48. The high point of Christian prayer is the
Eucharist, which in its turn is to be seen as the "summit and source"
of the sacraments and the Liturgy of the Hours. A totally necessary aspect of
the formation of every Christian, and in particular of every priest, is
liturgical formation, in the full sense of becoming inserted in a living way in
the paschal mystery of Jesus Christ, who died and rose again, and is present
and active in the Church's sacraments. Communion with God, which is the hinge
on which the whole of the spiritual life turns, is the gift and fruit of the
sacraments. At the same time it is a task and responsibility which the
sacraments entrust to the freedom of the believer, so that one may live this
same communion in the decisions, choices, attitudes and actions of daily
existence. In this sense, the "grace" which "renews"
Christian living is the grace of Jesus Christ, who died and rose again, and continues
to pour out his holy and sanctifying Spirit in the sacraments. In the same way,
the "new law" which should guide and govern the life of the Christian
is written by the sacraments in the "new heart." And it is a law of
charity toward God and humanity, as a response and prolonging of the charity of
God toward humanity signified and communicated by the sacraments. It is thus
possible to understand at once the value of a "full, conscious and active
participation"(142) in sacramental celebrations for the gift and
task of that "pastoral charity" which is the soul of the priestly
ministry.
This applies above all to sharing in the
Eucharist, the memorial of the sacrificial death of Christ and of his glorious
resurrection, the "sacrament of piety, sign of unity, bond of charity, (143)the
paschal banquet "in which Christ is received, the soul is filled with
grace and we are given a pledge of the glory that is to be ours."( 144)
For priests, as ministers of sacred things, are first and foremost ministers of
the sacrifice of the Mass:( 145) The role is utterly irreplaceable,
because without the priest there can be no eucharistic offering.
This explains the essential importance of
the Eucharist for the priest's life and ministry and, as a result, in the
spiritual formation of candidates for the priesthood. To be utterly frank and
clear, I would like to say once again: "It is fitting that seminarians
take part every day in the eucharistic celebration, in such a way that
afterward they will take up as a rule of their priestly life this daily celebration.
They should, moreover, be trained to consider the eucharistic celebration as
the essential moment of their day, in which they will take an active part and
at which they will never be satisfied with a merely habitual attendance.
Finally, candidates to the priesthood will be trained to share in the intimate
dispositions which the Eucharist fosters: gratitude for heavenly benefits
received, because the Eucharist is thanksgiving; an attitude of self -
offering, which will impel them to unite the offering of themselves to the
eucharistic offering of Christ; charity nourished by a sacrament which is a
sign of unity and sharing; the yearning to contemplate and bow in adoration
before Christ, who is really present under the eucharistic species."( 146)
It is necessary and very urgent to
rediscover within spiritual formation the beauty and joy of the sacrament of
penance. In a culture which -- through renewed and more subtle forms of self
justification -- runs the fatal risk of losing the "sense of sin" and,
as a result, the consoling joy of the plea for forgiveness (cf. Ps. 51:14) and
of meeting God who is "rich in mercy" (Eph. 2:4), it is vital to
educate future priests to have the virtue of penance, which the Church wisely
nourishes in her celebrations and in the seasons of the liturgical year, and
which finds its fullness in the sacrament of reconciliation. From it flow the
sense of asceticism and interior discipline, a spirit of sacrifice and self -
denial, the acceptance of hard work and of the cross. These are elements of the
spiritual life which often prove to be particularly arduous for many candidates
for the priesthood who have grown up in relatively comfortable and affluent
circumstances and have been made less inclined and open to these very elements
by the models of behavior and ideals transmitted by the mass media; but this
also happens in countries where the conditions of life are poorer and young
people live in more austere situations. For this reason, but above all in order
to put into practice the "radical self - giving" proper to the priest
following the example of Christ the good shepherd, the synod fathers wrote:
"It is necessary to inculcate the meaning of the cross, which is at the
heart of the paschal mystery. Through this identification with Christ
crucified, as a slave, the world can rediscover the value of austerity, of
suffering and also of martyrdom within the present culture, which is imbued
with secularism, greed and hedonism."( 147)
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