Serving the Church and the World
16. The priest's fundamental relationship is
to Jesus Christ, head and shepherd. Indeed, the priest participates in a
specific and authoritative way in the "consecration/anointing" and in
the "mission" of Christ (cf. Lk. 4:18-19). But intimately linked to
this relationship is the priest's relationship with the Church. It is not a
question of "relations" which are merely juxtaposed, but rather of
ones which are interiorly united in a kind of mutual immanence. The priest's
relation to the Church is inscribed in the very relation which the priest has
to Christ, such that the "sacramental representation" to Christ
serves as the basis and inspiration for the relation of the priest to the
Church.
In this sense the synod fathers wrote:
"Inasmuch as he represents Christ the head, shepherd and spouse of the
Church, the priest is placed not only in the Church but also in the forefront
of the Church. The priesthood, along with the word of God and the sacramental
signs which it serves, belongs to the constitutive elements of the Church. The
ministry of the priest is entirely on behalf of the Church; it aims at
promoting the exercise of the common priesthood of the entire People of God; it
is ordered not only to the particular Church but also to the universal Church
(Presbyterorum Ordinis, 10), in communion with the bishop, with Peter and under
Peter. Through the priesthood of the bishop, the priesthood of the second order
is incorporated in the apostolic structure of the Church. In this way priests,
like the apostles, act as ambassadors of Christ (cf. 2 Cor. 5:20). This is the
basis of the missionary character of every priest."( 28)
Therefore, the ordained ministry arises with
the Church and has in bishops, and in priests who are related to and are in
communion with them, a particular relation to the original ministry of the
apostles -- to which it truly "succeeds" -- even though with regard
to the latter it assumes different forms.
Consequently, the ordained priesthood ought
not to be thought of as existing prior to the Church, because it is totally at
the service of the Church. Nor should it be considered as posterior to the
ecclesial community, as if the Church could be imagined as already established
without this priesthood.
The relation of the priest to Jesus Christ,
and in him to his Church, is found in the very being of the priest by virtue of
his sacramental consecration/anointing and in his activity, that is, in his
mission or ministry. In particular, "the priest minister is the servant of
Christ present in the Church as mystery, communion and mission. In virtue of
his participation in the 'anointing' and 'mission' of Christ, the priest can
continue Christ's prayer, word, sacrifice and salvific action in the Church. In
this way, the priest is a servant of the Church as mystery because he actuates
the Church's sacramental signs of the presence of the risen Christ. He is a
servant of the Church as communion because -- in union with the bishop and
closely related to the presbyterate -- he builds up the unity of the Church
community in the harmony of diverse vocations, charisms and services. Finally,
the priest is a servant to the Church as mission because he makes the community
a herald and witness of the Gospel."( 29)
Thus, by his very nature and sacramental
mission, the priest appears in the structure of the Church as a sign of the
absolute priority and gratuitousness of the grace given to the Church by the
risen Christ. Through the ministerial priesthood the Church becomes aware in
faith that her being comes not from herself but from the grace of Christ in the
Holy Spirit. The apostles and their successors, inasmuch as they exercise an
authority which comes to them from Christ, the head and shepherd, are placed --
with their ministry -- in the fore front of the Church as a visible
continuation and sacramental sign of Christ in his own position before the
Church and the world, as the enduring and ever new source of salvation, he
"who is head of the Church, his body, and is himself its savior"
(Eph. 5:23).
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