58. And so pastoral formation certainly cannot be
reduced to a mere apprenticeship, aiming to make the candidate familiar with
some pastoral techniques. The seminary which educates must seek really and
truly to initiate the candidate into the sensitivity of being a shepherd, in
the conscious and mature assumption of his responsibilities, in the interior
habit of evaluating problems and establishing priorities and looking for solutions
on the basis of honest motivations of faith and according to the theological
demands inherent in pastoral work.
Thanks to an initial and gradual experience
of ministry, future priests will be able to be inserted into the living
pastoral tradition of their particular church. They will learn to open the
horizon of their mind and heart to the missionary dimension of the Church's
life. They will get practice in some initial forms of cooperation with one
another and with the priests alongside whom they will be sent to work. These
priests have a considerably important role, in union with the seminary program,
in showing the candidates how they should go about pastoral work.
When it comes to choosing places and
services in which candidates can obtain their pastoral experience, the parish
should be given particular importance(182) for it is a living cell of
local and specialized pastoral work in which they will find themselves faced
with the kind of problems they will meet in their future ministry. The synod
fathers have proposed a number of concrete examples such as visits to the sick;
caring for immigrants, refugees and nomads; and various social works which can
be expressions of charitable zeal. Specifically, they write: "The priest
must be a witness of the charity of Christ himself who 'went about doing good'
(Acts 10:38). He must also be a visible sign of the solicitude of the Church
who is mother and teacher. And given that man today is affected by so many
hardships, especially those who are sunk in inhuman poverty, blind violence and
unjust power, it is necessary that the man of God who is to be equipped for
every good work (cf. 2 Tm. 3:17) should defend the rights and dignity of man.
Nevertheless, he should be careful not to adopt false ideologies, nor should he
forget, as he strives to promote its perfecting, that the only redemption of
the world is that effected by the cross of Christ."( 183)
These and other pastoral activities will
teach the future priest to live out as a "service" his own mission of
"authority" in the community, setting aside all attitudes of
superiority or of exercising a power if it is not simply that which is
justified by pastoral charity.
If the training is to be suitable, the
different experiences which candidates for the priesthood have should assume a
clear "ministerial" character and should be intimately linked with
all the demands that befit preparation to the priesthood and (certainly not
neglecting their studies) in relation to the services of the proclamation of
the word, of worship and of leadership. These services can become a specific
way of experiencing the ministries of lector, acolyte and deacon.
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