correcting errors, forgiving,
curing the sick, consoling the afflicted, and promoting fraternity.(174)
This refined and complete attention, will not only guarantee
an ever more effective charity, but also will manifest the deep communion which
should exist between the priest and his community, which is like an extension of
the communion with God, with Christ, and with the Church.(175)
56. In Tune with the Church.
In order to be a good guide of his People, the priest must
also be attentive to the signs of the times: those larger and deeper ones which
concern the universal Church and its sojourn in the history of man, and those
which more closely affect the specific situation of a particular community.
This discernment requires the constant and correct study of
theological and pastoral problems, and the exercise of a knowledgeable
reflection on the social, cultural and scientific data presented to our epoch.
In carrying out their mission, priests must know how to
transfer these demands into a constant and sincere attitude of being in tune
with the Church, and thus will always work within a bond of communion with
the Pope, Bishops, other brothers in the priesthood, as well as with the
faithful consecrated through the profession of the evangelical counsels and with
the lay faithful.
They, moreover, will not fail to request, in legitimate ways
and taking into account the capacity of each one, the co-operation of the
consecrated faithful and the lay faithful, in exercising their mission.
Priestly Celibacy
57. Steadfast Will of the Church.
Convinced of the profound theological and pastoral motives
upholding the relationship between celibacy and the priesthood, and enlightened
by the testimony which confirms to this day, in spite of painful negative cases,
its spiritual and evangelical validity, the Church has reaffirmed in Vatican
Council II and repeatedly in teachings of the Pontifical Magisterium the "firm
will to maintain the law which requires celibacy freely chosen and perpetual for
candidates to priestly Ordination in the Latin rite".(176)
Celibacy, in fact, is a gift which the Church has received and
desires to retain, convinced that it is a good for the Church itself and for the
world.
58. Theological Spiritual Motives of
Celibacy.
Like any evangelical value, consecrated celibacy should be
seen as that liberating novelty which the world, especially today, demands as a
radical testimony that following Christ is a sign of the eschatological reality.
"Not all can understand it, but only those to whom it has been given. For
there are eunuchs who were born so from their mother's womb; and there are
eunuchs who were made so by men; and there are eunuchs who have made themselves
eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven. He that can understand, let him understand"
(Mt 19:10-12).(177)
To live with love and generosity the gift received, it is
particularly important that the priest understand from the beginning of his
seminary formation the theological and spiritual motives of ecclesiastical
discipline on celibacy.(l78) This particular gift of God demands the observance
of chastity, the perfect and perpetual continence for the Kingdom of heaven, so
sacred ministers can more easily adhere to Christ with an undivided heart and
dedicate themselves more freely to the service of God and man.(179) The
ecclesiastical discipline manifests, even before the subject expresses his will
to be so disposed, the will of the Church and finds its ultimate reason in the
intimate bond which celibacy has with holy Ordination, which shapes the priest
to Jesus Christ Head and Spouse of the Church.(180)
The letter to the Ephesians (cf 5:25-27) shows a strict
rapport between the priestly oblation of Christ (cf 5:25) and the sanctification
of the Church (cf 5:26), loved with a spousal love. Sacramentally inserted into
this priesthood of exclusive love of Christ for the Church, his faithful Spouse,
the priest expresses this love with his obligation of celibacy, which also
becomes a fruitful source of pastoral effectiveness.
Celibacy, therefore, is not an external effect placed upon the
priestly ministry, nor can it be simply considered as an institution laid down
by law, because those who receive the Sacrament of Holy Orders do so with full
freedom and conscience,(181) after years of preparation, and profound reflection
and diligent prayer. Along with the firm conviction that Christ grants them this
gift for the good of the Church and for the service of others, the priest
assumes it for his entire life, and it strengthens his will with regard to the
promise already made during the rite of deaconal Ordination.(182)
For these reasons, ecclesiastical law, on one hand, confirms
the gift of celibacy showing it to be in intimate connection with the sacred
ministry in its dual dimension of rapport with Christ and with the Church; and,
on the other hand, safeguards the freedom of those who assume it. (183) The
priest, then, consecrated to Christ with a new exalted title, (184) must be well
aware that he has received a gift with a specific juridical bond which he is
morally bound to observe. This bond, freely assumed, has theological and moral
characteristics which are prior to the juridical characteristics, and is a sign
of that spousal reality present in sacramental Ordination. The priest also
acquires that true and real spiritual paternity which has universal dimensions,
and is specified, in a particular way, in the rapport with the community to
which he has been entrusted.(185)
59. Example of Jesus.
Celibacy, then, is a gift of self "in" and
"with" Christ to his Church and expresses the service of the priest to
the Church "in" and "with" the Lord.(186)
It would be entirely immature to see celibacy as "a
tribute to be paid to the Lord" in order to receive Holy Orders rather than
"a gift received through his mercy",(182) as the free and welcomed
choice of a particular vocation of love for God and others.
The example is Christ, who in going against what could be
considered the dominant culture of his time, freely chose to live celibacy. In
following him the disciples left "everything" to fulfil the mission
entrusted to them (Lk 18:28-30).
For this reason the Church, from apostolic times, has wished
to conserve the gift of perpetual continence of the clergy and choose the
candidates for Holy Orders from among the celibate faithful (cf 2 Thes
2:15; 1 Cor 7:5; 9:5; 1 Tim 3:2-12; 5:9; Tit 1:6-8).(188)
60. Difficulties and objections.
In today's cultural climate, often conditioned by a vision of
man lacking in values and incapable of giving a complete, positive and
liberating sense to human sexuality, the question of the value and meaning of
priestly celibacy is often presented, or at least the question of its strict
rapport with ministerial priest-hood.
Difficulties and objections have always accompanied,
throughout history, the decision by the Latin Church and some Oriental Churches
to confer ministerial priesthood only on those men who have received from God
the gift of chastity in celibacy.
The difficulties which some present even today (189) are often
founded on pretentious arguments, for example that of an abstracted spiritualism
or claiming that continence leads to indifference or disdain for sexuality, or
they start from the consideration of difficult and painful cases, or even
generalise particular cases. This denies, however, the testimony offered by the
great majority of priests, who live their celibacy with internal freedom, rich
evangelical motivation, spiritual depth, and in a panorama of strong and joyful
fidelity to their vocation and mission.
It is clear that in order to guarantee and protect this gift
in a climate of serenity and spiritual progress, possible difficulties for the
priests should be avoided by use of appropriate measures.(190)
It is necessary, therefore, that priests conduct themselves
with due prudence in dealing with those whose familiarity could be a possible
danger for fidelity to this gift or could cause scandal amongst the
faithful.(191) In particular cases, he must submit to the judgement of the
Bishop, who has the obligation to establish precise rules in this matter.(192)
Priests, then, must not fail to follow those ascetical norms
which are proven by the Church's experience and which are demanded even more in
present-day circumstances. In this way they may prudently avoid frequenting
places, attending shows or reading materials which constitute a danger to the
observance of celibate chastity.(193) In making use of means of social
communication, whether as pastoral aids or for leisure, they must observe the
necessary discretion and avoid anything which could harm their vocation.
To lovingly safeguard the gift received amidst today's climate
of irritating sexual permissiveness, they will find in their communion with
Christ and with the Church, in their devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, and in
considering the example of holy priests of all times, the strength necessary to
overcome difficulties they may find along their way and act according to that
maturity which gives them credence before the world. (194)
Obedience
61. Basis of Obedience.
Obedience is a priestly value of primary importance. The very
sacrifice of Christ on the Cross acquired salvific value and significance
through his obedience and his fidelity to the will of the Father. He was
"obedient to death, and death on the Cross" (Phil 2:8). The
Letter to the Hebrews also points out that Jesus "learned obedience from
the things that He suffered" (Heb 5:8). It could be said, then, that
obedience to the Father is the very heart of the Priesthood of Christ.
Like Christ's, the priest's obedience expresses the will of
God which is made manifest to the priest through his legitimate Superiors. This
availability must be understood as a true act of personal freedom, the result of
a choice continually deepened in the presence of God in prayer. The virtue of
obedience, intrinsically required by the sacrament and by the hierarchical
structure of the Church, is clearly promised by the clergy, first in the rite of
diaconal Ordination, and then in priestly Ordination. With it the priest
strengthens his will of submission, thus participating in the dynamics of the
obedience of Christ made Servant obedient to death on the Cross (Phil
2:7-8).(195)
In contemporary culture the value of the individual's
subjectivity and autonomy is emphasised, as if intrinsic to one's dignity. This
value, in itself positive, if made absolute and claimed outside of its just
context, assumes a negative value.(196) This attitude could also be manifested
in ecclesial circles, and in the very life of the priest whenever his activities
in the service of the community become reduced to a subjective realm.
In reality, the priest, by the very nature of his ministry, is
at the service of Christ and the Church. Therefore, he must be disposed to
accept all that is justly indicated by his Superiors and, in a particular way,
if not legitimately impeded, must accept and faithfully fulfil the task
entrusted to him by his Ordinary.(197)
62. Hierarchical Obedience.
Priests have a "special obligation to show reverence and
obedience to the Supreme Pontiff and to their own Ordinary.(198) In virtue of
his belonging to a determined presbyterate, the priest is charged with the
service of a particular Church, in which the principle and foundation of unity
is the Bishop (199) who has all the ordinary, proper and immediate authority
required for the exercise of his pastoral office.(200) This hierarchical
subordination, required by the sacrament of Holy Orders, finds its
ecclesiological-structural fulfilment in reference to one's own Bishop and to
the Roman Pontiff, ordinary of the universal Church and thus of each particular
Church.(201)
The obligation to follow the Magisterium in matters of faith
and morals is intrinsically united to all the functions which the priest must
perform in the Church. Dissent in this area is to be considered grave, in that
it produces scandal and confusion among the faithful.
No one is more aware than the priest of the fact that the
Church needs norms. In fact, since the Church's hierarchical and organic
structure is visible, the exercise of its functions, divinely entrusted,
especially those concerning its guidance and the celebration of the sacraments,
must be adequately organized.(202)
As for the ministry of Christ and of his Church, the priest
generously takes on the duty to faithfully fulfil each and every norm, avoiding
any sense of partial compliance according to subjective criteria, which creates
division and has damaging effects upon the lay faithful and public opinion.
Indeed, "canonical laws, by their very nature, demand observance" and
require 'that which is mandated by the head be observed by the members'. (203)
In obeying the constituted authority, the priest, furthermore,
enhances mutual charity within the priesthood and also enhances that unity which
has its foundation in the truth.
63. Authority Exercised with Charity.
In order to achieve a real obedience which will nourish
ecclesial communion, those who are in authority (Ordinaries, religious
Superiors, Moderators of societies of apostolic life), other than offer their
necessary and constant personal example, must exercise their own institutional
office with charity, be it in anticipating or properly requesting the adhesion
to each disposition in the magisterial and disciplinarian realm.(204)
Such obedience is a source of freedom, insofar as it
stimulates sincere growth in maturity in the priest, who will know how to assume
a serene and even-minded pastoral conduct, creating a harmony in which
personality is based on a deep unity.
64. Respect for the Liturgical Norms.
Among the many aspects of the question, the one concerning
liturgical norms merits special attention in our times.
Liturgy is the exercise of the priesthood of Jesus
Christ,(205) "the summit to which all action of the Church is directed; it
is also the fount from which all her power flows".(206) This constitutes an
ambit in which the priest should have particular awareness of being a minister
and faithfully obeying the Church. "The ordering and guidance of the sacred
liturgy depends solely on the authority of the Church, namely, that of the
Apostolic See, and, as provided by law, that of the diocesan Bishop".(207)
Therefore, in such matter, he must not add, remove or change anything by his own
initiative.(208)
This is especially true for the celebration of the sacraments,
which are acts of Christ and the Church by excellence, and which the priest
administers in the person of Christ and in name of the Church for the good of
the faithful.(209) These have a true right to participate in the liturgical
celebrations as the Church wills and not according to the personal likes of a
particular minister, nor according to unapproved and unusual rites, expressions
of specific groups which tend to cut themselves off from the universality of the
People of God.
65. Unity in Pastoral Planning.
It is essential that priests, in exercising their ministry,
not only participate responsibly in the creation of pastoral plans which the
Bishop (with the co-operation with the Council of Priests) (210) determines;
they must also develop their own communities in harmony with these plans.
Creativity, that spirit of initiative proper to a wellformed
priest, will not only be unrestrained but can also be used to full advantage in
pastoral effectiveness.
An erroneous sense of independence in this area could bring
about not only a rupture in the necessary communion, but a weakening of the very
work of evangelization as well.
66. Obligation of Ecclesiastical
Attire.
In a secularised and materialistic society, where the external
signs of sacred and supernatural realities tend to disappear, it is particularly
important that the community be able to recognise the priest, man of God and
dispenser of his mysteries, by his attire as well, which is an unequivocal sign
of his dedication and his identity as a public minister.(211) The priest should
be identifiable primarily through his conduct, but also by his manner of
dressing, which makes visible to all the faithful, indeed and to all men,(212)
his identity and his belonging to God and the Church.
For this reason, the clergy should wear "suitable
ecclesiastical dress, in accordance with the norms established by the Episcopal
Conference and the legitimate local custom''.(213) This means that the attire,
when it is not the cassock, must be different from the manner in which the laity
dress, and conform to the dignity and sacredness of his ministry. The style and
colour should be established by the Episcopal Conference, always in agreement
with the dispositions of the universal law.
Because of their incoherence with the spirit of this
discipline, contrary practices cannot be considered legitimate customs; and
should be removed by the competent authority.(214)
Outside of entirely exceptional cases, a cleric's failure to
use this proper ecclesiastical attire could manifest a weak sense of his
identity as one consecrated to God.(215)
Priestly Spirit of Poverty
67. Poverty as Availability.
The poverty of Christ has a salvific scope. Christ, being
rich, became poor for us, that by his poverty we might become rich (cf 2 Cor
8:9).
The letter to the Philippians reveals the rapport between the
giving of oneself and the spirit of service which should enliven the pastoral
ministry. St. Paul says that Jesus did not consider "being equal to God a
thing to be clung to, but emptied himself, taking the nature of a slave" (Phil
2:6-7). A priest could hardly be a true servant and minister of his brothers if
he were excessively worried with his comfort and well-being.
Through his condition of poverty, Christ manifested that he
has received everything from eternity from the Father and all to him is restored
in a complete offering of his life.
The example of Christ should lead the priest to conform
himself to Him, with an interior detachment as to the goods and riches of the
world.(216) The Lord teaches us that the true goodness is God and that true
richness is reaching eternal life: "For what does it profit a man, if he
gain the whole world, but suffer the loss of his own soul? Or what will a man
give in exchange for his soul?" (Mk 8:36-37).
The priest, whose inheritance is the Lord (Num18:20),
knows that his mission, like that of the Church, is carried out in the middle of
the world and that created goods are necessary for the personal development of
man. However, he will use these goods with a sense of responsibility,
moderation, upright intention and detachment, precisely because he has his
treasure in heaven and knows that all should be used for building the Kingdom of
God (Lk 10:7; Mt 10:9-10; 1 Cor 9:14; Gal 6:6).(217)
Therefore, the priest will deny himself those worldly activities which are not
in keeping with his ministry.(218)
Remembering, moreover, that the gift he has received is
gratuitous, he must be disposed to give in like manner (Mt 10:8; Acts
8:18-25),(219) and to use what he receives from the exercise of his office for
the good of the Church and works of charity, after having provided for his
honest sustenance.(220)
The priest, although not having assumed poverty as a public
promise, must lead a simple life and avoid anything which could have an air of
vanity,(221) voluntarily embracing poverty to follow Christ more closely.(222)
In all aspects (living quarters, means of transportation, vacations, etc. ), the
priest must eliminate any kind of affectation and luxury.(223)
Friend of those most in need, he will reserve his most refined
pastoral charity for these, with a preferential option for all poverty, old and
new, tragically present in our world, always remembering that the first misery
from which man must be liberated is that of sin, the root of all evil.
Devotion to Mary
68. Imitating the Virtues of our
Mother.
There is an "essential rapport... between the Mother of
Jesus and the priesthood of the ministry of the Son", stemming from the
existing one between the divine maternity of Mary and the priesthood of
Christ.(224)
In light of such a rapport, Marian spirituality is rooted in
every priest. Priestly spirituality could not be considered complete if it were
to fail to include the message of Christ's words on the Cross, in which He
conferred his Mother to the beloved disciple, and, through him, to all priests
called to continue his work of redemption.
Like John at the foot of the Cross, every priest has been
entrusted, in a special way, with Mary as Mother (cf Jn 19:26-27).
Priests, who are among the favoured disciples of Jesus,
crucified and risen, should welcome Mary as their Mother in their own life,
bestowing her with constant attention and prayer. The Blessed Virgin then
becomes the Mother who leads them to Christ, who makes them sincerely love the
Church, who intercedes for them and who guides them toward the Kingdom of
heaven.
Every priest knows that Mary, as Mother, is also the most
distinguished modeller of his priesthood, since it is she who moulds the
priestly soul, protects it from dangers, from routine and discouragement, and
maternally safeguards it, so he may grow in wisdom, age and grace, before God
and men (cf Lk 2:40).
But they are not devout sons if they do not know how to
imitate the virtues of Mary. The priest will look to Mary to be a humble,
obedient and chaste minister and to give testimony of charity in the total
surrender to God and to the Church.(225)
Masterpiece of the priestly Sacrifice of Christ, the Blessed
Virgin represents the Church in the purest way, "with neither stain nor
blemish", completely "holy and immaculate" (Eph 5:27).
This contemplation of the Blessed Virgin places before the priest the ideal to
which the ministry in his community should lead, so that this be a "wholly
glorious Church" (ibid.) through the priestly gift of his very life.
Chapter III
ONGOING FORMATION
Principles
69. The Need for Ongoing formation
Today.
Ongoing formation is a need which begins and develops from the
moment of receiving the Sacrament of Holy Orders: with it the priest is not only
"consecrated" by the Father and "sent" by the Son, but also
"animated" by the Holy Spirit. Hence, permanent formation springs from
a Grace which produces a supernatural force destined to assimilate continually,
in ever broader and deeper terms, the entire life and activity of the priest in
fidelity to the gift received: "I am reminding you, writes St. Paul to
Timothy, to fan into a flame the gift that God gave you" (2 Tim
1:6).
This necessity is intrinsic to the divine gift itself,(226)
which is continually "vivified" so that the priest may adequately
respond to his vocation. As a man situated in history, he needs to perfect
himself in all the aspects of his human and spiritual existence in order to
attain that conformity with Christ, the unifying principle of all things.
Rapid and widespread transformations and a secularised social
fabric typical of the contemporary world are what make unavoidable the priest's
duty of being adequately prepared, so that he not lose his own identity and so
that he might respond to the demands of the new evangelization. To this grave
duty corresponds the specific right of the faithful, who feel the effects of
priests' solid formation and sanctity in a definite way.(227)
70. A Continuous Task.
The spiritual life of the priest and his pastoral ministry go
hand in hand with that ongoing personal formation to deepen and harmonise the
human, spiritual, intellectual, and pastoral aspects of his formation. This
task, which should begin in the seminary, must be supported by the Bishops at
various levels: national, regional and, above all, diocesan.
It is encouraging to note that there are already many Dioceses
and Episcopal Conferences involved in promising initiatives aimed at enhancing
an authentic permanent formation of their own priests. It is hoped that all
Dioceses may be able to respond to this need. However, where this may be
impossible for the moment, it is advisable that they come to an agreement among
themselves or contact those institutions or persons especially prepared to
handle such a delicate task.(228)
71. Instruments of Sanctification.
Ongoing formation presents itself as a necessary means to the
priest of today in order to achieve the aim of his vocation: the service of God
and of his People.
In practice, this consists in helping all priests respond
generously to the commitment demanded by the dignity and the responsibility
which God conferred upon them through the sacrament of Orders; in guarding,
defending, and developing their specific identity and vocation; and in
sanctifying themselves and others through the exercise of their ministry.
This means that priests must avoid any dualism between
spirituality and ministry, for it is at the origin of some profound crises.
It is evident that in order to achieve this end of a
supernatural order, the general criteria on which the permanent formation of
priests is to be organised must be discovered and analysed.
Such general principles must be developed in light of the end
proposed for the process of formation.
72. It Must be Imparted by the
Church.
Ongoing formation is a right-duty of the priest and imparting
it is a right-duty of the Church. This is established in universal law.(229) In
fact, in the same way that the vocation to the sacred ministry is received in
the Church, only the Church has the competence to impart the specific formation
according to the responsibility proper to such ministry. Therefore, permanent
formation — an activity linked to the exercise of the ministerial priesthood
— belongs to the responsibility of the Pope and of the Bishops. The Church,
then, has the duty and the right to continue forming its ministers, helping them
to progress in generous response to the gift which God has bestowed upon them.
On his part, the minister has also received, as a demand of
the gift connected with Ordination, the right to have the necessary help from
the Church in order to carry out his service effectively and in a holy way.
73. It Must be Ongoing.
The activity of formation is based on a dynamic demand
intrinsic to the ministerial charisma, which is permanent and irreversible in
itself. Therefore this can never be considered finished, neither on the part of
the Church which imparts it, nor on the part of the minister who receives it. It
is therefore necessary that this be thought of and developed in such a way that
all priests may receive it always, keeping in mind the characteristics
and possibilities that vary with age, condition of life, and assignments.(230)
74. It Must be Complete.
Such a formation must cover and harmonise all the dimensions
of the formation of priests. Thus, it must tend to help each priest achieve the
development of a full human personality matured in the spirit of service to
others, in whatever task he may receive; it will permit him to be intellectually
prepared in the theological sciences as well as in the human sciences, insofar
as they are linked with his ministry, in order to pursue his function as witness
to the faith with a greater effectiveness; that he have a deep spiritual life,
nourished by intimacy with Jesus Christ and by love for the Church; and so that
he may pursue his pastoral ministry with zeal and dedication.
In practice, such formation must be complete: spiritual,
pastoral, human, intellectual, systematic and personalised.
75. Human Formation.
This formation is extremely important in today's world, as it
always has been. The priest must never forget that he is a man chosen among men
to be at the service of men.
To sanctify himself and carry out his priestly mission, he
must present himself with an abundance of human virtues which render him worthy
of esteem by those around him.
In particular he must practice goodness of heart, patience,
kindness, strength of soul, love for justice, even-mindedness, truthfulness to
his word, coherence in the duties freely assumed, etc.(231)
It is likewise important that human virtues be reflected in
the priest's social conduct, correctness in the various forms of human
relations, friendships, courtesy, etc.
76. Spiritual Formation.
Keeping in mind all that has been said with regards to
spiritual life, we limit ourselves here to presenting some practical means of
formation.
Above all, it would be necessary to deepen the understanding
of the principal aspects of priestly existence, especially referring to the
biblical, patristic and hagiographic teachings in which the priest must
continually update himself, not only by reading good books but also by
participating in courses of studies, congresses, etc.(232)
Specific sessions may be dedicated to the care exercised in
the celebration of the Sacraments as well as to the study of questions of
spirituality such as Christian and human virtues, ways of praying, rapport
between spiritual life and liturgical ministry, pastoral ministry, etc.
More particularly, it is hoped that each priest, perhaps
during spiritual retreats, would develop a concrete plan of life, possibly in
agreement with his own spiritual director. The following points may be
indicated: 1. daily meditation on the Word or on a mystery of the Faith; 2.
daily personal encounter with Jesus Christ in the Eucharist apart from the
devout celebration of the Holy Mass; 3. Marian devotion (Rosary, consecration or
offering, intimate conversation); 4. periods of doctrinal formation and study of
hagiography; 5. due rest; 6. renewed effort to put into practice the indications
of the Bishop and to verify his convictions of adherence to the Magisterium and
to ecclesiastical discipline and; 7. care for his communion and friendship with
other priests.
77. Intellectual Formation.
Considering the enormous influence which humanistic and
philosophical trends have on modern culture, as well as the fact that some
priests have not received an adequate preparation in such disciplines, and also
because they come from different scholarly backgrounds, it is necessary that
these meetings deal with the more relevant humanistic and philosophical themes
or those that are "linked to the sacred sciences, particularly insofar as
they benefit the exercise of the pastoral ministry".(233) Such themes also
constitute a valid aid in order to deal correctly with the principal arguments
of fundamental, dogmatic and moral theology, of Sacred Scriptures, of Liturgy,
of Canon Law and of Ecumenism, etc., bearing in mind that the teaching of these
matters should not be simply problematic, informative and theoretical but must
lead to an authentic formation: towards prayer, communion and pastoral action.
Things should be done in such a way that during priestly
encounters the documents of the Magisterium may be studied together in a
profound manner, under an authoritative guide, so that the unity of
interpretation and practice — so useful in the work of evangelization — may
be facilitated in the pastoral work of the Dioceses.
Particular importance in intellectual formation must be given
to the handling of themes which today have more relevance in cultural debates
and pastoral practices, such as, for example, those related to social ethics,
bioethics, etc.
A special treatment must be reserved to the questions posed by
scientific advances, which are especially influential to the mentality of
contemporary men. Priests must be up-to-date and prepared to respond to
questions that science may pose in its advancement. They should not fail to
consult well-grounded and sound experts.
It is of the greatest interest that the social doctrine of the
Church be studied, deepened and disseminated. The interests of the priests who
are in favour of the needy, and of all the faithful through them, must not
remain as mere desires but be converted into specific efforts, always following
the impulse of the magisterial teachings. "Today more than ever the Church
is aware that her social message must find credibility in the testimony of
works, first of all in her internal coherence and logic".(234)
An indispensable demand for the intellectual formation of
priests is the knowledge and use of the means of social communications.
These means, if well used, constitute a providential instrument of
evangelization, capable of reaching not only great masses of faithful but also
of leaving a mark on their minds and behaviour.
In this regard it would be opportune that the Bishop or the
Episcopal Conference itself prepare programs and technical instruments
appropriate for this goal.
78. Pastoral Formation.
For an adequate pastoral formation, it is necessary to
organise encounters in which the principle objective is the reflection upon the
pastoral plan of the Diocese. In these, the consideration of all questions
pertinent to the priest's pastoral life and practice (fundamental morals, and
professional and social ethics, among others) should not be disregarded.
Special care must be devoted to understanding the life and
spirituality of the permanent deacons — where they exist, as well as of the
religious and of the lay faithful.
Other themes which could be helpful are those dealing with
catechesis, the family, vocations to priesthood and religious life, youth, the
elderly, the sick, ecumenism and the "the fallen away".
For pastoral work in present circumstances, it is very
important that special sessions be devoted to exploring and assimilating the Catechism
of the Catholic Church. Especially for priests, this constitutes a precious
instrument of formation for preaching as well as for works of evangelization in
general.
79. It must be Systematic.
For pastoral formation to be complete, it must be organised
"not as something haphazard, but as a systematic offering of subjects,
which unfolds by stages and take on precise forms".(235) This requires a
certain organizing structure which will establish opportune instruments, times
and contents for its particular and adequate realisation.
Such organization must be accompanied by the habit of personal
study, since periodic courses would be of little use if not accompanied by
serious study.(236)
80. It must be Personalised.
Although it may be for all, ongoing formation has, as its
direct objective, service to those who receive it. Thus, together with the
collective or common means of formation, there must also be other means which
truly personalise the formation of each one.
For this reason, there should be an awareness, especially on
the part of those responsible, that all priests must be reached personally,
taking care of each one, and not simply having all the diverse opportunities
available to them.
In his turn, each priest must feel encouraged to assume
responsibility for his own formation, with the word and example of his Bishop
and of his brothers in the priesthood, himself being the first agent of his own
formation.(237)
Organization
81. Priestly Encounters.
The itinerary of priestly encounters must have a unitary
character and progress by stages.
Such unity must converge in the conformation with Christ in a
way that the truth of faith, spiritual life and ministerial activity may work
towards a gradual maturity of the entire priesthood.
The unified formative path is divided into well-defined
stages. This requires a specific attention to the different phases of the life
of the priest, without ignoring any stage, and taking care to unite common
formative means with those that are personal.
The encounters of priests should be considered necessary in
order to grow in communion, for a growing consciousness and adequate scrutiny of
the problems corresponding to each stage of life.
Regarding the content of such meetings, we can refer here to
the themes proposed by the national or regional Episcopal Conferences. In every
case, themes must be established in a precise plan of formation by the Diocese,
and frequently updated, possibly even every year.(238)
Their organization and development may be prudently entrusted
by the Bishop to the faculty or institute of theological and pastoral studies,
to the seminary, to organisations or federations involved in the formation of
priests,(239) or to other specialised centres or institutes which may be
diocesan, regional or national, provided that their doctrinal orthodoxy,
fidelity to the Magisterium and ecclesiastical discipline are assured, as well
as their scientific competence and their adequate knowledge of real pastoral
situations.
82. Pastoral Year.
It will be the task of the Bishop to see to it, through
prudently-chosen help, that in the year following the priestly or deaconal
Ordination a so-called pastoral year be established, which will ease the passage
from the seminary life to the exercise of the sacred ministry, proceeding
gradually and facilitating a progressive and harmonious human and specifically
priestly maturation.(240)
In the course of this year, it will be necessary to ensure
that the newly ordained priests not be immersed in excessively burdensome and
delicate situations such as far off destinations away from their brothers.
Instead, it would be good that some opportune form of common life be
facilitated.
This period of formation may be held in a suitable residence
established for this purpose (House of Clerics) or in a place which may
constitute a precise and serene point for all priests during their early
pastoral experiences. This will facilitate conversation and meeting with the
Bishop and with one's brothers, common prayers (Liturgy of the Hours,
Eucharistic adoration, Holy Rosary, etc. ), exchange of experiences, mutual
encouragement, and the start of good relations of friendship.
It would be convenient for the Bishop to introduce new priests
in the beginning of their ministry to priests of exemplary life and pastoral
zeal. Notwithstanding the often critical pastoral needs, the first assignment
must respond, above all, to the need of setting the young priests on the right
road. The sacrifice of a year may then bear fruit for a long time in the future.
It is not superfluous to underline the fact that this year,
both delicate and valuable must favour the full growth of a rapport between the
priest and his Bishop which, initiated in the seminary, ought to become a true
father and son relationship.
In what refers to the intellectual aspect, this year must not
be filled with learning new material but rather involve a deep assimilation of
all that was studied in the institutional courses so as to favour the formation
of a mentality capable of appreciating the details in the light of God's
design.(241)
In this context, there may be properly organized lessons and
seminars on the practice of confession, liturgy, catechetics and preaching,
canon law, spirituality of priests, lay people and religious, social doctrine,
communication and its means, a knowledge of sects and new religious trends.
In practice, the work of synthesis must constitute the path on
which the pastoral year is directed. Every element must correspond to the
fundamental aim of maturing in the spiritual life.
The success of the pastoral year is in any case always
conditioned by the daily personal effort of the one concerned to seek sanctity
and to use the means of sanctification which have helped him since his seminary
days.
Means
83. "Sabbatical" Periods.
Among other factors that may cause discouragement in the souls
of pastors are the danger of routine, physical exhaustion due to overwork,
psychological fatigue caused by having to struggle against misunderstanding,
prejudice, going against organized forces that tend to give the impression that
the priests of today belong to a culturally obsolete minority.
Notwithstanding pastoral urgency, and precisely to face up to
these problems adequately, priests must be provided with time, as much as
reasonably possible, so as to facilitate longer periods spent with the Lord
Jesus, thus recovering strength and courage to continue the road to holiness.
To respond to this particular demand, in many Dioceses various
initiatives have already been tested - often with promising results.
These results are valid and may be taken into consideration,
despite the difficulties that may be encountered in some areas where the
scarcity of priests is more acutely felt.
For this purpose, monasteries, sanctuaries or other places of
spirituality, which are far from the main urban centres, may lend a helping hand
in sparing the priest from direct pastoral responsibilities.
In some cases, it may be useful to employ this time for study
or updating oneself in the sacred sciences, yet the primary goal of
strengthening spiritual and apostolic life must not be forgotten.
In any case, the danger of considering the sabbatical period
as vacation time or claiming it as a right should be avoided.
84. House for Clerics.
A "House for Clerics" is to be desired when
possible, for holding the above-mentioned formative encounters and also as a
reference place for other various circumstances. Such a house should offer all
the organisational structure which will make it comfortable and attractive.
Where they do not yet exist but necessity suggests it, it is
advisable to create either on a national or regional level, structures suitable
for the physical, psychological, and spiritual recovery of priests in special
need.
85. Retreats and Recollections.
As the long spiritual experience of the Church shows, retreats
and recollections are suitable and effective instruments for an adequate
permanent formation of priests. These still maintain their necessity and
relevance. Against a practice that tends to empty man of everything that is
interior, the priest must find God inside himself, taking advantage of spiritual
pauses in order to immerse himself in meditation and in prayer.
For this reason, canonical legislation has established that
clerics: "are obliged to make spiritual retreats, in accordance with the
provisions of particular law".(242) The two most usual modes which may be
prescribed by the Bishop in his own Diocese are the day of recollection
(possibly monthly) and the annual Retreat.
It is fitting that the Bishop plan and organise the retreats
and recollections in such a way that each priest has the possibility of choosing
those retreats, usually done within or outside of his Diocese, given by
exemplary priests or by a religious institution especially experienced for their
charisma in spiritual formation, or within monasteries.
Organizing a special retreat for priests ordained in recent
years is also advisable, in which the Bishop himself may actively
participate.(243)
During such encounters, it is important to focus on spiritual
themes, offer long periods of silence and prayer, and to take special care in
the celebration of the liturgy, the Sacrament of Penance, Eucharistic adoration,
spiritual direction and acts of veneration and cult to the Blessed Virgin Mary.
To give greater importance to the efficacy of these means of
formation, the Bishop may duly name a priest to take charge of organizing the
times and the way of conducting them.
In each case, it is necessary that days of recollection and
especially annual spiritual retreats be seen as times of prayer and not as
courses of theological-pastoral updating.
86. The Need for Programming.
Recognising the difficulties that permanent formation usually
encounters, above all due to the multiple and burdensome tasks that priests
have, it must be said that all these difficulties are surmountable if they are
carried out responsibly.
To be in keeping with the level of circumstances and confront
the demands of the urgent work of evangelization, a courageous action of
pastoral government must be undertaken which is designed to take care of priests
in a very particular way. It is necessary that the Bishops demand, with the
force of charity, that their priests be generous in following the legitimate
dispositions made in this matter.
The existence of a "plan of permanent formation"
requires that this be not only thought of or planned but also carried out. In
this regard a clear work structure is called for: with objectives, specific
topics and instruments to carry them out.
Those Responsible
87. The Priest.
It is the priest himself who is the person primarily
responsible for ongoing formation. In reality, this duty of being faithful to
the gift of God and to the dynamism of daily conversion falls upon each
priest.(244)
Such a duty is derived from the fact that no one can take the
place of the priest in watching over himself (cf 1 Tim 4:16). In fact, by
participating in the unique priesthood of Christ, he is called by his
irrepeatable vocation to reveal and exercise the extraordinary richness of grace
which he has received.
On the other hand, the conditions and situations of life of
every single priest are such that, even from the merely human point of view, he
must involve him-self in his own formation, in a manner which takes advantage of
his own capacities and possibilities.
He, therefore, should participate actively in the formative
encounters, making his own contribution based on his capacities and specific
talents and will strive to furnish himself with books and magazines with sound
doctrine and of proven utility, for his spiritual life and the fruitful
development of his ministry.
Among his reading material, the primary place must be given to
Sacred Scripture; and then the writings of the Fathers, classical and modern
spiritual Masters, and the Documents of the Magisterium, which constitute the
authoritative and updated source of permanent formation. Priests should study
them and deepen their understanding of them (directly and personally) in order
to adequately present them to the lay faithful.
88. Brotherly Assistance.
In all the aspects of priestly existence there appear
particular bonds of apostolic charity, of ministry and of fraternity,(245) which
serve as the foundation of the reciprocal help that priests give each
other.(246) It is to be hoped that co-operation among all priests should grow
and develop as regards their spiritual and human life, as well as their
ministerial service. The help which must be given to priests in this field can
find support in the different priestly associations which tend to form a truly
diocesan spirituality. This regards those associations whose "statutes are
recognised by the competent authority and which, by a suitable and well tried
rule of life and by fraternal support, promote holiness in the exercise of their
ministry and foster the unity of the clergy with one another and with their
Bishop".(247)
In this perspective, the right of every diocesan priest to
plan his own spiritual life must be respected with great care, obviously in
keeping with the characteristics of his own vocation and the obligations that
derive from it.
The work that these associations and other approved movements
carry out for priests, is held in high esteem by the Church,248 who recognises
this as a sign of the of vitality with which the Holy Spirit continually renews
her.
89. The Bishop.
However ample and arduous the work with that portion of the
People of God entrusted to him may be, the Bishop must observe a very special
diligence in all that refers to the permanent formation of his priests.(249)
In fact, a special relationship exists between them and the
Bishop, due to "the fact that priests receive their priesthood from him and
share his pastoral solicitude for the People of God".(250) Thus it also
constitutes a specific responsibility of the Bishop in the area of priestly
formation.
Such responsibility is expressed both in that which concerns
the individual priest, for whom the formation must be as Personalized as
possible, and in that which concerns the formation of all the priests who make
up the diocesan presbyterium. In this sense, the Bishop will never fail to
foster communication and communion among priests, taking particular care, to
guard and promote the true nature of their ongoing formation, to educate their
consciences regarding its necessity and importance, and finally, to plan the
necessary structure and appropriate persons to carry it out.(251)
In providing for the formation of his priests, the Bishop must
be involved in his own personal and permanent formation. Experience teaches that
the more the Bishop is bent on his own formation and convinced of its primary
importance, the more he will know how to encourage and sustain that of his
clergy.
In this delicate work the Bishop, while performing an
irreplaceable and undelegatable role, will know how to seek the collaboration of
the council of priests, for it is an organism which, by its nature and purpose,
is a suitable aid, especially in certain tasks such as that of drawing up the
plan of formation.
Every Bishop, then, will feel himself supported and helped in
his task by his brothers in the Episcopate, united in the Conference.(252)
90. Formation of Directors.
No formation is possible without both the person who must be
formed and the subject who forms: the director. The quality and the
effectiveness of a plan of formation will depend partially on the organization,
and principally on the directors.
It is obvious that the responsibility of the Bishop is even
more significant with regards to their formation.
It is necessary, therefore, that the Bishop himself name a
"group of directors" and that these persons be selected among those
priests who are highly qualified and esteemed due to their background and their
human, spiritual, cultural and pastoral maturity.
In fact, the directors must be, above all, men of prayer:
teachers with a strong supernatural outlook, a profound spiritual life, of
exemplary conduct, with adequate experience in the priestly ministry, capable of
consolidating the priest's spiritual demands with those properly human and like
the Fathers of the Church and great saints of all times. They may also be Chosen
from among the members of the seminary, centres or academic institutions
approved by the ecclesiastical authority, including those institutions whose
charisma concerns the life and spirituality of priests. In any case, doctrinal
orthodoxy and faithfulness to the ecclesiastical disciplines must be guaranteed.
Moreover, the directors must be trustworthy collaborators of the Bishop who
stands ultimately responsible for the formation of his most valuable
collaborators.
It is also important to create a committee for planning
and implementing, whose task it is to help the Bishop to set the topics to be
considered each year in any of the areas of ongoing formation; to prepare the
necessary aids; design the courses, sessions, meetings, and retreats; and
organise the calendar properly so as to foresee the absences and replacements
for priests. The expert advice of some specialists in specific fields may also
be sought.
Whereas one group of directors is sufficient, various
committees for planning and implementing the work can be established when
needed.
91. Collaboration Between Churches.
With regard to joint activities, by common agreement between
various particular churches, whether on a national or regional level (through
the respective Episcopal conferences), or principally between neighbouring or
adjacent Dioceses, the organization of different means of permanent formation
and their specific contents can be set. Thus, for example, the interdiocesan
structures such as schools and institutes of theology and pastoral care,
entities or associations committed to the formation of priests can be utilised
when suitable. Such combination of resources, aside from promoting an authentic
communion between particular churches, may offer to all the most qualified and
stimulating possibilities for ongoing formation.(253)
92. Collaboration with Academic and
Spiritual Centres.
Furthermore, institutes of study and research, centres of
spirituality, like monasteries of exemplary observance, and shrines, constitute
many reference points for theological and pastoral updating, oases of silence,
prayer, sacramental confession and spiritual direction, healthy rest including
physical relaxation, and moments of priestly fraternity. In this way also, the
religious families may collaborate in the permanent formation of priests as well
as contributing to the renewal of the clergy required by the new evangelization
of the Third Millennium.
Specific Needs of Certain Age Groups and Special Situations
93. The First Years of Priesthood.
During the first years after Ordination,
priests must be eager to find those conditions of life and ministry which permit
them to put into practice those ideals learned during their formation period in
the seminary.(254) These first years of priesthood, which make up a necessary
confirmation of the initial formation following the first difficult contact with
reality, are the most decisive for the future. These years, therefore, require a
harmonious maturity in order to face difficult moments with faith and courage.
For this reason, the young priests must benefit from a personal relationship
with their own Bishop and with a wise spiritual father and from times of rest,
of meditation and monthly recollection.
Keeping in mind what has already been said concerning the
pastoral year, it is necessary to organise, in the first years of priesthood,
annual meetings in which appropriate themes in theology, law, spirituality and
culture are studied and dealt with in greater depth, as well as those special
sessions dedicated to problems in morality, pastoral care and liturgy. Such
meetings may also serve as occasions to renew the faculty of confession in the
way it is established by the Code of Canon Law and by the Bishop.(255) It should
be beneficial also that during these days, fraternity between the young priests
and also with the more experienced ones be encouraged, allowing the exchange of
experiences, greater friendship and the refined evangelical practice of
fraternal correction.
Finally, it is essential for the young clergy to grow in a
spiritual environment of genuine and refined fraternity, manifested in concern
for one another, including their physical health and other material aspects of
life.
94. After a Certain Number of Years.
After a certain number of years of ministry, priests acquire a
solid experience and the great merit of having spent all their efforts in
extending the Kingdom of God through daily work. This group of priests
constitutes a great spiritual and pastoral resource.
They need encouragement, genuine appreciation, a new deepening
in all aspects of formation with the purpose of examining their actions, and a
re-awakening of the motivation underlying the sacred ministry. They also need to
reflect on: pastoral methods in the light of essentials, the communion among
priests of the presbyterate, friendship with the Bishop, surmounting any sense
of exhaustion, frustration and solitude and, finally, rediscovering the font of
priestly spirituality.(256)
It is therefore important that these priests benefit from
special and thorough sessions of formation in which, apart from pastoral and
theological subjects, all other psychological and emotional difficulties that
may arise in that period are examined. It is advisable that in such meetings,
not only the Bishop take part, but also those experts who can give a sound and
valid contribution to the solutions of the problems mentioned above.
95. Advanced Age.
The elderly priests or those advanced in years who merit
special consideration, enter in the vital circle of ongoing formation, not so
much regarding, thorough study and discussion of cultural subjects, but rather
"the calm and reassuring confirmation of the part which they are still
called to play in the presbyterate" .(257)
Besides the formation organized for the middle-aged priests,
they can benefit appropriately from special periods and workshops to go deeper
into the contemplative sense of the priest's life, in order to rediscover and
love the doctrinal wealth of what they have already studied and to feel useful,
as indeed they are. They can be involved in suitable ways in true and proper
ministry especially as expert confessors and spiritual directors. In particular,
they can share with others their own experiences, and encourage, welcome, listen
and convey serenity to them. They can also be available whenever they are asked
to "become effective teachers and mentors of other priests".(258)
96. Priests in Special Situations.
Independently of age, priests may find themselves in "a
condition of physical weakness or moral fatigue".(259) They contribute in
an eminent way to the work of redemption offering their sufferings and giving
"testimony by virtue of their union with the suffering Christ and with so
many other brothers and sisters in the Church who are sharing in the Lord's
Passion".(260)
For priests in these conditions ongoing formation must offer
stimuli to "continue their service to the Church in a serene and vigorous
way",(261) to be eloquent signs of the primacy of being over acting,
of content over technique, and of grace over exterior
efficacy. In this way they can live the experience of St. Paul: "I now
rejoice in my sufferings for you and fill up those things that are wanting of
the sufferings of Christ, in my flesh, for his body, which is the Church" (Col
1:24).
The Bishop and his brothers must never fail to make periodic
visits to those brothers who are ill, who can be informed about events in the
Diocese, in a way that makes them feel like active members of the clergy and of
the Universal Church, which builds upon their sufferings.
Those priests, close to concluding their days on earth spent
in the service of God and for the salvation of their brothers, must be given
particular and affectionate care.
The continual consolation of the faith and the prompt
administration of the sacraments is followed by suffrages of the entire clergy.
97. Solitude of the Priests.
The priest can experience a sense of solitude at any age and
situation.(262) Far from understanding this as a psychological isolation, it
could be altogether normal and a consequence of the sincere efforts to follow
the gospel, and as such constitutes a valuable dimension of his own life. In
some cases, however, it may be due to special difficulties such as alienation,
misunderstandings, deviations, abandonment, imprudence, personal limitations of
character as well as that of others, calumnies, humiliations, etc. He should not
draw a bitter sense of frustration from it, which would be deleterious.
Nevertheless, even these moments of difficulties may become,
with the help of the Lord, privileged occasions in which to grow on the road to
sanctity and apostolate. In these occasions, in fact, the priest may discover
that "there is a solitude filled with the presence of the Lord".(263)
Obviously, this must not make the Bishop and the entire clergy forget the grave
responsibility in avoiding every loneliness that stems out of negligence in the
communion among priests.
Neither must he forget those brothers who have left the
ministry, offering them necessary help, above all through prayer and penance.
Proper charitable behaviour with them must not, however, lead them to consider
entrusting them with ecclesiastical functions, which can create confusion and
disconcertment, above all, on the part of the faithful, in view of their
situation.
CONCLUSION
The Master of the harvest, who calls and sends workers to work
in his field (cf Mt 9:38), has promised with eternal faithfulness:
"I will give you shepherds after my own heart" (Jer 3:15). On
this divine faithfulness that is always alive and operative in the Church,(264)
rests the hope of receiving abundant and holy vocations to the priesthood.
Moreover, it has already been proven in many countries that the Lord will not
deny his Church the necessary light to confront the fascinating adventure of
casting the nets into the sea.
The Church responds to the gift of God with acts of
thanksgiving, fidelity, docility to the Spirit and a humble and persevering
prayer.
In order to perform his apostolic mission, each priest will
bear, engraved on his own heart, the words of the Lord: "Father, I have
glorified you on earth, having accomplished the work which you have given me to
do, to give eternal life to men" (Jn 17:2-4). For this, the priest
will dedicate his own life to his brothers, living as a sign of supernatural
charity, in obedience, in celibate chastity, with simplicity and with respect
for discipline in the communion of the Church.
In his work of evangelization the priest transcends the
natural order to direct himself "in things that belong to God" (Heb
5:1). He, in fact, is called to raise man, generating in him divine life and
making him grow towards fullness in Christ. For this reason, an authentic priest
impelled by his fidelity to Christ and to the Church constitutes, in reality, an
incomparable force of true progress for the entire world. "The new
evangelization needs new preachers and these are the priests who strive to live
their priesthood as a specific way to sanctity".(265) God's works are
performed by men of God!
Like Christ, the priest must present himself to the world as a
model of supernatural life: "For I have given you an example, that as I
have done to you, so you do also" (Jn 13:15).
The testimony reflected by his life gives the priest his
qualification and constitutes his most convincing sermon. The same
ecclesiastical discipline lived with real interior motivation turns out to be a
providential aid in which to live his own identity, foster charity and allow his
testimony to shine forth. Without this, all cultural preparation or rigorous
organization would merely be an illusion. "Doing" without "being
with Christ" is meaningless.
Here lies the horizon of the identity, life, ministry and
permanent formation of the priest; a task of immense work: open, courageous,
enlightened by faith, sustained in hope and rooted in charity.
In this urgent and necessary work, nobody is alone. It is
necessary that priests be assisted by an exemplary, authoritative and vigorous
action of pastoral government by their own Bishops, in communion with the
Apostolic See as well as the fraternal collaboration of all the clergy and the
entire People of God.
To Mary, Mother most faithful, each priest may entrust
himself. In her who "was the model of that maternal love which must inspire
all who co-operate in the regeneration of men in the apostolic mission of the
Church",(266) priests will find constant protection and help for the
renewal of their lives and help to draw out from their priesthood a renewed and
more intense zeal for the extension of the Gospel on the threshold of the third
millennium of Redemption.
His Holiness Pope John Paul II, on 31 January 1994, approved
this Directory and authorised its publication.
JOSÉ T. Card. SANCHEZ
Prefect
· + CRESCENZIO SEPE
Titular Archbishop of Grado
Secretary
PRAYER
TO THE MOST BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
O Mary,
Mother of Jesus Christ
and Mother of priests,
accept this title which we bestow on you
to celebrate your motherhood
and to contemplate with you the Priesthood
of your Son and of your sons,
O Holy Mother of God.
Mother of Christ,
to the Messiah-Priest you gave a body of flesh
through the anointing of the Holy Spirit
for the salvation of the poor
and the contrite of heart,
guard priests in your heart and in the Church,
O Mother of the Saviour.
O Mother of Faith,
you accompanied the Son of Man
at the temple,
in fulfilment of the promises made to the Fathers,
give to the Father for his glory,
the priests of his Son,
O Ark of the Covenant.
O Mother of the Church,
among the disciples in the Cenacle
you prayed to the Spirit
for the new People and their Shepherds,
obtain for the Order of Presbyters
the full measure of gifts,
O Queen of the Apostles.
O Mother of Jesus Christ,
you were with him from the beginning of his life
and in his mission,
you sought the Master among the crowd,
you stood beside him
when He was lifted up from the earth,
consumed as the one eternal sacrifice,
and you had John, your son, close by,
accept from the beginning those
who have been called
protect their growth,
in their life ministry accompany
your sons,
O Mother of Priests.
Amen! (267)
NOTES
(1).Among the most recent documents, cf ECUMENICAL. COUNCIL
VATICAN II, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen gentium 28; Decree
on Priestly Formation Optatam Totius 22; Decree on the pastorale Office
of the Bishops Christus Dominus 16; Decree on the Ministry and life of
Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis; PAUL Vl, Encyclical Letter Sacerdotalis
coelibatus (24 June 1967): AAS 59 (1967), 657-697;S. CONGREGATION FOR THE
CLERGY, Circular letter Inter ea (4 November 1969): AAS 62(1970),
123-134; SYNOD OF BISHOPS, Document on the Ministerial Priesthood Ultimis
temporibus (30 November 1971): AAS 63 (1971), 898-922; Codex Iuris
Canonici can. 273-289;232-264;1008-1054; CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC
EDUCATION, Ratio Fundamentalis Institutiones Sacerdotalis (19 March
1985), 101; JOHN PAUL II, Letters to all the Priests of the Church on Holy
Thursday; Catechesi on Priests, in the General Audiences from 31 March to
22 September 1993.
(2) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis (25 March 1992): AAS 84(1992), 657-804.
(3) Ibid., 18: l.c., 685
(4) ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 2.
(5) ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium, 1.
(6)JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 11: l.c., 675.
(7) Ibid., 15: l.c., 680.
(8) Ibid., 21: l.c., 688; cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN
II, Decree Presbyterorum ordinis, 2; 12.
(9) CF JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 12c: l.c., 676.
(10) Ibid., 18, l.c., 685-686; Message of the Synod
Fathers to the People of God (28 October 1990), III: "L'Osservatore
Romano", 29-30 October 1990.
(11) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 16: l.c., 682.
(12) Cf ibid., 12: l.c., 675-677.
(13) Cf COUNCIL ECUMENICAL TRIDENTINE, SESSIO XXIII, Desacramento
Ordinis: DS, 1763-1778; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo Vobis, 11-18:l.c., 673-686} Catechesi in the general audience of 31
March 1993: "L'Osservatore Romano", 1 April 1993.
(14) Cf. ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium, 18-31; Decree Presbyterorum ordinis, 2; C.l.C, can. 1008.
(15) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium, 10; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 2.
(16) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Apostolicam
actuositatem, 3; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifidelis
laici (30 December 1988), 14: AAS 81 (1989), 409-413.
(17) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 13-14:1.C., 677-679; Catechetics general audience of 31
March 1993: "L'Osservatore Romano", 1 April, 1993.
(18) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 18: l.c., 684-686.
(19) Cf ibid., 15: l.c., 679-681.
(20) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Dei
Verbum, 10; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 4.
(21) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 5; Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1120.
(22) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 6.
(23) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 16: l.c., 681.
(24) Cf ibid.
(25) Ibid. 3: l.c. 661.
(26) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 28; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 7; Decree Christus
Dominus 28; Decree Ad gentes 19; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic
Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 17: l.c., 683.
(27) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 28; Pontificale Romanum Ordinatio Episcoporum Presbyterorum et
diaconorum cap. I, n. 51, Ed. typica altera, 1990, P. 26.
(28) ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 28.
(29) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 16: l.c., 681.
(30) CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter on the
Church Understood as Communion Communionis notio (28 May 1992), 10: AAS
85 (1993) 844.
(31) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio
23a: AAS 83 (1991), 269.
(32) ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 10; cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 32: l.c., 709-710.
(33) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 28; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 7.
(34) Cf C l C can. 266, § 1.
(35) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 23; 26; S. CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY, Directive Notes Postquam
Apostoli (25 March 1980), 5; 14; 23: AAS 72 (1980) 346-347; 353-354;
360-361; TERTULLIAN, De praescriptione 20, 5-9: CCL 1 201-202.
(36) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 23; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 10; JOHN PAUL II,
Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 32: l.c., 709-710;
S. CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY, Directive Notes Postquam Apostoli (25
March 1980): AAS 72 (1980) 343-364; CONGREGATION FOR THE EVANGELIZATION OF
PEOPLES Pastoral Guide for Diocesan Priests that Depend on the Congregation
for the Evangelization of Peoples ( 1 October 1989), 4; C.I.C. can. 271.
(37) Cf CONGREGATION FOR THE EVANGELIZATION OF PEOPLES, Pastoral
Guide for Diocesan Priests that Depend on the Congregation for the
Evangelization of Peoples (1 October 1989); JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris
Missio (7 December 1990), 54; 67: AAS 83 (1991), 301-302; 315-316.
(38) Cf ST. AUGUSTINE, In Iohannis Evangelium Tractatus
123, 5: CCL 36, 678.
(39) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 21: L.C., 688-690; C.C., can. 274.
(40) Cf C.I.C., cann. 275, § 2; 529, § 1.
(41) Cf ibid., can. 574, § 1.
(42) Cf COUNCIL ECUMENICAL TRIDENTINE, Sessio XXIII, De
Sacramento Ordinis cap. 1 e 4, cann. 3, 4, 6: DS 1763-1776;
ECUMENTICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen gentium 10; S.
CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on Certain Questions Concerning the Minister of the Eucharist Sacerdotium
ministeriale ( 6 August 1983), 1: AAS 75 (1983), 1001.
(43) Cf. ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen
gentium 9.
(44) Cf. ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 7.
(45) Cf CONGREGATION FOR THE EVANGELIZATION OF PEOPLES, Pastoral
Guide for Diocesan Priests that Depend on the Congregation for the
Evangelization of Peoples ( 1 October 1989), 3.
(46) Cf S. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter
to the Bishops Of the Catholic Church on some questions regarding the minister
Of the Eucharist Sacerdotium ministeriale (6 August 1983 ), II . 3, III.
2: AAS 75 (1983), 100 1 - 1009; Catechism of the Catholic Church n. 875.
(47) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 11.
(48) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Address to the Episcopate of Switzerland
(15 July, 1984): Insegnamenti, VII/1 (1984), 1784.
(49) Cf JOHN PAUL II Address to the participants of the
International Symposium on "The Priest Today": "L'Osservatore
Romano", 29 May, 1993; Address to the participants of the International
symposium "Ius in vita et in missione Ecclesiae" (23 April, 1993), in
"L'Osservatore Romano", 25 April, 1993.
(50) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 12: l.c., 676; cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium, 1.
(51) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II Dogmatic Constitution Lumen
gentium, 8.
(52) Cf ST. AUGUSTINE, Sermo 46, 30: CCL 41, 555-557.
(53) JEAN PAUL II, Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation pastures
dabo vobis, 28: l.c., 701-702.
(54) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Cost. dogm. Lumen
gentium 28; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 7; 15.
(55) Cf C.l.C. cann. 331; 333 § 1
(56) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 22; Decree Christus Dominus 4; C.L.C. can. 336.
(57) Cf S. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Letter
on the Church Understood as Communion Communionis notio (28 May 1992),
14: AAS 85 (1993), 847.
(58) Cf. C.L.C. can. 902; SACRED CONGREGATION FOR THE
SACRAMENTS AND DIVINE LITURGY, Decree Promulgato Codice ( 12 September,
1983), II, I, 153: Notitiae 19 (1983), 542.
(59) Cf ST. THOMAS OF AQUINAS, Summa Theol. q. 82, a. 2
ad 2, Sent. IV d. 13, q. 1, a. 2, q. 2; ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II,
Const. Sacrosanctum Concilium, 41, 57; S. CONGREGATION OF RITES, General
Decree Ecclesiae semper ( 7 March, 1965): AAS 57 (1965), 410-412;
Instruction Eucaristicum Mysterium (25 May, 1965), 47: AAS 57 (1967),
565-566.
(60) Cf S. CONGREGATION OF RITES, Instruction Eucaristicum
Mysterium (25 May, 1967), 47: AAS 59 (1967), 565-566.
(61) Cf C.I.C. can. 273.
(62) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 15; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 65; 79: l.c., 770-772; 796-798.
(63) SAINT IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH, Ad Ephesios XX 1-2:
"...If the Lord will reveal to me that, each one on his own and everyone
together... you are united in heart through an unshakeable submission to the
Bishop and the presbyterate, breaking the only bread which is remedy of
immortality, an antidote to prevent death, and to live forever in Jesus
Christ": Patres Apostolici ed. F.X. FUNK, II 203-205.
(64) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 17: l.c. 683; cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 28; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 8; C.l.C, can. 275 § 1.
(65) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation
Pastores dabo vobis, 74:l.C., 790; CONGREGATION FOR THE EVANGELIZATION OF
THE PEOPLES, Pastoral Guide for Diocesan Priests that Depend on the
Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples ( 1 October, 1989),6.
(66) .Cf. ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 8; C.l.C cann. 369,498, 499.
(67) Cf Pontificale Romanum De Ordinatione Episcopi
Presbyterorum et Diaconorum chapter II, nn. 105; 130, editio typica
altera, 1990, PP. 54; 66-67; ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 8.
(68) Cf C.l.C., can. 265.
(69) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Address in the cathedral of Quito to
Bishops, Priests, Religious and Seminarians (29 January, 1985): Insegnamenti
VII/1(1985), 247-253.
(70) JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 31:1.C., 708.
(71) Cf ibid. 17;74;1.c., 683;790.
(72) C.l.C can. 498 §1,2.
(73) JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 31: l.c. 708-709.
(74) Cf ibid 31;41;68:1.c., 708;728-729;775-777.
(75) Cf C.l.C. can. 271.
(76) JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 74: l.c., 790.
(77) JOHN PAUL II, Catechesi in the General Audience of
4 August 1993, n.4: "L'Osservatore Romano", 5 August 1993.
(78) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 12- 14.
(79) Cf ibid 8.
(80) Cf ST.AUGUSTINE, Sermones 355, 356, De vita et moribus
clericorum: PL 39, 1568-1581.
(81) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Cost. dogm. Lumen
gentium 28c; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 8; Decree Christus
Dominus 30a.
(82) Cf SACRED CONGREGATION OF BISHOPS, DIRECTORY Ecclesiae
Imago (22 February 1973), n. 112: C 1 C cann. 280; 245, § 2; 550, § 1; JOHN
PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 81: l.c.,
799-800.
(83) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Cost. Sacrosanctum
Concilium 26; 99; Liturgia Horarum Institutio Generalis n. 25.
(84) Cf C.l.C can. 278, 5 2; JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 31; 68; 81: l.c., 708; 777;
799.
(85) Cf C l C can 550 § 2.
(86) Cf ibid, can. 545 § 1.
(87) . Cf JOHN PAUL II, Catechesi in the General Audience of 7
July 1993: "L Ossevatore Romano", 8 July 1993; ECUMENICAL COUNCIL
VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 15b
(88) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 15: l.c., 679-680.
(89) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 9; C l C, cann. 275 § 2; 529 § 2.
(90) JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolica Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 74: l.c., 788.
(91) Cf C l C, can. 529 § 2.
(92) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 74: I.c., 788; PAUL Vl, Encyclical Letter Ecclesiam suam
(6 August 1964), III: AAS 56 (1964), 647.
(93) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Catechesi in the General Audience
of 7 July
1993: "L'Osservatore Romano", 8 July 1993.
(94) Cf C l.c., can. 529 § 1.
(95) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 11; C.l.C. can. 233 § 1.
(96) JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 74c: l.c., 789.
(97) Cf C.l.C., can. 287 § 2; SACRED CONGREGATION FOR THE
CLERGY, Decree Quidam Episcopi (8 March 1982), AAS 74 (1982), 642-645.
(98) Cf CONGREGATION FOR THE EVANGELIZATION OF THE PEOPLES, Pastoral
Guide for Diocesan Priests that Depend on the Congregation for the
Evangelization of Peoples (1 October 1989), 9 SACRED CONGREGATION FOR THE
CLERGY, Decree Quidam Episcopi (8 March 1982), AAS 74 (1982), 642-645.
(99) JOHN PAUL II Catechism of the General Audience of 28 July
1993 n. 3: "L'Osservatore Romano", 29 July 1993, cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL
VATICAN II Pastoral Constitution Qaudium et Spes, 43; SYNOD OF
BISHOPS, Document on Ministerial Priesthood Ultimis temporibus (30
November 1971), II, I, 2b: AAS 63 (1971), 912-913 C.l.C, cann. 285 § 3; 287 §
1
(100) Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 2442; cf C.l.C.,
can. 227.
(101) SYNOD OF BISHOPS, Document on Ministerial; Priesthood Ultimis
temporibus(30 November 1971), II, I, 2b: AAS 63 (1971), 913.
(102) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 5: l.c., 663-665.
(103) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Inaugural Address to the IV General
Conference of Latin American Bishops (Santo Domingo, 12-28 October 1992), n. 24:
AAS 85 (1993), 826.
(104) Ibid., 1: l.c., 808-809.
(105) Ibid., 25: l.c., 827.
(106) Cf ibid.
(107) JOHN PAUL II, Letter to Priests on Holy Thursday
( 13 April 1987 ), 10: AAS 79 (1987) 1292.
(108) Cf C.l.C., can. 276 § 2, 1.
(109) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 5;18; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 23;26;38;46;48:l.C., 691-694;697-700;720-723;738-740;742-745;
C.l.C. cann. 246,§ 1;276 5 2,2.
(110) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 5;18; C.l.C. cann. 246§4;276§2,5; JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo Vobis, 26;48:1.c., 697-700, 742-745.
(111) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 18; C.l.C. can. 239; JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation
Pastores dabo vobis, 40;50; 81:1.c., 724-726; 746-748;799-800.
(112) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 18; C.l.C cann. 246§2; 276§2, 3 ; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 26; 72:1.c., 697-700;783-797.
(113) Cf C.l.C, can. 1174 § 1.
(114) ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 18; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 26; 37-38; 47; 51; 53; 72: I.c., 697-700; 718-723, 740-742,
748-750, 751-753-783-787
(115) Cf C.l.C. can. 276§2,5.
(116) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 4; 13; 18; JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 26;47;53;70;72:1.C., 697-700;740-742; 751-753;778-782;783-787.
(117) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 18; C.I.C. can. 276 § 2, 4; JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis,80:1.c. 798-800.
(118) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 18; C.l.C cann. 246 § 3;276 § 2, 5. JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis, 36;38;45;82:1.c.,
715-718;720-723;736-738;800-804.
(119) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 18; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 26; 37-38; 47; 51; 53; 72: l.c., 697-700;718-723-740-742,
748-750, 751-753, 783-787
(120) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 18c.
(121) JOHN PAUL II Letter to Priests for Holy Thursday 1979 Novo
incipiente (8 April 1979), 1: AAS 71(1979),394; Post-Synodal Apostolic
Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 80:1.c.,798-799.
(122) Cf POSSIDIO, Vita Sancti Aurelii Augustini 31: PL
32, 63-66
(123) Cf Liturgia Horarum, Institutio generalis,
nn. 3-4.
(124) Pontificale Romanum- Deordinatione Episcopi,
Presbyterorum et Diaconorum, cap. II, n. 151, Ed. typica altera 1990, pp.
87-88.
(125) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 18; SYNOD OF BISHOPS, Document on Ministerial Priesthood Ultimis
temporibus (30 November 1971), II, 1, 3: AAS 63 (1971), 913-915; JOHN PAUL
II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis, 46-47: I.c.,
738-742; Catechesi in the General Audience of 2 June 1993, n. 3:
"L'Osservatore Romano", 3 June 1993.
(126) "Numquam enim minus solus sum, quam cum solus esse
videor": Epist. 33 (Maur. 49), CSEL, 82, 229.
(127) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 14; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 23: I.c., 691-694.
(128) Cf C.l.C can. 279, 5 1.
(129) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Dei
Verbum, 5; Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1-2, 142.
(130) Cf Catechism of the Catholic Church, 150-152;
185-187.
(131) Cf JOHN PAUL II Catechesi in the General Audience
of 21 April 1993, n. 6: "L'Osservatore Romano", 22 April 1993.
(132) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II Dogm. Const. Dei Verbum
25.
(133) Cf C.l.C cann. 757, 762, 776.
(134) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 4.
(135) Ibid.; cf JOHN PAUL II Post-synodal Apostolic
Exhortation Pastor dabo vobis 26: I.c., 697-700.
(136) Cf JOHN PAUL II Catechesi in the General Audience
of 21 April 1993: "L'Osservatore Romano", 22 April 1993.
(137) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Catechesi in the General
Audience of 21 April 1993: "L'Osservatore Romano", 22 April 1993.
(138) Cf S. THOMAS AQUINAS, Stumna Theologiae I q. 43, a. 5.
(139) Cf C.l.C, can. 769.
(140) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Exhortation Catechesi
Tradendae ( 16 October 1979), 18: AAS 71 (1979), 1291-1292 14t
(141) Cf C.l.C, can. 768
(142) Cf C.l.C., can. 776.
(143) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 9.
(144) Cf ibid. 6.
(145) Cf C.I.C can. 779
(146) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Const. Fidei Depositum
(11 October 1992), 4.
(147) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Catechesi in the General
Audience of 12 May 1993, n. 3: "L'Osservatore Romano", 14 May 1993.
(148) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 5.
(149) Ibid.
(150) Cf ibid. 5; 13; ; ST. JUSTIN, Apologia 1 67: PG
6, 429-432; ST. AGUSTINO, Inhannis Etvangelium Tractatus 26, 13-15: CCL
36, 266-268.
(151) Cf C.I.C., can. 904.
(152) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Cost Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 128.
(153) Cf ibid., 122-124.
(154) Cf ibid., 112, 114, 116.
(155) Cf ibid., 120; C.l.C., can. 932.
(156) Cf ibid., 30.
(157) Cf C.l.C., can. 899 § 3.
(158) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Cost. Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 22; C.l.C., can. 846 § 1.
(159) Cf C.I.C, can. 929; Missale Romanum,
Institutio generalis, nn. 81; 298; S. CONGREGATION FOR THE DIVINE CULT,
Instruction Litugicae instaurationes (5 September 1970), 8c: AAS 62
(1970), 701.
(160) JOHN PAUL II Catechesi in the General Audience of
9 June 1993, n. 6: "L'Osservatore Romano", 10 June 1993; cf
Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 48: I.c., 744; S.
CONGREGATION OF RITES, Instruction Eucharisticum Mysterium (25 May 1967),
50: AAS 59 (1967), 539-573; Catechism of the Catholic Church 1418.
(161) JOHN PAUL II Catechesi in the General Audience of
2 June 1993, n. 5: "L'Osservatore Romano", 3 June 1993, cf. ECUMENICAL
COUNCIL VATICAN II, Cost. Sacrosanctum Concilium 99-100.
(162) Cf TRIDENTINE ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, sess. Vl, de iustificatione
c. 14; sess. XIV, de poenitentia c. 1 2, 5-7, can. 10; sess. XXIII, de
ordine c. 1: DS 1542-1543; 1668-1672; 1679-1688; VATICAN ECUMENICAL
COUNCIL II, Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 2, 5; C.l.C can. 965.
(163) Cf Catechism of the Catholic Church
1443-1445.
(164) Cf C.l.C., cann. 966 § 1; 978 5 1; 98i; JOHN PAUL II
Discourse to the Apostolic Penitentiary (27 March 1993): "L'Osservatore
Romano", 28 March 1993.
(165) Cf C.I.C., can. 986.
(166) Cf ibid. can. 960; JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical
letter Redemptor hominis 20: AAS 71 (1979), 309-316.
(167) Cf C.l.C cann. 961-963; PAUL Vl Allocution (20 March
1978), AAS 70 (1978), 328-332; JOHN PAUL II, Allocution (30 January 1981): AAS
73 (1981), 201-204; Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Reconctliatio et
Paenitentia (2 December 1984), 33: AAS 77 (1985), 269-271.
(168) Cf C.l.C., cann. 978 § l; 981.
(169) Cf ibid. can. 964
(170) Cf ibid. can. 276 § 2, 5; ECUMENICAL COUNCIL
VATICAN II Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 18b.
(171) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio
et Paenitentia (2 December 1984), 31: AAS 77 (1985), 266; Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 26. I.c, 699.
(172) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio
et Paenitentia 32: AAS 77 (1985) (2 December 1984), 267-269.
(173) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 22-23: l.c., 690-694; Apostolic Letter Mulieris dignitatem ( 15
August 1988), 26: AAS 80 ( 1988), 1715-1716.
(174) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 6; C.l.C., can. 529 § 1.
(175) ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, De sacerdotio, III, 6: PG,
48, 643-644: "The spiritual birth of the souls is entrusted to priests:
they bring souls to the life of grace through baptism; through them we put on
Christ, we are buried with the Son of God and we become members of his Body (cf Rom.
6, 1; Gal. 3, 27). Therefore we should not only respect the priest more
than princes and kings, but esteem him more than we do our parents. Indeed, our
parents have begotten us through blood and by the will of the flesh (cf ln.
1, 13); while the priests have brought us to life as sons of God; they are the
instruments of our joyful rebirth, of our freedom and of our adoption in the
order of grace".
(176) JOHN PAUL II Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 29: l.c., 704; cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 16; PAUL Vl, Encyclical Letter Sacerdotalis coelibatus (24
June 1967), 14: AAS 59 (1967), 662; C.l.C., can. 277, § 1.
(177) Cf JOHN PAUL 11, Encyclical Letter Veritatis splendor
(6 August 1993), 22b-c: AAS 85 (1993), 115l.
(178) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II Decree Optatam
Totius 10; C.I.C., can. 247 § l; CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC
EDUCATION, Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis Sacerdotalis (19 March
1985), 48; Educational orientation for the formation of priestly celibacy
(11 April 1974), n. 16.
(179) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 16; JOHN PAUL II, Letter to Priests for Holy Thursday 1979 Novo
incipiente (8 April 1979), 8: AAS 71 (1979) 405-409; Post-Synodal Apostolic
Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis 29: l.c., 703-705; C.I.C can. 277 § 1.
(180) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 16a; PAUL Vl, Encyclical Letter Sacerdotalis caelibatus (24
June 1967) 14: AAS 59 (1967), 662.
(181) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis16c; C.I.C cann. 1036; 1037.
(182) Cf Pontificale Romanum - De ordinatione
Episcopi Presbyterorum et Diaconorum c. III, 228 (Ed. typica altera
1990), 134; JOHN PAUL II, Letter to Priests for Holy Thursday 1979 Novo
incipiente (8 April 1979): AAS 71 (1979), 409-411.
(183) Cf SYNOD OF BISHOPS, Document Ultimis temporibus
( 30 November 1971), II, 1, 4c: AAS 63 (1971), 916-917.
(184) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 16b.
(185) Cf ibid.
(186) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 29: l.c., 703-705.
(187) S. CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION, Educative
Orientations for the Formation of Ministers to Priestly Celibacy ( 11 April
1974), n. 16.
(188) Cf COUNCIL OF ELVIRA (a. 300-305) cann. 27; 33: BRUNS
HERM., Canones Apostolorum et Conciliorum saec. IV-VII, II, 5-6; COUNCIL
OF NEOCESAREA (a. 314), can. 1; ECUM. COUNCIL OF NICEA I (a 325), can. 3: Conc.
Oecum. Decree 6; ROMAN SYNOD (a. 386): Concilia Africae a. 345-525,
CCl 149 (in Council of Telepte), 58-63; COUNCIL OF CARTHAGE (a. 390): ibid
13. 133 ff.; COUNCIL OF TRULLANO (a. 691), cann. 3, 6, 12, 13, 26, 30, 48: Pont.
Commissio ad redigendum CIC Orientalis IX I/1 125-186; SIRICIO, decretals Directa
(a. 386): PL 13, 1131-1147; INNOCENT I, lett. Dominus inter (a.
405): BRUNS, cit. 274-277. S. LEO THE GREAT, lett. a Rusticus (a. 456): PL
54, 1191; EUSEBIUS OF CESAREA, Demonstratio Evangelica 1 9: PG 22, 82
(78-83); EPIPHANIO OF SALAMINA, Panarion PG 41, 868, 1024; Expositio
Fidei PG 42, 822-826.
(189) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Letter to all Priests of the Church on
the Ooccsion of Holy Thursday 1993 (8 April 1993): AAS 85 (1993), 880-883; see
also Solo per amore, riflessioni sul celibato sacerdotale, a cura della
Congregazione per il Clero, Ed. Paoline, 1993; Identità e missione del
Sacerdote, a cura di C. PITTAU - C. SEPE, Ed. Città Nuova 1994.
(190) ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, De Sacerdotio, VI, 2: PG
48, 679: The soul of the priest must be purer than the rays of the sun so that
the Holy Spirit not abandon him and so that he might say: It is no longer I
that lives but Christ that lives in me (Gal. 2, 20). If the anachorites of
the desert who lived far from the city and its activity, enjoying harbour and
the tranquility there, they nevertheless did not rely solely on the security of
that life of theirs, but rather took special care of strengthening themselves in
purity and confidence and diligently insuring to the best of their ability that
their conduct be worthy of God's presence. To what extent, do you think, must a
priest employ strength and violence to avoid any kind of stain against his
spiritual beauty? Certainly he needs to have more purity than monks. Yet
precisely he who needs it the most is the one who most often is exposed to
inevitable occasions in which he can be contaminated, unless he renders this
inaccessible with assiduous sobriety and vigilance.
(191) Cf C.l.C., can. 277 § 2.
(192) Cf ibid., can. 277 § 3.
(193) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis 16c.
(194) Cf PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Sacerdotalis coelibatus
(24 June 1967), 78-81: AAS 59 (1967) 688-689; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis, 29: l.c., 703-705
(195) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 15c; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 27: l.c., 700-701.
(196) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Veritatis splendor
(6 August 1993), 31; 32; 106: AAS 85 (1993), 1159-1160; 1216.
(197) Cf C.l.C, can. 274 § 2.
(198) Cf C.l.C, can. 273.
(199) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, DOGMATIC CONSTITUTION Lumen
gentium, 23a.
(200) Cf ibid, 27a; C.l.C, can. 381 § 1.
(201) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decr. ChristusDominus,
2a; Dogm. Const. Lumen gentium, 22b; C.l.C., can. 333 § 1.
(202) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Const. Sacrae disciplinae
leges (25 January 1983): AAS 75 (1983) Pars II, XIII; Address to the
participants of the International Symposium "Ius in vita et in missione
Ecclesiae" (23 April 1993), in "L'Osservatore Romano", 25
April 1993.
(203) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Const . Sacrae disciplinae
leges ( 25 January 1983): AAS 75 (1983) Pars II, XIII
(204) Cf C.l.C can. 3w.
(205) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Cost. Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 7.
(206) Ibid. 10.
(207) C.l.C., can. 838.
(208) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Constitution Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 22.
(209) Cf C.l.C., can. 846 § 1.
(210) Cf SACRED CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY, Circular letter Omnis
Christifideles (25 January 1973), 9.
(211) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Letter to the Cardinal Vicar of Rome (8
September 1982): "L'Osservatore Romano", 18-19 October 1982.
(212) Cf PAUL VI, Allocution to Clergy (17 February 1969; 17
February 1972; 10 February 1978): AAS 61 (1969), 190; 64 (1972), 223; 70 (1978),
191; JOHN PAUL II, Letter to All Priests on the Occasion of Holy Thursday 1979 Novo
incipiente (7 April 1979), 7: AAS 71 403-405; Allocutions to Clergy (9
November 1978; 19 April 1979); Insegnamenti, I (1978), 116; II (1979),
929.
(213) C.I.C, can. 284.
(214) Cf PAUL VI, Motu Proprio Ecclesiae Sanctae, I,
25, § 2d: AAS 58 (1966), 770; SACRED CONGREGATION OF BISHOPS, Circular Letter
to all pontifical representatives Per venire incontro (27 January 1976); SACRED
CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION, Circular Letter The document (6
January 1980): "L'Osservatore Romano" suppl., 12 April 1980.
(215) Cf PAUL VI, Catechism in the General Audience of
17 September 1969; Allocution to Clergy (1 March 1973): Insegnamenti, VII
(1969), 1065; XI (1973), 176.
(216) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decr. Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 17 a.d; 20-21.
(217) Cf ibid., 17 a.c; JOHN PAUL II, Caterchesi
in the General Audience of 21 JULY 1993, n. 3: "L'Osservatore Romano",
22 July 1993.
(218) Cf C.l.C., can. 286; 1392.
(219) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 17d.
(220) Cf ibid., 17c; C.l.C., cann. 282; 222, § 2; 529,
§ 1
(221) Cf C.l.C, can. 282, § 1.
(222) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN 11, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis,17d.
(223) Cf ibid., 17e.
(224) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Catechesi in the General
Audience of 30 June 1993: "L'Osservatore Romano, 30 June-1 July 1993".
(225)ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbytrorum
Ordinis, 18b..
(226) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 70: l.c., 778-782.
(227) Cf ibid.
(228) Cf ibid, 79: l.c., 797.
(229) Cf C.l.C., can. 279.
(230) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 76: l.c., 793-794.
(231) Cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 3.
(232) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 19; Decree Optatam Totitus, 22, C.l.C can. 279, § 2,
CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis
Sacerdotalis (19 March 1985), 101.
(233) C.I.C., Can. 279, § 3.
(234) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Encycl.. Letter Centesimus annus
(1 May 1991), 57: AAS 83 (1991), 862-863
(235) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 79: l.c. 797.
(236) Cf ibid.
(237) Cf ibid.
(238) Cf ibid.
(239) Cf ibid.; ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Optatam
Totius 22; Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis 19c.
(240) Cf PAUL Vl, Motu Proprio Ecclesiae Sanctae (6
August 1966), I, 7: AAS 58 (1966), 761; S. CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY, Circular
Letter to the Presidents of the Episcopal Conferences Inter ea (4
November 1969), 16: AAS 62 (1970), 130-131; CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION,
Ratio Fundamentalis Institutiones Sacerdotalis ( 19 March 1985), 63; 101;
C.l.C can. 1032, § 2.
(241) Cf CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION, Ratio
Fundamentalis Institutiones Sacerdotalis (19 March 1985), 63.
(242) C.I.C., can 276, § 2, 4·; cf. can. 533, § 2;
550, § 3
(243) CF S. CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION, Ratio Fundamentalis
Institutiones Sacerdotalis ( 19 March 1985), 101.
(244) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 70: l.c., 778-782.
(245) ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 8.
(246) Cf ibid.
(247) C.I.C, can. 278, § 2; cf ECUMENICAL VATICAN COUNCIL II,
Decree Presbyterorum Ordinis, 8.
(248) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis, 8; C.I.C, can. 278, § 2; JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic
Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis, 81: l.c., 799-800.
(249) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Christum
Dominus, 16d.
(250) JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 79: l.c., 797.
(251) Cf ibid.: l.c., 797-798.
(252) Cf ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Decree Optatam
Totius, 22; CONGREGATION FOR CATHOLIC EDUCATION, Ratio Fundmentalis
lnstitutionis Sacerdotalis (19 March 1985), 101.
(253) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis 79: l.c., 796-798.
(254) Cf ibid, 76: l.c., 793-794
(255) Cf C.l.C., cann 970- 972.
(256) Cf JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 77: l.c., 794-795.
(257) Ibid.: l.c., 794.
(258) Ibid.
(259) Ibid.
(260) Ibid., 41: l.c., 727.
(261) Ibid., 77: l.c., 794.
(262) Cf ibid., 74; l.c., 791.
(263) Ibid.
(264) Cf ibid., 82: l.c., 800.
(265) 161d. 82 l.c., 801.
(266) ECUMENICAL COUNCIL VATICAN II, Dogm. Const. Lumen
gentium 65.
(267) JOHN PAUL II, Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis, 82: l.c., 803-804.
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