SECTION
3 Aids to the Life of Priests
18.
(Aids to encourage the spiritual life.) In order that, in all conditions of
life, they may be able to grow in union with Christ, priests, besides the
exercise of their conscious ministry, enjoy the common and particular means,
old and new, which the Spirit never ceases to arouse in the People of God and
which the Church commends, and sometimes commands,54 for the
sanctification of her members. Outstanding among all these spiritual aids are
those acts by which the faithful are nourished in the Word of God at the double
table of the Sacred Scripture and the Eucharist.55 The importance of
frequent use of these for the sanctification of priests is obvious to all. The
ministers of sacramental grace are intimately united to Christ our Savior and
Pastor through the fruitful reception of the sacraments, especially sacramental
Penance, in which, prepared by the daily examination of conscience, the
necessary conversion of heart and love for the Father of Mercy is greatly
deepened. Nourished by spiritual reading, under the light of faith, they can
more diligently seek signs of God's will and impulses of his grace in the
various events of life, and so from day to day become more docile to the
mission they have assumed in the Holy Spirit. They will always find a wonderful
example of such docility in the Blessed Virgin Mary, who was led by the Holy
Spirit to dedicate herself totally to the mystery of man's
redemption.56 Let priests love and venerate with filial devotion and
veneration this mother of the Eternal Highpriest, Queen of Apostles and
Protector of their own ministry.
In the
fulfillment of their ministry with fidelity to the daily colloquy with Christ,
a visit to and veneration of the Most Holy Eucharist, spiritual retreats and spiritual
direction are of great worth. In many ways, but especially through mental
prayer and the vocal prayers which they freely choose, priests seek and
fervently pray that God will grant them the spirit of true adoration whereby
they themselves, along with the people committed to them, may intimately unite
themselves with Christ the Mediator of the New Testament, and so as adopted
children of God may be able to call out "Abba, Father" (Rom 8:15).
19.
(Study and pastoral knowledge.) Priests are admonished by their bishop in the
sacred rite of ordination that they "be mature in knowledge" and that
their doctrine be "spiritual medicine for the People of
God."57 The knowledge of the sacred minister ought to be sacred
because it is drawn from the sacred source and directed to a sacred goal.
Especially is it drawn from reading and meditating on the Sacred
Scriptures,58 and it is equally nourished by the study of the Holy
Fathers and other Doctors and monuments or tradition. In order, moreover, that
they may give apt answers to questions posed by men of this age, it is
necessary for priests to know well the doctrines of the magisterium and the
councils and documents of the Roman pontiffs and to consult the best of prudent
writers of theological science.
Since
human culture and also sacred science has progressed in our times, priests are
urged to suitably and without interruption perfect their knowledge of divine
things and human affairs and so prepare themselves to enter more opportunely
into conversation with their contemporaries.
Therefore,
let priests more readily study and effectively learn the methods of
evangelization and the apostolate. Let opportune aids be prepared with all
care, such as the institution of courses and meetings according to territorial
conditions, the erection of centers of pastoral studies, the establishment of
libraries, and the qualified supervision of studies by suitable persons.
Moreover, let bishops, either individually or united in groups, see to it that
all their priests at established intervals, especially a few years after their
ordination,59 may be able to frequent courses in which they will be
given the opportunity to acquire a fuller knowledge of pastoral methods and
theological science, both in order that they may strengthen their spiritual
life and mutually communicate their apostolic experiences with their
brothers.60 New pastors and those who have newly begun pastoral work,
as well as those who are sent to other dioceses or nations, should be helped by
these and other suitable means with special care.
Finally,
the bishops will be solicitous that there will be some who dedicate themselves
to a deeper study of theology, that there will not be lacking suitable teachers
for the formation of clerics, that the rest of the priests and the faithful
will be helped to acquire the doctrine they need, and that healthy progress
will be encouraged in the sacred disciplines, so necessary for the Church.
20.
(Providing equitable remuneration for priests.) As those dedicated to the
service of God and the fulfillment of the office entrusted to them, priests
deserve to receive an equitable remuneration, because "the laborer is
worthy of his hire," (Lk 10:7)61 and "the Lord directed that
those who preach the Gospel should have their living from the Gospel" (1
Cor 9:14). Wherefore, insofar as an equitable remuneration of the priests would
not be provided otherwise, the faithful themselves-that is, those in whose
behalf the priest labors-are truly obliged to see to it that they can provide
what help is necessary for the honorable and worthy life of the priests. The
bishops, however, should admonish the faithful concerning this obligation of
theirs. And they should see to if whether each individual for his own diocese
or, more aptly, several together for their common territory-that norms are
established according to which suitable support is rightly provided for those
who do fulfill or have fulfilled a special office in the service of the People
of God. The remuneration received by each one, in accord with his office and
the conditions of time and place, should be fundamentally the same for all in
the same circumstances and befitting his station. Moreover, those who have
dedicated themselves to the service of the priesthood, by reason of the
remuneration they receive, should not only be able to honorably provide for
themselves but also themselves be provided with some means of helping the
needy. For the ministry to the poor has always been held in great honor in the
Church from its beginnings. Furthermore, this remuneration should be such that
it will permit priests each year to take a suitable and sufficient vacation,
something which indeed the bishops should see that their priests are able to
have.
Special
importance ought to be given to the office fulfilled by sacred ministers.
Therefore the so-called system of benefices should be relinquished or at least
so reformed that the place of the benefits, or the right to revenue from the
endowment attached to an office, would be held as secondary, and the first
place in law would be given to the ecclesiastical office itself. From this it
should be understood that whatever office is conferred in a stable manner is to
be exercised for a spiritual purpose.
21.
(On setting up common funds and establishing a system of social assistance for
priests.) We should always keep before our eyes the example of the faithful of
the early Church in Jerusalem, who "held all things in common" (Acts
4;32) "and distribution was made to each according to each one's
need" (Acts 4:35). So it is supremely fitting, at least in regions where
the support of the clergy completely or largely depends on the offerings of the
faithful, that their offerings for this purpose be collected by a particular
diocesan institution, which the bishop administers with the help of priests
and, when useful, of laymen who are expert in financial matters. Further it is
hoped that insofar as is possible in individual dioceses or regions there be
established a common fund enabling bishops to satisfy obligations to other
deserving persons and meet the needs of various dioceses. This would also
enable wealthier dioceses to help the poorer, that the need of the latter might
be supplemented by the abundance of the former.62 These common funds,
even though they should be principally made up of the offerings of the
faithful, also should be provided for by other duly established sources.
Moreover,
in nations where social security for the clergy is not yet aptly established,
let the episcopal conferences see to it that-in accord with ecclesiastical and
civil laws-there may be either diocesan institutes, whether federated with one
another or established for various dioceses together, or territorial
associations, which under the vigilance of the hierarchy would make sufficient
and suitable provision for a program of preventive medicine, and the necessary
support of priests who suffer from sickness, invalid conditions or old age. Let
priests share in this established institute, prompted by a spirit of solidarity
with their brothers to take part in their tribulations63 while at the
same time being freed from an anxious concern for their own future so that they
can cultivate evangelical poverty more readily and give themselves fully to the
salvation of souls. Let those in charge of this act to bring together the
institutes of various nations in order that their strength he more firmly
achieved and more broadly based.
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