Congregation for the Clergy
The Priest, Pastor and Leader of the Parish
Community
Instruction - Vatican City
INTRODUCTION
This "Instruction", addressed to all Parish Priests
and their brother collaborators involved in the "cura animarum",
is being relayed to them through the kind offices of their Bishops.
The document must be seen in the context of a deep reflection
and study, which has been ongoing for a number of years on this
topic.
With the publication of the Directories on the ministry and
life of Priests and that of the Permanent Deacons, along with
that of the Interdicasterial Instruction, Ecclesiae de mysterio
, and the Circular Letter, The Priest and the Third Christian
Millennium, Teacher of the Word, Minister of the Sacraments
and Leader of the Community, we find the resonance of the documents
of the Second Vatican Council, especially Lumen Gentium, Presbyterorum
Ordinis, the Catechism of the Catholic Church , and the Code
of Canon Law, in an uninterrupted expression of the Magisterium.
The document follows the same track as the great missionary
impetus of the Duc in altum, which necessarily leads to the
indispensable task of the evangelization of the Third Christian
Millenium. For this reason, mindful also of the many recommendations
produced by a worldwide consultation on this matter, it has
appeared appropriate to seize this opportunity to present a
doctrinal section with elements which will provoke a reflection
on those fundamental theological values which impel towards
missionary activity and which are sometimes somewhat obfuscated.
The relationship between the ecclesiological-pneumatic dimension,
which touches directly upon priestly ministry, and that ecclesiological
dimension, which helps in understanding the significance of
specific function., has been highlighted.
This "Instruction" has the underlying purpose of directing
particular affection towards those priests who carry out their
precious office as Parish Priests and who, through beset by
many challenges, are always in the midst of their people. The
delicate and valuable office they hold, provides the opportunity
to offer greater clarity with regard to the essential and vital
difference which exists between the common priesthood and the
ordained priesthood. This, in turn, gives rise to a proper understanding
of priestly identity and the essential sacramental dimension
of the ordained minister.
As it has been the intent to follow the line indicated by the
Holy Father in his Allocution to the Plenary Assembly of the
Congregation, which is particularly rich in its practicality,
it appears helpful to addend it here:
Your Eminences,
Your Excellencies, Monsignors and Fathers,
Brothers and Sisters in Christ!
1. With great joy I welcome you, on the occasion of the Plenary
Assembly of the Congregation for the Clergy. I cordially greet
Cardinal Dario Castrillón Hoyos, Prefect of the Congregation,
and I thank him for his kind words addressed to me in the name
of all present. I greet the Cardinals, Bishops and the participants
in your Plenary Assembly, which has focused on an important topic
for the life of the Church: the Priest, Pastor and Guide of the
Parish Community. Stressing the function of the priest in the
parish community, one brings to the fore the centrality of Christ
who should always be prominent in the mission of the Church.
Christ is present to his Church in the most sublime way in the
Blessed Sacrament of the Altar. In the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen
gentium, the Second Vatican Council teaches that the priest acting
in persona Christi celebrates the Sacrifice of the Mass and administers
the Sacraments (cf. n. 10). As my venerable predecessor Paul VI
so aptly observed in his Encyclical Letter Mysterium fidei, which
followed the Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 7, Christ
is also present through preaching and the guidance of the faithful,
tasks to which the priest is personally called (cf. AAS 57 [1965]
762).
2. The presence of Christ, which thus takes place in a daily
and ordinary way, makes the parish an authentic community of the
faithful. It is therefore of fundamental importance for the parish
to have a priest as its pastor and the title of pastor is specifically
reserved to the priest. The sacred Order of the presbyterate represents
the indispensable and irreplaceable condition for him to be appointed
pastor validly (cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 521, 1). Certainly,
other faithful can actively collaborate with him, even full-time,
but because they have not received the ministerial priesthood,
they cannot replace him as pastor.
What determines this singular ecclesial centrality of the priest
is the fundamental relation he has with Christ, Head and Pastor,
as his sacramental re-presentation. In the Apostolic Exhortation
Pastores dabo vobis, I noted that "the priest's relation
to the Church is inscribed in the 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" (n. 16). The ecclesial dimension
belongs to the substance of the ordained priesthood. It is totally
at the service of the Church, so that the ecclesial community
has an absolute need for the ministerial priesthood to have Christ
the Head and Shepherd present in her. If the common priesthood
results from the fact that the Christian People are chosen by
God as a bridge with humanity and that every believer belongs
to this people, the ministerial priesthood is the fruit of an
election, of a specific vocation: "he called his disciples,
and chose from them twelve" (Lk 6, 13-16). Thanks to the
ministerial priesthood, the faithful are made aware of their common
priesthood and they live it (cf. Eph 4, 11-12); the priest reminds
them that they are the People of God and makes them able to "offer
spiritual sacrifices" (cf. 1 Pt. 2,5), through which Christ
himself makes us an eternal gift to the Father (cf. 1 Pt. 3,18).
Without the presence of Christ represented by the priest, the
sacramental guide of the community, this would not be an ecclesial
community in its fullness.
3. As I said before, Christ is present in the Church in an eminent
way in the Eucharist, the source and summit of ecclesial life.
He is really present in the celebration of the holy Sacrifice,
and when the consecrated bread is kept in the tabernacle "as
the spiritual heart of the religious and parish community"
(Paul VI, Encyclical Letter Mysterium fidei, AAS 57 [1965], 772).
For this reason, the Second Vatican Council recommends that "parish
priests ensure that the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice
is the centre and culmination of the entire life of the Christian
community" (Decr. Christus Dominus, n. 30). Without Eucharistic
worship as its beating heart, the parish dries up. Here it is
helpful to recall what I wrote in the Apostolic Letter Dies Domini:
"Among the many activities of a parish, none is as vital
or as community-forming as the Sunday celebration of the Lord's
Day and his Eucharist" (n. 35). Nothing will ever be able
to replace it. The Liturgy of the Word by itself, when it is really
impossible to ensure the Sunday presence of a priest, is praiseworthy
to keep the faith alive, but it must always keep the regular celebration
of the Eucharist as the goal to be achieved.
Where a priest is lacking one must ask the Lord with faith and
insistence, to raise up numerous and holy labourers for his harvest.
In Pastores dabo vobis I repeated that "today the prayerful
expectation of new vocations should become an ever more continual
and widespread habit within the entire Christian community and
in every one of its parts" (n. 38). The splendour of the
priestly identity, the integral exercise of the pastoral ministry
united to the efforts of the whole community in prayer and personal
penance, are the irreplaceable elements for an urgent pastoral
activity to recruit vocations. It would be a fatal mistake to
be resigned to present difficulties, and act as if we should prepare
ourselves for a Church of tomorrow that some imagine as being
almost without priests. In this way, the measures adopted to remedy
the present scarcity, in spite of all good will, would be seriously
harmful for the Ecclesial Community.
4. Moreover, the parish is a privileged place to announce the
Word of God. It includes a variety of forms and each of the faithful
is called to take an active part, especially with the witness
of a Christian life and the explicit proclamation of the Gospel
to non-believers to lead them to the faith, or to believers to
instruct them, confirm them and encourage them to a more fervent
life. As for the priest, he "proclaims the word in his capacity
as "minister', as sharer in the prophetic authority of Christ
and the Church" (Pastores dabo vobis, n. 26). To fulfil this
ministry faithfully, corresponding to the gift received, he "ought
first of all to develop a great personal familiarity with the
Word of God" (ibid.). Even though he may be surpassed in
the ability to speak by non-ordained members of the faithful,
this would not reduce his being the sacramental representation
of Christ the Head and Shepherd, and the effectiveness of his
preaching derives from his identity. The parish community needs
this kind of effectiveness, especially at the most characteristic
moment of the proclamation of the Word by ordained ministers:
for this reason the liturgical proclamation of the Gospel and
the homily that follows it are both reserved to the priest.
5. Also the function of guiding the community as shepherd, the
proper function of the parish priest, stems from his unique relation
to Christ the Head and Shepherd. It is a function having a sacramental
character. It is not entrusted to the priest by the community,
but, through the Bishop, it comes to him from the Lord. To reaffirm
this clearly and exercise this function with humble authority
is an indispensable service to truth and to ecclesial communion.
The collaboration of others, who have not received this sacramental
configuration to Christ, is hoped for and often necessary.
However, these cannot in any way substitute the task of the pastor
proper to the parish priest. The extreme cases of shortage of
priests, that advise a more intense and extended collaboration
of the faithful not honoured with priestly ministry, in the pastoral
care of a parish, do not constitute an exception to this essential
criterion for the care of souls, as is indisputably established
by canonical norm (cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 517, 2). In this
controversial sector, the interdicasterial Exhortation Ecclesiae
de mysterio, that I approved in a specific way, is a sure guide
to follow.
In fulfilling his duty as guide, which is his personal responsibility,
the pastor will surely obtain help from the consultative bodies
foreseen by canon law (cf. Code of Canon Law, can. 536-537); but
these must remain faithful to their reality as consultative bodies.
Therefore it will be necessary to guard oneself from any form
that tends de facto to weaken the leadership of the parish priest,
because the very structure of the parish community would be distorted.
6. I now turn my affectionate and grateful thoughts to pastors
throughout the world, especially to those who work in the outposts
of evangelization. I encourage them to continue in the mission
of evangelization that is strenuous but precious for the whole
Church. I recommend to each one to turn, in the daily exercise
of pastoral care, to the maternal help of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
seeking to live in profound communion with Her. In the ministerial
priesthood, as I wrote in the Letter to Priests, on the occasion
of Holy Thursday 1979, "there is the wonderful and penetrating
dimension of nearness to the Mother of Christ" (n. 11). When
we celebrate Holy Mass, dear Brother priests, the Mother of the
Redeemer is beside us. She introduces us into the mystery of the
redemptive offering of her divine Son. "Ad Jesum per Mariam":
may this be our daily programme of spiritual and pastoral life!
With these sentiments, while I assure you of my remembrance in
prayer, I impart to each one a special Apostolic Blessing, which
I gladly extend to all the priests of the world.
(ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II TO THE PLENARY SESSION OF THE CONGREGATION
FOR THE CLERGY , Friday 23 November 2001)
Part I
The Common Priesthood of the Faithful
and
The Ordained Priesthood
1. Lift up you eyes (John 4, 35)
1. "I tell you, lift up your eyes, and see how the fields
are already white for harvest" (John 4,35). These words of
the Our Lord well illustrate the immense horizon of the incarnate
Word's mission of love. "For God sent the Son into the world,
not to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through
him" (John 3,17). His entire earthly life, which was completely
consonant with the Father's salvific will, is a constant manifestation
of that divine will which desires the salvation of mankind and
that all come to that salvation eternally willed by the Father.
He has bequeathed this historical mission to the Church and consigned
it in a special way to her ordained ministers. "Great indeed
is the mystery of which we have been made ministers. A mystery
of love without limit, for "having loved his own who were
in the world, he loved them to the end" (Jn 13,1).
The priestly ministers of Jesus Christ, invested with the character
and grace of the Sacrament of Orders, and constituted witnesses
and ministers of divine mercy, voluntarily undertake to serve
all in the Church. In whatever social, cultural or historical
circumstances, including contemporary society, heavily marked
as it is by an ethos of secularism and consumerism which erode
the meaning of Christianity for many of the faithful, the Lord's
ministers should always be mindful of the victory that overcomes
the world: our faith" (1 John 5,4). Indeed, contemporary
society affords an opportunity to recall the conquering power
of faith and of love in Christ, and to be mindful that, notwithstanding
difficulties and even a certain diffidence, the Christian faithful
- as well as many non-believers - greatly appreciate, and depend
on, the pastoral availability of priests. They expect to find
that the priest is a man of God, just as St Augustine says: "Our
knowledge is Christ and our wisdom is also Christ. He gives us
faith with regard to temporal realities and it is He who reveals
eternal realities to us". We live in an era of new evangelization
and should therefore go and search out those who await the opportunity
of encountering Christ.
2. In differing degrees, Christ transmitted, his own quality of
Pastor of Souls to Bishops and Priests through the Sacrament of
Orders so as to render them capable of acting in his name and
of representing his potestas capitis in the Church. "The
profound unity of this new people does not mean that there are
not different and complementary tasks in its life. Those whose
task it is to renew in persona Christi what Jesus did at the Last
Supper when he instituted the Eucharistic Sacrifice, "the
source and summit of the entire Christian life" (Lumen Gentium,
11), are linked in a special way to first Apostles. The sacramental
character which distinguishes them by virtue of their reception
of Holy Orders ensures that their presence and ministry are unique,
indispensable and irreplaceable". The presence of an ordained
minister is an essential condition for the Church's life and not
merely for her effective organization.
3. Duc in altum! Every Christian who experiences the light of
faith in his soul and desires to walk at the pace set by the Supreme
Pontiff must try to translate into deeds this urgent and decisively
missionary call. The Pastors of the Church, whose sense of the
supernatural allows for the possibility of discerning the ways
in which God desires to guide His people, must especially understand
this same call and implement it zealously and readily. "Duc
in altum! The Lord invites us to put out into the deep, with trust
in his word. Let us learn from the Jubilee experience and persevere
in the task of bearing witness to the Gospel with the enthusiasm
that contemplating the face of Christ engenders in us!"
4. It is important to recall how the Holy Father understands the
fundamental goals set out by him at the end of the Great Jubilee
of 2000, and offered to the particular Churches for concrete realization.
Inviting all the local Churches to undertake this task, the Pope
pointed to the need to profit from the grace received, "by
putting it into practice in resolutions and guidelines for action".
This grace touches upon the Church's mission of evangelization
which requires personal sanctity on the part of both her pastors
and faithful, a fervent apostolic sense concordant with their
specific states of life which imbues their responsibilities and
duties, and an awareness that the eternal salvation of many depends
on faithfully manifesting Christ both in word and in deed. Hence,
there emerges an urgent need to give greater impulse to the priestly
ministry in the local Churches, especially in parishes. Such should
be based on an authentic understanding of the ministry and life
of priests.
We priests "have been consecrated in the Church for this
specific ministry. We are called in various ways, to contribute,
wherever Providence puts us, to the formation of the community
of God's People. Our task ...is to tend the flock God entrusted
to us, not by constraint but willingly, not as domineering over
those in our charge, but by setting them an example (cf. 1 Pt
5: 2-3). (...) This is our way of holiness, which leads us to
our ultimate meeting with the "supreme shepherd" in
whose hands is the "crown of glory" (1 Pt 5: 4). This
is our mission at the service of the Christian people".
2. Central Elements of the Ministry and Life of Priests
a) Priestly identity
5. Priestly identity has to be seen in the context of the divine
salvific will since it is a fruit of the sacramental action of
the Holy Spirit, a sharing in the saving work of Christ, and completely
oriented to the service of that work in the Church as it unfolds
in history. Priestly identity is three dimensional: pneumatological,
Christological and ecclesiological. This primordial theological
structure of the mystery of the priest, who is a minister of salvation,
can never be overlooked if he is adequately to understand the
meaning of his pastoral ministry in the concrete circumstances
of the parish. He is the servant of Christ. Through Him, with
Him, and in Him, the priest becomes the servant of mankind. His
very being, ontologically assimilated to Christ, constitutes the
foundation of being ordained for the service of the community.
Total commitment to Christ, aptly effected and witnessed through
celibacy, places the priest at the service of all. The marvellous
gift of celibacy is clarified by, and draws inspiration from,
assimilation to the nuptial gift of the crucified and risen Son
of God to a redeemed and renewed mankind.
The very life and work of the priest - his consecrated person
and his ministry - are inseparable theological realities. Their
object is service in promoting the Church's mission which is the
eternal salvation of all mankind. The reason for the existence
of the priesthood is to be found and discovered in the mystery
of the Church, the Mystical Body of Christ and the People of God
journeying through history, which has been established as the
universal sacrament of salvation. "The ecclesial community
has absolute need of the ministerial priesthood so as to have
Christ, Head and Shepherd, present in her midst".
6. The baptismal or common priesthood of Christians, which is
a genuine participation in the priesthood of Christ, is an essential
property of the New People of God "You are a chosen race,
a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God's own people..." (1Pet
2,9); [He] has made us a kingdom, priests to his God and Father"
(Aps 1,6); [Thou] hast made them a kingdom and priests to our
God (Aps 5,10) ... they shall be priests of God and of Christ,
and they shall reign with him" (Aps 20,6). These passages
recall Exodus and transfer what was said of the Old Israel to
the New Israel: "You shall be my own possession among all
peoples; for all the earth is mine, and you shall be to me a kingdom
of priests and a holy nation" (Ex 19, 5-6). They also recall
Deuteronomy: For you are a people holy to the LORD your God; the
LORD your God has chosen you to be a people for his own possession,
out of all the peoples that are on the face of the earth (Dt 7,6).
"While the common priesthood is a consequence of the fact
that the Christian people has been chosen by God as bridge with
mankind and involves every believer who has been inserted into
this people, the ministerial priesthood is the fruit of being
chosen, it is the fruit of a specific vocation: "[Jesus]
called his disciples, and chose from them twelve" (Lk 6,
13-16). By virtue of the ministerial priesthood, the faithful
are made aware of their common priesthood and actualize it (cf.
Eph 4, 11-12); the priest constantly reminds them that they are
the People of God and prepares them to "offer spiritual sacrifices"
(cf. 1Pet 2,5), through which Christ himself make of us and eternal
offering to the Father (cf.1 Pet 3,18). Without the presence of
Christ, represented by the priest, who is the spiritual leader
of the community, this would not fully be an ecclesial communion".
In this priestly people, the Lord instituted a priestly ministry
to which some are called so that they might serve the faithful
in pastoral charity through the potestas sacra. The common priesthood
and the ministerial priesthood differ from each other not only
in grade but also in essence. The difference between the two priesthoods
is, therefore, not simply one of greater or lesser participation
in the priesthood of Christ, but one of essentially different
ways of participating in that priesthood. The common priesthood
of the faithful is based on baptismal character which is the spiritual
seal of their having been claimed for Christ. It "enables
and commits Christians to serve God by a vital participation in
the sacred liturgy of the Church and to exercise their baptismal
priesthood by the witness of holy lives and practical charity".
The ministerial priesthood, on the other hand, is based on the
sacramental character received in the Sacrament of Orders which
configures the priest to Christ so as to enable him to act in
the person of Christ, the Head, and to exercise the potestas sacra
to offer Sacrifice and forgive sins. A new and specific mission
is sacramentally conferred on those of the baptized who have received
the grace of the ministerial priesthood: to embody Christ's triple
office - prophetic, cultic and regal - as Head and Shepherd of
the Church in the midst of the people of God. In exercising their
specific functions, they act in persona Christi Capitis, and consequently,
in the same way, they act in nomine Ecclesiae.
7. "Our sacramental priesthood, therefore, is both 'hierarchial'
and 'ministerial'. It is a particular 'ministerium', that is a
'service', with regard to the community of the faithful. It does
not, however, derive from that community nor from its 'call' or
'delegation'. Rather, the ministry is a gift for the community
which comes from Christ himself and from the fullness of his priesthood
(...) Conscious of this reality, we understand how our priesthood
is 'hierarchial', that is, how it is connected with the power
to form and govern a priestly people (cf.ivi), and how, precisely
because of this, it is also 'ministerial'. We exercise an office
through which Christ himself incessantly 'serves' the Father in
the work of our salvation. Our entire priestly life is, and ought
to be, deeply imbued by this service if we wish adequately to
offer the Eucharistic Sacrifice 'in persona Christ".
In recent times, the Church has experienced problems of "priestly
identity", deriving sometimes from an unclear theological
understanding of the two ways of participating in the priesthood
of Christ. In some areas, these difficulties have progressed to
the point of losing that profound ecclesiological balance which
is proper to the perennial and authentic Magisterium.
At the present time, however, circumstances are such that it is
possible to overcome the danger of "clericalizing" the
laity and of "secularizing" the clergy.
The generous commitment of the laity in the areas of worship,
transmission of the faith and pastoral collaboration, in the face
of shortages of priests, has tempted some sacred ministers and
laity to go beyond that which is permitted by the Church and by
their own ontological sacramental capacities. This results in
a theoretical and practical under estimation of the specific mission
of the laity to sanctify the structures of society from within.
This same crisis of identity has also brought about the "secularization"
of some sacred ministers by the obfuscation of their absolutely
indispensable specific role in ecclesial communion.
8. In the Church, the priest, alter Christus, is the minister
of the essential salvific actions. Acting in persona Christi Capitis,
he is the fount of life and vitality in the Church and in his
parish by virtue of his sacrificial power to confect the Body
and Blood of the Redeemer, his authority to proclaim the Gospel,
and his power to conquer the evil of sin through sacramental forgiveness.
The priest himself is not the source of this spiritual life. Rather,
it comes from Him who distributes it to all the people of God.
The priest, anointed by the Holy Spirit, is the servant who enters
the sacramental sanctuary: Jesus Christ Crucified (cf. John 19,
31-37) and Risen, from whom salvation comes.
With Mary, Mother of the Eternal High Priest, the priest is aware
that, with her, he is "an instrument of salvific communication
between God and man", albeit in a different way: the Blessed
Virgin through the Incarnation, the priest through the power of
the Sacrament of Holy Orders. The relationship between priests
and the Blessed Virgin Mary is based not only on a need for protection
and assistance but more so on an awareness of an objective fact:
"the presence of Our Lady", that "operative presence
with which the Church lives the mystery of Christ".
9. As a participant in the directive action of Christ, the Head
and Shepherd of his Body, the priest, at the pastoral level, is
specifically empowered to be a "man of communion", government
and of service to all. He is charged with promoting and maintaining
unity between the members and the Head, and between the members.
By his vocation, he unites and serves this double dimension of
Christ's pastoral function (cf. Mt 20,28; Mark 10, 45; Lk 22,
27). For its development, the Church's life requires energies
which can only be supplied by this ministry of communion, government
and service. It requires priests who are totally assimilated to
Christ whose vocation originates in full appropriation of Christ.
It requires priests who, "in" and "with" Christ,
live all the virtues manifested by Christ the Shepherd, and who
are motivated by, and draw inspiration from, assimilation with
the nuptial offering of the Crucified and Risen Son of God to
a redeemed and renewed mankind. It requires priests who wish to
be sources of unity and of fraternal offering of self to all -especially
the most needy. It requires men who, recognising that their priestly
identity derives from the Good Shepherd, internally live that
image and externally manifest it in a manner immediately recognisable
to all.
The priest renders Christ, Head of the Church, present through
the ministry of the Word which is a sharing in his prophetic office.
In persona et nomine Christi, the priest is minister of the evangelizing
word which calls all to conversion and holiness. His is minister
of the word of worship which praises God's greatness and gives
thanks for His mercy. He is minister of the word of the sacraments
which are the effective source of grace. In these multiple ways,
the priest, with the power of the Holy Spirit, prolongs the teaching
of Christ in His Church.
b). Unity of Life
10. Because of the ministry entrusted to priests, which in itself
is a holy, sacramental configuration to Jesus Christ, priests
have a further reason to strive for holiness. This does not mean
that the holiness to which the priest is called is in any way
subjectively greater than that to which all the faithful are called
in virtue of Baptism. While holiness takes different forms, holiness
is always the same. The priest, however, is motivated to strive
for holiness for a different reason: so as to be worthy of that
new grace which has marked him so that he can represent the person
of Christ, Head and Shepherd, and thereby become a living instrument
in the work of salvation. In fulfilling his ministry, consequently,
he who is "sacerdos in aeternum" must strive to follow
the example of the Lord in all things by uniting himself with
Him "in discovering the Father's will, and in the gift of
himself to he flock". Unity of life, or interior unity between
the spiritual life and ministerial activity, is founded on love
for the divine will and pastoral charity. Growth in this unity
of life, founded on pastoral charity, is promoted by a solid prayer
life so much so that the priest becomes, at one and the same time,
a witness to charity and a master of the spiritual life.
11. The Church's history is redolent with splendid models of truly
radical pastoral self-sacrifice. These include a great number
of holy priests who have reached sanctity through generous and
indefatigable dedication to the care of souls, commitment to asceticism
and a profound spiritual life, among them the Curé of Ars,
patron of parish priests. These pastors, consumed by the love
of Christ and its attendant pastoral charity, are a lived expression
of the Gospel.
Some currents in contemporary culture regard interior virtue,
mortification and spirituality as forms of introspection, alienation,
or of egoism which are incapable of understanding the problems
of the world and of people. In some instance, this has led to
a multifarious image of the priest: it ranges from the sociologist
to the therapist, from the politician to the manager. It has even
led to the idea of the "retired" priest. In this context,
it has to be recalled that the priest is a full-time bearer of
an ontological consecration. His basic identity has to be sought
in the character which has been conferred on him by the Sacrament
of Holy Orders and from which pastoral grace derives. The priest,
therefore, must always know what he has to do, precisely as a
priest. As St John Bosco says, the priest is a priest at the altar;
he is a priest in the confessional; he is a priest in the school;
he is priest on the street; indeed, he is a priest everywhere.
In certain contemporary situations, some priests are led to believe
that their ministry is peripheral to life, whereas, in reality,
it is at the very centre of life since it has the capacity to
enlighten, reconcile and renew all things.
It can happen that some priests, having begun their ministry full
of enthusiasm and ideals, experience disaffection, disillusionment,
or even failure. There are multiple reasons for this phenomenon:
deficient formation, lack of fraternity in diocesan presbyterates,
personal isolation, or lack of support from the Bishop and the
community, personal problems, health, bitterness at not being
able to find responses or solution to problems, diffidence with
regard to the ascetical life, abandonment of the spiritual life
or even lack of faith.
Indeed, a dynamic ministry that is not based on a solid priestly
spirituality quickly become an empty activity devoid of any prophetic
character. Clearly, the disintegration of the priest's internal
unity results, in the first place, from the decline of his pastoral
charity, which amounts to a decline in "that vigilant love
for the mystery that he bears within his heart for the good of
the Church and of mankind".
Spending time in intimate conversation with, and adoration of,
the Good Shepherd, present in the Most Blessed Sacrament of the
Altar, is a pastoral priority far superior to any other. Every
priest, who is a leader of his community, should attend to this
priority so as to ensure that he does not become spiritually barren,
nor transformed into a dry channel no longer capable of offering
anything to anyone.
Spirituality is, without doubt, the most important pastoral concern.
Any pastoral initiative, missionary programme, or effort at evangelization
that eschews the primacy of spirituality and divine worship is
doomed to failure.
c). The specific journey to holiness
12. The ministerial priesthood, to the extent that it conforms
to the life and priestly work of Christ, introduces a new dimension
to the spiritual life of those who receive this most precious
gift. It is a spiritual life based on participation in the gratia
capitalis of Christ in His Church, which matures through ministerial
service to the Church: it is a holiness in ministry and through
ministry.
13. Deepening "awareness that one is a minister of Jesus
Christ" is, therefore, of vital importance for the spiritual
life of the priest and for the effectiveness of his very ministry.
Ministerial relationship with Jesus Christ "gives rise to,
and requires in the priest, the further bond which comes from
his 'intention', that is, from a conscious and free choice to
do in his ministerial activities what the Church intends to do".
The phrase "to do in his ministerial activities what the
Church intends to do" is enlightening for the spiritual life
of all sacred ministers and invites them to a greater appreciation
of personal instrumentality in the service of Christ and the Church,
and to give that expression concrete expression through their
ministerial activity. "Intention", in this sense, necessarily
implies a relationship with the actions of Christ in, and through,
the Church. It also implies obedience to His will, fidelity to
His commands, and docility to His actions: the sacred ministry
is the instrument through which Christ and His Body, the Church,
operate.
This is a permanent personal disposition: "This bond tends
by its very nature to become as extensive and profound as possible,
affecting one's way of thinking, feeling and life itself: in other
words, creating a series of moral and spiritual 'dispositions'
which correspond to the ministerial actions performed by the priest".
Priestly spirituality requires a climate of proximity to the Lord
Jesus Christ, of friendship and personal encounter with Him, of
'shared' ministerial mission, of love for and service to, His
Person in the 'person' of His Body and Spouse which is the Church.
To live the Church and give oneself to her ministerial service
implies a profound love for the Lord Jesus Christ. "This
pastoral charity flows especially from the eucharistic sacrifice.
This sacrifice is therefore the centre and root of the whole life
of the priest, so that the priestly soul strives to make its own
what is enacted on the altar. But this cannot be achieved except
through priests themselves penetrating more intimately through
prayer into the mystery of Christ".
In penetrating that mystery, the Blessed Virgin Mary, united with
the Redeemer, comes to our assistance because "when we celebrate
the Holy Mass, the Mother of the Son of God is in our midst and
introduces us to the mystery of His redemptive sacrifice. Thus,
she is the mediatrix of all the grace flowing from this sacrifice
to the Church and to all the faithful". Indeed, "Mary
was associated with the priestly sacrifice of Christ in a singular
way by sharing His will to save the world through the Cross. She
was the first and perfect spiritual participant in His oblation
as Sacerdos et Hostia. As such, she can obtain and give to those
who share ministerially in the priesthood of her Son, the grace
to respond all the more to the demands of the spiritual sacrifice
which the priesthood demands: in particular she can obtain and
give the grace of faith, hope and perseverance in the face of
trials which stimulate a more generous participation in the redemptive
sacrifice".
For the priest, the Eucharist must occupy "the truly central
place both in his ministry and in his spiritual life", because
all of the Church's spiritual good derives from the Eucharist,
which per se is the source and summit of all evangelization. Hence,
the importance of proper preparation before offering the Holy
Sacrifice of the Mass, of its daily celebration, of thanksgiving
and of the visit to the Blessed Sacrament during the course of
the day.
14. In addition to daily celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice,
the priest prays the Liturgy of the Hours, an obligation he freely
undertook sub grave. The priest intensifies his love for the divine
Shepherd and makes him present to the faithful from the immolation
of Christ on the altar to the celebration of the Divine Office
with the entire Church. The priest has received the privilege
of "of speaking to God in the name of all", indeed of
becoming almost "the mouth of the Church". In the Divine
Office he supplies what is lacking in the praise of Christ and,
as an accredited ambassador, his intercession for the salvation
of the world is numbered among the most effective.
d.) Fidelity of the priest to ecclesiastical discipline
15. An "awareness of being of being a minister" implies
an awareness of the organic action of the Body of Christ. In order
to make progress, the life and mission of the Church requires
order, rules and laws governing conduct - in short, a disciplinary
regime. Prejudice against ecclesiastical discipline has to be
overcome, beginning with the very expression itself. Fear of citing
ecclesiastical discipline or requiring the fulfilment of its demands
must also be overcome. When the norms of ecclesiastical discipline
are observed, tensions are avoided which otherwise would compromise
the unitary pastoral effectiveness which the Church needs so as
to fulfil her mission of evangelization. A mature appropriation
of one's own ministerial responsibilities takes it for granted
that the Church "organized as a social and visible structure...must
also have norms: in order that its hierarchical and organic structure
be visible; in order that the exercise of the functions divinely
entrusted to it, especially that of sacred power and of the administration
of the sacraments, may be adequately organized".
Consciousness of being a minister of Jesus Christ, and of His
Mystical Body, also implies fidelity the Church's will as concretely
expressed in the norms of law. The objective of the Church's legislation
is the greater perfection of the Christian life so as better to
accomplish her saving mission. That legislation should therefore
be observed with sincerity and good will.
Among the various aspects of ecclesiastical discipline, docility
to the Church's liturgical laws and dispositions, that is to say,
fidelity to the norms which organize divine worship in accordance
the will of the Eternal High Priest and of his Mystical Body,
merits special importance. The Sacred Liturgy is an exercise of
the priesthood of Jesus Christ, a sacred action par excellence,
"the summit toward which the activity of the Church is directed...[and]the
fount from which all her power flows". In this area, consequently,
the priest should be even more aware of being a minister and of
his obligations to act in accordance with the commitments he freely
and solemnly undertook before God and the Church. "Regulation
of the sacred liturgy depends solely on the authority of the Church,
that is, on the Apostolic See, and, as laws may determine, on
the bishop...No other person, not even a priest, may add, remove,
or change anything in the liturgy of his own accord". Arbitrariness,
subjective expressions, improvisations, disobedience in the celebration
of the Holy Eucharist patently contradict the essence of the Holy
Eucharist, which is the sacrifice of Christ. The same is true
of the celebration of the other sacraments, especially of the
celebration of the Sacrament of Penance through which those who
are penitent and intend to amend their lives have their sins forgiven
and are reconciled with the Church
Likewise, priests should be careful to promote an authentic and
conscious participation of the laity in the Sacred Liturgy, since
the Church promotes such participation. There are functions within
the Sacred Liturgy which can be exercised by the faithful who
have not received the Sacrament of Orders. Other functions, however,
are proper and absolutely exclusive to ordained ministers. Respect
for the different states of life, and for their complementary
nature in the Church's mission, requires that all confusion in
this matter be carefully avoided.
e). The priest in ecclesial communion
16. In order to serve the Church, which is an organically structured
community of the faithful invested with the same baptismal dignity
and a diversity of charisms and functions, it is necessary to
know and love her as she is willed by Jesus Christ, her founder,
and not as passing philosophies or different ideologies would
fashion her. The ministerial function of service to the community,
which is based on configuration with Christ, demands a knowledge
of, and respect for, the specific role of the lay faithful, and
the encouragement of every possible means of having all assume
their proper responsibilities. The priest is at the service of
the community. He is also sustained by his community. He needs
the specific contribution of the laity not only for the organization
and administration of the community, but also for faith and charity:a
certain osmosis exists between the faith of the priest and that
of the other faithful. Christian families and fervent communities
have often assisted their priests in times of crisis. It is, likewise,
highly important for the priest to know, esteem and respect the
nature of following Christ in the consecrated life, which is a
precious treasure of the Church and a witness to the work of the
Holy Spirit in her.
To the extent that priests are living signs and servants of ecclesial
communion they become part of the living unity of the Church in
time, that is, of Sacred Tradition of which the Magisterium is
the custodian and guarantor. Reference to Tradition invests the
ministry of priests with a solid basis and an objectivity of testimony
to the Truth, which came in Christ and was revealed in history.
Such helps to avoid a prurience with regard to novelty which injures
communion and evacuates the depth and credibility of the priestly
ministry.
The parish priest is called to be a patient builder of communion
between his own parish and the local Church, and the universal
Church. He should be a model of adherence to the perennial Magisterium
of the Church and to its discipline.
f). Sense of the universal in the particular
17. "The priest needs to be aware that his 'being in a particular
Church' constitutes by its very nature a significant element in
his living a Christian spirituality. In this sense, the priest
finds precisely in his belonging and dedication to the particular
Church a wealth of meaning, criteria for discernment and action
which shape both his pastoral discernment and his spiritual life".
This is an important point which should be clearly understood
in a manner which takes account of how "membership in and
dedication to a particular Church does not limit the activity
and life of priests to that Church: a restriction of this sort
is not possible, given the very nature both of the particular
Church and of the priestly ministry".
The concept of incardination, as modified by the Second Vatican
Council and subsequently assumed into the Code of Canon Law, overcomes
the danger of too tightly restricting the ministry of priests
not only in geographical terms, but especially in psychological
and even theological terms. Belonging to one particular Church
and to the pastoral service of her internal communion, which are
ecclesiological elements, also essentially incorporate the life
and activity of priests and lends them a specific structure consisting
of determined pastoral objectives, goals, personal commitments
to specific tasks, pastoral encounters and shared interests. In
order to know and love a particular Church more effectively, better
understand membership of, and dedication to her, serve her to
the point of giving one's own life so as to be sanctified through
her, sacred ministers must always be aware that the universal
Church " is a reality which is ontologically and temporally
prior to every particular Church". Indeed, the universal
Church is not the sum total of all particular Churches. The particular
Churches, in and with the universal Church, must be open to the
reality of a true communion of persons, charisms, and spiritual
traditions which transcends geographical, psychological or intellectual
boundaries. It should be perfectly clear to priests that the Church
is one. Universality or catholicity should always pervade the
particular. A profound, genuine and vital bond of communion with
the See of Peter is the guarantee and necessary condition for
this. Acceptance, diffusion, and conscientious application of
papal documents, and of other documents published by the Dicasteries
of the Roman Curia, are its concrete expression.
Up to now we have given consideration to the life and work of
all priests. Our reflection must now concentrate on those who
have been specifically constituted as parish priests.
Part II
THE PARISH
AND THE OFFICE OF PARISH PRIEST
The Parish and the Office of Parish Priest
18. The more important ecclesiological aspects of the theologico-canonical
idea of parish were considered by the Second Vatican Council in
the light of Tradition, Catholic doctrine, and the ecclesiology
of communion. They were subsequently given canonical form in the
Code of Canon Law. Post-conciliar papal teaching, implicitly or
explicitly, developed them from various perspectives but always
in reference to the ordained priesthood. A resume of the main
doctrinal, theological and canonical issues arising from this
material will be useful especially in working out a more effective
response to the pastoral challenges facing the parochial ministry
of priests at the dawn of the third millennium.
By analogy, much of what is said in relation to the pastoral leadership
given by parish priests also applies to priests who assist in
parishes, as well as to those appointed to specific pastoral duties
such as chaplains in prisons, hospitals, universities and schools
and to those charged with the care of migrants and tourists etc.
A parish is a specific community of the christifideles, established
on a stable basis within a particular Church, whose pastoral care
is entrusted to a parish priest as its own shepherd under the
authority of the diocesan bishop. Thus, the entire life of the
parish, as well as the significance of its apostolic commitments
to society, have to be understood and lived in terms of an organic
communion between the common priesthood of the faithful and the
ministerial priesthood; of fraternal and dynamic collaboration
between pastors and faithful, with absolute respect for the rights,
duties and functions of both, and mutual recognition of their
respective proper competence and responsibility. The parish priest,
"in close communion with his Bishop and with his faithful...
should avoid introducing into his pastoral ministry all forms
of authoritarianism and forms of democratic administration which
are alien to the profound reality of the ministry". In this
regard, the interdicasterial Instruction Ecclesia de Mysterio,
approved in forma specifica by the Supreme Pontiff, remains in
full force. Its integral application assures that correct ecclesial
praxis which is fundamental for the very life of the Church.
The intrinsic bond with the diocesan community and the Bishop,
and his hierarchical communion with the Successor of Peter, ensure
the parochial community's membership of the universal Church.
The parochial community is therefore a pars dioecesis animated
by the same spirit of communion, an ordered baptismal co-responsibility,
a common liturgical life centered on the celebration of the Holy
Eucharist, and a common missionary spirit shared by that community.
Indeed, every parish "is founded on a theological reality,
because it is a Eucharistic community(94). This means that the
parish is a community properly suited for celebrating the Eucharist,
the living source for its upbuilding and the sacramental bond
of its being in full communion with the whole Church. Such suitableness
is rooted in the fact that the parish is a community of faith
and an organic community, that is, constituted by the ordained
ministers and other Christians, in which the pastor-who represents
the diocesan bishop -is the hierarchical bond with the entire
particular Church".
Thus, the parish, which is like a diocesan cell, should give "an
outstanding example of community apostolate, for it gathers into
a unity all the human diversity that are found there and inserts
them into the universality of the Church". The communitas
christifidelium is a the fundamental element of the parish. In
a certain sense, the term underlines the dynamic relationship
between those persons who, under the indispensable leadership
of a proper pastor, are its constituents. As a general rule, such
are all the faithful in a given territory, or some of the faithful
in the case of personal parishes which have been constituted on
the basis of rite, language, nationality or for other specific
purposes.
19. Another basic element for the idea of parish is that of the
cura pastoralis or cura animarum which is proper to the office
of parish priest and principally expressed by preaching the Word
of God, administering the sacraments, and in the pastoral government
of the community. In the parish, which is the normal context for
pastoral care, "the parish priest is the proper shepherd
of the parish entrusted to him. He exercises the pastoral care
of that community under the authority of the diocesan bishop with
whom he has been called to share in the ministry of Christ so
that, in the service of that community, he may discharge the duties
of teaching, sanctifying and governing, with the cooperation of
other priests or deacons and the assistance of the lay members
of the faithful and in accordance with the norms of law".
The concept of parish priest is redolent of great theological
significance while permitting a Bishop to establish other forms
of the cura animarum in accordance with the norms of law.
It recent times, it has become necessary to adapt pastoral care
in the parishes to various circumstances such as shortages of
priests in some areas, overpopulated urban parishes, depleted
rural parishes, or parishes with reduced numbers of the faithful.
Such has required the introduction of certain innovations in the
universal law of the Church concerning the pastoral care of parishes.
Needless to say, these innovations do not involve any innovations
at the level of principle. Among such initiatives is the possibility
of entrusting the pastoral care of souls, in one or more parishes,
in solidum to several priests, on the condition that only one
will act as moderator, directing the common pastoral activity
of all, and personally assuming responsibility for it before the
Bishop. On the basis of a multiple title, a single parochial office
and the single pastoral care of a parish can be entrusted to several
priests who participate in the office entrusted to them in an
identical manner, and whose direction is personally undertaken
by a brother priest who acts as moderator. Entrusting the pastoral
care of a parish in solidum can prove useful in resolving difficulties
arising in those dioceses in which reduced numbers of priests
are obliged to distribute their time among several ministerial
activities. It can also prove a useful way of promoting pastoral
coresponsibility among priests and, in a special way, for promoting
the custom of the common life among priests which should always
be encouraged.
It cannot, however, be prudently overlooked that pastoral care
in solidum, which can only be given to priests alone, can give
rise to certain difficulties. It is natural for the faithful to
identify with their own parish priest. The continuing rotation
of priests among themselves can be confusing or misunderstood
in the parish. The great value of the spiritual paternity of the
parish priest in his parish is clearly evident. The role of sacramental
"pater familias" played by the parish priest, and its
consequent ties, is pastorally effective.
In cases where pastoral necessity require such, a diocesan Bishop
may entrust several parishes to the pastoral care of one priest
on a temporary basis.
Where circumstances require it, and as a provisional measure,
a parish may be entrusted to an administrator. It should be recalled,
however, that the office of parish priest, which is essentially
pastoral, requires fullness and stability. The parish priest must
be an icon of the presence of the historical Christ. The demands
of configuration to Christ underline the importance of this commitment.
20. The mission of pastor in a parish, which implies the full
care of souls, absolutely requires the exercise of priestly orders.
Hence, in addition to ecclesial communion, canon law explicitly
stipulates that only a man constituted in the sacred order of
the presbyterate can be validly nominated to the office of parish
priest
With regard to the parish priest's duty to proclaim the word of
God and to preach authentic Catholic doctrine, canon 528 explicitly
mentions the homily and catechetical instruction; initiatives
to promote the spirit of the Gospel in every ambit of life; the
Catholic education of children and young people; as well as efforts
involving the correct collaboration of the laity to ensure that
the Gospel message reaches those who have abandoned the practise
of the faith and those who do not profess the true faith, so that
they might come to conversion through the grace of God. Clearly,
the parish priest is not obliged personally to fulfil all of these
duties. Rather, he is obliged to ensure that they are discharged
in his parish in an opportune manner and in conformity with the
doctrine and discipline of the Church. Such are realized as circumstances
permit and subject to his personal responsibility. Some of the
obligations incumbent on the parish priest must always be discharged
exclusively by an ordained minister, as in the case of preaching
during the celebration of the Holy Mass. "Although he may
be overshadowed by the eloquence of the non-ordained faithful,
this does erase the fact that he sacramentally represents Christ,
Head and Shepherd, and the fact that the effectiveness of his
preaching derives from this reality". Other functions of
the parish priest, such as catechesis, can be habitually carried
out by the laity who have been properly trained doctrinally and
who integrally live the Christian life. In such instances, the
parish priest is obliged to maintain personal contact with these
people. Blessed John XXIII wrote "it is most important that
the clergy are at all times faithful in their duty of teaching.
'In this respect, it is useful to hold and insist - as St. Pius
X says - that priests are bound more gravely to no other office,
nor more strictly to any other obligation'".
As is clear, the parish priest is bound by effective pastoral
charity not only to encourage all of his collaborators but also
to be vigilant in their regard. In some countries in which there
are faithful who belong to diverse language groups, where no personal
parish has been erected nor adequate arrangements made for them,
the territorial parish priest is the proper parish priest for
such members of the faithful. He is obliged to provide for their
particular needs, especially in matters pertaining to their specific
cultural sensibilities.
21. Concerning the ordinary means of sanctification, canon 528
stipulates that the parish priest is to give particular care to
ensure that the Most Holy Eucharist is the centre of the parochial
community and that the faithful come to the fullness of Christian
life by a conscious and active participation in the Sacred Liturgy,
by the celebration of the sacraments, by the practise of prayer
and by good works.
It is notable that the Code makes specific mention of frequent
reception of the Holy Eucharist and of the Sacrament of Penance.
This would indicate that the parish priest, in establishing the
times for Masses and confessions in his parish, would take into
consideration those times which are convenient for the majority
of the faithful, while bearing in mind also the need to facilitate
those who have difficulty in easily attending the celebration
of the sacraments. The parish priest should devote special attention
to individual confession, understood in the spirit and form established
by the Church. He should be mindful that confession must precede
first Holy Communion. Moreover, the individual confessions of
the faithful, for pastoral reasons and for the convenience of
the faithful, may also be received during the celebration of the
Holy Mass.
Care should be taken to ensure respect "for the sensibilities
of the penitent concerning the manner in which he wishes to confess,
either face to face, or from behind a grill". The confessor
may also have pastoral reasons for preferring the use a confessional
equipped with a grill.
The practise of visiting the Blessed Sacrament should be strongly
encouraged. To this end, churches should be kept open for as long
as possible, and their opening times fixed and established. Many
parish priests promote the laudable practise of adoration of the
Blessed Sacrament through solemn exposition and can attest to
its fruits in the vitality of their parishes.
The Blessed Sacrament is to be lovingly reserved in a tabernacle
"which is the spiritual heart of every religious and parochial
community" "Without the cult of the Eucharist, as with
a beating heart, a parish becomes arid""If you wish
the faithful to pray willingly and piously -as Pius XII reminded
the clergy of Rome - set an example for them by praying in your
churches before them. A priest on his knees before the tabernacle,
with a proper disposition and in deep recollection is a model
of edification for the people, a reminder of, and an invitation
to, prayerful emulation".
22. Canon 529 elaborates the principal duties which are required
for the fulfilment of the pastoral office of parish priest and
outlines the ministerial characteristics expected of a parish
priest. As the priest proper to the parish, he should make every
effort to know the faithful entrusted to his care and avoid the
danger of any form of functionalism. A parish priest is not a
functionary fulfilling a role or providing services to those who
request them. Rather, he exercises his ministry in an integral
way as a man of God, seeking out the faithful, visiting their
families, sharing in their needs and in their joys. He corrects
with prudence, he cares for the aged, the weak, the abandoned,
the sick, and the dying. He devotes particular care to the poor
and the afflicted. He strives for the conversion of sinners and
those in error. He encourages all in the fulfilment of the duties
of their states of life and promotes the Christian life among
families.
Promotion of the spiritual and corporeal works of mercy remains
a constant pastoral priority and a sign of the vitality of any
Christian community.
Another important duty entrusted to the parish priest is the promotion
of the proper role of the laity in the Church's mission, which
is that of quickening and perfecting the temporal order with the
spirit of the Gospel, thereby giving witness to Christ through
the exercise of secular tasks.
The parish priest is obliged to collaborate with his Bishop and
with the other priests of the diocese so as to ensure that the
faithful who participate in the parochial community become aware
that they are also members of the diocese and of the universal
Church. The increasing mobility of contemporary society makes
it all the more necessary that the parish does not become introspective.
Rather, it should welcome the faithful of other parishes and avoid
discouraging its own parishioners from participating in the life
of other parishes, rectories or chaplaincies.
The parish priest is particularly bound zealously to promote,
sustain and follow vocations to the priesthood. Personal example,
given by visibly owning his priestly identity, living consistently
with it, together with devotion to individual confession, spiritual
direction of young people, and catechesis on the ordained ministry
are indispensable to any pastoral promotion of priestly vocations.
"It has always been a special duty of the priestly ministry
to sow the seeds of life totally consecrated to God and to promote
love of virginity".
The Code attributes the following duties specifically to parish
priests: administer the Sacrament of Baptism and that of Confirmation
to those in danger of death in accordance with canon 883, 3; administer
Viaticum and the Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick, without
prejudice to the provisions of canon 1003, §§ 2 and
3; impart the Apostolic Blessing; assist at and bless marriages;
celebrate funerals; bless the Baptismal font in Eastertide; lead
processions and impart solemn blessings outside of the church;
solemnly celebrate the Sacrament of the Most Holy Eucharist on
Sundays and on the feasts of precept.
Rather than duties or rights given exclusively to the parish priest,
these functions are entrusted to him in a special way in virtue
of his particular responsibility as parish priest. They should
consequently be discharged personally, in so far as possible,
or a least overseen by the parish priest.
23. In those areas experiencing shortages of priests it can happen,
as is already the case in some places, that the Bishop, after
prudent consideration, may entrust a certain collaboration "ad
tempus" in the exercise of the pastoral care of a parish,
in the canonically approved manner, to a person or persons who
have not been invested with priestly character. In such cases,
however, the original properties of diversity and complementarity
of the charisms and functions of ordained ministers and the lay
faithful must be carefully observed and respected since these
are proper to the Church and are willed by God for its organization.
Extraordinary situations exist which justify such collaboration.
Such collaboration, however, may not lawfully supersede the specific
nature of the sacred ministry and the lay state.
In her desire to clarify terminology that might occasion confusion,
the Church exclusively reserves certain expressions connoting
"potestas capitis" to priests - "pastor",
"chaplain", "director", "co-ordinator"
and other equivalents.
In its title dedicated to the rights and duties of the lay faithful,
the Code distinguishes between those competencies or functions
which properly belong to all the lay faithful by right or duty,
and those deriving from collaboration with the pastoral ministry.
These latter are a capacitas or habilitas whose exercise depends
on being called by the Church's lawful pastors. Thus, they are
in no sense, "rights".
24. The foregoing has already been clarified by John Paul II in
the Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles Laici: "The
Church's mission of salvation in the world is realized not only
by the ministers in virtue of the Sacrament of Orders but also
by all the lay faithful; indeed, because of their Baptismal state
and their specific vocation, in the measure proper to each person,
the lay faithful participate in the priestly, prophetic and kingly
mission of Christ.
The Pastors, therefore, ought to acknowledge and foster the ministries,
offices and roles of the lay faithful that find their foundation
in the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation, and indeed, for
a good many of them, in the Sacrament of Matrimony. When necessity
in the Church requires it, the Pastors, according to the established
norms of universal law, can entrust to the lay faithful, ad tempus,
certain offices and roles, connected with their pastoral ministry
which do not require the character of Orders. This same document
recalls the basic principles underlying this collaboration and
sets the limits for it: the exercise of such tasks does not make
Pastors of the lay faithful: in fact, a person is not a minister
simply in performing a task, but through sacramental ordination.
Only the Sacrament of Orders gives the ordained minister a particular
participation in the office of Christ, the Shepherd and Head,
and in his Eternal Priesthood. Supplying certain tasks by the
laity takes its legitimacy, formally and immediately, from the
official deputation given by the Pastors to the laity, as well
as from its concrete exercise under the guidance of ecclesiastical
authority(23).
In those cases where a collaboration with the ordained ministry
has been entrusted to the non ordained faithful, a priest must
necessarily be appointed as moderator and vested with the power
and duties of a parish priest, personally to direct pastoral care.
Clearly, the office of parish priest exercised by a priest who
has been designated to direct pastoral activity -i.e. one invested
with the faculties of a parish priest - and exercise those functions
which are exclusively priestly differs completely from the subsidiary
collaboration of the non-ordained faithful in the other functions
of the office. A non ordained male religious, a female religious,
a lay person may exercise administrative functions, as well as
that of promoting spiritual formation. The may not, however, exercise
functions which belong fully to the care of souls since such requires
priestly character. They may, nevertheless, supply for the ordained
minister in those liturgical functions which are consonant with
their canonical condition" and enumerated in canon 230 §
3: "exercise the ministry of the word, preside over liturgical
prayers, confer Baptism, and distribute Holy Communion in accordance
with the prescriptions of law". Even Deacons, who cannot
be equated with other members of the faithful, cannot exercise
the full cura animarum.
It is always advisable for the diocesan Bishop to verify every
case of necessity with the utmost prudence and pastoral foresight.
He should establish criteria to determine the suitability of those
called to this form of collaboration and clearly define the functions
to be given to each of them in accordance with the circumstances
of each respective parish. In the absence of a specific and clear
assignment of functions, the priest moderator will determine in
the matter. The exceptional and provisional nature of such arrangements
require the promotion of an awareness of the absolute need for
priestly vocations in these parish communities. The seeds of such
vocations should be encouraged in them, community and personal
prayer for vocations should be promoted and well as prayers for
the sanctification of priests.
In order to ensure that priestly vocations may flourish more easily
in the community, it is important that an authentic love for the
Church should imbue it. A profound esteem and strong enthusiasm
for Bride of Christ, who collaborates with the Holy Spirit in
work of salvation, should always be promoted and encouraged.
Every effort, therefore, has to be made to keep alive in the hearts
of the faithful that joy and holy pride deriving from membership
of the Church which is so palpably evident in the first letter
of St. Peter and in the Apocalypse (cf. 1 Pet 3,14; Ap 2, 13.17;
7, 9; 14, 1ff; 19, 6; 22, 14). Without this joy and pride, at
a psychological level, it becomes difficult to conserve and develop
the life of faith. It is not surprising, at least at the level
of psychology, that in some contexts priestly vocations fail to
germinate or come to maturity.
"It would be a fatal error to despair in the face of present
difficulties and adopt an attitude which, de facto, would prepare
a Church of the future which would be almost bereft of priests.
Measures adopted in this light to counter present shortages of
priests, not withstanding the good intentions motivating them,
would, in fact, be seriously prejudicial for the ecclesial community".
25. "Where permanent deacons participate in the pastoral
care of parishes which, because of a shortage of priests, do not
have the immediate benefit of a parish priest, they should have
precedence over the non-ordained faithful". In virtue of
Sacred Orders, "the deacon is teacher in so far as he preaches
and bears witness to the word of God; he sanctifies when he administers
the Sacrament of Baptism, the Holy Eucharist and the sacramentals,
he participates at the Holy Eucharist as "a minister of the
Blood", and conserves and distributes the Blessed Eucharist;
he is a guide in as much as he animates the community or a section
of ecclesial life".
Deacons who are candidates for ordination to the priesthood should
be especially welcome when they offer their pastoral services
in a parish. In agreement with the seminary authorities, the parish
priest should be a guide and a teacher, conscious that a sincere
and total self offering to Christ on the part of a candidate for
the priesthood, can depend on his own coherent witness to priestly
identity, and to the missionary generosity of his service and
love for the parish.
26. Like the diocesan pastoral council, the provisions of law
foresee the constitution of a pastoral council at parochial level,
should such be considered opportune by the Bishop, having heard
his council of priests. The basic task of such a council is to
serve, at institutional level, the orderly collaboration of the
faithful in the development of pastoral activity which is proper
to priests. The pastoral council is thus a consultative organ
in which the faithful, expressing their baptismal responsibility,
can assist the parish priest, who presides at the council, by
offering their advice on pastoral matters "The lay faithful
ought to be ever more convinced of the special meaning that their
commitment to the apostolate takes on in their parish"; hence
it is necessary to have "a more convinced, extensive and
decided appreciation for "Parish Pastoral Councils".
There are clear reasons for such: In the present circumstances
the lay faithful have the ability to do very much and, therefore,
ought to do very much towards the growth of an authentic ecclesial
communion in their parishes in order to reawaken missionary zeal
towards nonbelievers and believers themselves who have abandoned
the faith or grown lax in the Christian life.
"All of the faithful have the right, sometimes even the duty,
to make their opinions known on matters concerning the good of
the Church. This can happen through institutions which have been
established to facilitate that purpose: [...]the pastoral council
can be a most useful aid...providing proposals and suggestions
on missionary, catechetical and apostolic initiatives [..] as
well as on the promotion of doctrinal formation and the sacramental
life of the faithful; on the assistance to be given to the pastoral
work of priests in various social and territorial situations;
on how better to influence public opinion etc.". The pastoral
council is to be seen in relation to the context of the relationship
of mutual service that exists between a parish priest and his
faithful. It would therefore be senseless to consider the pastoral
council as an organ replacing the parish priest in his government
of the parish, or as one which, on the basis of a majority vote,
materially constrains the parish priest in his direction of the
parish.
In accordance with the norms of law on just and honest administration,
organs which have been established to consider economic questions
in a parish, may not constrain the pastoral role of the parish
priest, who is the legal representative and administrator of the
goods of the parish.
4. Positive contemporary challenges for the pastoral ministry
in parishes
27. Since, at the outset of the new millennium, the entire Church
has been invited to strive for "a renewed commitment to the
Christian life", founded on an awareness of the risen Christ's
presence amongst us", we must see the consequences of that
invitation for pastoral care in parishes.
This does not require the invention of new pastoral programmes,
since the Christian programme, revolving around Christ, is always
one of knowing, loving and imitating Him, of living the life of
the Trinity in Him, and of transforming history with Him by bringing
it to completion: This is a programme which does not change with
shifts of times and cultures, even though it takes account of
time and culture for the sake of true dialogue and effective communication.
In the immense and demanding pastoral horizons of to-day: It is
in the local churches that the specific features of a detailed
pastoral plan can be identified - goals and methods, formation
and enrichment of the people involved, the search for the necessary
resources - which will enable the proclamation of Christ to reach
people, mould communities, and have a deep and incisive influence
in bringing Gospel values to bear in society and culture".
Such are the horizons of "an exciting work of pastoral revitalization
- a work involving all of us".
The most important and basic pastoral challenge facing the priest
in the parish is to bring the faithful to a consistent spiritual
life based on the principles of Christian doctrine as lived and
taught by the Saints. Pastoral planning must give priority to
this essential aspect of all pastoral action. To-day, more than
ever, prayer, the sacramental life, meditation, silent adoration,
talking heart to heart with the Lord, daily exercise of the virtues
which make us more like Him, must be rediscovered, since such
are far more productive than any discussion, and ultimately the
necessary condition for all effective discussion.
Novo Millennio inuente sets seven pastoral priorities: holiness,
prayer, the Sunday celebration of the Most Holy Eucharist, the
Sacrament of Penance, the primacy of grace, and listening to and
proclaiming the Word. These priorities became particularly clear
from the experience of the Great Jubilee. Not only do they offer
parish priests but, all priests engaged in the cura animarum,
the content and substance of the pastoral questions on which they
should carefully meditate. They also provide a synthesis of the
spirit with which the renewal of pastoral work should be approached.
Novo millennio ineunte also emphasizes another "important
area in which there has to be commitment and planning on the part
of the universal Church and the particular Churches: the domain
of communion (koinonia), which embodies and reveals the very essence
of the mystery of the Church and implies the promotion of a spirituality
of communion. "To make the Church the home and the school
of communion: that is the great challenge facing us in the millennium
which is now beginning, if we wish to be faithful to God's plan
and respond to the world's deepest yearnings". Moreover,
it also specifies that before making practical plans, we need
to promote a spirituality of communion, making it the guiding
principle of education wherever individuals and Christians are
formed, wherever ministers of the altar, consecrated persons,
and pastoral workers are trained, wherever families and communities
are being built up".
A truly pastoral promotion of the holiness of our parish communities
implies an authentic pedagogy on prayer, a renewed, persuasive
and effective catechesis on the importance of the Sunday and daily
celebration of the Most Holy Eucharist, on community and personal
adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, on the frequent and individual
practice of the Sacrament of Penance, on spiritual direction,
on marian devotion, on the imitation of the Saints, as well as
on a renewed apostolic commitment to live the daily duties of
the community and of individuals, proper pastoral care of the
family, and on a consistent political and social engagement.
This pastoral renewal will not be possible unless inspired, sustained
and activated by priests imbued by this same spirit. "The
faithful draw great encouragement from the example and witness
of the priest. They can rediscover the parish as a "school"
of prayer in which encounter with Jesus Christ is not merely expressed
in implorations for assistance but also in acts of thanksgiving,
praise, adoration, contemplation, prayerful listening, ardour
of affection, to the point of a truly loving him". "It
is fatal to forget that "without Christ we can do nothing"
(cf. Jn 15:5). It is prayer which roots us in this truth. It constantly
reminds us of the primacy of Christ and, in union with him, the
primacy of the interior life and of holiness. When this principle
is not respected, is it any wonder that pastoral plans come to
nothing and leave us with a disheartening sense of frustration?
We then share the experience of the disciples in the Gospel story
of the miraculous catch of fish: "We have toiled all night
and caught nothing" (Lk 5:5). This is the moment of faith,
of prayer, of conversation with God, in order to open our hearts
to the tide of grace and allow the word of Christ to pass through
us in all its power: Duc in altum!".
A good laity is scarcely possible without truly holy priests.
Without them everything is dead - just as it is almost impossible
to have a blossoming of vocations without Christian families which
are domestic churches. It is therefore erroneous to emphasize
the laity if this entails overlooking the ordained ministry. Such
error ends by penalizing the laity and frustrating the entire
mission of the Church.
28. The rediscovery in our communities of the universal call to
holiness should be the basis for all pastoral planning and orient
that same planning. The soul of every apostolate depends on divine
intimacy, on placing nothing before the love of Christ, in seeking
the greater glory of God in all things, in living the Christocentric
dynamism of the marian "totus tuus". Training in holiness
"places pastoral planning under the sign of holiness"
and constitutes the primary pastoral challenge of contemporary
times. In the holy Church, all of the faithful are called to holiness.
Teaching all, and recalling indefatigably, that holiness is the
goal of Christian life is essential to the pedagogy of holiness.
"All in the Church, whether they belong to the hierarchy
or cared for by it, are called to holiness, according to the Apostle's
saying: 'For this is the will of God, your sanctification'"
(1 Thes 4,3; cf. Eph 1,3)". This is the first element to
be pedagogically developed in ecclesial catechesis, so that an
awareness for the need for personal sanctification becomes a common
conviction.
Proclamation of the universality of the call to holiness requires
that the Christian life is understood as a following of Christ,
or of being conformed to Christ. This conformation to Christ is
the very substance of sanctification and is the specific goal
of all Christian life. In order to accomplish this objective,
all Christians need the Church's assistance, since she is both
mater et magistra. The pedagogy of holiness is a goal which is
as attractive as it is challenging for all those in the Church
who hold responsibilities of government and formation.
29. A zealous, missionary commitment to evangelization is a priority
of singular importance for the Church and, consequently, for the
pastoral care of the parish. "Even in countries evangelized
many centuries ago, the reality of a "Christian society"
which, amid all the frailties which have always marked human life,
measured itself explicitly on Gospel values, is now gone. Today
we must courageously face a situation which is becoming increasingly
diversified and demanding, in the context of "globalization"
and of the consequent new and uncertain mingling of peoples and
cultures".
In contemporary society, which is marked by cultural, religious
and ethnic pluralism, relativism, indifferentism, irenicism, and
syncretism, it appears that some Christians have become accustomed
to a form of "Christianity" lacking any real reference
to Christ and his Church. In these circumstances, the pastoral
mission is reduced to social concerns which are envisaged in exclusively
anthropological terms, often based on a vague appeal to pacificism,
universalism or to a loose reference to "values".
The evangelization of the contemporary world can only happen with
the rediscovery of the personal, social and cultural identity
of Christians. That implies, above all else, the rediscovery of
Jesus Christ, incarnate Word, and sole Saviour of mankind. This
basic conviction sets free that missionary commitment which should
especially characterize every priest, and through him, every parish
or community entrusted to his pastoral care. "We hold that
it is impossible even to imagine one pastoral method which is
applicable to, or can be adapted to, all circumstances. Before
us, this was axiomatic in the teaching of Gregory Nazianzanus.
A single pastoral method is excluded. In order to edify all in
charity, it is necessary to vary the modes in which the hearts
of faithful can be touched, but not doctrine. Pastoral care, therefore,
requires an adaptation of modes but excludes any adaptation of
doctrine".
The parish priest will always ensure that the various associations,
movements or groups present in the parish will make their specific
contribution to the missionary endeavour of the parish. "Another
important aspect of communion is the promotion of forms of association,
whether of the more traditional kind or the newer ecclesial movements,
which continue to give the Church a vitality that is God's gift
and a true "springtime of the Spirit". Associations
and movements in the Church, both at universal and local level,
must always operate in complete ecclesial harmony and obey the
directives of their lawful Pastors". Every form of exclusivism
or introspection among specific groups should be avoided in the
parochial structure because its missionary character rests on
the certainty, which should be shared by all, that "Jesus
Christ has a significance and a value for the human race and its
history, which are unique and singular, proper to him alone, exclusive,
universal, and absolute. Jesus Christ is the Word of God made
man for the salvation of mankind".
The Church relies on the daily fidelity of her priests to the
pastoral ministry as they attend to their indispensable mission
in the parishes entrusted to their care.
For parish priests and other priests who serve various communities,
certainly, there is no shortage of pastoral difficulties, or spiritual
or physical exhaustion caused by overwork or a lack of that balance
which recommends healthy periods of spiritual renewal and physical
rest. What disappointments, it has to be stated, are experienced
when the winds of secularism often choke the seeds sown with such
noble daily effort.
A largely secularized culture which seeks to isolate the priest
within its own conceptual categories and strip him of his fundamental
mystical-sacramental dimension, is largely responsible for this
phenomenon. From this, several forms of discouragement can derive
which lead to isolation, forms of depressive fatalism, and scattered
activism. Such, however, does not take from the fact that the
vast majority of the Church's priests, supported by the solicitude
of their Bishops, face the difficulties of the present historical
conjuncture positively, and succeed in joyfully living their generous
pastoral commitment and their priestly identity to the full.
Internal dangers to the priestly ministry also exist: bureaucracy,
functionalism, democratization, planning which is more managerial
than pastoral. Unfortunately, in some circumstances, priests can
be overwhelmed by structures which overpower them and are not
always necessary, or which induce negative psycho-physical consequences
detrimental for the spiritual life and for the very ministry itself.
The Bishop is obliged carefully to invigilate such situations
since he is, above all else, a father to his closest and most
precious collaborators. It is both urgent and necessary to ensure
unity among all ecclesial forces so as to respond effectively
to the attacks currently being made on priests and their ministry.
30. In view of the current circumstances of the Church's life,
the demands of new evangelization, and in consideration of the
response which priests are call to make, the Congregation for
the Clergy offers this present document as an aid for, an encouragement
to, and a stimulus for, the ministry of priests entrusted with
the pastoral care of souls in parishes. Indeed, the Church's most
immediate contact with people normally happens in the context
of the parish. Our thoughts and considerations, therefore, are
directed towards the priest qua parish priest. He represents the
presence of Jesus Christ as head of his Mystical Body, the Good
Shepherd who tends every single member of the flock. In this document,
we have sought to highlight the mystery and sacramental nature
of that ministry.
In the light of the teaching of the Second Vatican Council and
the Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis, this document should
be seen as a continuity of the Directory for the Ministry and
Life of Priests, the Interdicasterial Instruction Ecclesiae de
mysterio, and the Circular Letter The Priest and the Third Christian
Millennium, Teacher of the Word, Minister of the Sacraments and
Leader of the Community.
It is only possible to live the daily ministry by means of personal
holiness which should always be based on the supernatural power
of the sacraments of the Holy Eucharist and Penance.
"The Eucharist is the point from which everything else comes
forth and to which it all returns. (...) Through the centuries,
countless priests have found in the Eucharist the consolation
promised by Jesus on the evening of the Last Supper, the secret
to overcoming their solitude, the strength to bear their sufferings,
the nourishment to make a new beginning after every discouragement,
and the inner energy to bolster their decision to remain faithful".
Progress in the spiritual life and in permanent formation can
be greatly assisted by that fraternity among priests which is
not merely one of simply being able to live together under the
same roof, but one which involves communion of prayer, shared
objectives, pastoral cooperation, and reciprocal friendship between
priests and their Bishop. Such is also helpful in overcoming the
trials and difficulties which are experienced in the exercise
of the Sacred Ministry. Every priest not only needs the ministerial
assistance of his own brethren but also needs them precisely because
they are his brethren.
Among other measures, a house could be set aside in the diocese
for all priests who, from time to time, need to retire to a place
suitable for recollection and prayer so as to renew contact with
those means which are indispensable for their personal holiness.
In the spirit of the Cenacle, where the Apostles gathered in prayer
with Mary, the Mother of Jesus (Acts 1, 14), to her we entrust
these pages which have been written with affection and gratitude
for all priests who exercise the cura animarum throughout the
world. May all who are engaged in the pastoral care of souls experience
the maternal assistance of the Queen of Apostles and live in profound
communion with her. The ministerial priesthood "has a stupendous
and penetrating dimension in the closeness of the Mother of Christ
[to priests]"It is a source of great consolation to know
that "the Mother of the Redeemer who introduces us to the
mystery of the redemptive offering of her divine Son, is always
close to us. Ad Iesum per Mariam: let this be the daily objective
of our spiritual and pastoral life"
The Supreme Pontiff John Paul II approved this present Instruction
and ordered its publication.
Rome, at the offices of the Congregation for the Clergy, 4 August
2002, liturgical memorial of St. John Mary Vianney, Curé
d'Ars, patron of parish priests.
DARIO Card. CASTRILLON HOYOS
Prefect
+ CESBA TERNYAK
Titular Archbishop of Eminenziana
Secretary
Parish Priest's Prayer to Mary Most Holy
O Mary, M |