72. Fuller development is first required in the human
aspect of priestly formation. Through his daily contact with people, his
sharing ill their daily lives, the priest needs to develop and sharpen his
human sensitivity so as to understand more clearly their needs, respond to
their demands, perceive their unvoiced questions and share the hopes and
expectations, the joys and burdens which are part of life: Thus he will be able
to meet and enter into dialogue with all people. In particular, through coming
to know and share, through making his own the human experience Or suffering in
its many different manifestations, from poverty to illness, from rejection to
ignorance, loneliness and material or moral poverty, the priest can cultivate
his own humanity and make it all the more genuine and clearly apparent by his
increasingly ardent love for his fellow men and women.
In this task of bringing his human formation
to maturity, the priest receives special assistance from the grace of Jesus
Christ. The charity of the good shepherd was revealed not only by his gift of
salvation to mankind, but also by his desire to share our life: Thus, the Word
who became "flesh" (cf. Jn. 1:14) desired to know joy and suffering,
to experience weariness, to share feelings, to console sadness. Living as a man
among and with men, Jesus Christ offers the most complete, genuine and perfect
expression of what it means to be human. We see him celebrating at the wedding
feast of Cana, a friend's family, moved by the hungry crowd who follow him,
giving sick or even dead children back to their parents, weeping for the death
of Lazarus, and so on.
The People of God should be able to say
about the priest, who has increasingly matured in human sensitivity, something
similar to what we read about Jesus in the letter to the Hebrews: "For we
have not a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one
who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sinning"
(Heb. 4:15).
The formation of the priest in its spiritual
dimension is required by the new Gospel life to which he has been called in a
specific way by the Holy Spirit, poured out in the sacrament of holy orders.
The Spirit, by consecrating the priest and configuring him to Jesus Christ,
head and shepherd, creates a bond which, located in the priest's very being,
demands to be assimilated and lived out in a personal, free and conscious way
through an ever richer communion of life and love and an ever broader and more
radical sharing in the feelings and attitudes of Jesus Christ. In this bond
between the Lord Jesus and the priest, an ontological and psychological bond, a
sacramental and moral bond, is the foundation and likewise the power for that
"life according to the Spirit" and that "radicalism of the
Gospel" to which every priest is called today and which is fostered by
ongoing formation in its spiritual aspect. This formation proves necessary also
for the priestly ministry to be genuine and spiritually fruitful. "Are you
exercising the care of souls?" St. Charles Borromeo once asked in a talk
to priests. And he went on to say: "Do not thereby neglect yourself. Do
not give yourself to others to such an extent that nothing is left of yourself
for yourself. You should certainly keep in mind the souls whose pastor you are,
but without forgetting yourself. My brothers, do not forget that there is
nothing so necessary to all churchmen that the meditation which precedes,
accompanies and follows all our actions: I will sing, says the prophet, and I
will meditate (cf. Ps. 100:1). If you administer the sacraments, my brother,
meditate upon what you are doing. If you celebrate Mass, meditate on what you
are offering. If you recite the psalms in choir, meditate to whom and of what
you are speaking. If you are guiding souls, meditate in whose blood they have
been cleansed. And let all be done among you in charity (1 Cor. 16:14). Thus we
will be able to overcome the difficulties we meet, countless as they are, each
day. In any event, this is what is demanded of us by the task entrusted to us.
If we act thus, we will find the strength to give birth to Christ in ourselves
and in others."( 216)
The priest's prayer life in particular needs
to be continually "reformed." Experience teaches that in prayer one
cannot live off past gains. Every day we need not only to renew our external
fidelity to times of prayer, especially those devoted to the celebration of the
Liturgy of the Hours and those left to personal choice and not reinforced by
fixed times of liturgical service, but also to strive constantly for the
experience of a genuine personal encounter with Jesus, a trusting dialogue with
the Father and a deep experience of the Spirit.
What the apostle Paul says of all
Christians, that they must attain "to mature manhood, to the measure of
the stature of the fullness of Christ" (Eph. 4:13), can be applied
specifically to priests, who are called to the perfection of charity and
therefore to holiness, even more so because their pastoral ministry itself
demands that they be living models for all the faithful.
The intellectual dimension of formation
likewise needs to be continually fostered through the priest's entire life,
especially by a commitment to study and a serious and disciplined familiarity
with modern culture. As one who shares in the prophetic mission of Jesus and is
part of the mystery of the Church, the teacher of truth, the priest is called
to reveal to others, in Jesus Christ, the true face of God, and as a result the
true face of humanity."( 217) This demands that the priest himself
seek God's face and contemplate it with loving veneration (cf. Ps. 26:7; 41:2).
Only thus will he be able to make others know him. In particular, continuing
theological study is necessary if the priest is to faithfully carry out the
ministry of the word, proclaiming it clearly and without ambiguity,
distinguishing it from mere human opinions, no matter how renowned and
widespread these might be. Thus he will be able to stand at the service of the
People of God, helping them to give an account, to all who ask, of their
Christian hope (cf. 1 Pt. 3:15). Furthermore, the priest "in applying
himself conscientiously and diligently to theological study is in a position to
assimilate the genuine richness of the Church in a sure and personal way.
Therefore, he can faithfully discharge the mission which is incumbent on him
when responding to difficulties about authentic Catholic doctrine and overcome
the inclination, both in himself and others, which leads to dissent and
negative attitudes toward the magisterium and sacred tradition."( 218)
The pastoral aspect of ongoing formation is
well expressed by the words of the apostle Peter: "As each has received a
gift, employ it for one another, as good stewards of God's varied grace"
(1 Pt. 4:10). If he is to live daily according to the graces he has received,
the priest must be ever more open to accepting the pastoral charity of Jesus
Christ granted him by Christ's Spirit in the sacrament he has received. Just as
all the Lord's activity was the fruit and sign of pastoral charity, so should
the priest's ministerial activity be. Pastoral charity is a gift, but it is
likewise a task, a grace and a responsibility to which we must be faithful. We
have, therefore, to welcome it and live out its dynamism even to its most radical
demands. This pastoral charity, as has been said, impels the priest and
stimulates him to become ever better acquainted with the real situation of the
men and women to whom he is sent, to discern the call of the Spirit in the
historical circumstances in which he finds himself and to seek the most
suitable methods and the most useful forms for carrying out his ministry today.
Thus pastoral charity encourages and sustains the priest's human efforts for
pastoral activity that is relevant, credible and effective. But this demands
some kind of permanent pastoral formation.
The path toward maturity does not simply
demand that the priest deepen the different aspects of his formation. It also
demands above all that he be able to combine ever more harmoniously all these
aspects, gradually achieving their inner unity. This will be made possible by
pastoral charity. Indeed, pastoral charity not only coordinates and unifies the
diverse aspects, but it makes them more specific, marking them out as aspects
of the formation of the priest as such, that is, of the priest as a clear and
living image, a minister of Jesus the good shepherd.
Ongoing formation helps the priest to
overcome the temptation to reduce his ministry to an activism which becomes an
end in itself, to the provision of impersonal services, even if these are
spiritual or sacred, or to a businesslike function which he carries out for the
Church. Only ongoing formation enables the priest to safeguard with vigilant
love the "mystery" which he bears within his heart for the good of
the Church and of mankind.
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