II. The Setting of Priestly Formation
The Major Seminary - A Formation Community
60. The need for the major seminary -- and
by analogy for the religious house -- for the formation of candidates for
priesthood, was affirmed with authority by the Second Vatican Council (188)
and has been reaffirmed by the synod as follows: "The institution of the
major seminary, as the best place for formation, is to be certainly reaffirmed
as the normal place, in the material sense as well, for a community and
hierarchical life, indeed as the proper home for the formation of candidates
for the priesthood, with superiors who are truly dedicated to this service.
This institution has produced many good results down the ages and continues to
do so all over the world."( 189) The seminary can be seen as a
place and a period in life. But it is above all an educational community in
progress: It is a community established by the bishop to offer to those called
by the Lord to serve as apostles the possibility of re - living the experience
of formation which our Lord provided for the Twelve. In fact, the Gospels present
a prolonged and intimate sharing of life with Jesus as a necessary premise for
the apostolic ministry. Such an experience demands of the Twelve the practice
of detachment in a particularly clear and specific fashion, a detachment that
in some way is demanded of all the disciples, a detachment from their roots,
from their usual work, from their nearest and dearest (cf. Mk. 1:16-20; 10:28;
Lk. 9:23, 57-62; 14:25-27). On several occasions we have referred to the Marcan
tradition which stresses the deep link that unites the apostles to Christ and
to one another: Before being sent out to preach and to heal, they are called
"to be with him" (Mk. 3:14).
In its deepest identity the seminary is
called to be, in its own way, a continuation in the Church of the apostolic
community gathered about Jesus, listening to his word, proceeding toward the
Easter experience, awaiting the gift of the Spirit for the mission. Such an
identity constitutes the normative ideal which stimulates the seminary in the
many diverse forms and varied aspects which it assumes historically as a human
institution, to find a concrete realization, faithful to the Gospel values from
which it takes its inspiration and able to respond to the situations and needs
of the times.
The seminary is, in itself, an original
experience of the Church's life. In it the bishop is present through the
ministry of the rector and the service of co - responsibility and communion
fostered by him with the other teachers, for the sake of the pastoral and
apostolic growth of the students. The various members of the seminary
community, gathered by the Spirit into a single brotherhood, cooperate, each
according to his own gift in the growth of all in faith and charity so that
they may prepare suitably for the priesthood and so prolong in the Church and
in history the saving presence of Jesus Christ, the good shepherd.
The human point of view, the major seminary
should strive to become "a community built on deep friendship and charity
so that it can be considered a true family living in joy."( 190)
As a Christian institution, the seminary should become -- as the synod fathers
continue -- an "ecclesial community," a "community of the
disciples of the Lord in which the one same liturgy (which imbues life with a
spirit of prayer) is celebrated; a community molded daily in the reading and
meditation of the word of God and with the sacrament of the Eucharist, and in
the practice of fraternal charity and justice; a community in which, as its
life and the life each of its members progresses, there shine forth the Spirit
of Christ and love for the Church."( 191) This ecclesial aspect of
the seminary is confirmed and concretized by the fathers when they add:
"As an ecclesial community, be it diocesan or interdiocesan, or even
religious, the seminary should nourish the meaning of communion between the
candidates and their bishop and presbyterate, in such a way that they share in
their hopes and anxieties and learn to extend this openness to the needs of the
universal Church."( 192)
It is essential for the formation of
candidates for the priesthood and the pastoral ministry, which by its very
nature is ecclesial, that the seminary should be experienced not as something
external and superficial, or simply a place in which to live and study, but in
an interior and profound way. It should be experienced as a community, a
specifically ecclesial community, a community that relives the experience of
the group of Twelve who were united to Jesus.( 193)
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