32. Membership in and dedication to a particular
church does not limit the activity and life of the presbyterate to that church:
A restriction of this sort is not possible, given the very nature both of the
particular church(87) and of the priestly ministry. In this regard the
Council teaches that "the spiritual gift which priests received at their
ordination prepares them not for any limited or narrow mission but for the
widest scope of the universal mission of salvation 'to the end of the earth'
(Acts 1:8). For every priestly ministry shares in the universality of the
mission entrusted by Christ to his apostles."( 88)
It thus follows that the spiritual life of
the priest should be profoundly marked by a missionary zeal and dynamism. In
the exercise of their ministry and the witness of their lives, priests have the
duty to form the community entrusted to them as a truly missionary community.
As I wrote in the encyclical Redemptoris Missio, "all priests must have
the mind and heart of missionaries open to the needs of the Church and the
world, with concern for those farthest away and especially for the non -
Christian groups in their own area. They should have at heart, in their prayers
and particularly at the eucharistic sacrifice, the concern of the whole Church
for all of humanity."( 89)
If the lives of priests are generously
inspired by this missionary spirit, it will be easier to respond to that
increasingly serious demand of the Church today which arises from the unequal
distribution of the clergy. In this regard, the Council was both quite clear
and forceful: "Let priests remember then that they must have at heart the
care of all the churches. Hence priests belonging to dioceses which are rich in
vocations should show themselves willing and ready, with the permission or at
the urging of their own bishop, to exercise their ministry in other regions,
missions or activities which suffer from a shortage of clergy."( 90)
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