II.
PRIESTLY FORMATION
60. Our reflection on the
beauty, importance and intimate fittingness of holy virginity for the ministers
of Christ and His Church makes it incumbent on those who hold the office of
teacher and pastor of that Church to take steps to assure and promote its
positive observance, from the first moment of preparation to receive such a
precious gift.
In fact, the difficulties and problems which
make the observance of chastity very painful or quite impossible for some,
spring, not infrequently, from a type of priestly formation which, given the
great changes of these last years, is no longer completely adequate for the
formation of a personality worthy of a "man of God." 114
Carrying
Out the Council's Norms
61. The Second Vatican
Council has already indicated wise criteria and guidelines to this end. They
are in conformity with the progress of psychology and pedagogy, as well as with
the changed conditions of mankind and of contemporary society. 115 It
is Our wish that appropriate instructions be drawn up with the help of truly
qualified men, treating with all necessary detail the theme of chastity. They
should be sent out as soon as possible to provide competent and timely
assistance to those who have the great responsibility within the Church of
preparing future priests.
Personal
Response to the Divine Vocation
62. The priesthood is a
ministry instituted by Christ for the service of His Mystical Body which is the
Church. To her belongs the authority to admit to that priesthood those whom she
judges qualified—that is, those to whom God has given, along with other signs
of an ecclesiastical vocation, the gift of a consecrated celibacy. 116
In virtue of such a gift, confirmed by canon
law, the individual is called to respond with free judgment and total
dedication, adapting his own mind and outlook to the will of God who calls him.
Concretely, this divine calling manifests itself in a given individual with his
own definite personality structure which is not at all overpowered by grace. In
candidates for the priesthood, therefore, the sense of receiving this divine
gift should be cultivated; so too, a sense of responsibility in their meeting
with God, with the highest importance given to supernatural means.
63. It is likewise
necessary that exact account be taken of the physical and psychological state
of the candidate in order to guide and orient him toward the priestly ideal; so
a truly adequate formation should harmoniously coordinate grace and nature in
the man in whom one clearly sees the proper conditions and qualifications.
These conditions should be ascertained as soon as signs of his holy vocation
are first indicated—not hastily or superficially, but carefully, with the
assistance and aid of a doctor or a competent psychologist. A serious
investigation of hereditary factors should not be omitted.
Unsuitable
Candidates
64. Those who are
discovered to be unfit for physical, psychological or moral reasons should be
quickly removed from the path to the priesthood. Let educators appreciate that
this is one of their very grave duties. They must neither indulge in false
hopes and dangerous illusions nor permit the candidate to nourish these hopes
in any way, with resultant damage to himself or to the Church. The life of the
celibate priest, which engages the whole man so totally and so delicately,
excludes in fact those of insufficient physical, psychic and moral
qualifications. Nor should anyone pretend that grace supplies for the defects
of nature in such a man.
65. After the capability
of a man has been ascertained and he has been admitted to the course of studies
leading to the goal of the priesthood, care should be taken for the progressive
development of a mature personality through physical, intellectual and moral
education directed toward the control and personal dominion of his temperament,
sentiments and passions.
The
Necessity of Discipline
66. This will be proved by
the firmness of the spirit with which he accepts the personal and community
type of discipline demanded by the priestly life. Such a regime, the lack or
deficiency of which is to be deplored because it exposes the candidate to grave
disorders, should not be borne only as an imposition from without. It should be
inculcated and implanted as an indispensable component within the context of
the spiritual life.
Personal
Initiative
67. The educator should
skillfully stimulate the young man to the evangelical virtue of sincerity
117 and to spontaneity by approving every good personal initiative, so
that the young man will come to know and properly evaluate himself, wisely
assume his own responsibilities, and train himself to that self-control which
is of such importance in priestly education.
68. The exercise of
authority, the principle of which should be maintained firmly, will be animated
by wise moderation and a pastoral attitude. It will be used in a climate of
dialogue and will be implemented in a gradual way which will afford the
educator an ever deepening understanding of the psychology of the young man,
and will appeal to personal conviction.
A
Free Choice
69. The complete education
of the candidate for the priesthood should be directed to help him acquire a
tranquil, convinced and free choice of the grave responsibilities which he must
assume in conscience before God and the Church. Ardor and generosity are
marvelous qualities of youth; illuminated and supported, they merit, along with
the blessing of the Lord, the admiration and confidence of the whole Church as
well as of all men. None of the real personal and social difficulties which
their choice will bring in its train should remain hidden to the young men, so
that their enthusiasm will not be superficial and illusory. At the same time it
will be right to highlight with at least equal truth and clarity the sublimity
of their choice, which, though it may lead on the one hand to a certain
physical and psychic void, nevertheless on the other brings with it an interior
richness capable of elevating the person most profoundly.
A
Demanding Asceticism
70. Young candidates for
the priesthood should be convinced that they cannot follow their difficult way
without a special type of asceticism proper to themselves and more demanding
than that which is required of the other faithful. It will be a demanding
asceticism but not a suffocating one which consists in the deliberate and
assiduous practice of those virtues which make a man a priest: self-denial in
the highest degree—an essential condition if one would follow Christ;
118 humility and obedience as expressions of internal truth and of an
ordered liberty; prudence, justice, courage and temperance—virtues without
which it is impossible for true and profound religious life to exist; a sense
of responsibility, fidelity and loyalty in the acceptance of one's obligations;
a balance between contemplation and action; detachment and a spirit of poverty,
which will give tone and vigor to evangelical freedom; chastity, the result of
a persevering struggle, harmonized with all the other natural and supernatural
virtues; a serene and secure contact with the world to whose service the young
man will dedicate himself for Christ and for His kingdom.
In such a way the aspirant to the priesthood
will acquire, with the help of a divine grace, a strong, mature and balanced
personality, a combination of inherited and acquired qualities, harmony of all
his powers in the light of the faith and in intimate union with Christ, whom he
has chosen for himself and for the ministry of salvation to the world.
Trial
Periods
71. However, to judge with
more certainty the young man's fitness for the priesthood and to have
successive proofs of his attained maturity on both the human and supernatural
levels—for "it is more difficult to conduct oneself correctly in the
service of souls because of dangers coming from outside" 119—it
will be advisable to have a preliminary trial period before the observance of
holy celibacy becomes something definitive and permanent through ordination to
the priesthood. 120
A
Gift to the Lord and His Church
72. Once moral certainty
has been obtained that the maturity of the candidate is sufficiently
guaranteed, he will be in a position to take on himself the heavy and sweet
burden of priestly chastity as a total gift of himself to the Lord and to His
Church.
In this way, the obligation of celibacy,
which the Church makes a condition of Holy Orders, is accepted by the candidate
through the influence of divine grace and with full reflection and liberty,
and, as is evident, not without the wise and prudent advice of competent
spiritual directors who are concerned not to impose the choice, but rather to
dispose the candidate to make it more consciously. Hence, in that solemn moment
when the candidate will decide once and for his whole life, he will not feel
the weight of an imposition from outside, but rather the interior joy that
accompanies a choice made for the love of Christ.
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