The Minor Seminary and Other Forms of Fostering
Vocations
63. As long experience shows, a priestly
vocation tends to show itself in the preadolescent years or in the earliest
years of youth. Even in people who decide to enter the seminary later on it is
not infrequent to find that God's call had been perceived much earlier. The
Church's history gives constant witness of calls which the Lord directs to
people of tender age. St. Thomas, for example, explains Jesus' special love for
St. John the Apostle "because of his tender age" and draws the
following conclusion: "This explains that God loves in a special way those
who give themselves to his service from their earliest youth."( 198)
The Church looks after these seeds of
vocations sown in the hearts of children by means of the institution of minor
seminaries, providing a careful though preliminary discernment and
accompaniment. In a number of parts of the world, these seminaries continue to
carry out a valuable educational work, the aim of which is to protect and
develop the seeds of a priestly vocation so that the students may more easily
recognize it and be in a better position to respond to it. The educational goal
of such seminaries tends to favor in a timely and gradual way the human,
cultural and spiritual formation which will lead the young person to embark on
the path of the major seminary with an adequate and solid foundation. "To
be prepared to follow Christ the Redeemer with generous souls and pure
hearts": This is the purpose of the minor seminary as indicated by the
Council in the decree Optatam Totius, which thus outlines its educational
aspect: The students "under the fatherly supervision of the superiors --
the parents too playing their appropriate part -- should lead lives suited to
the age, mentality and development of young people. Their way of life should be
fully in keeping with the standards of sound psychology and should include
suitable experience of the ordinary affairs of daily life and contact with
their own families."( 199)
The minor seminary can also be in the
diocese a reference point for vocation work, with suitable forms of welcome and
the offering of opportunities for information to adolescents who are looking
into the possibility of a vocation or who, having already made up their mind to
follow their vocation, have to delay entry into the seminary for various family
or educational reasons.
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