The Seminary as an Educational Community
66. The educational community of the
seminary is built round the various people involved in formation: the rector,
the spiritual father or spiritual director, the superiors and professors. These
people should feel profoundly united to the bishop, whom they represent in
their different roles and in various ways. They should also maintain among
themselves a frank and genuine communion. The unity of the educators not only
helps the educational program to be put into practice properly, but also and
above all it offers candidates for the priesthood a significant example and a
practical introduction to that ecclesial communion which is a fundamental value
of Christian living and of the pastoral ministry.
It is evident that much of the effectiveness
of the training offered depends on the maturity and strength of personality of
those entrusted with formation, both from the human and from the Gospel points
of view. And so it is especially important both to select them carefully and to
encourage them to become ever more suitable for carrying out the task entrusted
to them. The synod fathers were very aware that the future of the preparation
of candidates for the priesthood depends on the choice and formation of those
entrusted with the work of formation, and so they describe at length the
qualities sought for in them. Specifically they wrote: "The task of
formation of candidates for the priesthood requires not only a certain special
preparation of those to whom this work is entrusted, one that is professional,
pedagogical, spiritual, human and theological, but also a spirit of communion
and of cooperating together to carry out the program, so that the unity of the
pastoral action of the seminary is always maintained under the leadership of
the rector. The body of formation personnel should witness to a truly
evangelical lifestyle and total dedication to the Lord. It should enjoy a
certain stability, and its members as a rule should live in the seminary
community. They should be intimately joined to the bishop, who is the first one
responsible for the formation of the priests."( 203)
The bishops first of all should feel their
grave responsibility for the formation of those who have been given the task of
educating future priests. For this ministry, priests of exemplary life should
be chosen, men with a number of qualities: "human and spiritual maturity,
pastoral experience, professional competence, stability in their own vocation,
a capacity to work with others, serious preparation in those human sciences
(psychology especially) which relate to their office, a knowledge of how to
work in groups."( 204)
While safeguarding the distinctions between
internal and external forum, and maintaining a suitable freedom in the choice
of confessors and the prudence and discretion which should be a feature of the
ministry of the spiritual director, the priestly community of teachers should
feel united in the responsibility of educating candidates for the priesthood.
It is their duty, always with regard to the authoritative evaluation made by
the bishop and the rector together, to foster and verify in the first place the
suitability of the candidates in regard to their spiritual, human and
intellectual endowments, above all in regard to their spirit of prayer, their
deep assimilation of the doctrine of the faith, their capacity for true
fraternity and the charism of celibacy.( 205)
Bearing in mind (as the synod fathers have
indeed done) the indications of the exhortation Christifideles Laici(206)
and of the apostolic letter Mulieris Dignitatem, which stress the suitability
of a healthy influence of lay spirituality and of the charism of femininity in
every educational itinerary, it is worthwhile to involve, in ways that are
prudent and adapted to the different cultural contexts, the cooperation also of
lay faithful, both men and women, in the work of training future priests. They
are to be selected with care, within the framework of Church laws and according
to their particular charisms and proven competence. We can expect beneficial
fruits from their cooperation, provided it is suitably coordinated and
integrated in the primary educational responsibilities of those entrusted with
the formation of future priests, fruits for a balanced growth of the sense of
the Church and a more precise perception of what it is to be a priest on the
part of the candidates to the priesthood.( 207)
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