In the Church as Mystery, Communion and Mission
12. "The priest's identity," as
the synod fathers wrote, "like every Christian identity, has its source in
the Blessed Trinity,"( 20) which is revealed and is communicated
to people in Christ, establishing, in him and through the Spirit, the Church as
"the seed and the beginning of the kingdom."( 21) The
apostolic exhortation Christifideles Laici, summarizing the Council's teaching,
presents the Church as mystery, communion and mission: "She is mystery
because the very life and love of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are the gift
gratuitously offered to all those who are born of water and the Spirit (cf. Jn.
3:5) and called to relive the very communion of God and to manifest it and
communicate it in history [mission]."( 22)
It is within the Church's mystery, as a
mystery of Trinitarian communion in missionary tension, that every Christian
identity is revealed, and likewise the specific identity of the priest and his
ministry. Indeed, the priest, by virtue of the consecration which he receives
in the sacrament of orders, is sent forth by the Father through the
mediatorship of Jesus Christ, to whom he is configured in a special way as head
and shepherd of his people, in order to live and work by the power of the Holy
Spirit in service of the Church and for the salvation of the world.( 23)
In this way the fundamentally
"relational" dimension of priestly identity can be understood.
Through the priesthood which arises from the depths of the ineffable mystery of
God, that is, from the love of the Father, the grace of Jesus Christ and the
Holy Spirit's gift of unity, the priest sacramentally enters into communion
with the bishop and with other priests(24) in order to serve the People
of God who are the Church and to draw all mankind to Christ in accordance with
the Lord's prayer: "Holy Father, keep them in your name, which you have
given me, that they may be one, even as we are one...even as you, Father, are
in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world may believe
that you have sent me" (Jn. 17:11, 21).
Consequently, the nature and mission of the
ministerial priesthood cannot be defined except through this multiple and rich
interconnection of relationships which arise from the Blessed Trinity and are
prolonged in the communion of the Church, as a sign and instrument of Christ,
of communion with God and of the unity of all humanity.( 25) In this
context the ecclesiology of communion becomes decisive for understanding the
identity of the priest, his essential dignity, and his vocation and mission
among the People of God and in the world. Reference to the Church is therefore
necessary, even if not primary, in defining the identity of the priest. As a
mystery, the Church is essentially related to Jesus Christ. She is his
fullness, his body, his spouse. She is the "sign" and living
"memorial" of his permanent presence and activity in our midst and on
our behalf. The priest finds the full truth of his identity in being a
derivation, a specific participation in and continuation of Christ himself, the
one high priest of the new and eternal covenant. The priest is a living and
transparent image of Christ the priest. The priesthood of Christ, the
expression of his absolute "newness" in salvation history,
constitutes the one source and essential model of the priesthood shared by all
Christians and the priest in particular. Reference to Christ is thus the absolutely
necessary key for understanding the reality of priesthood.
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