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| spiritual formation in seminaries
Congregation Document of Pope John Paul II
SPIRITUAL FORMATION IN SEMINARIES
TO ALL LOCAL ORDINARIES
The document entitled Ratio fundamentalis institutionis
sacerdotalis and, following this, the various national Rationes
produced by Bishop's Conferences have given to spiritual formation its
deserved place, namely, the most important of all.
However, there are many signs today which indicate that it might
be opportune and useful to reflect further and deeper on this matter.
We presume that people today are ready to accept such further
reflection and, with the help of God's grace, we expect rich fruit from
it.
After pointing out encouraging signs in this field, the present
circular letter aims not at producing a complete and systematic study,
but at calling the attention of seminary authorities to certain,
selected areas where immediate effort seems to be needed. At the
conclusion, a suggestion will be proposed that could be quite important
for the future of the priesthood in the Catholic Church.
I. INTRODUCTION
Providential Signs
The sign which we would like to point out first, since it has
made the greatest impression on us in the Sacred Congregation, is the
truly exceptional quality of the "Plans of Action for Vocations," which
we ventured to ask the bishops to prepare and which are arriving here
at a rate that we had never dared to expect. The climate of courageous
faith shown by the spiritual aspects of these "Plans" indicates that
the time might have arrived for some initiatives in the spiritual field
that will not be undertaken in vain. If these "Plans" put forward by
the diocese were concerned only or mainly with clever vocational
techniques, they would not justify this present circular letter.
However, the position that prayer occupies in them-always in the
forefront of every initiative and the animating force behind it-brings
evidence of the presence of grace. We are living in one of the
"favorable times" when generous commitments can be demanded.
Resurgence of Vocations
Moreover, projects and hopes are not the only things involved.
The widespread increase in the number of vocations throughout the world
confirms the presence of a providential activity which is bearing
fruit. Of course, many dioceses and even entire countries-although
these are in the minority-are still behind in this trend and are even a
source of worry. But, it is remarkable that in those places where the
upward trend is the strongest, and especially where it is most
unexpectedly vigorous, one often comes across the following
interpretation of the facts by the bishops: it is, first of all, to the
spiritual renewal of seminaries that the increase must be attributed.
This renewal has been sought and produced in different forms, but there
are certain common points to which we must return if we are to gather
any profit from these experiences and find our way forward.
The Urge To Pray
Another consideration cannot be ignored. Everyone today agrees
that recognition must be given to a real "urge to pray" more or less
everywhere in the Church and even outside of her. The number of
"centers" is almost beyond counting where people come to learn about
prayer, where they gather to pray and where they hope to find a
"teacher of prayer." People sometimes go to great lengths in order to
find such a person and run the almost certain risk of losing their way
and being disappointed. A new method needs only to be suggested
somewhere and immediately students are found who arrive ready to try it
out. But, whatever may be the spiritual qualities involved, whatever
may be the setbacks and errors, it is undeniable that there exists a
general and profound inclination to pray. In many ways this invitation
to prayer is receiving a worthy answer. But, do we realize sufficiently
the extent of this quest or the extraordinary opportunity that is being
offered to the Church for the progress of the Faith? We do, so long as
we are able to find in our priests real "teachers of prayer" with a
firm knowledge of tradition, priests who experience God in a deep and
fervent way, who are capable of being wise and prudent "directors of
souls" following the paths of the great masters, and who are also
responsive to the needs of the time. This is quite a different matter
from judging various prayer movements, often confused in their origins.
Rather it means helping priests to be able to reply effectively to the
call God gives to His chosen ones, so that they can become "teachers of
prayer."
Spiritual Resurgence in the Church
Furthermore, the general context of the Life of the Church must
be taken into consideration here. Can one avoid the feeling that the
Church has just lived through an impressive series of events, the
spiritual richness of which has disconcerted the usual opinion makers
and left them confounded, as if they were faced with evidence of the
intervention of something that goes beyond human factors? Who was not
struck and even dumbfounded by the surprising dignity of the funeral of
Pope Paul VI? The whole world was able to witness this through our
advanced means of social communication. Who did not suspect that there
was at least something other than a prominent "news story" in the
astonishingly rapid and unanimous conclaves which followed and in the
eventual arrival of the Pope "from afar," whose simplicity and radiant
faith immediately captured the hearts of the faithful? One can suppose
that the presence of such a leader-emerging from the storms of the
postconciliar period-is an exceptional opportunity for encouraging
priests to arm themselves with that same faith, a faith that springs
from sources of prayer.
The Young Generation
We must note here the extent to which the younger generation has
in its own way responded to the situation which we have been
describing. Young people are waiting for Christ. They are awaiting
someone to point Him out to them and to make them love Him. They are
ready to welcome priests who are able to do this. Many of them would
give themselves enthusiastically for this very mission. Therefore, our
seminaries must be prepared to meet their expectations. The future of
the Church at the present moment depends most of all on the spiritual
formation of future priests.
In the soul of a young person today, spiritual hunger naturally
and generally takes the form of an anxious search for a reason for
living, which the world about him does not provide. It leaves him to
face life while being deprived of what would give sense of purpose to
life. We ourselves know, through faith, that this reason for living is
none other than Christ. The young man who aspires to the priesthood
usually has already begun to understand this. He also knows that other
young people already have some intuition about Christ and that, more or
less distinctly, they have already begun to call on His Name. He would
like to make Him known to them in the fullness of truth. He expects the
seminary to make him capable of rendering this service to them.
Christ, the Ideal of the Seminarian
No other group than the young is more aware of the spiritual
vacuum that needs to be filled. However, because of this there is no
other group in which solutions born of despair are more to be feared:
the attraction of false ideologies, the mindless promise of destructive
experiences such as drug-taking, the rejection of all constraint
whether moral, familial, or social, and, in extreme cases, the
renunciation of life itself. One who brings to this generation the
Person of Jesus Christ, who is the only true response, will himself
have to be solidly prepared for his task and to have found in Christ
not only light but strength, the true reason for living, the authentic
model for humanity to follow, the Savior to whom we must submit and
with whom we must "cooperate" to use a well known phrase of St. Teresa
of Avila.
It is from this starting point that the essential task of a
seminary must begin, the task that belongs to all who are responsible
for forming future priests.
It is toward Christ, in fact, that grace has attracted the gaze
of the young men who aspire to His priesthood. They have already given
Him their hearts in an outburst of generosity which is still ignorant
of the demands of formation, but which already instinctively consents
to all the sacrifices involved. The future priest knows that he will
have to give everything and, in the depths of his soul, he already has
done so.
Jesus Christ: life in a seminary must be designed solely to allow
this initial grace to come to full maturity, according to the measure
in which it is given to each. The heart of the future priest will have
to free itself from everything which, by nature or habit, could
constitute an obstacle to the development in him of the love of Christ.
All the resources of his being must be employed so that they become
instruments to the accomplishment of this one end. It must be Christ
who is known, sought and loved evermore fully through study, through
personal sacrifice, victory over self and in the slow conquest of the
virtues of justice, temperance, fortitude, and prudence. It must be
Christ who is contemplated with enough fervent and patient persistence
so that, little by little, according to the admirable idea of St. Paul
(cf. 2 Cor. 3:18), the very face of Christ is imprinted on that of
believers. It must be Christ who is ceaselessly offered to the Father
for the salvation of the world in the mystery of which the future
priest will be fully the minister. It is Christ whom a future priest
cannot fail to proclaim and whose kingdom, by the power of the Holy
Spirit and to the glory of the Father, must be the permanent concern
and the only reason for the seminarian's existence.
II. GUIDELINES
Four Directives
We believe it is our duty to point out four of the most urgent
guidelines which the work of spiritual formation for future priests
ought to follow:
1. Priests need to be formed in such a way that the Word of God
is welcomed by them and loved in depth. This Word is none other than
Christ Himself. For this end we must begin with the cultivation of a
sense of genuine interior silence. To acquire such a sense is
difficult. As St. Ignatius of Loyola says, "To find Christ" is not
possible without long and well-directed, patient effort. It is the way
of prayer which is esteemed, loved and desired here despite all the
distractions and all the obstacles. The future priest, through his own
real experience, must be able to be a "teacher of prayer" for all those
who will come to him or whom he will seek out, and for all whom so many
false prophets today easily lead astray.
2. Priests need to be formed today who recognize in the Paschal
Mystery, of which they will be the ministers, the supreme expression of
God's Word. To this end they must be taught the way to communion in the
mystery of Christ who died and rose from the dead. It is there that
Christ is truly the "Savior." If the image we have of Christ is not
that of the "Crucified One," we have an image of someone else. St. Paul
recalled this with singular vigor (cf. 1 Cor. 1:23; 2:2). Now it is the
priest who in the Eucharistic Mystery makes present the sacrifice of
Christ and gathers the Christian people around him to participate in
it. One can say, without hesitation or exaggeration, therefore, that
the life of a seminary can be judged by the understanding it is able to
impart to future priests about this Mystery and about the inalienable
responsibility which priests have to make the faithful communicate
worthily in it.
3. Priests need to be formed who are fearless in accepting the
fact that real communion with Christ entails self-denial, and, in
particular, in understanding that following Christ entails genuine
obedience. Thus the seminary will have to impart a sense of penance.
This means, of course, the sacrament of Penance, but also and above
all, it means teaching seminarians that penance which is indispensable
for anyone who wants to live in Christ, not participating falsely in
His Mystery, not refusing a share in His passion, but carrying one's
cross in His footsteps, acquiring those virtues which support a
Christian soul and enable it to prevail, that is to say, "stand firm"
against the enemy in the combat, which St. Paul compares to the
contests in a stadium (1 Cor. 9:24). A seminary which allows a future
priest to leave unaware of the struggles which await him and of
self-denial without which his fidelity is impossible, just as for the
ordinary faithful, would have gravely failed in its mission.
4. Finally, a seminary ought to be a school of filial love
towards her who is the "Mother of Jesus" and whom Christ on the cross
gave us as our mother. This must not be merely a pietistic and
sentimental note attached to spiritual formation in seminaries. Rather
the taste for prayer to the Blessed Virgin, confidence in her
intercession, and sound habits in this area are to be an integral part
of the formation program of a seminary.
Now we shall discuss each of these points more thoroughly.
1. CHRIST, THE WORD OF GOD
Interior Silence
A candidate for the priesthood must become capable of listening to and understanding the Word, the "Verbum Dei. "
It is not necessary to insist here on the manifest quest for
interior silence, both among Christians and non-Christians alike. One
could cite the groups being formed, the "centers" being created, the
often frantic search for those who are deemed able to unlock a "secret"
in regard to this matter, the interest shown in various formulas which
more or less take their inspiration from certain areas of Asia, etc.
Let us leave aside all detailed description of these searches for
silence and all attempts at judgment. Let us here simply recognize the
quest and go on to draw conclusions in regard to our future priests.
They must receive an experience of interior silence. They must acquire
a genuine sense of it. They must become capable of communicating it to
others.
First of all, it is important that priests should have a precise
idea about this silence. They must know in what it consists. Surely
nobody will confuse it with a simple external silence, from which,
however, it is in a certain way inseparable, which we shall mention
later. There are other, more serious, ambiguities in this field, and
many people become exposed to them when they get involved in oriental
mysticism or other similar activities. Christian mysticism has no other
aim than to bring about a meeting with Christ, to foster an interior
intimacy and a real dialogue with Him. Genuine interior silence, about
which someone like St. John of the Cross speaks so well, has in Christ
its source and its goal. It is the fruit of living faith and of
charity. It is abandonment to God and dependence upon Him and is, in
itself, "distinct from one's feelings and from the extraordinary" (St.
Louis Marie Grignon de Montfort). It is a profound attitude of soul
which seeks everything from God and is entirely turned towards Him. It
is not linked essentially to any bodily position and even less does it
concern a sensible manifestation of the Holy Spirit. This is what the
seminarian will have to be made to discover and accept. This will be
done by training him in the school of sound spiritual masters and in
that of the Church herself in her official prayers.
The Art of Prayer
To attain interior silence proper steps must be taken. Training
in this field is slow and difficult because it involves liberating a
man from certain internal inclinations and from the constant
distractions of the world. Without pretending to make quick and
superficial judgments about some methods proposed here and there, we
must beware of "short cuts" which promise too much too soon, throw us
off the right track, and create false quests with an illusion of almost
automatic and deceptive results. What results? A certain human warmth
is taken for spiritual well-being; violence is done to the body in a
way that harms the soul; beguiling music is taken for prayer, etc. The
school of faith is arduous, and it is this that we are speaking about
here. The true instruments in this area are: contact with authentic
teachers, prayer that is patiently cultivated, and above all, a perfect
and deep participation and sharing in the official prayer of the
Church. We must add to this the presence of a guide, the sort of
director which the future priest himself will become tomorrow.
Furthermore, we must not separate this aspect of the life of faith,
which is truly fundamental, from the other aspects of formation, making
the rule a faith which is exercised through love.
Spiritual Masters
The Church, thank God, has never lacked "spiritual teachers."
Their recognized personal sanctity and the extraordinary fecundity of
their activity are there to invite us and encourage us. They are the
"saints" who have formed generations of saints. Everyone remembers
their names, but how many future priests will come into real contact
with them before leaving the seminary? How many will, through such
contact, acquire a genuine spiritual climate for themselves, a taste
for the things of God, and a desire for interior silence, which is not
deceptive and which allows them to discern falsehood in these areas?
Every seminary must have a policy about this, and each seminary must
give its students a habit and a taste for the great spiritual writers,
the real "classics." Reading these classics does not exclude other
spiritual reading, but reading these writers must be a preeminent
activity and must remain indispensable.
Learning How To Pray
In this context, the students must be taught to pray. They must
accept the fact that at first this will be arduous and sometimes
disappointing. There should be no fear of issuing rules, of humbly
adopting a method, and of putting the method into practice. If in a
given context ample prayer in common is not thought possible, then at
least the times for private prayer must be firmly stipulated and the
seminary must make certain that personal prayer is conscientiously
carried out. Abstract preparation should be avoided. Instead, one must
turn to the Gospel and constantly recall the goal: "to search for
Christ," "to wait on Him alone," "not thinking a beautiful idea is
necessarily a good result," "learning the limits of one's knowledge,"
"deepening rather then widening one's experience," etc. This then
effects a development, from simply listening one passes to asking, from
wordless adoration one passes to praise, etc. This is what the guide or
director must continually call to the seminarian's mind so that he will
not go astray and may evaluate his progress correctly.
Prayer of the Church
Nothing, however, is more important and decisive than a deeper
and more complete participation in the official prayer of the Church.
That is to say, first of all, the Mass and the Liturgy of the Word
which constitutes the first part of it (We shall return to this later.)
But, it also means the Liturgy of the Hours. The prayer of the Church
is nourished by the prayer of the psalms. The Church receives from God
Himself these "inspired" words. They are like the "mold" into which she
pours human thoughts and feelings. It is the Holy Spirit who through
the psalms suggests words and forms the heart. It was thus that Jesus
prayed. His passion bears witness to this. It was thus that Mary
prayed, if one accepts the evidence of her "Magnificat." There is no
prayer more able gradually to create the inner silence that men seek,
the silence which is true, the silence which comes from God, than the
Divine Office when it is simply, intelligently, and perfectly sung,
either inwardly or, better still, in community.
External Silence
In all of this, internal silence is not useless nor a matter of
indifference. When inner silence exists it calls forth external
silence. It demands this, and it fosters it. In its turn external
silence serves the purposes of interior silence. In a seminary which is
preparing future teachers of prayer, there must be external silence.
The seminary Rule of Life must provide for this as a priority. However,
if the students do not understand the origin of such silence and what
it is meant for, it can only be received by them as meaningless and be
badly accepted. On the other hand, where internal silence has been
deepened, the demand for material silence is all the stronger and more
vigorous. There can be no doubt that in a seminary where external
silence does not exist, interior silence is also absent.
General Seminary Climate
It is immediately obvious that such initiation into prayer
requires certain conditions and if such conditions are not provided,
seminaries are failing in their duty. We have already stated that
formation for prayer is inseparable from general education. It cannot
remain isolated. It must be linked to a life of neighborly love and to
a search for Christ through study and to service in the kingdom of God
which is present and will be present in the future in the Church.
However, training in prayer also demands specific and particular
methods. Above all, the main task of those responsible for the running
of seminaries is the formation of the students in interior silence.
They must make continual and concerted efforts in this undertaking.
Each has a special part to play in this, from the rector to the
spiritual director, to each member of the staff. If this chain is
broken, there is no real formation. If each seminary authority is not
aware of his responsibility for this formation, in his conscience and
in fact, or if he does not allow this to be the object of mutual and
continuous reflection, the best methods will lose their value because
the right general climate does not exist.
2.THE WORD OF THE CROSS: THE REDEMPTIVE SACRIFICE
Sacrament and Sacrifice
The prayer of the Church reaches its "apex" in the Liturgy of the
Eucharist. In the words of the Constitution on the Liturgy of the
Second Vatican Council (no. 10), it is "the summit and the source." In
fact, the Eucharist is nothing other than the sacrifice of the Lord
which is offered and shared within the community of the baptized. The
providential renewal begun by Pope St. Pius X has borne great fruit,
and the Second Vatican Council has given new thrust to this effort.
Future priests must be able to exploit this movement in depth and at
the same time maintain its proper direction. Today this requires a firm
hand, a solid and sure theological sense, an absolute fidelity to the
discipline of the Church, and deep, well nourished personal experience.
The Eucharist is the "sacrament of the redemptive sacrifice."
Theology has never ceased explaining this mystery from which the Church
permanently draws life. The fullness of this mystery is such that human
thought can scarcely grasp it. At times there is a risk of reducing it
in order to make it fit within the categories of human reason. At other
times there is risk of exploiting one aspect of it to the detriment of
others, which is to say there is a risk of disturbing the structure of
our Faith. That is why in a seminary the doctrine about this matter
must be taught with extreme care and must be constantly recalled. No
single aspect should be sacrificed to another. The teaching of the
Council of Trent on the reality of the sacrifice must be professed in
all its force, as must the teaching on the "Real Presence." The aspect
of brotherly communion, however deeply understood, cannot overshadow
the fundamental aspect of the sacrifice of Christ, outside of which the
Eucharistic Banquet poses its meaning. The deviations which are
occurring today on these points cannot be ignored and future priests
must be carefully warned about them. Pastoral work which does not have
its basis in doctrine cannot be considered beneficial.
Eucharistic Adoration
Eucharistic faith has undergone an inevitable and gradual
development through the centuries in the matter of worship outside of
the liturgical sacrifice. This has opened up a certain space for
eucharistic prayer, offered with grateful fervor to Christ given for us
in the host and sacramentally present beyond the confines of the Mass,
especially reserved as "Viaticum" for the dying. The continuous
development of the cult of Eucharistic adoration is one of the most
marvelous experiences of the Church. The extraordinary sanctity which
has developed from it, and the number of whole communities specifically
consecrated to this adoration are a guarantee of the authenticity of
its inspiration. Someone like Brother Charles de Foucauld, alone in the
desert with the Eucharist, yet shining out in the Church through his
"Little Brothers" and "Little Sisters," is a most striking example of
this in our own time. A priest who does not have this fervor, who does
not acquire a taste for this adoration and is unable to communicate
this to others is betraying the Eucharist itself and is blocking the
way of the faithful to an incomparable treasure.
The Priesthood
The doctrine of the priesthood is grafted onto this. The
encouragement given to the theological consideration of ministries in
the Church should not cast doubt on the doctrine of priestly ministry
as this was happily and solidly defined in the Church, especially in
the Council of Trent. Clerics and lay people have a complementary
mission in the Church. The development of lay ministries does not alter
the specific nature of the ministerial priesthood. Far from
compromising the sense and importance of God's Word, the Eucharistic
action consecrates it. Two aspects are welded and bound together in the
person of the priest, the two aspects by which people are given food
from heaven. These are the two aspects which are stressed so strongly
as radically united in the sixth chapter of the Gospel according to St.
John, speaking about the preaching of Jesus at Capharnaum. The priest
is ordained to prepare and distribute under two sacramental forms-that
of the sign of the word, and that under the sign of bread-the eternal
bread which is Christ.
Even in these, his own fields, in missionary areas, the
ministerial priest might need some assistance. However, whatever aids
the Church recognizes as legitimate and on occasion necessary from the
laity, a priest cannot lose nor abandon his own essential
responsibility. When a layman is asked to preach. the priest remains
responsible for the choice of a collaborator, whose appointment cannot
be taken lightly, and for the contents of what he preaches. It is
exactly the same way when the priest chooses extraordinary ministers of
Holy Communion. This is why the seminary must attach extreme importance
to the means which the Church has instituted for preparing future
priests to become conscious of the charge laid upon them and its
special significance. The two liturgical ministries, which formerly
were called minor orders, namely lectorate and acolytate, are no less
indispensable or serious today in the rather modest garb they now wear.
To underrate their value, for example, by conferring them both at the
same time, is to go against a good of the first order and to deprive
oneself of a supernatural, pedagogical resource in a serious area. One
ought to reread the moving letter of St. Cyprian (Epistle XXXVIII, in
the edition of Can. Bayard, Paris, 1925, pp. 96-97), in which he called
to the office of lector a young Christian who rendered himself worthy
of it by risking martyrdom. St. Cyprian presents this office as a
necessary and desired preparation for higher responsibility, that of
the priesthood.
The Discipline of the Church
Understanding the Eucharist leads one to understand and to
respect meticulously the discipline of the Church in this matter.
People often speak today about "creativity." However, this can only be
understood correctly within the framework of the rules formulated by
the Church. The rules which order prayer must be accepted with the same
obedience as those which concern faith, according to the classical
formula lex orandi est lex credendi. These are inseparable. The rules
formulated by the Church are deeply linked to the essential values
which individuals might lose sight of, even inspired, as they might be,
by real pastoral concerns. Thus it is possible for the faith to become
disordered. Furthermore, this produces difficult problems and painful
divisions. The essential point of reference here is the Ecumenical
Council. It has been abundantly proved that the general orientations of
the Council, if they are faithfully observed, do not irritate the
People of God. They rebel only against novelties and excesses. For
instance, the Council is far from having banned the use of the Latin
language. Indeed, it did the contrary. Thus the systematic exclusion of
Latin is an abuse no less to be condemned than the systematic desire of
some people to use it exclusively. Its sudden and total disappearance
will not be without serious pastoral consequences. Only in a gradual
way can the "Word of God" take on, for the general good, the apparel of
everyday language. Otherwise it will be confused with the "words of
men" in the consciences of the faithful (cf. 1 Tim. 2:13). This is why
the seminary must ensure that future priests understand the seriousness
of what is at stake and help them not only to practice, but also to
love obedience. There is quite enough room for new initiatives in the
liturgy within the framework of the official directives.
Christ, the Bread of Life; Word and Eucharist
The disciples on the road to Emmaus felt their hearts burn within
them (cf. Lk. 24:32) while Scripture was being explained to them by the
mysterious traveler. But, they recognized Him only in "the breaking of
the bread." At each Mass the Church retraces the same road. Through His
Holy Spirit, Christ comments on the Scriptures for His people so that
they may be ready to lake part in the banquet prepared by His hands.
The deep unity of the mystery of the Divine Word, now offered so
liberally in the liturgy, with the Eucharist itself is something that
must be evermore deeply experienced by future priests. There are in
fact not two separate "tables," since the one leads to the other, just
as the revelation in the sixth chapter of the Gospel according to St.
John goes from the bread of the Word to the bread of the Eucharist. The
whole of this Gospel is slanted towards the "hour" of Christ which He
spends so much time explaining. The whole teaching of the Word was
designed to bring people to an understanding of the Paschal Mystery. In
fact, it was "for this that He had come." The Liturgy of the Word
prepares one for the sacrifice. It is in this Liturgy of the Word which
precedes the Eucharist that the Word acquires its full meaning. It
lives fully only through formal contact with the Eucharist. The
"celebrations of the Word" provided for by the Ecumenical Council
cannot avoid making reference to the Eucharist. And, it is here that
the prayer life of a future priest must realize its full promise, find
its full significance, and locate its true value.
Clerical Dress
It can be truly said that one can judge the spiritual climate of
a seminary by its participation in the Eucharist. Is this not the place
perhaps to note that at the Eucharist people see the need and the
meaning of clerical dress, which has been too easily abandoned, to the
harm of the very pastoral work this was supposed to foster?
Pope John Paul II has already recalled on several occasions the
need for a priest to appear before men for what he is, one of them,
certainly, but marked by a deep sign which sets him apart and which
sends him out in the name of God to God's followers and to all the
world. Now how is it possible to deny the evidence? In the eyes of the
faithful and in the very conscience of the priest, the significance of
the "sacraments of faith" is steadily degraded when a priest is
habitually negligent about his clothing or even fully secularized when
he is the minister of them. These sacraments include Penance, Anointing
of the Sick, and, above all, the Holy Eucharist. Often the situation
ends with the priest not even using the prescribed liturgical
vestments. If this trend is thought to be inevitable, the end is
disastrous and fatal. The seminary has no right to be lax when faced
with such possible consequences. It must have the courage to speak, to
explain, and to make demands upon its students.
3. THE WORD OF THE CROSS: SPIRITUAL SACRIFICES
Alongside the Eucharist, Penance must be assigned an important
place. This word has been used as the name of a sacrament, but when
used in the context of priestly life one must obviously extend its
meaning to one which involves an effort tending to unite one with
Christ the Redeemer and to participate personally in His passion in an
effective way. The priest must become a "teacher of penance" to others
in the same way that he must be a "teacher of prayer."
Preparation for Penance
The Second Vatican Council did not relegate the sacrament of
Penance to the shadows. If it seems to have become less important when
compared to the practice of the recent past, one can state that this is
a real abuse. "Penitential celebrations" were not designed to gradually
eliminate individual confession and to substitute for it "general
absolution," which some falsely claim is a return to early Christian
practice. Public penance in the early Church involved a small number of
specific sinners who were well known from private contact over a period
of time with the bishop. The so-called "public" penance involved
bringing to public notice a penitent whose penitential journey had up
to that time been private. What has this ancient rite got in common
with an absolution given to an indeterminate group about whom nothing
is known? Even if the Church allows "general absolution" in cases of
necessity and under certain conditions, it is in private penance, in
the way in which theology has progressively defined and explained it,
that one finds a resemblance to the public penance of the past ages.
Having said this, it must now be asserted that penitential services are
a very fine initiative which in a timely way bring people's consciences
to a state where they feel able to go individually to a priest. Some
find that these devotional services provide a suitable spiritual
atmosphere, which they did not have in the past, enabling them to gain
a clear idea about the will of God and His specific demands and
allowing them to put things right which had been long amiss. One can
see what kind of rich training the seminary must give to future priests
if they are to succeed in this area, following the Instruction on
Liturgical Formation in Seminaries, issued by the Sacred Congregation
for Catholic Education recently (no. 35t. Through authentic contact
with the Word of God, seminarians must be trained to have a right idea
about the structure of a Christian conscience, which is certainly based
on charity, but which is also well aware of how charity has to be
translated into action, in justice, temperance, fortitude, and
prudence, to use the classical expressions. At the same time they must
be trained to put all this reflection and investigation in the context
of the love of God from which genuine and calm contrition can spring.
Private Penance
From all this, personal contact with a priest becomes a natural
consequence. Nothing can take the place of that meeting with a priest
when a mind that has been informed and a heart that has been stirred
asks him whom God has given the power to forgive sins to utter those
irreplaceable words which we hear so often in the Gospels and which
touch the heart of each repentant sinner: "Your sins are forgiven." If
possible and when it is thought useful, this pardon is matched with
appropriate advice. While the preparation may have been communal and
has permitted each penitent to benefit from the prayers of all, the
pardon is, of itself, personal and incommunicable. The seminary must
impart to its students a taste for this private absolution along with
one for communal celebrations of penance where these are possible. The
future priest who has grasped this well will find the courage to impose
on himself the hard regime that made the Cure of Ars a saint and of
which someone like St. John Bosco has given a magnificent example in
more recent times.
Spiritual Directors
It is important to note that, in the context of the sacrament of
Penance which is worthily and authentically received, the light of the
Lord passes freely and goes beyond pardon. A priest who hears
confessions becomes in many cases a "spiritual director." He helps
people to discern the ways of the Lord. How many vocations have never
been discovered through a lack of this unique supernatural contact in
the course of which a priest could have at least asked a question? One
can probably attribute the striking slackening off in the number of
vocations at least partially to the gradual decline in the practice of
private confession. A seminary must realize that it is preparing future
"spiritual directors."
Self-denial and the Rule of Life
The sacrament of Penance is never anything other than the
intervention of God who comes to bring to fruition an individual's
work, in which the penitential service was a preliminary and fortunate
stage. God comes to meet the penitent who must continue as a Christian
to carry his cross in the footsteps of Christ. The expression
"self-denial" is rarely heard today. Self-denial itself is accepted
very unwillingly. However, it is indispensable for everyone according
to his state in life. A priest cannot be faithful to the charge laid
upon him and to all his priestly commitments, especially celibacy, if
he has not been prepared to accept and impose upon himself real
discipline. Seminaries do not always have the courage to say this or to
demand it, especially in relationship to a "Rule of Life, " a set of
rules which are wise, modest, and yet firm and which will prepare the
students to impose on themselves in the future a rule of life. The
absence of precise rules to be obeyed is a source of many problems for
a priest. He is left open to wasting time, to losing all idea of his
mission and of the restraints it imposes on him, a progressive
vulnerability in all attacks of his feelings, etc. It should be
remembered what sacrifices conjugal fidelity involves. Surely priestly
fidelity can demand no less. This would be quite paradoxical. A priest
simply is not permitted to see, hear, say, or experience everything he
feels inclined toward. A seminary must train future priests to enable
them, in their inner liberty, to bear sacrifices and to accept personal
discipline both intelligently and loyally.
Obedience
One cannot avoid pausing a moment to consider the problem of
obedience. The word "obedience" must stop being a forbidden word. One
cannot be a disciple of Christ and still deny a title which St. Paul
uses for Christ as one of His claims to glory (cf. Phil. 2:8-9). Not
only is personal freedom uncompromised by obedience but, when it is
well understood, it is the highest expression of freedom.
Obviously then, obedience must be well understood.
One certainly cannot claim to be obedient to God when he refuses
to obey those to whom God has confided His mission. Indeed, the
exercise of authority and obedience cannot be understood unless on both
sides there is expressly involved a notion of obedience to God. In this
matter both the rector and the seminarian must have their attention
fixed constantly on the will of God. This will of God is made explicit
in the "common good" of the seminary. It is the rector's job to clearly
define this "common good," to help people to see it and accept it, to
help them understand it and love it, to stimulate people to put their
initiatives and good will at its service, to interest his students in
grasping this "common good" in those points where they might find it
unclear, and to dialogue about it. Finally, he must judge with
authority and without hesitation. It is the duty of a future priest to
listen to and understand the rector whom the Lord has given the mission
of governing in His name. It is also his job to cooperate, according to
his capacity, in bringing about the fulfillment of the common good.
This always consists in creating and maintaining an atmosphere in which
the priesthood of Christ can be discerned and recommended to all, in
which the grace of God can do its work in everyone, and in which not
more or less is demanded than people are capable of giving.
Obedience will always be a sacrifice. It must at the same time be
a joy, for it is a way of loving God. In the future, a young priest
will have to practice obedience in many ways. He must in the seminary
be enabled to understand it in the person of Christ and to love it. In
this context one can authentically experience a real brotherly,
Christian community in the seminary in which all are bound together by
the will to cooperate with each other for the good of the kingdom of
God.
4. THE WORD MADE FLESH IN THE WOMB OF THE VIRGIN MARY
The Marian Mystery-an Object of Faith
A point of major importance would be omitted in the present
circumstances if there was neglect in remembering briefly and firmly
the place that should be occupied in seminary life by devotion to the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
The word "devotion" today is rather equivocal. It might seem that
what is being dealt with here is a personal and entirely optional
matter. In fact, it is a question quite simply of accepting the Faith
of the Church and living out what our creed requires us to believe. The
Word of God became incarnate in the womb of the Virgin Mary. The words
of Christ on the cross would serve to show, were it needful, that it is
not some simple, ephemeral contribution made by Mary to the economy of
salvation that we are concerned with here. The Annunciation is another
name for the Incarnation. The Church gradually has become more aware of
the Marian mystery. Far from adding her own conjectures to what she
found in Sacred Scripture about Mary, she has met the Virgin at every
stage of her journey towards the discovery of Christ.
Christology is also Mariology. The fervor with which our Supreme
Pontiff, Pope John Paul II, lives the Marian mystery is nothing other
than fidelity. This is the way in which love of the Blessed Virgin must
be taught in a seminary. The problems which Christology faces today
could find their main solution in a fidelity of this kind. In
particular, devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary can and must be a
guarantee against everything which would tend to eradicate the
historicity of the mystery of Christ. One cannot help but wonder
whether the decline in devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary does not
often mask a certain hesitation to profess frankly and openly the
mystery of Christ and the Incarnation.
Marian Attitude
Obviously, the mystery of the Virgin cannot be lived out except
in an inner climate of simplicity and abandonment, which has nothing to
do with sweet sentimentality and superficial outpouring of feelings.
Contact with the Blessed Virgin can only lead to greater contact with
Christ and His cross. Nothing better introduces one, in the spirit of
the Second Vatican Council and of the Apostolic Exhortation Marialis
cultus of Pope Paul VI to the joy of believing. "Blessed are you who
have believed" (Luke 1:45). A seminary must give its students, without
shrinking from this task, a sense of the authentic mystery of Mary.
This should be done through the means traditionally used by the Church
to arrive at a real interior devotion, such as the saints possessed as,
in the expression of St. Louis Marie Grignon de Montfort, the "secret"
of salvation.
III. CONCLUSION
In conclusion we wish to offer a suggestion. In fact, we would
like this suggestion to be followed and gradually to become part of the
normal seminary practice in a solid and lasting way.
The ideal which we have in part described is not easy to attain.
The generous young men who offer themselves for the priesthood come
from a world in which inner recollection is almost impossible because
of continuous over-excitement of the senses and of overabundance of
concepts. Experience shows that a period of preparation for the
seminary, given over exclusively to spiritual formation, is not only
not superfluous but can bring surprising results. There is evidence
from seminaries in which the number of candidates has suddenly gone up.
In these the people responsible attribute this to such a brave
initiative. This period of spiritual apprenticeship is welcomed by the
students. It appears that it is the diocesan authorities who are rather
opposed to this spiritual propaedeutic period. This seems to come from
a lack of priests and a view that it would be foolish to institute such
a practice. In reality, were it tried they would soon become convinced
of its benefits. Permit us to insist, in conclusion, that this
suggestion be tried.
This period of preparation would benefit from being conducted
somewhere other than the seminary itself. It should be of sufficient
duration. Thus something could be achieved at the beginning which might
be very difficult or impossible to achieve later on when seminary
training is taken up with a great deal of intellectual work. Then the
students often do not have the leisure and the freedom of mind to
accomplish a real spiritual apprenticeship.
If this suggestion is followed, the things indicated in this
circular would have a good chance of success, and one could expect they
would bear rich fruit.
Evidently, this will not always be possible. But, other
possibilities might open themselves up to generous imaginations of
those who will try to understand and put into practice the matters
mentioned in this circular letter, and who are prepared to give
themselves trustfully to Christ so that their labors may be helped and
sustained by His grace.
Given at Rome, from the offices of the Sacred Congregation for
Catholic Education, the 6th of January in the year of our Lord 1980,
the Solemnity of the Epiphany.
Gabriel-Marie Cardinal Garrone
Prefect
Antonio-Maria Javierre-Ortas
Titular Archbishop of Meta
Secretary
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