74. Ongoing formation helps priests, within the
Church as "communion," to deepen their awareness that their ministry
is ultimately aimed at gathering together the family of God as a brotherhood
inspired by charity and to lead it to the Father through Christ in the Holy
Spirit.( 219)
The priest should grow in awareness of the
deep communion uniting him to the People of God: He is not only "in the
forefront of" the Church, but above all "in" the Church. He is a
brother among brothers. By baptism, which marks him with the dignity and
freedom of the children of God in the only begotten Son, the priest is a member
of the one body of Christ (cf. Eph. 4:16). His consciousness of this communion
leads to a need to awaken and deepen co - responsibility in the one common
mission of salvation, with a prompt and heartfelt esteem for all the charisms
and tasks which the Spirit gives believers for the building up of the Church.
It is above all in the exercise of the pastoral ministry, directed by its very
nature to the good of the People of God, that the priest must live and give
witness to his profound communion with all. As Pope Paul VI wrote:
"We must become brothers to all at the very same time as we wish to be
their shepherds, fathers and teachers. The climate of dialogue is friendship.
Indeed it is service."( 220)
More specifically, the priest is called to
deepen his awareness of being a member of the particular church in which he is
incardinated, joined by a bond that is juridical, spiritual and pastoral. This
awareness presupposes a particular love for his own church and it makes that
love grow. This is truly the living and permanent goal of the pastoral charity which
should accompany the life of the priest and lead him to share in the history or
life experience of this same particular church, in its riches and in its
weaknesses, in its difficulties and in its hopes, working in it for its growth.
And thus to feel himself both enriched by the particular church and actively
involved in building it up, carrying on -- as an individual and together with
other priests -- that pastoral involvement typical of his brother priests who
have gone before him. A necessary requirement of this pastoral charity toward
one's own particular church and its future ministry is the concern which the
priest should have to find, so to speak, someone to replace him in the
priesthood.
The priest must grow in his awareness of the
communion existing between the various particular churches, a communion rooted
in their very being as churches which make present in various places Christ's
one universal Church. This awareness of the communion of the particular
churches will foster an "exchange of gifts," beginning with living
and personal gifts, such as priests themselves. There should be a readiness,
indeed a generous commitment, to provide for a fair distribution of clergy. (221)
Among these particular churches, those should be kept in mind which, because
they are "deprived of freedom, cannot have their own vocations," as
well as those "churches which have emerged recently from persecution and
poor churches which have been given help already for many years and from many
sources with great - hearted brotherliness and still receive help.( 222)
Within the ecclesial communion, the priest is called in particular to grow,
thanks to his ongoing formation, in and with his own presbyterate in union with
his bishop. The presbyterate, in the fullness of its truth, is a mysterium: It
is in fact a supernatural reality because it is rooted in the sacrament of holy
orders. This is its source and origin. This is its "place" of birth
and of its growth. Indeed, "priests by means of the sacrament of orders are
tied with a personal and indissoluble bond to Christ the one priest. The
sacrament of holy orders is conferred upon each of them as individuals, but
they are inserted into the communion of the presbyterate united with the bishop
(Lumen Gentium, 28; Presbyterorum Ordinis, 7 and 8)."( 223)
This sacramental origin is reflected and
continued in the sphere of priestly ministry: from mysterium to ministerium.
"Unity among the priests with the bishop and among themselves is not
something added from the outside to the nature of their service, but expresses
its essence inasmuch as it is the care of Christ the priest for the people
gathered in the unity of the Blessed Trinity."( 224) This unity
among priests, lived in a spirit of pastoral charity, makes priests witnesses
of Jesus Christ, who prayed to the Father" that they may all be one"
(Jn. 17:21).
The presbyterate thus appears as a true
family, as a fraternity whose ties do not arise from flesh and blood but from
the grace of holy orders. This grace takes up and elevates the human and
psychological bonds of affection and friendship, as well as the spiritual bonds
which exist between priests. It is a grace that grows ever greater and finds
expression in the most varied forms of mutual assistance, spiritual and
material as well. Priestly fraternity excludes no one. However it can and
should have its preferences, those of the Gospel, reserved for those who have
greatest need of help and encouragement. This fraternity "takes special
care of the young priests, maintains a kind and fraternal dialogue with those
of the middle and older age groups, and with those who for whatever reasons are
facing difficulties, as for those priests who have given up this way of life or
are not following it at this time, this brotherhood does not forget them but
follows them all the more with fraternal solicitude."( 225)
Religious clergy who live and work in a
particular church also belong to the one presbyterate, albeit under a different
title. Their presence is a source of enrichment for all priests. The different
particular charisms which they live, while challenging all priests to grow in
the understanding of the priesthood itself, help to encourage and promote
ongoing priestly formation. The gift of religious life, in the framework of the
diocese, when accompanied by genuine esteem and rightful respect for the
particular features of each institute and each spiritual tradition, broadens
the horizon of Christian witness and contributes in various ways to an
enrichment of priestly spirituality, above all with regard to the proper
relationship and interplay between the values of the particular church and
those of the whole People of God. For their part, religious will be concerned
to ensure a spirit of true ecclesial communion, a genuine participation in the
progress of the diocese and the pastoral decisions of the bishop, generously
putting their own charism at the service of building up everyone; in charity.( 226)
Finally, it is in the context of the Church
as communion and in the context of the presbyterate that we can best discuss
the problem of priestly loneliness treated by the synod fathers. There is a
loneliness which all priests experience and which is completely normal. But
there is another loneliness which is the product of various difficulties and which
in turn creates further difficulties. With regard to the latter, "active
participation in the diocesan presbyterate, regular contact with the bishop and
with the other priests, mutual cooperation, common life or fraternal dealings
between priests, as also friendship and good relations with the lay faithful
who are active in parish life are very useful means to overcome the negative
effects of loneliness which the priest can sometimes experience."( 227)
Loneliness does not however create only
difficulties; it can also offer positive opportunities for the priestly life:
"When it is accepted in a spirit of oblation and is seen as an opportunity
for greater intimacy with Jesus Christ the Lord, solitude can be an opportunity
for prayer and study, as also a help for sanctification and also for human
growth."( 228)
It should be added that a certain type of
solitude is a necessary element in ongoing formation. Jesus often went off
alone to pray (cf. Mt. 14:23). The ability to handle a healthy solitude is
indispensable for caring for one's interior life. Here we are speaking of a
solitude filled with the presence of the Lord who puts us in contact with the
Father, in the light of the Spirit. In this regard, concern for silence and
looking for places and times of "desert" are necessary for the
priest's permanent formation, whether in the intellectual, spiritual or
pastoral areas. In this regard too, it can be said that those unable to have a
positive experience of their own solitude are incapable of genuine and fraternal
fellowship.
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