Communities of Origin and Associations and Youth
Movements
68. The communities from which the candidate
for the priesthood comes continue, albeit with the necessary detachment which
is involved by the choice of a vocation, to bear considerable influence on the
formation of the future priest. They should therefore be aware of their
specific share of responsibility.
Let us mention first of all the family:
Christian parents, as also brothers and sisters and the other members of the
family, should never seek to call back the future priest within the narrow
confines of a too human (if not worldly) logic, no matter how supported by
sincere affection that logic may be (cf. Mk. 3 :20-21, 31-35). Instead, driven
by the same desire "to fulfill the will of God," they should
accompany the formative journey with prayer, respect, the good example of the
domestic virtues and spiritual and material help, especially in difficult
moments. Experience teaches that, in so many cases, this multiple help has
proved decisive for candidates for the priesthood. Even in the case of parents
or relatives who are indifferent or opposed to the choice of a vocation, a
clear and calm facing of the situation and the encouragement which derives from
it can be a great help to the deeper and more determined maturing of a priestly
vocation.
Closely linked with the families is the
parish community. Both it and the family are connected in education in the
faith. Often, afterward, the parish, with its specific pastoral care for young
people and vocations, supplements the family's role. Above all, inasmuch as it
is the most immediate local expression of the mystery of the Church, the parish
offers an original and especially valuable contribution to the formation of a
future priest. The parish community should continue to feel that the young man
on his way to the priesthood is a living part of itself; it should accompany
him with its prayer, give him a cordial welcome during the holiday periods,
respect and encourage him to form himself in his identity as a priest, and
offer him suitable opportunities and strong encouragement to try out his
vocation for the priestly mission.
Associations and youth movements, which are
a sign and confirmation of the vitality which the Spirit guarantees to the
Church, can and should contribute also to the formation of candidates for the
priesthood, in particular of those who are the product of the Christian,
spiritual and apostolic experience of these groups. Young people who have
received their basic formation in such groups and look to them for their
experience of the Church should not feel they are being asked to uproot
themselves from their past or to break their links with the environment which
has contributed to their decision to respond to their vocation, nor should they
erase the characteristic traits of the spirituality which they have learned and
lived there in all that they contain that is good, edifying and rich.( 210)
For them too, this environment from which they come continues to be a source of
help and support on the path of formation toward the priesthood.
The Spirit offers to many young people
opportunities to be educated in the faith and to grow as Christians and as
members of the Church through many kinds of groups, movements and associations
inspired in different ways by the Gospel message. These should be felt and
lived as a nourishing gift of a soul within the institution and at its service.
A movement or a particular spirituality "is not an alternative structure
to the institution. It is rather a source of a presence which constantly
regenerates the existential and historical authenticity of the institution. The
priest should therefore find within a movement the light and warmth which make
him capable of fidelity to his bishop and which make him ready for the duties
of the institution and mindful of ecclesiastical discipline, thus making the
reality of his faith more fertile and his faithfulness more joyful."( 211)
It is therefore necessary, in the new
community of the seminary in which they are gathered by the bishop, that young
people coming from associations and ecclesial movements should learn
"respect for other spiritual paths and a spirit of dialogue and
cooperation," should take in genuinely and sincerely the indications for
their training imparted by the bishop and the teachers in the seminary,
abandoning themselves with real confidence to their guidance and
assessments."' Such an attitude will prepare and in some way anticipate a
genuine priestly choice to serve the entire People of God in the fraternal
communion of the presbyterate and in obedience to the bishop.
The fact that seminarians and diocesan
priests take part in particular spiritualities or ecclesial groupings is
indeed, in itself, a factor which helps growth and priestly fraternity. Such
participation, however, should not be an obstacle, but rather a help to the
ministry and spiritual life which are proper to the diocesan priest, who
"will always remain the shepherd of all. Not only is he a 'permanent'
shepherd, available to all, but he presides over the gathering of all so that
all may find the welcome which they have a right to expect in the community and
in the Eucharist that unites them, whatever be their religious sensibility or
pastoral commitment."( 213)
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