hf_jp-ii_exh_25031992_pastores-dabo-vobis-en


hf_jp-ii_exh_25031992_pastores-dabo-vobis-en

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The Holy See
POST-SYNODAL
APOSTOLIC EXHORTATIONPASTORES DABO VOBIS
TO THE BISHOPS,
CLERGY AND FAITHFUL
ON THE FORMATION OF PRIESTS
IN THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE PRESENT DAY
INTRODUCTION
1. "I will give you shepherds after my own heart" (Jer. 3:15).
In these words from the prophet Jeremiah, God promises his people that he will never leave them
without shepherds to gather them together and guide them: "I will set shepherds over them [my
sheep] who will care for them, and they shall fear no more, nor be dismayed (Jer. 23.4).
The Church, the People of God, constantly experiences the reality of this prophetic message and
continues joyfully to thank God for it. She knows that Jesus Christ himself is the living, supreme
and definitive fulfillment of God's promise: "I am the good shepherd" (Jn. 10:11). He, "the great
shepherd of the sheep" (Heb. 13:20), entrusted to the apostles and their successors the ministry of
shepherding God's flock (cf. Jn. 21:15ff.; 1 Pt. 5:2).
Without priests the Church would not be able to live that fundamental obedience which is at the
very heart of her existence and her mission in history, an obedience in response to the command
of Christ: "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations" (Mt. 28:19) and "Do this in remembrance
of me" (Lk. 22:19; cf. 1 Cor. 11.24), i.e:, an obedience to the command to announce the Gospel
and to renew daily the sacrifice of the giving of his body and the shedding of his blood for the life
of the world.
By faith we know that the Lord's promise cannot fail. This very promise is the reason and force
underlying the Church's rejoicing at the growth and increase of priestly vocations now taking place
in some parts of the world. It is also the foundation and impulse for a renewed act of faith and
fervent hope in the face of the grave shortage of priests which is being felt in other parts of the
world. Everyone is called upon to share complete trust in the unbroken fulfillment of God's

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promise, which the synod fathers expressed in clear and forceful terms: "The synod, with complete
trust in the promise of Christ who has said: 'Lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age' (Mt.
28:20), and aware of the constant activity of the Holy Spirit in the Church, firmly believes that there
will never be a complete lack of sacred ministers in the Church.... Even though in a number of
regions there is a scarcity of clergy, the action of the Father, who raises up vocations, will
nonetheless always be at work in the Church."(1)
At the conclusion of the synod, I said that in the face of a crisis of priestly vocations "the first
answer which the Church gives lies in a total act of faith in the Holy Spirit. We are deeply
convinced that this trusting abandonment will not disappoint if we remain faithful to the graces we
have received."(2)
2. To remain faithful to the grace received! This gift of God does not cancel human freedom;
instead it gives rise to freedom, develops freedom and demands freedom.
For this reason, the total trust in God's unconditional faithfulness to his promise is accompanied in
the Church by the grave responsibility to cooperate in the action of God who calls, and to
contribute toward creating and preserving the conditions in which the good seed, sown by God,
can take root and bring forth abundant fruit. The Church must never cease to pray to the Lord of
the harvest that he send laborers into his harvest, (cf. Mt. 9:38). She must propose clearly and
courageously to each new generation the vocational call, help people to discern the authenticity of
their call from God and to respond to it generously, and give particular care to the formation of
candidates for the priesthood.
The formation of future priests, both diocesan and religious, and lifelong assiduous care for their
personal sanctification in the ministry and for the constant updating of their pastoral commitment is
considered by the Church one of the most demanding and important tasks for the future of the
evangelization of humanity.
The Church's work of formation is a continuation in time of Christ's own work, which the evangelist
Mark illustrates in these words: "And he went up on the mountain, and called to him those whom
he desired; and they came to him. And he appointed twelve, to be with him, and to be sent out to
preach and have authority to cast out demons" (Mk. 3:13-15).
It can be said that through her work of forming candidates to the priesthood and priests
themselves, the Church throughout her history has continued to live this passage of the Gospel in
various ways and with varying intensity. Today, however, the Church feels called to relive with a
renewed commitment all that the Master did with his apostles - urged on as she is by the deep and
rapid transformations in the societies and culture of our age; by the multiplicity and diversity of
contexts in which she announces the Gospel and witnesses to it; by the promising number of
priestly vocations being seen in some dioceses around the world; by the urgency of a new look at

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the contents and methods of priestly formation; by the concern of bishops and their communities
about a persisting scarcity of clergy; and by the absolute necessity that the "new evangelization"
have priests as its initial "new evangelizers."
It is precisely in this cultural and historical context that the last ordinary general assembly of the
Synod of Bishops took place. Dedicated to "the formation of priests in circumstances of the
present day," its purpose was to put into practice the Council's teaching on this matter, making it
more up - to - date and incisive in present circumstances, twenty - five years after the Council
itself.(3)
3. Following the texts of the Second Vatican Council regarding the ministry of priests and their
formation,(4) and with the intention of applying to various situations their rich and authoritative
teaching, the Church has on various occasions dealt with the subject of the life, ministry and
formation of priests She has done this in a more solemn way during the Synods of Bishops.
Already in October 1967, the first general ordinary assembly of the synod devoted five general
congregations to the subject of the renewal of seminaries. This work gave a decisive impulse to
the formulation of the document of the Congregation for Catholic Education titled Fundamental
Norms for Priestly Formation.(5)
The second ordinary general assembly held in 1971 spent half its time on the ministerial
priesthood. The fruit of the lengthy synodal discussion, incorporated and condensed in some
"recommendations," which were submitted to my predecessor Pope Paul VI and read at the
opening of the 1974 synod, referred principally to the teaching on the ministerial priesthood and to
some aspects of priestly spirituality and ministry.
On many other occasions the Church's magisterium has shown its concern for the life and ministry
of priests. It may be said that in the years since the Council there has not been any subject treated
by the magisterium which has not in some way, explicitly or implicitly, had to do with the presence
of priests in the community as well as their role and the need for them in the life of the Church and
the world.
In recent years some have voiced a need to return to the theme of the priesthood, treating it from
a relatively new point of view, one that was more adapted to present ecclesial and cultural
circumstances. Attention has shifted from the question of the priest's identity to that connected
with the process of formation for the priesthood and the quality of priestly life. The new generation
of those called to the ministerial priesthood display different characteristics in comparison to those
of their immediate predecessors. In addition, they live in a world which in many respects is new
and undergoing rapid and continual evolution. All of this cannot be ignored when it comes to
programming and carrying out the various phases of formation for those approaching the
ministerial priesthood.

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Moreover, priests who have been actively involved in the ministry for a more or less lengthy period
of time seem to be suffering today from an excessive loss of energy in their ever increasing
pastoral activities. Likewise, faced with the difficulties of contemporary culture and society, they
feel compelled to re - examine their way of life and their pastoral priorities, and they are more and
more aware of their need for ongoing formation.
The concern of the 1990 Synod of Bishops and its discussion focused on the increase of vocations
to the priesthood and the formation of candidates in an attempt to help them come to know and
follow Jesus - as they prepare to be ordained and to live the sacrament of holy orders, which
configures them to Christ the head and shepherd, the servant and spouse of the Church. At the
same time, the synod searched for forms of ongoing formation to provide realistic and effective
means of support for priests in their spiritual life and ministry.
This same synod also sought to answer a request which was made at the previous synod on the
vocation and mission of the laity in the Church and in the world. Lay people themselves had asked
that priests commit themselves to their formation so that they, the laity, could be suitably helped to
fulfill their role in the ecclesial mission which is shared by all. Indeed, "the more the lay apostolate
develops, the more strongly is perceived the need to have well - formed holy priests. Thus the very
life of the People of God manifests the teaching of the Second Vatican Council concerning the
relationship between the common priesthood and the ministerial or hierarchical priesthood. For
within the mystery of the Church the hierarchy has a ministerial character (cf. Lumen Gentium,
10). The more the laity's own sense of vocation is deepened, the more what is proper to the priest
stands out."(6)
4. In the ecclesial experience that is typical of the synod (i.e., "a unique experience on a universal
basis of episcopal communion, which strengthens the sense of the universal Church and the
sense of responsibility of the bishops toward the universal Church and her mission, in affective
and effective communion around Peter"),(7) the voice of the various particular churches - and in
this synod, for the first time, the voices of some churches from the East - were clearly heard and
taken to heart. The churches have proclaimed their faith in the fulfillment of God's promise: "I will
give you shepherds after my own heart" (Jer. 3:15), and they have renewed their pastoral
commitment to care for vocations and for the formation of priests - aware that on this depends the
future of the Church, her development and her universal mission of salvation.
In this post - synodal apostolic exhortation, I take up anew the rich legacy resulting from the
reflections, endeavors and indications which were made during the synod's preparation, as well as
those which accompanied the work of the synod fathers, and as the bishop of Rome and
successor of Peter I add my voice to theirs - addressing it to each and every one of the faithful,
and in particular to each priest and to those involved in the important yet demanding ministry of
their formation. Yes, in this exhortation l wish to meet with each and every priest, whether
diocesan or religious.

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Quoting from the "Final Message of the Synod to the People of God," I make my own the words
and the sentiments expressed by the synod fathers: "Brother priests, we want to express our
appreciation to you, who are our most important collaborators in the apostolate. Your priesthood is
absolutely vital. There is no substitute for it. You carry the main burden of priestly ministry through
your day - to - day service of the faithful. You are ministers of the Eucharist and ministers of God's
mercy in the sacrament of penance. It is you who bring comfort to people and guide them in
difficult moments in their lives.
"We acknowledge your work and thank you once again, urging you to continue on your chosen
path willingly and joyfully. No one should be discouraged as we are doing God's work; the same
God who calls us, sends us and remains with us every day of our lives. We are ambassadors of
Christ."(8)
CHAPTER I
CHOSEN FROM AMONG ME
The Challenges Facing Priestly Formation
at the Conclusion of the Second Millennium
The Priest in His Time
5. "Every high priest chosen from among men is appointed to act on behalf of men in relation to
God" (Heb. 5:1).
The Letter to the Hebrews clearly affirms the "human character" of God's minister he comes from
the human community and is at its service, imitating Jesus Christ "who in every respect has been
tempted as we are, yet without sin" (Heb. 4:1s)?.
God always calls his priests from specific human and ecclesial contexts, which inevitably influence
them; and to these same contexts the priest is sent for the service of Christ's Gospel.
For this reason the synod desired to "contextualize" the subject of priests, viewing it in terms of
today's society and today's Church in preparation for the third millennium. This is indicated in the
second part of the topic's formulation: "The formation of priests in the circumstances of the present
day."
Certainly "there is an essential aspect of the priest that does not change: the priest of tomorrow,
no less than the priest of today, must resemble Christ. When Jesus lived on this earth, he
manifested in himself the definitive role of the priestly establishing a ministerial priesthood with
which the apostles were the first to be invested. This priesthood is destined to last in endless
succession throughout history. In this sense the priest of the third millennium will continue the

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work of the priests who, in the preceding millennia, have animated the life of the Church. In the
third millennium the priestly vocation will continue to be the call to live the unique and permanent
priesthood of Christ."(9) It is equally certain that the life and ministry of the priest must also "adapt
to every era and circumstance of life.... For our part we must therefore seek to be as open as
possible to light from on high from the Holy Spirit, in order to discover the tendencies of
contemporary society, recognize the deepest spiritual needs, determine the most important
concrete tasks and the pastoral methods to adopt, and thus respond adequately to human
expectations."(10)
With the duty of bringing together the permanent truth of the priestly ministry and the characteristic
requirements of the present day, the synod fathers sought to respond to a few necessary
questions: What are the positive and negative elements in socio - cultural and ecclesial contexts
which affect boys, adolescents and young men who throughout their lives are called to bring to
maturity a project of priestly life? What difficulties are posed by our times, and what new
possibilities are offered for the exercise of a priestly ministry which corresponds to the gift received
in the sacrament and the demands of the spiritual life which is consistent with it?
I now mention some comments taken from the synod fathers' analysis of the situation - fully aware
that the great variety of socio - cultural and ecclesial circumstances in different countries limits by
necessity our treatment to only the most evident and widespread phenomena, particularly those
relating to the question of education and priestly formation.
The Gospel Today: Hopes and Obstacles
6. A number of factors seem to be working toward making people today more deeply aware of the
dignity of the human person and more open to religious values, to the Gospel and to the priestly
ministry.
Despite many contradictions, society is increasingly witnessing a powerful thirst for justice and
peace; a more lively sense that humanity must care for creation and respect nature; a more open
search for truth; a greater effort to safeguard human dignity; a growing commitment in many
sectors of the world population to a more specific international solidarity and a new ordering of the
world in freedom and justice. Parallel to the continued development of the potential offered by
science and technology and the exchange of information and interaction of cultures, there is a new
call for ethics, that is, a quest for meaning - and therefore for an objective standard of values
which will delineate the possibilities and limits of progress.
In the more specifically religious and Christian sphere, ideological prejudice and the violent
rejection of the message of spiritual and religious values are crumbling and there are arising new
and unexpected possibilities of evangelization and the rebirth of ecclesial life in many parts of the
world. These are evident in an increased love of the sacred Scriptures; in the vitality and growing

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vigor of many young churches and their ever - larger role in the defense and promotion of the
values of human life and the person; and in the splendid witness of martyrdom provided by the
churches of Central and Eastern Europe as well as that of the faithfulness and courage of other
churches which are still forced to undergo persecution and tribulation for the faith.(11)
The thirst for God and for an active meaningful relationship with him is so strong today that, where
there is a lack of a genuine and full proclamation of the Gospel of Christ, there is a rising spread of
forms of religiosity without God and the proliferation of many sects. For all children of the Church,
and for priests especially, the increase of these phenomena, even in some traditionally Christian
environments, is not only a constant motive to examine our consciences as to the credibility of our
witness to the Gospel but at the same time is a sign of how deep and widespread is the search for
God.
7. Mingled with these and other positive factors, there are also, however, many problematic or
negative elements.
Rationalism is still very widespread and, in the name of a reductive concept of "science," it renders
human reason insensitive to an encounter with revelation and with divine transcendence.
We should take note also of a desperate defense of personal subjectivity which tends to close it off
in individualism, rendering it incapable of true human relationships. As a result, many - especially
children and young people - seek to compensate for this loneliness with substitutes of various
kinds, in more or less acute forms of hedonism or flight from responsibility. Prisoners of the
fleeting moment, they seek to "consume" the strongest and most gratifying individual experiences
at the level of immediate emotions and sensations, inevitably finding themselves indifferent and
"paralyzed" as it were when they come face to face with the summons to embark upon a life
project which includes a spiritual and religious dimension and a commitment to solidarity.
Furthermore, despite the fall of ideologies which had made materialism a dogma and the refusal of
religion a program, there is spreading in every part of the world a sort of practical and existential
atheism which coincides with a secularist outlook on life and human destiny. The individual, "all
bound up in himself, this man who makes himself not only the center of his every interest, but
dares to propose himself as the principle and reason of all reality,"(12) finds himself ever more
bereft of that "supplement of soul" which is all the more necessary to him in proportion - as a wide
availability of material goods and resources deceives him about his self - sufficiency. There is no
longer a need to fight against God; the individual feels he is simply able to do without him.
In this context special mention should be made of the breakup of the family and an obscuring or
distorting of the true meaning of human sexuality. That phenomena have a very negative effect on
the education of young people and on their openness to any kind of religious vocation.
Furthermore, one should mention the worsening of social injustices and the concentration of

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wealth in the hands of a few, the fruit of an inhuman capitalism(13) which increasingly widens the
gap between affluent and indigent peoples. In this way tension and unrest are introduced into
everyday life, deeply disturbing the lives of people and of whole communities.
There are also worrying and negative factors within the Church herself which have a direct
influence on the lives and ministry of priests. For example: the lack of due knowledge of the faith
among many believers; a catechesis which has little practical effect, stifled as it is by the mass
media whose messages are more widespread and persuasive; an incorrectly understood pluralism
in theology, culture and pastoral teaching which - though starting out at times with good intentions
- ends up by hindering ecumenical dialogue and threatening the necessary unity of faith; a
persistent diffidence toward and almost unacceptance of the magisterium of the hierarchy; the one
- sided tendencies which reduce the richness of the Gospel message and transform the
proclamation and witness to the faith into an element of exclusively human and social liberation or
into an alienating flight into superstition and religiosity without God.
A particularly important phenomenon, even though it is relatively recent in many traditionally
Christian countries, is the presence within the same territory of large concentrations of people of
different races and religions, thereby resulting in multiracial and multi - religious societies. While
on the one hand this can be an opportunity for a more frequent and fruitful exercise of dialogue,
open - mindedness, good relations and a just tolerance - on the other hand the situation can also
result in confusion and relativism, above all among people and populations whose faith has not
matured.
Added to these factors, and closely linked with the growth of individualism, is the phenomenon of
subjectivism in matters of faith. An increasing number of Christians seem to have a reduced
sensitivity to the universality and objectivity of the doctrine of the faith because they are
subjectively attached to what pleases them; to what corresponds to their own experience; and to
what does not impinge on their own habits. In such a context, even the appeal to the inviolability of
the individual conscience - in itself a legitimate appeal - may be dangerously, marked by
ambiguity.
This situation also gives rise to the phenomenon of belonging to the Church in ways which are
ever more partial and conditional, with a resulting negative influence on the birth of new vocations
to the priesthood, on the priest's own self - awareness and on his ministry within the community.
Finally, in many parts of the Church today it is still the scarcity of priests which creates the most
serious problem. The faithful are often left to themselves for long periods, without sufficient
pastoral support. As a result their growth as Christians suffers, not to mention their capacity to
become better promoters of evangelization.
Young People: Vocation and Priestly Formation

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8. The many contradictions and potentialities marking our societies and cultures - as well as
ecclesial communities - are perceived, lived and experienced by our young people with a particular
intensity and have immediate and very acute repercussions on their personal growth. Thus, the
emergence and development of priestly vocations among boys, adolescents and young men are
continually under pressure and facing obstacles.
The lure of the so - called "consumer society" is so strong among young people that they become
totally dominated and imprisoned by an individualistic, materialistic and hedonistic interpretation of
human existence. Material "well - being," which is so intensely sought after, becomes the one ideal
to be striven for in life, a well - being which is to be attained in any way and at any price. There is a
refusal of anything that speaks of sacrifice and a rejection of any effort to look for and to practice
spiritual and religious values. The all - determining "concern" for having supplants the primacy of
being, and consequently personal and interpersonal values are interpreted and lived not according
to the logic of giving and generosity but according to the logic of selfish possession and the
exploitation of others.
This is particularly reflected in that outlook on human sexuality according to which sexuality's
dignity in service to communion and to the reciprocal donation between persons becomes
degraded and thereby reduced to nothing more than a consumer good. In this case, many young
people undergo an affective experience which, instead of contributing to a harmonious and joyous
growth in personality which opens them outward in an act of self - giving, becomes a serious
psychological and ethical process of turning inward toward self, a situation which cannot fail to
have grave consequences on them in the future.
In the case of some young people a distorted sense of freedom lies at the root of these
tendencies. Instead of being understood as obedience to objective and universal truth, freedom is
lived out as a blind acquiescence to instinctive forces and to an individual's will to power.
Therefore, on the level of thought and behavior, it is almost natural to find an erosion of internal
consent to ethical principles. On the religious level, such a situation, if it does not always lead to
an explicit refusal of God, causes widespread indifference and results in a life which, even in its
more significant moments and more decisive choices, is lived as if God did not exist. In this
context it is difficult not only to respond fully to a vocation to the priesthood but even to understand
its very meaning as a special witness to the primacy of "being" over "having," and as a recognition
that the significance of life consists in a free and responsible giving of oneself to others, a
willingness to place oneself entirely at the Service of the Gospel and the kingdom of God as a
priest.
Often the world of young people is a "problem' in the Church community itself. In fact, if in them -
more so than in adults - there is present a strong tendency to subjectivize the Christian faith and to
belong only partially and conditionally to the life and mission of the Church, and if the Church
community is slow for a variety of reasons to initiate and sustain an up - to - date and courageous

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pastoral care for young people, they risk being left to themselves, at the mercy of their
psychological frailty? dissatisfied and critical of a world of adults who, in failing to live the faith in a
consistent and mature fashion, do not appear to them as credible models.
Thus we see how difficult it is to present young people with a full and penetrating experience of
Christian and ecclesial life and to educate them in it. So, the prospect of having a vocation to the
priesthood is far from the actual everyday interests which young men have in life.
9. Nevertheless, there are positive situations and tendencies which bring about and nurture in the
heart of adolescents and young men a new readiness, and even a genuine search, for ethical and
spiritual values. These naturally offer favorable conditions for embarking on the journey of a
vocation which leads toward the total gift of self to Christ and to the Church in the priesthood.
First of all, mention should be made of the decrease of certain phenomena which had caused
many problems in the recent past, such as radical rebellion, libertarian tendencies, utopian claims,
indiscriminate forms of socialization and violence.
It must be recognized, moreover, that today' s young people, with the vigor and vitality typical of
their age, are also bearers of ideals which are coming to the fore in history: the thirst for freedom;
the recognition of the inestimable value of the person; the need for authenticity and sincerity; a
new conception and style of reciprocity in the rapport between men and women; a convinced and
earnest seeking after a more just, sympathetic and united world; openness and dialogue with all;
and the commitment to peace.
The fruitful and active development among so many young people today of numerous and varied
forms of voluntary service, directed toward the most forgotten and forsaken of our society,
represents in these times a particularly important resource for personal growth. It stimulates and
sustains young people in a style of life which is less self - interested and more open and
sympathetic toward the poor. This way of life can help young men perceive, desire and accept a
vocation to stable and total service of others, following the path of complete consecration to God
as a priest.
The recent collapse of ideologies, the heavily critical opposition to a world of adults who do not
always offer a witness of a life based on moral and transcendent values, and the experience of
companions who seek escape through drugs and violence - contribute in no small fashion to
making more keen and inescapable the fundamental question as to what values are truly capable
of giving the fullest meaning to life, suffering and death. For many young people the question of
religion and the need for spirituality are becoming more explicit. This is illustrated in the desire for
"desert experiences" and for prayer, in the return to a more personal and regular reading of the
word of God and in the study of theology.

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As has happened in their involvement in the sphere of voluntary social service, young people are
becoming more actively involved as leaders in the ecclesial community, above all through their
membership in various groups - whether traditional but renewed ones or of more recent origin.
Their experience of a Church challenged to undertake a "new evangelization" by virtue of her
faithfulness to the Spirit who animates her and in response to the demands of a world far from
Christ but in need of him, as well as their experience of a Church ever more united with individuals
and peoples in the defense and promotion of the dignity of the person and of the human rights of
each and every one - these experiences open the hearts and lives of the young to the exciting and
demanding ideals which can find their concrete fulfillment in following Christ and in embracing the
priesthood.
Naturally it is not possible to ignore this human and ecclesial situation - characterized by strong
ambivalence - not only in the pastoral care of vocations and the formation of future priests, but
also in the care of priests in their life and ministry and their ongoing formation. At the same time,
while it is possible to detect various forms of "crisis" to which priests are subjected today in their
ministry, in their spiritual life and indeed in the very interpretation of the nature and significance of
the ministerial priesthood - mention must likewise be made, in a spirit of joy and hope, of the new
positive possibilities which the present historical moment is offering to priests for the fulfillment of
their mission.
Gospel Discernment
10. The complex situation of the present day, briefly outlined above in general terms and
examples, needs not only to be known but also and above all to be interpreted. Only in this way
can an adequate answer can be given to the fundamental question: How can we form priests who
are truly able to respond to the demands of our times and capable of evangelizing the world of
today?(15)
Knowledge of the situation is important. However, simply to provide data is not enough; what is
needed is a "scientific" inquiry in order to sketch a precise and concrete picture of today's socio -
cultural and ecclesial circumstances.
Even more important is an interpretation of the situation. Such an interpretation is required
because of the ambivalence and at times contradictions which are characteristic of the present
situation where there is a mixture of difficulties and potentialities, negative elements and reasons
for hope, obstacles and alternatives, as in the field mentioned in the Gospel where good seed and
weeds are both sown and "co - exist" (cf. Mt. 13:24ff.).
It is not always easy to give an interpretive reading capable of distinguishing good from evil or
signs of hope from threats. In the formation of priests it is not sufficient simply to welcome the
positive factors and to counteract the negative ones. The positive factors themselves need to be

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subjected to a careful work of discernment, so that they do not become isolated and contradict one
another, becoming absolutes and at odds with one another. The same is true for the negative
factors, which are not to be rejected en bloc and without distinction, because in each one there
may lie hidden some value which awaits liberation and restoration to its full truth.
For a believer the interpretation of the historical situation finds its principle for understanding and
its criterion for making practical choices in a new and unique reality, that is, in a Gospel
discernment. This interpretation is a work which is done in the light and strength provided by the
true and living Gospel, which is Jesus Christ, and in virtue of the gift of the Holy Spirit. In such a
way, Gospel discernment gathers from the historical situation - from its events and circumstances
- not just a simple "fact" to be precisely recorded yet capable of leaving a person indifferent or
passive, but a "task," a challenge to responsible freedom - both of the individual person and of the
community. It is a "challenge" which is linked to a "call" which God causes to sound in the
historical situation itself. In this situation, and also through it, God calls the believer - and first of all
the Church - to ensure that "the Gospel of vocation and priesthood" expresses its perennial truth in
the changing circumstances of life. In this case, the words of the Second Vatican Council are also
applicable to the formation of priests: "The Church has always had the duty of scrutinizing the
signs of the times and of interpreting them in the light of the Gospel so that in a language
intelligible to every generation, she can respond to the perennial questions which people ask
about this present life and the life to come, and about the relationship of the one to the other. We
must therefore recognize and understand the world in which we live, it's expectations, its longings
and its often dramatic characteristics."(16)
This Gospel discernment is based on trust in the love of Jesus Christ, who always and tirelessly
cares for his Church (cf. Eph. 5:29), he the Lord and Master, the key, the center and the purpose
of the whole of human history.(17) This discernment is nourished by the light and strength of the
Holy Spirit who evokes everywhere and in all circumstances, obedience to the faith, the joyous
courage of following Jesus, and the gift of wisdom, which judges all things and is judged by no one
(cf. 1 Cor. 2:15). It rests on the fidelity of the Father to his promises.
In this way the Church feels that she can face the difficulties and challenges of this new period of
history and can also provide, in the present and in the future, priests who are well trained to be
convinced and fervent ministers of the "new evangelization," faithful and generous servants of
Jesus Christ and of the human family. We are not unmindful of difficulties in this regard; they are
neither few nor insignificant. However, to surmount these difficulties we have at our disposal our
hope, our faith in the unfailing love of Christ, and our certainty that the priestly ministry in the life of
the Church and in the world knows no substitute.
CHAPTER II
HE HAS ANOINTED ME AND HAS SENT ME FORTH

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The Nature and Mission of the Ministerial Priesthood
A Look at the Priest
11. "The eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him" (Lk. 4:20). What the evangelist Luke says
about the people in the synagogue at Nazareth that Sabbath, listening to Jesus' commentary on
the words of the prophet Isaiah which he had just read, can be applied to all Christians. They are
always called to recognize in Jesus of Nazareth the definitive fulfillment of the message of the
prophets: "And he began to say to them, 'Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing"'
(Lk. 4:21). The "Scripture" he had read was this: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he
has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the
captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim
the acceptable year of the Lord" (Lk. 4:18-19; cf. Is. 61:1-2). Jesus thus presents himself as filled
with the Spirit, "consecrated with an anointing," "sent to preach good news to the poor." He is the
Messiah, the Messiah who is priest, prophet and king.
These are the features of Christ upon which the eyes of faith and love of Christians should be
fixed. Using this "contemplation" as a starting point and making continual reference to it, the synod
fathers reflected on the problem of priestly formation in present - day circumstances. This problem
cannot be solved without previous reflection upon the goal of formation, that is, the ministerial
priesthood, or more precisely, the ministerial priesthood as a participation - in the Church - in the
very priesthood of Jesus Christ. Knowledge of the nature and mission of the ministerial priesthood
is an essential presupposition, and at the same time the surest guide and incentive toward the
development of pastoral activities in the Church for fostering and discerning vocations to the
priesthood and training those called to the ordained ministry.
A correct and in - depth awareness of the nature and mission of the ministerial priesthood is the
path which must be taken - and in fact the synod did take it - in order to emerge from the crisis of
priestly identity. In the final address to the synod I stated: "This crisis arose in the years
immediately following the Council. It was based on an erroneous understanding of - and
sometimes even a conscious bias against - the doctrine of the conciliar magisterium. Undoubtedly,
herein lies one of the reasons for the great number of defections experienced then by the Church,
losses which did serious harm to pastoral ministry and priestly vocations, especially missionary
vocations. It is as though the 1990 synod - rediscovering, by means of the many statements which
we heard in this hall, the full depth of priestly identity - has striven to instill hope in the wake of
these sad losses. These statements showed an awareness of the specific ontological bond which
unites the priesthood to Christ the high priest and good shepherd. This identity is built upon the
type of formation which must be provided for priesthood and then endure throughout the priest's
whole life. This was the precise purpose of the synod."(18)
For this reason the synod considered it necessary to summarize the nature and mission of the

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ministerial priesthood, as the Church's faith has acknowledged them down the centuries of its
history and as the Second Vatican Council has presented them anew to the people of our day.(19)
In the Church as Mystery, Communion and Mission
12. "The priest's identity," as the synod fathers wrote, "like every Christian identity, has its source
in the Blessed Trinity,"(20) which is revealed and is communicated to people in Christ,
establishing, in him and through the Spirit, the Church as "the seed and the beginning of the
kingdom."(21) The apostolic exhortation Christifideles Laici, summarizing the Council's teaching,
presents the Church as mystery, communion and mission: "She is mystery because the very life
and love of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are the gift gratuitously offered to all those who are
born of water and the Spirit (cf. Jn. 3:5) and called to relive the very communion of God and to
manifest it and communicate it in history [mission]."(22)
It is within the Church's mystery, as a mystery of Trinitarian communion in missionary tension, that
every Christian identity is revealed, and likewise the specific identity of the priest and his ministry.
Indeed, the priest, by virtue of the consecration which he receives in the sacrament of orders, is
sent forth by the Father through the mediatorship of Jesus Christ, to whom he is configured in a
special way as head and shepherd of his people, in order to live and work by the power of the Holy
Spirit in service of the Church and for the salvation of the world.(23)
In this way the fundamentally "relational" dimension of priestly identity can be understood.
Through the priesthood which arises from the depths of the ineffable mystery of God, that is, from
the love of the Father, the grace of Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit's gift of unity, the priest
sacramentally enters into communion with the bishop and with other priests(24) in order to serve
the People of God who are the Church and to draw all mankind to Christ in accordance with the
Lord's prayer: "Holy Father, keep them in your name, which you have given me, that they may be
one, even as we are one...even as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in
us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me" (Jn. 17:11, 21).
Consequently, the nature and mission of the ministerial priesthood cannot be defined except
through this multiple and rich interconnection of relationships which arise from the Blessed Trinity
and are prolonged in the communion of the Church, as a sign and instrument of Christ, of
communion with God and of the unity of all humanity.(25) In this context the ecclesiology of
communion becomes decisive for understanding the identity of the priest, his essential dignity, and
his vocation and mission among the People of God and in the world. Reference to the Church is
therefore necessary, even if not primary, in defining the identity of the priest. As a mystery, the
Church is essentially related to Jesus Christ. She is his fullness, his body, his spouse. She is the
"sign" and living "memorial" of his permanent presence and activity in our midst and on our behalf.
The priest finds the full truth of his identity in being a derivation, a specific participation in and
continuation of Christ himself, the one high priest of the new and eternal covenant. The priest is a

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living and transparent image of Christ the priest. The priesthood of Christ, the expression of his
absolute "newness" in salvation history, constitutes the one source and essential model of the
priesthood shared by all Christians and the priest in particular. Reference to Christ is thus the
absolutely necessary key for understanding the reality of priesthood.
The Fundamental Relationship With Christ the Head and Shepherd
13. Jesus Christ has revealed in himself the perfect and definitive features of the priesthood of the
new Covenant.(26) He did this throughout his earthly life, but especially in the central event of his
passion, death and resurrection.
As the author of the letter to the Hebrews writes, Jesus, being a man like us and at the same time
the only begotten Son of God, is in his very being the perfect mediator between the Father and
humanity (cf. Heb. 8-9). Thanks to the gift of his Holy Spirit he gives us immediate access to God:
"God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, 'Abba! Father! "' (Gal. 4:6; cf. Rom.
8:15)
Jesus brought his role as mediator to complete fulfillment when he offered himself on the cross,
thereby opening to us, once and for all, access to the heavenly sanctuary, to the Father's house
(cf. Heb. 9:24-28). Compared with Jesus, Moses and all other "mediators" between God and his
people in the Old Testament - kings, priests and prophets - are no more than "figures" and
"shadows of the good things to come" instead of "the true form of these realities" (cf. Heb. 10:1).
Jesus is the promised good shepherd (cf. Ez. 34), who knows each one of his sheep, who offers
his life for them and who wishes to gather them together as one flock with one shepherd (cf. Jn.
10:11-16). He is the shepherd who has come "not to be served but to serve" (Mt. 20:28), who in
the paschal action of the washing of the feet (cf. Jn. 13:1-20) leaves to his disciples a model of
service to one another and who freely offers himself as the "innocent lamb" sacrificed for our
redemption (cf. Jn. 1:36; Rv. 5:6, 12).
With the one definitive sacrifice of the cross, Jesus communicated to all his disciples the dignity
and mission of priests of the new and eternal covenant. And thus the promise which God had
made to Israel was fulfilled: "You shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation" (Ex. 19:6).
According to St. Peter, the whole people of the new covenant is established as "a spiritual house,
a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ" (1 Pt. 2:5).
The baptized are "living stones" who build the spiritual edifice by keeping close to Christ, "that
living stone...in God's sight chosen and precious" (1 Pt. 2:4). The new priestly people which is the
Church not only has its authentic image in Christ, but also receives from him a real ontological
share in his one eternal priesthood, to which she must conform every aspect of her life.
14. For the sake of this universal priesthood of the new covenant Jesus gathered disciples during

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his earthly mission (cf. Lk. 10:1-12), and with a specific and authoritative mandate he called and
appointed the Twelve "to be with him, and to be sent out to preach and have authority to cast out
demons" (Mk. 3:14-15).
For this reason, already during his public ministry (cf. Mt. 16:18), and then most fully after his
death and resurrection (cf. Mt. 28; Jn. 20; 21), Jesus had conferred on Peter and the Twelve
entirely special powers with regard to the future community and the evangelization of all peoples.
After having called them to follow him, he kept them at his side and lived with them, imparting his
teaching of salvation to them through word and example, and finally he sent them out to all
mankind. To enable them to carry out this mission Jesus confers upon the apostles, by a specific
paschal outpouring of the Holy Spirit, the same messianic authority which he had received from
the Father, conferred in its fullness in his resurrection: "All authority in heaven and on earth has
been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have
commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age" (Mt. 28:18-20).
Jesus thus established a close relationship between the ministry entrusted to the apostles and his
own mission: "He who receives you receives me, and he who receives me receives him who sent
me" (Mt. 10:40); "He who hears you hears me, and he who rejects you rejects me, and he who
rejects me rejects him who sent me" (Lk. 10:16). Indeed, in the light of the paschal event of the
death and resurrection, the fourth Gospel affirms this with great force and clarity: "As the Father
has sent me, even so I send you" (Jn. 20:21; cf. 13:20; 17:18). Just as Jesus has a mission which
comes to him directly from God and makes present the very authority of God (cf. Mt. 7:29; 21:23;
Mk. 1:27; 11:28; Lk. 20:2; 24:19), so too the apostles have a mission which comes to them from
Jesus. And just as "the Son can do nothing of his own accord" (Jn. 5:19) such that his teaching is
not his own but the teaching of the One who sent him (cf. Jn. 7:16), so Jesus says to the apostles:
"Apart from me you can do nothing" (Jn. 15:5). Their mission is not theirs but is the same mission
of Jesus. All this is possible not as a result of human abilities, but only with the "gift" of Christ and
his Spirit, with the "sacrament": "Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are
forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained" (Jn. 20:22-23). And so the apostles, not by
any special merit of their own, but only through a gratuitous participation in the grace of Christ,
prolong throughout history to the end of time the same mission of Jesus on behalf of humanity.
The sign and presupposition of the authenticity and fruitfulness of this mission is the apostles' unity
with Jesus and, in him, with one another and with the Father - as the priestly prayer of our Lord,
which sums up his mission, bears witness (cf. Jn. 17:20-23).
15. In their turn, the apostles, appointed by the Lord, progressively carried out their mission by
calling - in various but complementary ways - other men as bishops, as priests and as deacons in
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The writings of the New Testament are unanimous in stressing that it is the same Spirit of Christ
who introduces these men chosen from among their brethren into the ministry Through the laying
on of hands (cf. Acts 6:6; 1 Tm. 4:14; 5:22; 2 Tm. 1:6) which transmits the gift of the Spirit, they
are called and empowered to continue the same ministry of reconciliation, of shepherding the flock
of God and of teaching (cf. Acts 20:28; 1 Pt. 5:2).
Therefore, priests are called to prolong the presence of Christ, the one high priest, embodying his
way of life and making him visible in the midst of the flock entrusted to their care. We find this
clearly and precisely stated in the first letter of Peter: "I exhort the elders among you, as a fellow
elder and a witness of the sufferings of Christ as well as a partaker in the glory that is to be
revealed. Tend the flock of God that is your charge, not by constraint but willingly, not for shameful
gain but eagerly, not as domineering over those in your charge but being examples to the flock.
And when the chief Shepherd is manifested you will obtain the unfading crown of glory" (1 Pt. 5:1-
4).
In the Church and on behalf of the Church, priests are a sacramental representation of Jesus
Christ - the head and shepherd - authoritatively proclaiming his word, repeating his acts of
forgiveness and his offer of salvation - particularly in baptism, penance and the Eucharist, showing
his loving concern to the point of a total gift of self for the flock, which they gather into unity and
lead to the Father through Christ and in the Spirit. In a word, priests exist and act in order to
proclaim the Gospel to the world and to build up the Church in the name and person of Christ the
head and shepherd.(27)
This is the ordinary and proper way in which ordained ministers share in the one priesthood of
Christ. By the sacramental anointing of holy orders, the Holy Spirit configures them in a new and
special way to Jesus Christ the head and shepherd; he forms and strengthens them with his
pastoral charity; and he gives them an authoritative role in the Church as servants of the
proclamation of the Gospel to every people and of the fullness of Christian life of all the baptized.
The truth of the priest as it emerges from the Word of God, that is, from Jesus Christ himself and
from his constitutive plan for the Church, is thus proclaimed with joyful gratitude by the Preface of
the liturgy of the Chrism Mass: "By your Holy Spirit you anointed your only Son high priest of the
new and eternal covenant. With wisdom and love you have planned that this one priesthood
should continue in the Church. Christ gives the dignity of a royal priesthood to the people he has
made his own. From these, with a brother's love, he chooses men to share his sacred ministry by
the laying on of hands. He appointed them to renew in his name the sacrifice of redemption as
they set before your family his paschal meal. He calls them to lead your holy people in love,
nourish them by your word and strengthen them through the sacraments. Father, they are to give
their live in your service and for the salvation of your people as they strive to grow in the likeness
of Christ and honor you by their courageous witness of faith and love."

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Serving the Church and the World
16. The priest's fundamental relationship is to Jesus Christ, head and shepherd. Indeed, the priest
participates in a specific and authoritative way in the "consecration/anointing" and in the "mission"
of Christ (cf. Lk. 4:18-19). But intimately linked to this relationship is the priest's relationship with
the Church. It is not a question of "relations" which are merely juxtaposed, but rather of ones
which are interiorly united in a kind of mutual immanence. The priest's relation to the Church is
inscribed in the very relation which the priest has to Christ, such that the "sacramental
representation" to Christ serves as the basis and inspiration for the relation of the priest to the
Church.
In this sense the synod fathers wrote: "Inasmuch as he represents Christ the head, shepherd and
spouse of the Church, the priest is placed not only in the Church but also in the forefront of the
Church. The priesthood, along with the word of God and the sacramental signs which it serves,
belongs to the constitutive elements of the Church. The ministry of the priest is entirely on behalf
of the Church; it aims at promoting the exercise of the common priesthood of the entire People of
God; it is ordered not only to the particular Church but also to the universal Church
(Presbyterorum Ordinis, 10), in communion with the bishop, with Peter and under Peter. Through
the priesthood of the bishop, the priesthood of the second order is incorporated in the apostolic
structure of the Church. In this way priests, like the apostles, act as ambassadors of Christ (cf. 2
Cor. 5:20). This is the basis of the missionary character of every priest."(28)
Therefore, the ordained ministry arises with the Church and has in bishops, and in priests who are
related to and are in communion with them, a particular relation to the original ministry of the
apostles - to which it truly "succeeds" - even though with regard to the latter it assumes different
forms.
Consequently, the ordained priesthood ought not to be thought of as existing prior to the Church,
because it is totally at the service of the Church. Nor should it be considered as posterior to the
ecclesial community, as if the Church could be imagined as already established without this
priesthood.
The relation of the priest to Jesus Christ, and in him to his Church, is found in the very being of the
priest by virtue of his sacramental consecration/anointing and in his activity, that is, in his mission
or ministry. In particular, "the priest minister is the servant of Christ present in the Church as
mystery, communion and mission. In virtue of his participation in the 'anointing' and 'mission' of
Christ, the priest can continue Christ's prayer, word, sacrifice and salvific action in the Church. In
this way, the priest is a servant of the Church as mystery because he actuates the Church's
sacramental signs of the presence of the risen Christ. He is a servant of the Church as
communion because - in union with the bishop and closely related to the presbyterate - he builds
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Finally, the priest is a servant to the Church as mission because he makes the community a herald
and witness of the Gospel."(29)
Thus, by his very nature and sacramental mission, the priest appears in the structure of the
Church as a sign of the absolute priority and gratuitousness of the grace given to the Church by
the risen Christ. Through the ministerial priesthood the Church becomes aware in faith that her
being comes not from herself but from the grace of Christ in the Holy Spirit. The apostles and their
successors, inasmuch as they exercise an authority which comes to them from Christ, the head
and shepherd, are placed - with their ministry - in the fore front of the Church as a visible
continuation and sacramental sign of Christ in his own position before the Church and the world,
as the enduring and ever new source of salvation, he "who is head of the Church, his body, and is
himself its savior" (Eph. 5:23).
17. By its very nature, the ordained ministry can be carried out only to the extent that the priest is
united to Christ through sacramental participation in the priestly order, and thus to the extent that
he is in hierarchical communion with his own bishop. The ordained ministry has a radical
"communitarian form" and can only be carried out as "a collective work."(30) The Council dealt
extensively with this communal aspect of the nature of the priesthood, (31) examining in
succession the relationship of the priest with his own bishop, with other priests and with the lay
faithful.
The ministry of priests is above all communion and a responsible and necessary cooperation with
the bishop's ministry, in concern for the universal Church and for the individual particular churches,
for whose service they form with the bishop a single presbyterate.
Each priest, whether diocesan or religious, is united to the other members of this presbyterate on
the basis of the sacrament of holy orders and by particular bonds of apostolic charity, ministry and
fraternity All priests in fact, whether diocesan or religious, share in the one priesthood of Christ the
head and shepherd; "they work for the same cause, namely, the building up of the body of Christ,
which demands a variety of functions and new adaptations, especially at the present time,"(32)
and is enriched down the centuries by ever new charisms.
Finally, because their role and task within the Church do not replace but promote the baptismal
priesthood of the entire People of God, leading it to its full ecclesial realization, priests have a
positive and helping relationship to the laity. Priests are there to serve the faith, hope and charity
of the laity. They recognize and uphold, as brothers and friends, the dignity of the laity as children
of God and help them to exercise fully their specific role in the overall context of the Church's
mission.(33) The ministerial priesthood conferred by the sacrament of holy orders and the
common or "royal" priesthood of the faithful, which differ essentially and not only in degree,(34)
are ordered one to the other - for each in its own way derives from the one priesthood of Christ.
Indeed, the ministerial priesthood does not of itself signify a greater degree of holiness with regard

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to the common priesthood of the faithful; through it Christ gives to priests, in the Spirit, a particular
gift so that they can help the People of God to exercise faithfully and fully the common priesthood
which it has received.(35)
18. As the Council points out, "the spiritual gift which priests have received in ordination does not
prepare them merely for a limited and circumscribed mission, but for the fullest, in fact the
universal, mission of salvation to the end of the earth. The reason is that every priestly ministry
shares in the fullness of the mission entrusted by Christ to the apostles."(36) By the very nature of
their ministry they should therefore be penetrated and animated by a profound missionary spirit
and "with that truly Catholic spirit which habitually looks beyond the boundaries of diocese, country
or rite to meet the needs of the whole Church, being prepared in spirit to preach the Gospel
everywhere."(37)
Furthermore, precisely because within the Church's life the priest is a man of communion, in his
relations with all people he must be a man of mission and dialogue. Deeply rooted in the truth and
charity of Christ, and impelled by the desire and imperative to proclaim Christ's salvation to all, the
priest is called to witness in all his relationships to fraternity, service and a common quest for the
truth, as well as a concern for the promotion of justice and peace. This is the case above all with
the brethren of other churches and Christian denominations, but it also extends to the followers of
other religions, to people of good will and in particular to the poor and the defenseless, and to all
who yearn - even if they do not know it or cannot express it - for the truth and the salvation of
Christ, in accordance with the words of Jesus who said: "Those who are well have no need of a
physician, but those who are sick; I came not to call the righteous, but sinners" (Mk. 2:17).
Today, in particular, the pressing pastoral task of the new evangelization calls for the involvement
of the entire People of God, and requires a new fervor, new methods and a new expression for the
announcing and witnessing of the Gospel. This task demands priests who are deeply and fully
immersed in the mystery of Christ and capable of embodying a new style of pastoral life, marked
by a profound communion with the pope, the bishops and other priests, and a fruitful cooperation
with the lay faithful, always respecting and fostering the different roles, charisms and ministries
present within the ecclesial community.(38)
"Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing" (Lk. 4:2 1). Let us listen once again to
these words of Jesus in the light of the ministerial priesthood which we have presented in its
nature and mission. The "today" to which Jesus refers, precisely because it belongs to and defines
the "fullness of time," the time of full and definitive salvation, indicates the time of the Church. The
consecration and mission of Christ - "The Spirit of the Lord...has anointed me and has sent me to
preach good news to the poor" (cf. Lk. 4:18) - are the living branch from which bud the
consecration and mission of the Church, the "fullness" of Christ (cf. Eph. 1:23). In the rebirth of
baptism, the Spirit of the Lord is poured out on all believers, consecrating them as a spiritual
temple and a holy priesthood and sending them forth to make known the marvels of him who out

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of darkness has called them into his marvelous light (cf. 1 Pt. 2:4-10). The priest shares in Christ's
consecration and mission in a specific and authoritative way, through the sacrament of holy
orders, by virtue of which he is configured in his being to Jesus Christ, head and shepherd, and
shares in the mission of "preaching the good news to the poor" in the name and person of Christ
himself.
In their final message the synod fathers summarized briefly but eloquently the "truth," or better the
"mystery" and "gift" of the ministerial priesthood, when they stated: "We derive our identity
ultimately from the love of the Father, we turn our gaze to the Son, sent by the Father as high
priest and good shepherd. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, we are united sacramentally to
him in the ministerial priesthood. Our priestly life and activity continue the life and activity of Christ
himself. Here lies our identity, our true dignity, the source of our joy, the very basis of our life."(39)
CHAPTER III
THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD IS UPON ME
The Spiritual Life of the Priest
A "Specific" Vocation to Holiness
19. "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me" (Lk. 4:18). The Spirit is not simply "upon" the Messiah, but
he "fills" him, penetrating every part of him and reaching to the very depths of all that he is and
does. Indeed, the Spirit is the principle of the "consecration" and "mission" of the Messiah:
"Because he has anointed me and sent me to preach good news to the poor" (cf. Lk. 4:18).
Through the Spirit, Jesus belongs totally and exclusively to God and shares in the infinite holiness
of God, who calls him, chooses him and sends him forth. In this way the Spirit of the Lord is
revealed as the source of holiness and of the call to holiness.
This name "Spirit of the Lord" is "upon" the entire People of God, which becomes established as a
people "consecrated" to God and "sent" by God to announce the Gospel of salvation. The
members of the People of God are "inebriated" and "sealed" with the Spirit (cf. 1 Cor. 12:13; 2 Cor.
1:21ff.; Eph. 1:13; 4:30) and called to holiness.
In particular, the Spirit reveals to us and communicates the fundamental calling which the Father
addresses to everyone from all eternity: the vocation to be "holy and blameless before him...in
love," by virtue of our predestination to be his adopted children through Jesus Christ (cf. Eph. 1:4-
5). This is not all. By revealing and communicating this vocation to us, the Spirit becomes within us
the principle and wellspring of its fulfillment. He, the Spirit of the Son (cf. Gal. 4:6), configures us to
Christ Jesus and makes us sharers in his life as Son, that is, sharers in his life of love for the
Father and for our brothers and sisters. "If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit" (Gal.
5:25). In these words the apostle Paul reminds us that a Christian life is a "spiritual life," that is, a

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life enlivened and led by the Spirit toward holiness or the perfection of charity.
The Council's statement that "all Christians in any state or walk of life are called to the fullness of
Christian life and to the perfection of charity"(40) applies in a special way to priests. They are
called not only because they have been baptized, but also and specifically because they are
priests, that is, under a new title and in new and different ways deriving from the sacrament of holy
orders.
20. The Council's Decree on Priestly Life and Ministry gives us a particularly rich and thought -
provoking synthesis of the priest's "spiritual life" and of the gift and duty to become "saints": "By
the sacrament of orders priests are configured to Christ the priest so that as ministers of the head
and co - workers with the episcopal order they may build up and establish his whole body which is
the Church. Like all Christians they have already received in the consecration of baptism the sign
and gift of their great calling and grace which enables and obliges them even in the midst of
human weakness to seek perfection (cf. 2 Cor. 12:9), according to the Lord's word: 'You,
therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect' (Mt. 5:48). But priests are bound in
a special way to strive for this perfection, since they are consecrated to God in a new way by their
ordination. They have become living instruments of Christ the eternal priest, so that through the
ages they, can accomplish his wonderful work of reuniting the whole human race with heavenly
power. Therefore, since every priest in his own way represents the person of Christ himself, he is
endowed with a special grace. By this grace the priest, through his service of the people
committed to his care and all the People of God, is able the better to pursue the perfection of
Christ, whose place he takes. The human weakness of his flesh is remedied by the holiness of him
who became for us a high priest 'holy, innocent, undefiled, separated from sinners' (Heb.
7:26)."(41)
The Council first affirms the "common" vocation to holiness. This vocation is rooted in baptism,
which characterizes the priest as one of the "faithful" (Christifedelis), as a "brother among
brothers," a member of the People of God, joyfully sharing in the gifts of salvation (cf. Eph. 4:4-6)
and in the common duty of walking "according to the Spirit" in the footsteps of the one master and
Lord. We recall the celebrated words of St. Augustine: "For you I am a bishop, with you I am a
Christian. The former title speaks of a task undertaken, the latter of grace; the former betokens
danger, the latter salvation."(42)
With the same clarity the conciliar text also speaks of a "specific" vocation to holiness, or more
precisely of a vocation based on the sacrament of holy orders - as a sacrament proper and
specific to the priest - and thus involving a new consecration to God through ordination. St.
Augustine also alludes to this specific vocation when, after the words "For you I am a bishop, with
you I am a Christian, he goes on to say: "If therefore it is to me a greater cause for joy to have
been rescued with you than to have been placed as your leader, following the Lord's command, I
will devote myself to the best of my abilities to serve you, so as not to show myself ungrateful to

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him who rescued me with that price which has made me your fellow servant."(43)
The conciliar text goes on to point out some elements necessary for defining what constitutes the
"specific quality" of the priest's spiritual life. These are elements connected with the priest's
"consecration," which configures him to Christ the head and shepherd of the Church, with the
"mission" or ministry peculiar to the priest; which equips and obliges him to be a "living instrument
of Christ the eternal priest" and to act "in the name and in the person of Christ himself" and with
his entire "life," called to manifest and witness in a fundamental way the "radicalism of the
Gospel."(44)
Configuration to Christ, the Head and Shepherd, and Pastoral Charity
21. By sacramental consecration the priest is configured to Jesus Christ as head and shepherd of
the Church, and he is endowed with a "spiritual power" which is a share in the authority with which
Jesus Christ guides the Church through his Spirit.(45)
By virtue of this consecration brought about by the outpouring of the Spirit in the sacrament of holy
orders, the spiritual life of the priest is marked, molded and characterized by the way of thinking
and acting proper to Jesus Christ, head and shepherd of the Church, and which are summed up in
his pastoral charily.
Jesus Christ is head of the Church his body. He is the "head" in the new and unique sense of
being a "servant," according to his own words: "The Son of Man came not to be served but to
serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many" (Mk. 10:45). Jesus' service attains its fullest
expression in his death on the cross, that is, in his total gift of self in humility and love. "He emptied
himself, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human
form, he humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross" (Phil. 2:7-8).
The authority of Jesus Christ as head coincides then with his service, with his gift, with his total,
humble and loving dedication on behalf of the Church. All this he did in perfect obedience to the
Father; he is the one true Suffering Servant of God, both priest and victim.
The spiritual existence of every priest receives its life and inspiration from exactly this type of
authority, from service to the Church, precisely inasmuch as it is required by the priest's
configuration to Jesus Christ Head and Servant of the Church.(46) As St. Augustine once
reminded a bishop on the day of his ordination: "He who is head of the people must in the first
place realize that he is to be the servant of many. And he should not disdain being such; I say it
once again, he should not disdain being the servant of many, because the Lord of Lords did not
disdain to make himself our servant."(47)
The spiritual life of the ministers of the New Testament should therefore be marked by this
fundamental attitude of service to the People of God (cf. Mt. 20:24ff.; Mk. 10:43-44), freed from all

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presumption of desire of "lording over" those in their charge (cf. 1 Pt. 5 :2-3). The priest is to
perform this service freely and willingly as God desires. In this way the priests, as the ministers,
the "elders" of the community, will be in their person the "model" of the flock, which for its part is
called to display this same priestly attitude of service toward the world - in order to bring to
humanity the fullness of life and complete liberation.
22. The figure of Jesus Christ as shepherd of the Church, his flock, takes up and represents in
new and more evocative terms the same content as that of Jesus Christ as head and servant.
Fulfilling the prophetic proclamation of the Messiah and savior joyfully announced by the psalmist
and the prophet Ezekiel (cf. Ps. 22-23; Ez. 34:11ff.), Jesus presents himself as "the good
shepherd" (Jn. 10:11, 14), not only of Israel but of all humanity (cf. Jn. 10:16). His whole life is a
continual manifestation of his "pastoral charity," or rather, a daily enactment of it. He feels
compassion for the crowds because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a
shepherd (cf. Mt. 9:35-36). He goes in search of the straying and scattered sheep (cf. Mt. 18:12-
14) and joyfully celebrates their return. He gathers and protects them. He knows them and calls
each one by name (cf. Jn. 10:3). He leads them to green pastures and still waters (cf. Ps. 22-23)
and spreads a table for them, nourishing them with his own life. The good shepherd offers this life
through his own death and resurrection, as the Church sings out in the Roman liturgy: "The good
shepherd is risen! He who laid down his life for his sheep, who died for his flock, he is risen,
alleluia."(48)
The author of the first letter of Peter calls Jesus the "chief Shepherd" (1 Pt. 5:4) because his work
and mission continue in the Church through the apostles (cf. Jn. 21:15-17) and their successors
(cf. 1 Pt. 5:1ff.), and through priests. By virtue of their consecration, priests are configured to Jesus
the good shepherd and are called to imitate and to live out his own pastoral charity.
Christ's gift of himself to his Church, the fruit of his love, is described in terms of that unique gift of
self made by the bridegroom to the bride, as the sacred texts often suggest. Jesus is the true
bridegroom who offers to the Church the wine of salvation (cf. Jn. 2:11). He who is "the head of
the Church, his body, and is himself its savior" (Eph. 5:23) "loved the Church and gave himself up
for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, that
he might present the Church to himself in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that
she might be holy and without blemish" (Eph. 5 :25-27). The Church is indeed the body in which
Christ the head is present and active, but she is also the bride who proceeds like a new Eve from
the open side of the redeemer on the cross.
Hence Christ stands "before" the Church and "nourishes and cherishes her" (Eph. 5 :29), giving
his life for her. The priest is called to be the living image of Jesus Christ, the spouse of the
Church.(49) Of course, he will always remain a member of the community as a believer alongside
his other brothers and sisters who have been called by the Spirit, but in virtue of his configuration
to Christ, the head and shepherd, the priest stands in this spousal relationship with regard to the

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community. "Inasmuch as he represents Christ, the head, shepherd and spouse of the Church, the
priest is placed not only in the Church but also in the forefront of the Church."(50) In his spiritual
life, therefore, he is called to live out Christ's spousal love toward the Church, his bride. Therefore,
the priest's life ought to radiate this spousal character, which demands that he be a witness to
Christ's spousal love and thus be capable of loving people with a heart which is new, generous
and pure - with genuine self - detachment, with full, constant and faithful dedication and at the
same time with a kind of "divine jealousy" (cf. 2 Cor. 11:2) and even with a kind of maternal
tenderness, capable of bearing "the pangs of birth" until "Christ be formed" in the faithful (cf. Gal.
4:19).
23. The internal principle, the force which animates and guides the spiritual life of the priest
inasmuch as he is configured to Christ the head and shepherd, is pastoral charity, as a
participation in Jesus Christ's own pastoral charity, a gift freely bestowed by the Holy Spirit and
likewise a task and a call which demand a free and committed response on the part of the priest.
The essential content of this pastoral charity is the gift of self, the total gift of self to the Church,
following the example of Christ. "Pastoral charity is the virtue by which we imitate Christ in his self
- giving and service. It is not just what we do, but our gift of self, which manifests Christ's love for
his flock. Pastoral charity determines our way of thinking and acting, our way of relating to people.
It makes special demands on us."(51)
The gift of self, which is the source and synthesis of pastoral charity, is directed toward the
Church. This was true of Christ who "loved the Church and gave himself up for her" (Eph. 5:25),
and the same must be true for the priest. With pastoral charity, which distinguishes the exercise of
the priestly ministry as an amoris officium,(52) "the priest, who welcomes the call to ministry, is in
a position to make this a loving choice, as a result of which the Church and souls become his first
interest, and with this concrete spirituality he becomes capable of loving the universal Church and
that part of it entrusted to him with the deep love of a husband for his wife."(53) The gift of self has
no limits, marked as it is by the same apostolic and missionary zeal of Christ, the good shepherd,
who said: "And I have other sheep, that are not of this fold; I must bring them also, and they will
heed my voice. So there shall be one flock, one shepherd" (Jn. 10:16).
Within the Church community the priest's pastoral charity impels and demands in a particular and
specific way his personal relationship with the presbyterate, united in and with the bishop, as the
Council explicitly states: "Pastoral charity requires that a priest always work in the bond of
communion with the bishop and with his brother priests, lest his efforts be in vain."(54)
The gift of self to the Church concerns her insofar as she is the body and the bride of Jesus Christ.
In this way the primary point of reference of the priest's charity is Jesus Christ himself. Only in
loving and serving Christ the head and spouse will charity become a source, criterion, measure
and impetus for the priest's love and service to the Church, the body and spouse of Christ. The

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apostle Paul had a clear and sure understanding of this point. Writing to the Christians of the
church in Corinth, he refers to "ourselves as your servants for Jesus' sake" (2 Cor 4:5). Above all,
this was the explicit and programmatic teaching of Jesus when he entrusted to Peter the ministry
of shepherding the flock only after his threefold affirmation of love, indeed only after he had
expressed a preferential love: "He said to him the third time, 'Simon, son of John, do you love me?'
Peter...said to him, 'Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you.' Jesus said to him, 'Feed
my sheep."' (Jn. 21:17)
Pastoral charity, which has its specific source in the sacrament of holy orders, finds its full
expression and its supreme nourishment in the Eucharist. As the Council states: "This pastoral
charity flows mainly from the eucharistic sacrifice, which is thus the center and root of the whole
priestly life. The priestly soul strives thereby to apply to itself the action which takes place on the
altar of sacrifice."(55) Indeed, the Eucharist re - presents, makes once again priest, the sacrifice of
the cross, the full gift of Christ to the Church, the gift of his body given and his blood shed, as the
supreme witness of the fact that he is head and shepherd, servant and spouse of the Church.
Precisely because of this, the priest's pastoral charity not only flows from the Eucharist but finds in
the celebration of the Eucharist its highest realization - just as it is from the Eucharist that he
receives the grace and obligation to give his whole life a "sacrificial" dimension.
This same pastoral charity is the dynamic inner principle capable of unifying the many different
activities of the priest. In virtue of this pastoral charity the essential and permanent demand for
unity between the priest's interior life and all his external actions and the obligations of the ministry
can be properly fulfilled, a demand particularly urgent in a socio - cultural and ecclesial context
strongly marked by complexity, fragmentation and dispersion. Only by directing every moment and
every one of his acts toward the fundamental choice to "give his life for the flock" can the priest
guarantee this unity which is vital and indispensable for his harmony and spiritual balance. The
Council reminds us that "priests attain to the unity of their lives by uniting themselves with Christ
whose food was to fulfill the will of him who sent him to do his work.... In this way, by assuming the
role of the good shepherd they will find in the very exercise of pastoral charity the bond of priestly
perfection which will unify their lives and activities."(56)
The Spiritual Life in the Exercise of the Ministry
24. The Spirit of the Lord anointed Christ and sent him forth to announce the Gospel (cf. Lk. 4:18).
The priest's mission is not extraneous to his consecration or juxtaposed to it, but represents its
intrinsic and vital purpose: Consecration is for mission. In this sense, not only consecration but
mission as well is under the seal of the Spirit and the influence of his sanctifying power.
This was the case in Jesus' life. This was the case in the lives of the apostles and their
successors. This is the case for the entire Church and within her for priests: All have received the
Spirit as a gift and call to holiness in and through the carrying out of the mission.(57)

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Therefore, an intimate bond exists between the priest's spiritual life and the exercise of his
ministry,(58) a bond which the Council expresses in this fashion: "And so it is that they are
grounded in the life of the Spirit while they exercise the ministry of the Spirit and of justice (cf. 2
Cor. 3:8-9), as long as they are docile to Christ's Spirit, who gives them life and guidance. For by
their everyday sacred actions, as by the entire ministry which they exercise in union with the
bishop and their fellow priests, they are being directed toward perfection of life. Priestly holiness
itself contributes very greatly to a fruitful fulfillment of the priestly ministry."(59)
"Live the mystery that has been placed in your hands!" This is the invitation and admonition which
the Church addresses to the priest in the Rite of Ordination, when the offerings of the holy people
for the eucharistic sacrifice are placed in his hands. The "mystery" of which the priest is a
"steward" (cf. 1 Cor. 4:1) is definitively Jesus Christ himself, who in the Spirit is the source of
holiness and the call to sanctification. This "mystery" seeks expression in the priestly life. For this
to be so, there is need for great vigilance and lively awareness. Once again, the Rite of Ordination
introduces these words with this recommendation: "Beware of what you will be doing." In the same
way Paul had admonished Timothy, "Do not neglect the gift you have" (1 Tm. 4:14; cf. 2 Tm. 1:6).
The relation between a priest's spiritual life and the exercise of his ministry can also be explained
on the basis of the pastoral charity bestowed by the sacrament of holy orders. The ministry of the
priest, precisely because of its participation in the saving ministry of Jesus Christ the head and
shepherd, cannot fail to express and live out his pastoral charity which is both the source and spirit
of his service and gift of self. In its objective reality the priestly ministry is an "amoris officium",
according to the previously quoted expression of St. Augustine. This objective reality itself serves
as both the basis and requirement for a corresponding ethos, which can be none other than a life
of love, as St. Augustine himself points out: Sit amoris officium pascere dominicum gregem.(60)
This ethos, and as a result the spiritual life, is none other than embracing consciously and freely -
that is to say in one's mind and heart, in one's decisions and actions - the "truth" of the priestly
ministry as an amoris officium.
25. For a spiritual life that grows through the exercise of the ministry, it is essential that the priest
should continually renew and deepen his awareness of being a minister of Jesus Christ by virtue
of sacramental consecration and configuration to Christ the head and shepherd of the Church.
This awareness is not only in accordance with the very nature of the mission which the priest
carries out on behalf of the Church and humanity, but it also provides a focus for the spiritual life of
the priest who carries out that mission. Indeed, the priest is chosen by Christ not as an "object" but
as a "person." In other words, he is not inert and passive, but rather is a "living instrument," as the
Council states, precisely in the passage where it refers to the duty to pursue this perfection (61)
The Council also speaks of priests as "companions and helpers" of God who is "the holy one and
sanctifier."(62)

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In this way the exercise of his ministry deeply involves the priest himself as a conscious, free and
responsible person. The bond with Jesus Christ assured by consecration and configuration to him
in the sacrament of orders 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. 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.
There can be no doubt that the exercise of the priestly ministry, especially in the celebration of the
sacraments, receives its saving effects from the action of Christ himself who becomes present in
the sacraments. But so as to emphasize the gratuitous nature of salvation which makes a person
both "saved" and a "savior" - always and only in Christ - God's plan has ordained that the efficacy
of the exercise of the ministry is also conditioned by a greater or lesser human receptivity and
participation.(63) In particular, the greater or lesser degree of the holiness of the minister has a
real effect on the proclamation of the word, the celebration of the sacraments and the leadership
of the community in charity. This was clearly stated by the Council: "The very holiness of priests is
of the greatest benefit for the fruitful fulfillment of their ministry. While it is possible for God's grace
to carry out the work of salvation through unworthy ministers, yet God ordinarily prefers to show
his wonders through those men who are more submissive to the impulse and guidance of the Holy
Spirit and who, because of their intimate union with Christ and their holiness of life, are able to say
with St. Paul: 'It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me' (Gal. 2:20)."(64)
The consciousness that one is a minister of Jesus Christ the head and shepherd also brings with it
a thankful and joyful awareness that one has received a singular grace and treasure from Jesus
Christ: the grace of having been freely chosen by the Lord to be a "living instrument" in the work of
salvation. This choice bears witness to Jesus Christ's love for the priest. This love, like other loves
and yet even more so, demands a response. After his resurrection, Jesus asked Peter the basic
question about love: "Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these?" And following his
response Jesus entrusts Peter with the mission: "Feed my lambs" (Jn. 21:15). Jesus first asks
Peter if he loves him so as to be able to entrust his flock to him. However, in reality it was Christ's
own love, free and unsolicited, which gave rise to his question to Peter and to his act of entrusting
"his" sheep to Peter. Therefore, every ministerial action - while it leads to loving and serving the
Church - provides an incentive to grow in ever greater love and service of Jesus Christ the head,
shepherd and spouse of the Church, a love which is always a response to the free and unsolicited
love of God in Christ. Growth in the love of Jesus Christ determines in turn the growth of love for
the Church: "We are your shepherds (pascimus vobis), with you we receive nourishment
(pascimur vobiscum). May the Lord give us the strength to love you to the extent of dying for you,
either in fact or in desire (aut effectu aut affectu)."(65)
26. Thanks to the insightful teaching of the Second Vatican Council,(66) we can grasp the

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conditions and demands, the manifestations and fruits of the intimate bond between the priest's
spiritual life and the exercise of his threefold ministry of word, sacrament and pastoral charity.
The priest is first of all a minister of the word of God. He is consecrated and sent forth to proclaim
the good news of the kingdom to all, calling every person to the obedience of faith and leading
believers to an ever increasing knowledge of and communion in the mystery of God, as revealed
and communicated to us in Christ. For this reason, the priest himself ought first of all to develop a
great personal familiarity with the word of God. Knowledge of its linguistic or exegetical aspects,
though certainly necessary, is not enough. He needs to approach the word with a docile and
prayerful heart so that it may deeply penetrate his thoughts and feelings and bring about a new
outlook in him "the mind of Christ" (1 Cor. 2:16) - such that his words and his choices and attitudes
may become ever more a reflection, a proclamation and a witness to the Gospel. Only if he
"abides" in the word will the priest become a perfect disciple of the Lord. Only then will he know
the truth and be set truly free, overcoming every conditioning which is contrary or foreign to the
Gospel (cf. Jn. 8:31-32). The priest ought to be the first "believer" in the word, while being fully
aware that the words of his ministry are not "his," but those of the One who sent him. He is not the
master of the word, but its servant. He is not the sole possessor of the word; in its regard he is in
debt to the People of God. Precisely because he can and does evangelize, the priest - like every
other member of the Church - ought to grow in awareness that he himself is continually in need of
being evangelized.(67) He proclaims the word in his capacity as "minister," as a sharer in the
prophetic authority of Christ and the Church. As a result, in order that he himself may possess and
give to the faithful the guarantee that he is transmitting the Gospel in its fullness, the priest is
called to develop a special sensitivity, love and docility to the living tradition of the Church and to
her magisterium. These are not foreign to the word, but serve its proper interpretation and
preserve its authentic meaning.(68)
It is above all in the celebration of the sacraments and in the celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours
that the priest is called to live and witness to the deep unity between the exercise of his ministry
and his spiritual life. The gift of grace offered to the Church becomes the principle of holiness and
a call to sanctification. For the priest as well, the truly central place, both in his ministry and
spiritual life, belongs to the Eucharist, since in it is contained "the whole spiritual good of the
Church, namely Christ himself our pasch and the living bread which gives life to men through his
flesh - that flesh which is given life and gives life through the Holy Spirit. Thus people are invited
and led to offer themselves, their works and all creation with Christ."(69)
From the various sacraments, and in particular from the specific grace proper to each of them, the
priest's spiritual life receives certain features. It is built up and molded by the different
characteristics and demands of each of the sacraments as he celebrates them and experiences
them.
I would like to make special mention of the sacrament of penance, of which priests are the

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ministers, but ought also to be its beneficiaries, becoming themselves witnesses of God's mercy
toward sinners. Once again, I would like to set forth what I wrote in the exhortation Reconciliatio et
Paenitentia: "The priest's spiritual and pastoral life, like that of his brothers and sisters, lay and
religious, depends, for its quality and fervor, on the frequent and conscientious personal practice
of the sacrament of penance. The priest's celebration of the Eucharist and administration of the
other sacraments, his pastoral zeal, his relationship with the faithful, his communion with his
brother priests, his collaboration with his bishop, his life of prayer - in a word, the whole of his
priestly existence, suffers an inexorable decline if by negligence or for some other reason he fails
to receive the sacrament of penance at regular intervals and in a spirit of genuine faith and
devotion. If a priest were no longer to go to confession or properly confess his sins, his priestly
being and his priestly action would feel its effects very soon, and this would also be noticed by the
community of which he was the pastor."(70)
Finally, the priest is called to express in his life the authority and service of Jesus Christ the head
and priest of the Church by encouraging and leading the ecclesial community, that is, by gathering
together "the family of God as a fellowship endowed with the spirit of unity" and by leading it "in
Christ through the Spirit to God the Father."(71) This munus regendi represents a very delicate
and complex duty which, in addition to the attention which must be given to a variety of persons
and their vocations, also involves the ability to coordinate all the gifts and charisms which the Spirit
inspires in the community, to discern them and to put them to good use for the upbuilding of the
Church in constant union with the bishops. This ministry demands of the priest an intense spiritual
life, filled with those qualities and virtues which are typical of a person who "presides over" and
"leads" a community, of an "elder" in the noblest and richest sense of the word: qualities and
virtues such as faithfulness, integrity, consistency, wisdom, a welcoming spirit, friendliness,
goodness of heart, decisive firmness in essentials, freedom from overly subjective viewpoints,
personal disinterestedness, patience, an enthusiasm for daily tasks, confidence in the value of the
hidden workings of grace as manifested in the simple and the poor (cf. Ti. 1:7-8).
Priestly Life and the Radicalism of the Gospel
27. "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me" (Lk. 4:18). The Holy Spirit poured out in the sacrament of
holy orders is a source of holiness and a call to sanctification. This is the case not only because it
configures the priest to Christ, the head and shepherd of the Church, entrusting him with a
prophetic, priestly and royal mission to be carried out in the name and person of Christ, but also
because it inspires and enlivens his daily existence, enriching it with gifts and demands, virtues
and incentives which are summed up in pastoral charity. This charity is a synthesis which unifies
the values and virtues contained in the Gospel and likewise a power which sustains their
development toward Christian perfection.(72)
For all Christians without exception, the radicalism of the Gospel represents a fundamental,
undeniable demand flowing from the call of Christ to follow and imitate him by virtue of the intimate

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communion of life with him brought about by the Spirit (cf. Mt. 8:18ff.; 10:37ff.; Mk. 8:34-38; 10:17-
21; Lk. 9:57ff.). This same demand is made anew to priests, not only because they are "in" the
Church, but because they are "in the forefront" of the Church inasmuch as they are configured to
Christ, the head and shepherd. equipped for and committed to the ordained ministry, and inspired
by pastoral charity. Within and as a manifestation of the radicalism of the Gospel one can find a
blossoming of many virtues and ethical demands which are decisive for the pastoral and spiritual
life of the priest, such as faith, humility in relation to the mystery of God, mercy and prudence. A
particularly significant expression of the radicalism of the Gospel is seen in the different
"evangelical counsels" which Jesus proposes in the Sermon on the Mount (cf. Mt. 5-7), and
among them the intimately related counsels of obedience, chastity and poverty.(73) The priest is
called to live these counsels in accordance with those ways and, more specifically, those goals
and that basic meaning which derive from and express his own priestly identity
28. "Among the virtues most necessary for the priestly ministry must be named that disposition of
soul by which priests are always ready to seek not their own will, but the will of him who sent them
(cf. Jn. 4:34; 5 :30; 6:38)."(74) It is in the spiritual life of the priest that obedience takes on certain
special characteristics.
First of all, obedience is "apostolic" in the sense that it recognizes, loves and serves the Church in
her hierarchical structure. Indeed, there can be no genuine priestly ministry except in communion
with the supreme pontiff and the episcopal college, especially with one's own diocesan bishop,
who deserves that "filial respect and obedience" promised during the rite of ordination. This
"submission" to those invested with ecclesial authority is in no way a kind of humiliation. It flows
instead from the responsible freedom of the priest who accepts not only the demands of an
organized and organic ecclesial life, but also that grace of discernment and responsibility in
ecclesial decisions which was assured by Jesus to his apostles and their successors for the sake
of faithfully safeguarding the mystery of the Church and serving the structure of the Christian
community among its common path toward salvation.
Authentic Christian obedience, when it is properly motivated and lived without servility, helps the
priest to exercise in accordance with the Gospel the authority entrusted to him for his work with the
People of God: an authority free from authoritarianism or demagoguery. Only the person who
knows how to obey in Christian really able to require obedience from others in accordance with the
Gospel.
Priestly obedience has also a "community" dimension: It is not the obedience of an individual who
alone relates to authority, but rather an obedience which is deeply a part of the unity of the
presbyterate, which as such is called to cooperate harmoniously with the bishop and, through him,
with Peter's successor.(75)
This aspect of the priest's obedience demands a marked spirit of asceticism, both in the sense of a

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tendency not to become too bound up in one's own preferences or points of view and in the sense
of giving brother priests the opportunity to make good use of their talents, and abilities, setting
aside all forms of jealousy, envy and rivalry. Priestly obedience should be one of solidarity, based
on belonging to a single presbyterate. Within the presbyterate, this obedience is expressed in co -
responsibility regarding directions to be taken and choices to be made.
Finally, priestly obedience has a particular "pastoral" character. It is lived in an atmosphere of
constant readiness to allow oneself to be taken up, as it were "consumed," by the needs and
demands of the flock. These last ought to be truly reasonable and at times they need to be
evaluated and tested to see how genuine they are. But it is undeniable that the priest's life is fully
"taken up" by the hunger for the Gospel and for faith, hope and love for God and his mystery, a
hunger which is more or less consciously present in the People of God entrusted to him.
29. Referring to the evangelical counsels, the Council states that "preeminent among these
counsels is that precious gift of divine grace given to some by the Father (cf. Mt. 19:11; 1 Cor. 7:7)
in order more easily to devote themselves to God alone with an undivided heart (cf. 1 Cor. 7:32-
34) in virginity or celibacy. This perfect continence for love of the kingdom of heaven has always
been held in high esteem by the Church as a sign and stimulus of love, and as a singular source
of spiritual fertility in the world."(76) In virginity and celibacy, chastity retains its original meaning,
that is, of human sexuality lived as a genuine sign of and precious service to the love of
communion and gift of self to others. This meaning is fully found in virginity which makes evident,
even in the renunciation of marriage, the "nuptial meaning" of the body through a communion and
a personal gift to Jesus Christ and his Church which prefigures and anticipates the perfect and
final communion and self - giving of the world to come: "In virginity or celibacy, the human being is
awaiting, also in a bodily way, the eschatological marriage of Christ with the Church, giving himself
or herself completely to the Church in the hope that Christ may give himself to the Church in the
full truth of eternal life."(77)
In this light one can more easily understand and appreciate the reasons behind the centuries - old
choice which the Western Church has made and maintained - despite all the difficulties and
objections raised down the centuries - of conferring the order of presbyter only on men who have
given proof that they have been called by God to the gift of chastity in absolute and perpetual
celibacy.
The synod fathers clearly and forcefully expressed their thought on this matter in an important
proposal which deserves to be quoted here in full: "While in no way interfering with the discipline of
the Oriental churches, the synod, in the conviction that perfect chastity in priestly celibacy is a
charism, reminds priests that celibacy is a priceless gift of God for the Church and has a prophetic
value for the world today. This synod strongly reaffirms what the Latin Church and some Oriental
rites require that is, that the priesthood be conferred only on those men who have received from
God the gift of the vocation to celibate chastity (without prejudice to the tradition of some Oriental

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churches and particular cases of married clergy who convert to Catholicism, which are admitted as
exceptions in Pope Paul VI's encyclical on priestly celibacy, no. 42). The synod does not wish to
leave any doubts in the mind of anyone regarding the Church's firm will to maintain the law that
demands perpetual and freely chosen celibacy for present and future candidates for priestly
ordination in the Latin rite. The synod would like to see celibacy presented and explained in the
fullness of its biblical, theological and spiritual richness, as a precious gift given by God to his
Church and as a sign of the kingdom which is not of this world - a sign of God's love for this world
and of the undivided love of the priest for God and for God's people, with the result that celibacy is
seen as a positive enrichment of the priesthood."(78)
It is especially important that the priest understand the theological motivation of the Church's law
on celibacy. Inasmuch as it is a law, it expresses the Church's will, even before the will of the
subject expressed by his readiness. But the will of the Church finds its ultimate motivation in the
link between celibacy and sacred ordination, which configures the priest to Jesus Christ the head
and spouse of the Church. The Church, as the spouse of Jesus Christ, wishes to be loved by the
priest in the total and exclusive manner in which Jesus Christ her head and spouse loved her.
Priestly celibacy, then, is the gift of self in and with Christ to his Church and expresses the priest's
service to the Church in and with the Lord.
For an adequate priestly spiritual life, celibacy ought not to be considered and lived as an isolated
or purely negative element, but as one aspect of the positive, specific and characteristic approach
to being a priest. Leaving father and mother, the priest follows Jesus the good shepherd in an
apostolic communion, in the service of the People of God. Celibacy, then, is to be welcomed and
continually renewed with a free and loving decision as a priceless gift from God, as an "incentive
to pastoral charity "(79) as a singular sharing in God's fatherhood and in the fruitfulness of the
Church, and as a witness to the world of the eschatological kingdom. To put into practice all the
moral, pastoral and spiritual demands of priestly celibacy it is absolutely necessary that the priest
pray humbly and trustingly, as the Council points out: "In the world today, many people call perfect
continence impossible. The more they do so, the more humbly and perseveringly priests should
join with the Church in praying for the grace of fidelity. It is never denied to those who ask. At the
same time let priests make use of all the supernatural and natural helps which are now available
to all."(80) Once again it is prayer, together with the Church's sacraments and ascetical practice,
which will provide hope in difficulties, forgiveness in failings, and confidence and courage in
resuming the journey.
30. On the subject of evangelical poverty, the synod fathers gave a concise yet important
description, presenting it as "the subjection of all goods to the supreme good of God and his
kingdom.(81) In reality, only the person who contemplates and lives the mystery of God as the one
and supreme good, as the true and definitive treasure, can understand and practice poverty, which
is certainly not a matter of despising or rejecting material goods but of a loving and responsible
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that is, with reference to God and his plan.
Poverty for the priest, by virtue of his sacramental configuration to Christ, the head and shepherd,
takes on specific "pastoral" connotations which the synod fathers took up from the Council's
teachings and further developed. Among other things, they wrote: "Priests, following the example
of Christ, who, rich though he was, became poor for love of us (cf. 2 Cor. 8:9) - should consider
the poor and the weakest as people entrusted in a special way to them, and they should be
capable of witnessing to poverty with a simple and austere lifestyle, having learned the generous
renunciation of superfluous things(Optatam Totius, 9; Code of Canon Law, Canon 282)."(83)
It is true that "the workman deserves his wages" (Lk. 10:7) and that "the Lord commanded that
those who proclaim the Gospel should get their living by the Gospel" (1 Cor. 9:14), but it is no less
true that this right of the apostle can in no way be confused with attempts of any kind to condition
service to the Gospel and the Church upon the advantages and interests which can derive from it.
Poverty alone ensures that the priest remains available to be sent wherever his work will be most
useful and needed even at the cost of personal sacrifice. It is a condition and essential premise of
the apostle's docility to the Spirit, making him ready to "go forth," without traveling bag or
personalities, following only the will of the Master(cf. Lk. 9:57-62; Mk. 10:17-22).
Being personally involved in the life of the community and being responsible for it, the priest
should also offer the witness of a total "honesty" in the administration of the goods of the
community, which he will never treat as ;f they were his own property, but rather something for
which he will be held accountable by God and his brothers and sisters, especially the poor.
Moreover, his awareness of belonging to the one presbyterate will be an incentive for the priest to
commit himself to promoting both a more equitable distribution of goods among his fellow priests
and a certain common use of goods (cf. Acts 2:42-47).
The interior freedom which is safeguarded and nourished by evangelical poverty will help the
priest to stand beside the underprivileged; to practice solidarity with their efforts to create a more
just society; to be more sensitive and capable of understanding and discerning realities involving
the economic and social aspects of life; and to promote a preferential option for the poor. The
latter, while excluding no one from the proclamation and gift of salvation, will assist him in gently
approaching the poor, sinners and all those on the margins of society, following the model given
by Jesus in carrying out his prophetic and priestly ministry (cf. Lk. 4:18).
Nor should the prophetic significance of priestly poverty be forgotten, so urgently needed in
affluent and consumeristic societies: "A truly poor priest is indeed a specific sign of separation
from, disavowal of and non - submission to the tyranny of a contemporary world which puts all its
trust in money and in material security."(84)
Jesus Christ, who brought his pastoral charity to perfection on the cross with a complete exterior

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and interior emptying of self, is both the model and source of the virtues of obedience, chastity and
poverty which the priest is called to live out as an expression of his pastoral charity for his brothers
and sisters. In accordance with St. Paul's words to the Christians at Philippi, the priest should have
"the mind which was in Christ Jesus," emptying himself of his own "self," so as to discover, in a
charity which is obedient, chaste and poor, the royal road of union with God and unity with his
brothers and sisters (cf. Phil. 2:5).
Membership in and Dedication to the Particular Church
31. Like every authentically Christian spiritual life, the spiritual life of the priest has an essential
and undeniable ecclesial dimension which is a sharing in the holiness of the Church herself, which
we profess in the Creed to be a "communion of saints." The holiness of the Christian has its
source in the holiness of the Church; it expresses that holiness and at the same time enriches it.
This ecclesial dimension takes on special forms, purposes and meanings in the spiritual life of the
priest by virtue of his specific relation to the Church, always as a result of his configuration to
Christ the head and shepherd, his ordained ministry and his pastoral charity.
In this perspective, it is necessary to consider the priest's membership in and dedication to a
particular Church. These two factors are not the result of purely organizational and disciplinary
needs. On the contrary, the priest's relationship with his bishop in the one presbyterate, his
sharing in the bishop's ecclesial concern and his devotion to the evangelical care of the People of
God in the specific historical and contextual conditions of a particular Church are elements which
must be taken into account in sketching the proper configuration of the priest and his spiritual life.
In this sense, "incardination" cannot be confined to a purely juridical bond, but also involves a set
of attitudes as well as spiritual and pastoral decisions which help to fill out the specific features of
the priestly vocation.
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 to and dedication to the particular Church a wealth of meaning, criteria for discernment
and action which shape both his pastoral mission and his spiritual life.
Other insights or reference to other traditions of spiritual life can contribute to the priest's journey
toward perfection, for these are capable of enriching the life of individual priests as well as
enlivening the presbyterate with precious spiritual gifts. Such is the case with many old and new
Church associations which welcome priests into their spiritual family: from societies of apostolic
life to priestly secular institutes, and from various forms of spiritual communion and sharing to
ecclesial movements. Priests who belong to religious orders and congregations represent a
spiritual enrichment for the entire diocesan presbyterate, to which they contribute specific
charisms and special ministries, stimulating the particular church by their presence to be more
intensely open to the Church throughout the world.(85)

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The priest's membership in a particular church and his dedication - even to the gift of his life - to
the upbuilding of the Church, "in the person" of Christ the head and shepherd, in service of the
entire Christian community and in a generous and filial relationship with the bishop, must be
strengthened by every charism which becomes part of his priestly life or surrounds it.(86)
For the abundance of The Spirit's gifts to be welcomed with joy and allowed to bear fruit for the
glory of God and the good of the entire Church, each person is required first to have a knowledge
and discernment of his or her own charisms and those of others, and always to use these
charisms with Christian humility, with firm self - control and with the intention, above all else, to
help build up the entire community which each particular charism is meant to serve. Moreover, all
are required to make a sincere effort to live in mutual esteem, to respect others and to hold in
esteem all the positive and legitimate diversities present in the presbyterate. This too constitutes
part of the priest's spiritual life and continual practice of asceticism.
32. Membership in and dedication to a particular church does not limit the activity and life of the
presbyterate to that church: A restriction of this sort is not possible, given the very nature both of
the particular church(87) and of the priestly ministry. In this regard the Council teaches that "the
spiritual gift which priests received at their ordination prepares them not for any limited or narrow
mission but for the widest scope of the universal mission of salvation 'to the end of the earth' (Acts
1:8). For every priestly ministry shares in the universality of the mission entrusted by Christ to his
apostles."(88)
It thus follows that the spiritual life of the priest should be profoundly marked by a missionary zeal
and dynamism. In the exercise of their ministry and the witness of their lives, priests have the duty
to form the community entrusted to them as a truly missionary community. As I wrote in the
encyclical Redemptoris Missio, "all priests must have the mind and heart of missionaries open to
the needs of the Church and the world, with concern for those farthest away and especially for the
non - Christian groups in their own area. They should have at heart, in their prayers and
particularly at the eucharistic sacrifice, the concern of the whole Church for all of humanity."(89)
If the lives of priests are generously inspired by this missionary spirit, it will be easier to respond to
that increasingly serious demand of the Church today which arises from the unequal distribution of
the clergy. In this regard, the Council was both quite clear and forceful: "Let priests remember then
that they must have at heart the care of all the churches. Hence priests belonging to dioceses
which are rich in vocations should show themselves willing and ready, with the permission or at
the urging of their own bishop, to exercise their ministry in other regions, missions or activities
which suffer from a shortage of clergy."(90)
"Renew in Them the Outpouring of Your Spirit of Holiness"
33. "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the

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poor" (Lk. 4:18). Even today Christ makes these words which he proclaimed in the synagogue of
Nazareth echo in our priestly hearts. Indeed, our faith reveals to us the presence of the spirit of
Christ at work in our being, in our acting and in our living, just as the sacrament of orders has
configured, equipped and molded it.
Yes, the Spirit of the Lord is the principal agent in our spiritual life. He creates our "new heart,"
inspires it and guides it with the "new law" of love, of pastoral charity. For the development of the
spiritual life it is essential to be aware that the priest will never lack the grace of the Holy Spirit as a
totally gratuitous gift and as a task which he is called to undertake. Awareness of this gift is the
foundation and support of the priest's unflagging trust amid the difficulties, temptations and
weaknesses which he will meet along his spiritual path.
Here I would repeat to all priests what I said to so many of them on another occasion: "The priestly
vocation is essentially a call to holiness in the form which derives from the sacrament of orders.
Holiness is intimacy with God; it is the imitation of Christ, who was poor, chaste and humble; it is
unreserved love for souls and a giving of oneself on their behalf and for their true good; it is love
for the Church which is holy and wants us to be holy, because this is the mission that Christ
entrusted to her. Each one of you should also be holy in order to help your brothers and sisters to
pursue their vocation to holiness.
"How can we fail to reflect on...the essential role that the Holy Spirit carries out in this particular
call to holiness which is proper to the priestly ministry? Let us remember the words of the rite of
priestly ordination which are considered to be central in the sacramental formula: 'Almighty Father,
give these your sons the dignity of the priesthood. Renew in them the outpouring of your Spirit of
holiness. O Lord, may they fulfill the ministry of the second degree of priesthood received from
you, and by their example may they lead all to upright conduct of life.'
"Beloved, through ordination, you have received the same Spirit of Christ, who makes you like
him, so that you can act in his name and so that his very mind and heart might live in you. This
intimate communion with the Spirit of Christ - while guaranteeing the efficacy of the sacramental
actions which you perform in persona Christi - seeks to be expressed in fervent prayer, in integrity
of life, in the pastoral charity of a ministry tirelessly spending itself for the salvation of the brethren.
In a word, it calls for your personal sanctification."(91)
CHAPTER IV
COME AND SEE
Priestly Vocation in the Church's Pastoral Work
Seek, Follow, Abide

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34. "Come, and see" (Jn. 1:39). This was the reply Jesus gave to the two disciples of John the
Baptist who asked him where he was staying. In these words we find the meaning of vocation.
This is how the evangelist relates the call of Andrew and Peter: "The next day again John was
standing with two of his disciples; and he looked at Jesus as he walked, and said, 'Behold, the
Lamb of God!' The two disciples heard him say this, and they followed Jesus. Jesus turned, and
saw them following, and said to them, 'What do you seek?' Arid they said to him, 'Rabbi' (which
means Teacher), 'Where are you staying?' He said to them, ' Come and see. ' They came and saw
where he was staying; and they stayed with him that day, for it was about the tenth hour.
"One of the two who heard John speak, and followed him, was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother. He
first found his brother, Simon, and said to him, 'We have found the Messiah' (which means Christ).
He brought him to Jesus. Jesus looked at him, and said, 'So you are Simon the son of John? You
shall be called Cephas' (which means Peter)" (Jn. 1:35-42).
This Gospel passage is one of many in the Bible where the "mystery" of vocation is described, in
our case the mystery of the vocation to be apostles of Jesus. This passage of John, which is also
significant for the Christian vocation as such, has a particular value with regard to the priestly
vocation. As the community of Jesus' disciples, the Church is called to contemplate this scene
which in some way is renewed constantly down the ages. The Church is invited to delve more
deeply into the original and personal meaning of the call to follow Christ in the priestly ministry and
the unbreakable bond between divine grace and human responsibility which is contained and
revealed in these two terms which we find more than once in the Gospel: Come follow me (cf. Mt.
19:21). She is asked to discern and to live out he proper dynamism of vocation, its gradual and
concrete development in the phases of seeking Christ, finding him and staying with him.
The Church gathers from this "Gospel of vocation" the paradigm, strength and impulse behind her
pastoral work of promoting vocations, of her mission to care for the birth, discernment and
fostering of vocations, particularly those to the priesthood. By the very fact that "the lack of priests
is certainly a sad thing for any Church,"(92) pastoral work for vocations needs especially today, to
be taken up with a new vigor and more decisive commitment by all the members of the Church, in
the awareness that it is not a secondary or marginal matter, or the business of one group only, as
if it were but a "part," no matter how important, of the entire pastoral work of the Church. Rather as
the synod fathers frequently repeated, it is an essential part of he overall pastoral work of each
Church,(93) a concern which demands to be integrated into and fully identified with the ordinary
"care of souls,"(94) a connatural and essential dimension of the Church's pastoral work, of her
very life and mission.(95)
Indeed, concern for vocations is a connatural and essential dimension of the Church's pastoral
work. The reason for this is that vocation, in a certain sense, defines the very being of the Church,
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for the Church is a "convocation," an assembly of those who have been called: "All those who in
faith look toward Jesus, the author of salvation and the principle of unity and peace, God has
gathered together and established as the Church, that she may be for each and everyone the
visible sacrament of this saving unity."(96)
A genuinely theological assessment of priestly vocation and pastoral work in its regard can only
arise from an assessment of the mystery of the Church as a Mysterium vocationis.
The Church and the Gift of Vocation
35. Every Christian vocation finds its foundation in the gratuitous and prevenient choice made by
the Father "who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, even
as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless
before him. He destined us in love to be his sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose
of his will" (Eph. 1:3-5).
Each Christian vocation comes from God and is God's gift. However, it is never bestowed outside
of or independently of the Church. Instead it always comes about in the Church and through the
Church because, as the Second Vatican Council reminds us, "God has willed to make men holy
and save them, not as individuals without any bond or link between them, but rather to make them
into a people who might acknowledge him and serve him in holiness."(97)
The Church not only embraces in herself all the vocations which God gives her along the path to
salvation, but she herself appears as a mystery of vocation, a luminous and living reflection of the
mystery of the Blessed Trinity. In truth, the Church, a "people made one by the unity of the Father,
the Son and the Holy Spirit,"(98) carries within her the mystery of the Father, who, being neither
called nor sent by anyone (cf. Rom. 11:33-35), calls all to hallow his name and do his will; she
guards within herself the mystery of the Son, who is called by the Father and sent to proclaim the
kingdom of God to all and who calls all to follow him; and she is the trustee of the mystery of the
Holy Spirit, who consecrates for mission those whom the Father calls through his Son Jesus
Christ.
The Church, being by her very nature a "vocation," is also a begetter and educator of vocations.
This is so because she is a "sacrament," a "sign" and "instrument" in which the vocation of every
Christian is reflected and lived out. And she is so in her activity, in the exercise of her ministry of
proclaiming the word, in her celebration of the sacraments and in her service and witness to
charity.
We can now see the essential dimension of the Christian vocation: Not only does it derive "from"
the Church and her mediation, not only does it come to be known and find fulfillment "in" the
Church, but it also necessarily appears - in fundamental service to God - as a service "to" the

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Church. Christian vocation, whatever shape it takes, is a gift whose purpose is to build up the
Church and to increase the kingdom of God in the world.(99)
What is true of every vocation is true specifically of the priestly vocation: The latter is a call, by the
sacrament of holy orders received in the Church, to place oneself at the service of the People of
God with a particular belonging and configuration to Jesus Christ and with the authority of acting
"in the name and in the person" of him who is head and shepherd of the Church.
From this point of view, we understand the statement of the synod fathers: "The vocation of each
priest exists in the Church and for the Church: Through her this vocation is brought to fulfillment.
Hence we can say that every priest receives his vocation from our Lord through the Church as a
gracious gift, a grace gratis data (charisma). It is the task of the bishop or the competent superior
not only to examine the suitability and the vocation of the candidate but also to recognize it. This
ecclesiastical element is inherent in a vocation to the priestly ministry as such. The candidate to
the priesthood should receive his vocation not by imposing his own personal conditions, but
accepting also the norms and conditions which the Church herself lays down, in the fulfillment of
her responsibility."(100)
The Vocational Dialogue - Divine Initiative and Human Response
36. The history of every priestly vocation, as indeed of every Christian vocation, is the history of an
inexpressible dialogue between God and human beings, between the love of God who calls and
the freedom of individuals who respond lovingly to him. These two indivisible aspects of vocation,
God's gratuitous gift and the responsible freedom of human beings, are reflected in a splendid and
very effective way in the brief words with which the evangelist Mark presents the calling of the
Twelve: Jesus "went up into the hills, and called to him those whom he desired; and they came to
him" (Mk. 3:13). On the one hand, we have the completely free decision of Jesus; on the other, the
"coming" of the Twelve, their "following" Jesus.
This is the constant paradigm, the fundamental datum of every vocation: whether of prophets,
apostles, priests, religious, the lay faithful - of everyone.
First of all, indeed in a prevenient and decisive way, comes the free and gracious intervention of
God who calls. It is God who takes the initiative in the call. This was, for example, the experience
of the prophet Jeremiah: "Now the word of the Lord came to me saying, ' Before I formed you in
the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you; I appointed you prophet to the
nations"' (Jer. 1:4-5). The same truth is presented by the apostle Paul, who roots every vocation in
the eternal election in Christ, made "before the foundation of the world" and "according to the
purpose of his will" (Eph. 1:4-5). The absolute primacy of grace in vocation is most perfectly
proclaimed in the words of Jesus: "You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that
you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide" (Jn. 15:16).

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If the priestly vocation bears unequivocal witness to the primacy of grace, God's free and
sovereign decision to call man calls for total respect. It cannot be forced in the slightest by any
human ambition, and it cannot be replaced by any human decision. Vocation is a gift of God's
grace and never a human right, such that "one can never consider priestly life as a simply human
affair, nor the mission of the minister as a simply personal project."(101) Every claim or
presumption on the part of those called is thus radically excluded (cf Heb 5 4ff ). Their entire heart
and spirit should be filled with an amazed and deeply felt gratitude. an unshakable trust and hope,
because those who have been called know that they are rooted not in their own strength but in the
unconditional faithfulness of God who calls.
"He called to him those whom he desired; and they came to him" (Mk. 3:13). This "coming," which
is the same as "following" Jesus, expresses the free response of the Twelve to the Master's call.
We see it in the case of Peter and Andrew: "And he said to them, 'Follow me and I will make you
fishers of men.' Immediately they left their nets and followed him" (Mt. 4:19-20). The experience of
James and John was exactly the same (cf. Mt. 4:21-22). And so it is always: In vocation there
shine out at the same time God's gracious love and the highest possible exaltation of human
freedom - the freedom of following God's call and entrusting oneself to him.
In effect, grace and freedom are not opposed. On the contrary, grace enlivens and sustains
human freedom, setting it free from the slavery of sin (cf. Jn. 8:34-36), healing it and elevating it in
its ability to be open to receiving God's gift. And if we cannot in any way minimize the absolutely
gratuitous initiative of God who calls, neither can we in any way minimize the serious responsibility
which persons face in the challenge of their freedom. And so when he hears Jesus' invitation to
"Come, follow me" the rich young man refuses, a sign - albeit only a negative sign - of his
freedom: "At that saying his countenance fell, and he went away sorrowful; for he had great
possessions" (Mk. 10:22).
Freedom, therefore, is essential to vocation - a freedom which, when it gives a positive response,
appears as a deep personal adherence, as a loving gift - or rather as a gift given back to the giver
who is God who calls, an oblation: "The call" - Paul VI once said - "is as extensive as the
response. There cannot be vocations unless they be free; that is, unless they be spontaneous
offerings of oneself, conscious, generous, total....Oblations, we call them: Here lies in practice the
heart of the matter.... It is the humble and penetrating voice of Christ who says, today as
yesterday, and even more than yesterday: Come. Freedom reaches its supreme foundation:
precisely that of oblation, of generosity, of sacrifice."(102)
The free oblation, which constitutes the intimate and most precious core of a person's response to
God who calls, finds its incomparable model, indeed its living root, in the most free oblation which
Jesus Christ, the first of those called, made to the Father's will: "Consequently, when Christ came
into the world, he said, ' Sacrifices and offerings you have not desired, but a body have you
prepared for me.... Then I said, lo, I have come to do your will, O God"' (Heb. 10:5, 7).

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The creature who more than any other has lived the full truth of vocation is Mary the virgin mother,
and she did so in intimate communion with Christ: No one has responded with a love greater than
hers to the immense love of God. (103)
37. "At that saying his countenance fell, and he went away sorrowful; for he had great
possessions" (Mk. 10:22). The rich young man in the Gospel who did not follow Jesus' call
reminds us of the obstacles preventing or eliminating one's free response: Material goods are not
the only things that can shut the human heart to the values of the Spirit and the radical demands
of the kingdom of God, certain social and cultural conditions of our day can also present many
threats and can impose distorted and false visions about the true nature of vocation, making it
difficult, if not impossible, to embrace or even to understand it. Many people have such a general
and confused idea of God that their religiosity becomes a religiosity without God, where God's will
is seen as an immutable and unavoidable fate to which one has to bend and resign oneself in a
totally passive manner. But this is not the face of God which Jesus Christ came to reveal to us:
God is truly a Father who with an eternal and prevenient love calls human beings and opens up
with them a marvelous and permanent dialogue, inviting them, as his children, to share his own
divine life. It is true that if human beings have an erroneous vision of God cannot even recognize
the truth about themselves, and thus they will be unable to perceive or live their vocation in its
genuine value: Vocation will be felt only as a crushing burden imposed upon them.
Certain distorted ideas regarding human nature, sometimes backed up by specious philosophical
or "scientific" theories, also sometimes lead people to consider their own existence and freedom
as totally determined and conditioned by external factors of an educational, psychological, cultural
or environmental type. In other cases, freedom is understood in terms of total autonomy, the sole
and indisputable basis for personal choices, and effectively as self - affirmation at any cost. But
these ways of thinking make it impossible to understand and live one's vocation as a free dialogue
of love, which arises from the communication of God to the human person and ends in the sincere
self giving.
In the present context there is also a certain tendency to view the bond between human beings
and God in an individualistic and self - centered way, as if God's call reached the individual by a
direct route without in any way passing through the community. Its purpose is held to be the
benefit, or the very salvation, of the individual called and not a total dedication to God in the
service of the community. We thus find another very deep and at the same time subtle threat
which makes it impossible to recognize and accept joyfully the ecclesial dimension which naturally
marks every Christian vocation, and the priestly vocation in particular: As the Council reminds us,
priestly ministry acquires its genuine meaning and attains to its fullest truth in serving and in
fostering the growth of the Christian community and the common priesthood of the faithful.(104)
The cultural context which we have just recalled, and which affects Christians themselves and
especially young people, helps us to understand the spread of the crisis of priestly vocations, a

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crisis that is rooted in and accompanied by even more radical crises of faith. The synod fathers
made this very point when recognizing that the crisis of vocations to the priesthood has deep roots
in the cultural environment and in the outlook and practical behavior of Christians."(105)
Hence the urgent need that the Church's pastoral work in promoting vocations be aimed decisively
and primarily toward restoring a "Christian mentality," one built on faith and sustained by it. More
than ever, what is now needed is an evangelization which never tires of pointing to the true face of
God, the Father who calls each one of us in Jesus Christ, and to the genuine meaning of human
freedom as the principal driving force behind the responsible gift of oneself. Only thus will the
indispensable foundations be laid, so that every vocation, including the priestly vocation, will be
perceived for what it really is, loved in its beauty and lived out with total dedication and deep joy.
Content and Methods of Pastoral Work for Promoting Vocations
38. Certainly a vocation is a fathomless mystery involving the relationship established by God with
human beings in their absolute uniqueness, a mystery perceived and heard as a call which awaits
a response in the depths of one's conscience, which is "a person's most secret core and
sanctuary. There one is alone with God whose voice echoes in his depths."(106) But this does not
eliminate the communitarian and in particular the ecclesial dimension of vocation. The Church is
also truly present and at work in the vocation of every priest.
In her service to the priestly vocation and its development, that is, in the birth, discernment and
care of each vocation, the Church can look for her model to Andrew, one of the first two disciples
who set out to follow Jesus. Andrew himself told his brother what had happened to him: "'We have
found the Messiah' (which means Christ)" (Jn. 1:41). His account of this "discovery" opened the
way to a meeting: "He brought him to Jesus" (Jn. 1:42). There can be no doubt about the
absolutely free initiative nor about the sovereign decision of Jesus. It is Jesus who calls Simon and
gives him a new name: "Jesus looked at him, and said, 'So you are Simon the son of John? You
shall be called Cephas' (which means Peter)" (Jn. 1:42). But Andrew also acted with initiative: He
arranged his brother's meeting with Jesus.
"He brought him to Jesus." In a way, this is the heart of all the Church's pastoral work on behalf of
vocations, in which she cares for the birth and growth of vocations, making use of the gifts and
responsibilities, of the charisms and ministry she has received from Christ and his Spirit. The
Church, as a priestly, prophetic and kingly people, is committed to foster and to serve the birth and
maturing of priestly vocations through her prayer and sacramental life; by her proclamation of the
word and by education in the faith; by her example and witness of charity.
The Church, in her dignity and responsibility as a priestly people, possesses in prayer and in the
celebration of the liturgy the essential and primary stages of her pastoral work for vocations.
Indeed, Christian prayer, nourished by the word of God, creates an ideal environment where each

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individual can discover the truth of his own being and the identity of the personal and unrepeatable
life project which the Father entrusts to him. It is therefore necessary to educate boys and young
men so that they will become faithful to prayer and meditation on God's word: in silence and
listening, they will be able to perceive the Lord who is calling them to the priesthood, and be able
to follow that call promptly and generously.
The Church should daily take up Jesus' persuasive and demanding invitation to "pray the Lord of
the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest" (Mt. 9:38). Obedient to Christ's command, the
Church first of all makes a humble profession of faith: In praying for vocations, conscious of her
urgent need of them for her very life and mission, she acknowledges that they are a gift of God
and, as such, must be asked for by a ceaseless and trusting prayer of petition. This prayer, the
pivot of all pastoral work for vocations, is required' not only of individuals but of entire ecclesial
communities. There can be no doubt about the importance of individual initiatives of prayer, of
special times set apart for such prayer - beginning with the World Day of Prayer for Vocations -
and of the explicit commitment of persons and groups particularly concerned with the problem of
priestly vocations. 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.
Thus it will be possible to relive the experience of the apostles in the upper room who, in union
with Mary, prayerfully awaited the outpouring of the Spirit (cf. Acts 1:14), who will not fail to raise
up once again in the People of God "worthy ministers for the altar, ardent but gentle proclaimers of
the Gospel."(107)
In addition, the liturgy, as the summit and source of the Church's existence(108) and in particular
of all Christian prayer, plays an influential and indispensable role in the pastoral work of promoting
vocations. The liturgy is a living experience of God's gift and a great school for learning how to
respond to his call. As such, every liturgical celebration, and especially the Eucharist, reveals to us
the true face of God and grants us a share in the paschal mystery, in the "hour" for which Jesus
came into the world and toward which he freely and willingly made his way in obedience to the
Father's call (cf. Jn. 13:1). It shows us the Church as a priestly people and a community structured
in the variety and complementarity of its charisms and vocations. The redemptive sacrifice of
Christ, which the Church celebrates in mystery, accords a particular value to suffering endured in
union with the Lord Jesus. The synod fathers invited us never to forget that "through the offering of
sufferings, which are so frequent in human life, the Christian who is ill offers himself as a victim to
God, in the image of Christ, who has consecrated himself for us all" (cf. Jn. 17:19) and that "the
offering of sufferings for this intention is a great help in fostering vocations."(109)
39. In carrying out her prophetic role, the Church feels herself irrevocably committed to the task of
proclaiming and witnessing to the Christian meaning of vocation, or as we might say, to "the
Gospel of vocation." Here too, she feels the urgency of the apostle's exclamation: "Woe to me if I
do not preach the Gospel!" (1 Cor. 9:16) This admonishment rings out especially for us who are
pastors but, together with us, it touches all educators in the Church. Preaching and catechesis

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must always show their intrinsic vocational dimension: The word of God enlightens believers to
appreciate life as a response to God's call and leads them to embrace in faith the gift of a personal
vocation.
But all this, however important and even essential, is not enough: We need a "direct preaching on
the mystery of vocation in the Church, on the value of the ministerial priesthood, on God's
people's."(10) A properly structured catechesis, directed to all the members of the Church, in
addition to dissipating doubts and countering one - sided or distorted ideas about priestly ministry,
will open believers' hearts to expect the gift and create favorable conditions for the birth of new
vocations. The time has come to speak courageously about priestly life as a priceless gift and a
splendid and privileged form of Christian living. Educators, and priests in particular, should not be
afraid to set forth explicitly and forcefully the priestly vocation as a real possibility for those young
people who demonstrate the necessary gifts and talents. There should be no fear that one is
thereby conditioning them or limiting their freedom; quite the contrary, a clear invitation, made at
the right time, can be decisive in eliciting from young people a free and genuine response.
Besides, the history of the Church and that of many individual priests whose vocations blossomed
at a young age bear ample witness to how providential the presence and conversation of a priest
can be: not only his words, but his very presence, a concrete and joyful witness which can raise
questions and lead to decisions, even definitive ones.
40. As a kingly people, the Church sees herself rooted in and enlivened by "the law of the Spirit of
life" (Rom. 8:2), which is essentially the royal law of charity (cf. Jas. 2:8) or the perfect law of
freedom (cf. Jas. 1:25). Therefore, the Church fulfills her mission when she guides every member
of the faithful to discover and live his or her own vocation in freedom and to bring it to fulfillment in
charity.
In carrying out her educational role, the Church aims with special concern at developing in
children, adolescents and young men a desire and a will to follow Jesus Christ in a total and
attractive way. This educational work, while addressed to the Christian community as such, must
also be aimed at the individual person: Indeed, God with his call reaches the call of each
individual, and the Spirit, who abides deep within each disciple (cf. 1 Jn. 3:24), gives himself to
each Christian with different charisms and special signs. Each one, therefore, must be helped to
embrace the gift entrusted to him as a completely unique person, and to hear the words which the
Spirit of God personally addresses to him.
From this point of view, the pastoral work of promoting vocations to the priesthood will also be able
to find expression in a firm and encouraging invitation to spiritual direction. It is necessary to
rediscover the great tradition of personage spiritual guidance which has always brought great and
precious fruits to the Church's life. In certain cases and under precise conditions this work can be
assisted, but not replaced, by forms of analysis or psychological help.(111) Children, adolescents
and young men are invited to discover and appreciate the gift of spiritual direction, to look for it

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and experience it, and to ask for it with trusting insistence from those who are their educators in
the faith. Priests, for their part, should be the first to devote time and energies to this work of
education and personal spiritual guidance: They will never regret having neglected or put in
second place so many other things which are themselves good and useful, if this proved
necessary for them to be faithful to their ministry as cooperators of the Spirit in enlightening and
guiding those who have been called.
The aim of education for a Christian is to attain the "stature of the fullness of Christ" (Eph. 4:13)
under the influence of the Spirit. This happens when, imitating and sharing Christ's charity, a
person turns his entire life into an act of loving service (cf. Jn. 13:14-15), offering to God a spiritual
worship acceptable to him (cf. Rom . 12:1) and giving himself to his brothers and sisters. The
service of love is the fundamental meaning of every vocation, and it finds a specific expression in
the priestly vocation. Indeed, a priest is called to live out, as radically as possible, the pastoral
charity of Jesus, the love of the good shepherd who "lays down his life for the sheep" (Jn. 10:11).
Consequently, an authentic pastoral work on behalf of vocations will never tire of training boys,
adolescents and young men to appreciate commitment, the meaning of free service, the value of
sacrifice and unconditional self - giving. In this context it is easy to see the great value of forms of
volunteer work, which so many young people are growing to appreciate. If volunteer work is
inspired by the Gospel values, capable of training people to discern true needs, lived with
dedication and faithfulness each day, open to the possibility of a total commitment in consecrated
life and nourished in prayer, then it will be more readily able to sustain a life of disinterested and
free commitment and will make the one involved in it more sensitive to the voice of God who may
be calling him to the priesthood. Unlike the rich young man, the person involved in volunteer work
would be able to accept the invitation lovingly addressed to him by Jesus (cf. Mk. 10:21); and he
would be able to accept it because his only wealth now consists in giving himself to others and in
"losing" his life.
We Are All Responsible for Priestly Vocations
41. The priestly vocation is a gift from God. It is undoubtedly a great good for the person who is its
first recipient. But it is also a gift to the Church as a whole, a benefit to her life and mission. The
Church, therefore, is called to safeguard this gift, to esteem it and love it. She is responsible for
the birth and development of priestly vocations. Consequently, the pastoral work of promoting
vocations has as its active agents, as its protagonists, the ecclesial community as such, in its
various expressions: from the universal Church to the particular church and, by analogy, from the
particular church to each of its parishes and to every part of the People of God.
There is an urgent need, especially nowadays, for a more widespread and deeply felt conviction
that all the members of the Church, without exception, have the grace and responsibility to look
after vocations. The Second Vatican Council was quite explicit in this regard: "The duty of fostering

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vocations falls on the whole Christian community, and they should discharge it principally by living
full Christian lives."(112) Only on the basis of this conviction will pastoral work on behalf of
vocations be able to show its truly ecclesial aspect, develop a harmonious plan of action, and
make use of specific agencies and appropriate instruments of communion and co - responsibility.
The first responsibility for the pastoral work of promoting priestly vocations lies with the
bishop,(113) who is called to be the first to exercise this responsibility even though he can and
must call upon many others to cooperate with him. As the father and friend of his presbyterate, it
falls primarily to the bishop to be concerned about "giving continuity" to the priestly charism and
ministry, bringing it new forces by the laying on of hands. He will be actively concerned to ensure
that the vocational dimension is always present in the whole range of ordinary pastoral work, and
that it is fully integrated and practically identified with it. It is his duty to foster and coordinate
various initiatives on behalf of vocations.(114)
The bishop can rely above all on the cooperation of his presbyterate. All its priests are united to
him and share his responsibility in seeking and fostering priestly vocations. Indeed, as the Council
states, "it is the priests' part as instructors of the people in the faith to see to it that each member
of the faithful shall be led in the Holy Spirit to the full development of his own vocation."(115) "This
duty belongs to the very nature of the priestly ministry which makes the priest share in the concern
of the whole Church lest laborers should ever be wanting to the People of God here on
earth."(116) The very life of priests, their unconditional dedication to God's flock, their witness of
loving service to the Lord and to his Church - a witness marked by free acceptance of the cross in
the spirit of hope and Easter joy - their fraternal unity and zeal for the evangelization of the world
are the first and most convincing factor in the growth of vocations.(117)
A very special responsibility falls upon the Christian family, which by virtue of the sacrament of
matrimony shares in its own unique way in the educational mission of the Church - teacher and
mother. As the synod fathers wrote: "The Christian family, which is truly a 'domestic Church'
(Lumen Gentium, 11), has always offered and continues to offer favorable conditions for the birth
of vocations. Since the reality of the Christian family is endangered nowadays, much importance
should be given to pastoral work on behalf of the family, in order that the families themselves,
generously accepting the gift of human life, may be 'as it were, a first seminary' (Optatam Totius,
2) in which children can acquire from the beginning an awareness of piety and prayer and love for
the Church.(118) Following upon and in harmony with the work of parents and the family, the
school is also called to live its identity as an "educating community" by providing a correct
understanding of the dimension of vocation as an innate and fundamental value of the human
person. In this sense, if it is endowed with a Christian spirit (either by a significant presence of
members of the Church in state schools, following the laws of each country, or above all in the
case of the Catholic school), it can infuse "in the hearts of boys and young men a desire to do
God's will in that state in life which is most suitable to each person, and never excluding the
vocation to the priestly ministry."(119)

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The lay faithful also, and particularly catechists, teachers, educators and youth ministers, each
with his or her own resources and style, have great importance in the pastoral work of promoting
priestly vocations: The more they inculcate a deep appreciation of young people's vocation and
mission in the Church, the more they will be able to recognize the unique value of the priestly
vocation and mission.
With regard to diocesan and parish communities, special appreciation and encouragement should
be given to groups which promote vocations, whose members make an important contribution by
prayer and sufferings offered up for priestly and religious vocations, as well as by moral and
material support.
We should also remember the numerous groups, movements and associations of lay faithful
whom the Holy Spirit raises up and fosters in the Church with a view to a more missionary
Christian presence in the world. These various groupings of lay people are proving a particularly
fertile field for the manifestation of vocations to consecrated life, and are truly environments in
which vocations can be encouraged and can grow. Many young people, in and through these
groupings, have heard the Lord's call to follow him along the path of priestly ministry(120) and
have responded with a generosity that is reassuring. These groupings, therefore, are to be utilized
well, so that in communion with the whole Church and for the sake of her growth they may make
their proper contribution to the development of the pastoral work of promoting vocations.
The various elements and members of the Church involved in the pastoral work of promoting
vocations will make their work more effective insofar as they stimulate the ecclesial community as
such, starting with the parish, to sense that the problem of priestly vocations cannot in any way be
delegated to some "official" group (priests in general and the priests working in the seminary in
particular), for inasmuch as it is "a vital problem which lies at the very heart of the Church,"(121) it
should be at the heart of the love which each Christian feels for the Church.
CHAPTER V
HE APPOINTED TWELVE TO BE WITH HIM
The Formation of Candidates for the Priesthood
Following Christ as the Apostles Did
42. "And he went up on the mountain, and called to him those whom he desired; and they came to
him. And he appointed twelve, to be with him, and to be sent out to preach and have authority to
cast out demons" (Mk. 3:13-15).
"To be with him": It is not difficult to find in these words a reference to Jesus' "accompanying" the
apostles for the sake of their vocation. After calling them and before he sends them out, indeed in

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order to be able to send them out to preach, Jesus asks them to set aside a "period of time" for
formation. The aim of this time is to develop a relationship of deep communion and friendship with
himself. In this time they receive the benefit of a catechesis that is deeper than the teaching he
gives to the people (cf. Mt. 13:11); also he wishes them to be witnesses of his silent prayer to the
Father (cf. Jn. 17:1-26; Lk. 22:39-45).
In her care for priestly vocations the Church in every age draws her inspiration from Christ's
example. There have been, and to some extent there still are, many different practical forms
according to which the Church has been involved in the pastoral care of vocations. Her task is not
only to discern but also to "accompany" priestly vocations. But the spirit which must inspire and
sustain her remains the same: that of bringing to the priesthood only those who have been called,
and to bring them adequately trained, namely, with a conscious and free response of adherence
and involvement of their whole person with Jesus Christ, who calls them to intimacy of life with him
and to share in his mission of salvation. In this sense, the "seminary" in its different forms - and
analogously the "house" of formation for religious priests - more than a place, a material space,
should be a spiritual place, a way of life, an atmosphere that fosters and ensures a process of
formation, so that the person who is called to the priesthood by God may become, with the
sacrament of orders, a living image of Jesus Christ, head and shepherd of the Church. In their
final message the synod fathers have grasped in a direct and deep way the original and specific
meaning of the formation of candidates for the priesthood, when they say that "To live in the
seminary, which is a school of the Gospel, means to follow Christ as the apostles did. You are led
by Christ into the service of God the Father and of all people, under the guidance of the Holy
Spirit. Thus you become more like Christ the good shepherd in order better to serve the Church
and the world as a priest. In preparing for the priesthood we learn how to respond from the heart
to Christ's basic question: 'Do you love me?' (Jn. 21:15). For the future priest the answer can only
mean total self giving."(122)
What needs to be done is to transfer this spirit - which can never be lacking in the Church - to the
social, psychological, political and cultural conditions of the world today, conditions which are so
varied and complex, as the synod fathers have confirmed, bearing in mind the different particular
churches. The fathers, with words expressing thoughtful concern but at the same time great hope,
have shown awareness of and reflected at length on the efforts going on in all their churches to
identify and update methods of training candidates for the priesthood.
This present exhortation seeks to gather the results of the work of the synod, setting out some
established points, indicating some essential goals, making available to all the wealth of
experiences and training programs which have already been tried and found worthwhile. In this
exhortation we consider "initial" formation and "ongoing" formation separately, but without
forgetting that they are closely linked and that as a result they should become one sole organic
journey of Christian and priestly living. The exhortation looks at the different areas of formation -
the human, spiritual, intellectual and pastoral areas - as well as the settings and the persons

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responsible for the formation of candidates for the priesthood.
I. The Areas of Priestly Formation
Human Formation, the Basis of All Priestly Formation
43. "The whole work of priestly formation would be deprived of its necessary foundation if it lacked
a suitable human formation."(123) This statement by the synod fathers expresses not only a fact
which reason brings to our consideration every day and which experience confirms, but a
requirement which has a deeper and specific motivation in the very nature of the priest and his
ministry. The priest, who is called to be a "living image" of Jesus Christ, head and shepherd of the
Church, should seek to reflect in himself, as far as possible, the human perfection which shines
forth in the incarnate Son of God and which is reflected with particular liveliness in his attitudes
toward others as we see narrated in the Gospels. The ministry of the priest is, certainly, to
proclaim the word, to celebrate the sacraments, to guide the Christian community in charity "in the
name and in the person of Christ," but all this he does dealing always and only with individual
human beings: "Every high priest chosen from among men is appointed to act on behalf of men in
relation to God" (Heb. 5:1). So we see that the human formation of the priest shows its special
importance when related to the receivers of the mission: In order that his ministry may be humanly
as credible and acceptable as possible, it is important that the priest should mold his human
personality in such a way that it becomes a bridge and not an obstacle for others in their meeting
with Jesus Christ the Redeemer of humanity. It is necessary that, following the example of Jesus
who "knew what was in humanity" (Jn. 2:25; cf. 8:3-11), the priest should be able to know the
depths of the human heart, to perceive difficulties and problems, to make meeting and dialogue
easy, to create trust and cooperation, to express serene and objective judgments.
Future priests should therefore cultivate a series of human qualities, not only out of proper and
due growth and realization of self, but also with a view to the ministry. These qualities are needed
for them to be balanced people, strong and free, capable of bearing the weight of pastoral
responsibilities. They need to be educated to love the truth, to be loyal, to respect every person, to
have a sense of justice, to be true to their word, to be genuinely compassionate, to be men of
integrity and, especially, to be balanced in judgment and behavior.(124) A simple and demanding
program for this human formation can be found in the words of the apostle Paul to the Philippians:
"Whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely,
whatever is gracious, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about
these things" (Phil. 4:8). It is interesting to note that Paul, precisely in these profoundly human
qualities, presents himself as a model to his faithful, for he goes on to say: "What you have
learned and received and heard and seen in me, do" (Phil. 4:9).
Of special importance is the capacity to relate to others. This is truly fundamental for a person who
is called to be responsible for a community and to be a "man of communion." This demands that

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the priest not be arrogant, or quarrelsome, but affable, hospitable, sincere in his words and heart,
prudent and discreet, generous and ready to serve, capable of opening himself to clear and
brotherly relationships and of encouraging the same in others, and quick to understand, forgive
and console(125) (cf. 1 Tm. 3:1-5; Ti. 1:7-9). People today are often trapped in situations of
standardization and loneliness, especially in large urban centers, and they become ever more
appreciative of the value of communion. Today this is one of the most eloquent signs and one of
the most effective ways of transmitting the Gospel message.
In this context affective maturity, which is the result of an education in true and responsible love, is
a significant and decisive factor in the formation of candidates for the priesthood.
44. Affective maturity presupposes an awareness that love has a central role in human life. In fact,
as I have written in the encyclical Redemptor Hominis, "Man cannot live without love. He remains
a being that is incomprehensible for himself; his life is meaningless, if love is not revealed to him, if
he does not encounter love, if he does not experience it and make it his own, if he does not
participate intimately in it.(126)
We are speaking of a love that involves the entire person, in all his or her aspects - physical,
psychic and spiritual - and which is expressed in the "nuptial meaning" of the human body, thanks
to which a person gives oneself to another and takes the other to oneself. A properly understood
sexual education leads to understanding and realizing this "truth" about human love. We need to
be aware that there is a widespread social and cultural atmosphere which "largely reduces human
sexuality to the level of something commonplace, since it interprets and lives it in a reductive and
impoverished way by linking it solely with the body and with selfish pleasure."(127) Sometimes the
very family situations in which priestly vocations arise will display not a few weaknesses and at
times even serious failings.
In such a context, an education for sexuality becomes more difficult but also more urgent. It should
be truly and fully personal and therefore should present chastity in a manner that shows
appreciation and love for it as a "virtue that develops a person's authentic maturity and makes him
or her capable of respecting and fostering the 'nuptial meaning' of the body."(128)
Education for responsible love and the affective maturity of the person are totally necessary for
those who, like the priest, are called to celibacy, that is, to offer with the grace of the Spirit and the
free response of one's own will the whole of one's love and care to Jesus Christ and to his Church.
In view of the commitment to celibacy, affective maturity should bring to human relationships of
serene friendship and deep brotherliness a strong, lively and personal love for Jesus Christ. As the
synod fathers have written, "A love for Christ, which overflows into a dedication to everyone, is of
the greatest importance in developing affective maturity. Thus the candidate, who is called to
celibacy, will find in affective maturity a firm support to live chastity in faithfulness and joy."(129)

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Since the charism of celibacy, even when it is genuine and has proved itself, leaves one's
affections and instinctive impulses intact, candidates to the priesthood need an affective maturity
which is prudent, able to renounce anything that is a threat to it, vigilant over both body and spirit,
and capable of esteem and respect in interpersonal relationships between men and women. A
precious help can be given by a suitable education to true friendship, following the image of the
bonds of fraternal affection which Christ himself lived on earth (cf. Jn. 11:5).
Human maturity, and in particular affective maturity, requires a clear and strong training in
freedom, which expresses itself in convinced and heartfelt obedience to the "truth of one's own
being, to the "meaning" of one's own existence, that is to the "sincere gift of self" as the way and
fundamental content of the authentic realization of self.(130) Thus understood, freedom requires
the person to be truly master of oneself, determined to fight and overcome the different forms of
selfishness and individualism which threaten the life of each one, ready to open out to others,
generous in dedication and service to one's neighbor. This is important for the response that will
have to be given to the vocation, and in particular to the priestly vocation, and for faithfulness to it
and to the commitments connected with it, even in times of difficulty. On this educational journey
toward a mature, responsible freedom, the community life of the seminary can provide help.(131)
Intimately connected with formation to responsible freedom is education of the moral conscience
Such education calls from the depths of one's own "self" obedience to moral obligations and at the
same time reveals the deep meaning of such obedience. It is a conscious and free response, and
therefore a loving response, to God's demands, to God's love. "The human maturity of the priest -
the synod fathers write - should include especially the formation of his conscience. In order that
the candidate may faithfully meet his obligations with regard to God and the Church and wisely
guide the consciences of the faithful he should become accustomed to listening to the voice of
God, who speaks to him in his heart, and to adhere with love and constancy to his will."(132)
Spiritual Formation: In Communion with God and in Search of Christ
45. Human formation, when it is carried out in the context of an anthropology which is open to the
full truth regarding the human person, leads to and finds its completion in spiritual formation. Every
human being, as God's creature who has been redeemed by Christ's blood, is called to be reborn
"of water and the Spirit" (Jn. 3:S) and to become a "son in the Son." In this wonderful plan of God
is to be found the basis of the essentially religious dimension of the human person, which
moreover can be grasped and recognized by reason itself: The human individual is open to
transcendence, to the absolute; he has a heart which is restless until it rests in the Lord.(133)
The educational process of a spiritual life, seen as a relationship and communion with God,
derives and develops from this fundamental and irrepressible religious need. In the light of
revelation and Christian experience, spiritual formation possesses the unmistakable originality
which derives from evangelical "newness." Indeed, it "is the work of the Holy Spirit and engages a

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person in his totality. It introduces him to a deep communion with Jesus Christ, the good
shepherd, and leads to the total submission of one's life to the Spirit, in a filial attitude toward the
Father and a trustful attachment to the Church. Spiritual formation has its roots in the experience
of the cross, which in deep communion leads to the totality of the paschal mystery."(134)
Spiritual formation, as we have just seen, is applicable to all the faithful. Nevertheless, it should be
structured according to the meanings and connotations which derive from the identity of the priest
and his ministry. And just as for all the faithful spiritual formation is central and unifies their being
and living as Christians, that is, as new creatures in Christ who walk in the Spirit, so too for every
priest his spiritual formation is the core which unifies and gives life to his being a priest and his
acting as a priest. In this context, the synod fathers state that "without spiritual formation pastoral
formation would be left without foundation"(135) and that spiritual formation is "an extremely
important element of a priest's education."(136)
The essential content of spiritual formation specifically leading toward the priesthood is well
expressed in the Council's decree Optatam Totius: "Spiritual formation...should be conducted in
such a way that the students may learn to live in intimate and unceasing union with God the
Father through his Son Jesus Christ, in the Holy Spirit. Those who are to take on the likeness of
Christ the priest by sacred ordination should form the habit of drawing close to him as friends in
every detail of their lives. They should live his paschal mystery in such a way that they will know
how to initiate into it the people committed to their charge. They should be taught to seek Christ in
faithful meditation on the word of God and in active participation in the sacred mysteries of the
Church, especially the Eucharist and the Divine Office, to seek him in the bishop by whom they
are sent and in the people to whom they are sent, especially the poor, little children, the weak,
sinners and unbelievers. With the confidence of sons they should love and reverence the most
blessed Virgin Mary, who was given as a mother to the disciple by Jesus Christ as he was dying
on the cross."(137)
46. This text from the Council deserves our careful and loving meditation, out of which we will
easily be able to outline some fundamental values and demands of the spiritual path trodden by
the candidate for the priesthood.
First there is the value and demand of "living intimately united" to Jesus Christ. Our union with the
Lord Jesus, which has its roots in baptism and is nourished with the Eucharist, has to express
itself and be radically renewed each day. Intimate communion with the Blessed Trinity, that is, the
new life of grace which makes us children of God, constitutes the "novelty" of the believer, a
novelty which involves both his being and his acting. It constitutes the "mystery" of Christian
existence which is under the influence of the Spirit: it should, as a result, constitute the ethos of
Christian living. Jesus has taught us this marvelous reality of Christian living, which is also the
heart of spiritual life, with his allegory of the vine and the branches: "I am the true vine, and my
Father is the vinedresser.... Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself,

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unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine, you are the
branches. He who abides in me, and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you
can do nothing" (Jn. 15:1, 4-5).
There are spiritual and religious values present in today's culture, and man, notwithstanding
appearances to the contrary, cannot help but hunger and thirst for God. However, the Christian
religion is often regarded as just one religion among many or reduced to nothing more than a
social ethic at the service of man. As a result, its amazing novelty in human history is quite often
not apparent. It is a "mystery," the event of the coming of the Son of God who becomes man and
gives to those who welcome him the "power to become children of God" (Jn. 1:12). It is the
proclamation, nay the gift, of a personal covenant of love and life between God and human beings.
Only if future priests, through a suitable spiritual formation, have become deeply aware and have
increasingly experienced this "mystery" will they be able to communicate this amazing and
blessed message to others (cf. 1 Jn. 1:1-4).
The Council text, while taking account of the absolute transcendence of the Christian mystery,
describes the communion of future priests with Jesus in terms of friendship. And indeed it is not an
absurdity for a person to aim at this, for it is the priceless gift of Christ, who said to his apostles,
"No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what the master is doing; but I
have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you" (Jn.
15:15).
The Council text then points out a second great spiritual value: the search for Jesus. "They should
be taught to seek Christ." This, along with the quaerere Deum (the search for God), is a classical
theme of Christian spirituality. It has a specific application in the context of the calling of the
apostles. When John tells the story of the way the first two disciples followed Christ, he highlights
this "search." It is Jesus himself who asks the question: "What do you seek?" And the two reply:
"Rabbi, where are you staying?" The evangelist continues: "He said to them, 'Come and see.'
They came and saw where he was staying; and they stayed with him that day" (Jn. 1:37-39). In a
certain sense, the spiritual life of the person who is preparing for the priesthood is dominated by
this search: by it and by the "finding" of the Master, to follow him, to be in communion with him. So
inexhaustible is the mystery of the imitation of Christ and the sharing in his life that this "seeking"
will also have to continue throughout the priest's life and ministry. Likewise this "finding" the
Master will have to continue in order to bring him to others, or rather in order to excite in others the
desire to seek out the Master. But all this becomes possible if it is proposed to others as a living
"experience,' an experience that is worthwhile sharing. This was the path followed by Andrew to
lead his brother Simon to Jesus. The evangelist John writes that Andrew "first found his brother
Simon, and said to him, 'We have found the Messiah' (which means Christ)" and brought him to
Jesus (Jn. 1:41-42). And so Simon too will be called, as an apostle, to follow the Messiah: "Jesus
looked at him and said, 'So you are Simon the son of John? You shall be called Cephas' (which
means Peter)" (Jn. 1:42).

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But what does to seek Christ signify in the spiritual life? And where is he to be found? "Rabbi,
where are you staying?" The decree Optatam Totius would seem to indicate a triple path to be
covered: a faithful meditation on the word of God, active participation in the Church's holy
mysteries and the service of charity to the "little ones." These are three great values and demands
which further define the content of the spiritual formation of the candidate to the priesthood.
47. An essential element of spiritual formation is the prayerful and meditated reading of the word
of God (lectio divina), a humble and loving listening of him who speaks. It is in fact by the light and
with the strength of the word of God that one's own vocation can be discovered and understood,
loved and followed, and one's own mission carried out. So true is this that the person's entire
existence finds its unifying and radical meaning in being the terminus of God's word which calls
man and the beginning of man's word which answers God. Familiarity with the word of God will
make conversion easy, not only in the sense of detaching us from evil so as to adhere to the good,
but also in the sense of nourishing our heart with the thoughts of God, so that the faith (as a
response to the word) becomes our new basis for judging and evaluating persons and things,
events and problems.
Provided that we approach the word of God and listen to it as it really is, it brings us into contact
with God himself, God speaking to us. It brings us into contact with Christ, the Word of God, the
truth, who is at the same time both the way and the life (cf. Jn. 14:6). It is a matter of reading the
"scriptures" by listening to the "words," "the word" of God, as the Council reminds us: "The sacred
Scriptures contain the word of God, and because they are inspired, are truly the word of
God."(138) The Council also states: "By this revelation, then, the invisible God (cf. Col. 1:15; 1 Tm.
1:7), from the fullness of his love, addresses people as his friends (cf. Ex. 33:11; Jn. 15:14-15),
and moves among them (cf. Bar. 3:38), in order to invite and receive them into his own
company.(139)
A loving knowledge of the word of God and a prayerful familiarity with it are specifically important
for the prophetic ministry of the priest. They are a fundamental condition for such a ministry to be
carried out suitably, especially if we bear in mind the "new evangelization" which the Church today
is called to undertake. The Council tells us: "All clerics, particularly priests of Christ and others
who, as deacons or catechists, are officially engaged in the ministry of the word, should immerse
themselves in the Scriptures by constant sacred reading and diligent study. For it must not happen
that anyone becomes 'an empty preacher of the word of God to others, not being a hearer of the
word of God in his own heart' (St. Augustine, Sermon 179, 1: PL 8:966)."(140)
The first and fundamental manner of responding to the word is prayer, which is without any doubt
a primary value and demand of spiritual formation. Prayer should lead candidates for the
priesthood to get to know and have experience of the genuine meaning of Christian prayer, as a
living and personal meeting with the Father through the only - begotten Son under the action of the
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One aspect of the priest's mission, and certainly by no means a secondary aspect, is that he is to
be a "teacher of prayer." However, the priest will only be able to train others in this school of Jesus
at prayer if he himself has been trained in it and continues to receive its formation. This is what
people ask of the priest: "The priest is The man of God, the one who belongs to God and makes
people think about God. When the letter to the Hebrews speaks of Christ it presents him as
'merciful and faithful high priest in the service of God' (Heb. 2:17).... Christians expect to find in the
priest not only a man who welcomes them, who listens to them gladly and shows a real interest in
them, but also and above all a man who will help them to turn to God, to rise up to him. And so the
priest needs to be trained to have a deep intimacy with God. Those who are preparing for the
priesthood should realize that their whole priestly life will have value inasmuch as they are able to
give themselves to Christ and through Christ to the Father."(141)
A necessary training in prayer in a context of noise and agitation like that of our society is an
education in the deep human meaning and religious value of silence as the spiritual atmosphere
vital for perceiving God's presence and for allowing oneself to be won over by it (cf. 1 Kgs.
19:11ff.).
48. The high point of Christian prayer is the Eucharist, which in its turn is to be seen as the
"summit and source" of the sacraments and the Liturgy of the Hours. A totally necessary aspect of
the formation of every Christian, and in particular of every priest, is liturgical formation, in the full
sense of becoming inserted in a living way in the paschal mystery of Jesus Christ, who died and
rose again, and is present and active in the Church's sacraments. Communion with God, which is
the hinge on which the whole of the spiritual life turns, is the gift and fruit of the sacraments. At the
same time it is a task and responsibility which the sacraments entrust to the freedom of the
believer, so that one may live this same communion in the decisions, choices, attitudes and
actions of daily existence. In this sense, the "grace" which "renews" Christian living is the grace of
Jesus Christ, who died and rose again, and continues to pour out his holy and sanctifying Spirit in
the sacraments. In the same way, the "new law" which should guide and govern the life of the
Christian is written by the sacraments in the "new heart." And it is a law of charity toward God and
humanity, as a response and prolonging of the charity of God toward humanity signified and
communicated by the sacraments. It is thus possible to understand at once the value of a "full,
conscious and active participation"(142) in sacramental celebrations for the gift and task of that
"pastoral charity" which is the soul of the priestly ministry.
This applies above all to sharing in the Eucharist, the memorial of the sacrificial death of Christ
and of his glorious resurrection, the "sacrament of piety, sign of unity, bond of charity, (143)the
paschal banquet "in which Christ is received, the soul is filled with grace and we are given a
pledge of the glory that is to be ours."(144) For priests, as ministers of sacred things, are first and
foremost ministers of the sacrifice of the Mass:(145) The role is utterly irreplaceable, because
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This explains the essential importance of the Eucharist for the priest's life and ministry and, as a
result, in the spiritual formation of candidates for the priesthood. To be utterly frank and clear, I
would like to say once again: "It is fitting that seminarians take part every day in the eucharistic
celebration, in such a way that afterward they will take up as a rule of their priestly life this daily
celebration. They should, moreover, be trained to consider the eucharistic celebration as the
essential moment of their day, in which they will take an active part and at which they will never be
satisfied with a merely habitual attendance. Finally, candidates to the priesthood will be trained to
share in the intimate dispositions which the Eucharist fosters: gratitude for heavenly benefits
received, because the Eucharist is thanksgiving; an attitude of self - offering, which will impel them
to unite the offering of themselves to the eucharistic offering of Christ; charity nourished by a
sacrament which is a sign of unity and sharing; the yearning to contemplate and bow in adoration
before Christ, who is really present under the eucharistic species."(146)
It is necessary and very urgent to rediscover within spiritual formation the beauty and joy of the
sacrament of penance. In a culture which - through renewed and more subtle forms of self
justification - runs the fatal risk of losing the "sense of sin" and, as a result, the consoling joy of the
plea for forgiveness (cf. Ps. 51:14) and of meeting God who is "rich in mercy" (Eph. 2:4), it is vital
to educate future priests to have the virtue of penance, which the Church wisely nourishes in her
celebrations and in the seasons of the liturgical year, and which finds its fullness in the sacrament
of reconciliation. From it flow the sense of asceticism and interior discipline, a spirit of sacrifice and
self - denial, the acceptance of hard work and of the cross. These are elements of the spiritual life
which often prove to be particularly arduous for many candidates for the priesthood who have
grown up in relatively comfortable and affluent circumstances and have been made less inclined
and open to these very elements by the models of behavior and ideals transmitted by the mass
media; but this also happens in countries where the conditions of life are poorer and young people
live in more austere situations. For this reason, but above all in order to put into practice the
"radical self - giving" proper to the priest following the example of Christ the good shepherd, the
synod fathers wrote: "It is necessary to inculcate the meaning of the cross, which is at the heart of
the paschal mystery. Through this identification with Christ crucified, as a slave, the world can
rediscover the value of austerity, of suffering and also of martyrdom within the present culture,
which is imbued with secularism, greed and hedonism."(147)
49. Spiritual formation also involves seeking Christ in people.
The spiritual life is, indeed, an interior life, a life of intimacy with God, a life of prayer and
contemplation. But this very meeting with God and with his fatherly love for everyone brings us
face to face with the need to meet our neighbor, to give ourselves to others, to serve in a humble
and disinterested fashion, following the example which Jesus has proposed to everyone as a
program of life when he washed the feet of the apostles: "I have given you an example, that you
also should do as I have done to you" (Jn. 13:15).

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Formation which aims at giving oneself generously and freely, which is something helped also by
the communal structure which preparation to the priesthood normally takes, is a necessary
condition for one who is called to be a manifestation and image of the good shepherd, who gives
life (cf. Jn. 10:11, 15). From this point of view, spiritual formation has and should develop its own
inherent pastoral and charitable dimension, and can profitably make use of a proper devotion to
the Sacred Heart of Jesus, one that is both strong and tender. This is a point made by the synod
fathers: "When we speak of forming future priests in the spirituality of the heart of the Lord, we
mean they should lead lives that are a response to the love and affection of Christ the priest and
good shepherd: to his love for the Father in the Holy Spirit, and to his love toward men that was so
great as to lead him to give his life in sacrifice for them."(148)
The priest is, therefore, a man of charity and is called to educate others according to Christ's
example and the new commandment of brotherly love (cf. Jn. 15 :12). But this demands that he
allow himself to be constantly trained by the Spirit in the charity of Christ. In this sense preparation
for the priesthood must necessarily involve a proper training in charity and particularly in the
preferential love for the "poor" in whom our faith discovers Jesus (cf. Mt. 25:40) and a merciful
love for sinners.
In the general context of charity - which consists in the loving gift of oneself - is to be found, in the
program of spiritual formation of the future priest, education in obedience, celibacy and
poverty.(149) The Council offers this invitation: "Students must clearly understand that it is not
their lot in life to lord it over others and enjoy honors, but to devote themselves completely to the
service of God and the pastoral ministry. With special care they should be trained in priestly
obedience, poverty and a spirit of self - denial, that they may accustom themselves to living in
conformity with the crucified Christ and to, give up willingly even those things which are lawful, but
not expedient."(150)
50. The spiritual formation of one who is called to live celibacy should pay particular attention to
preparing the future priest so that he may know, appreciate, love and live celibacy according to its
true nature and according to its real purposes, that is, for evangelical, spiritual and pastoral
motives. The virtue of chastity is a premise for this preparation and is its content. It colors all
human relations and leads "to experiencing and showing...a sincere, human, fraternal and
personal love, one that is capable of sacrifice, following Christ's example, a love for all and for
each person."(151)
The celibacy of priests brings with it certain characteristics thanks to which they "renounce
marriage for the sake of the kingdom of heaven (cf. Mt. 19:12) and hold fast to their Lord with that
undivided love which is profoundly in harmony with the new covenant; they bear witness to the
resurrection in a future life (cf. Lk. 20:36) and obtain the most useful assistance toward the
constant exercise of that perfect charity by which they can become all things to all men in their
priestly ministry."(152) And so priestly celibacy should not be considered just as a legal norm or as

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a totally external condition for admission to ordination, but rather as a value that is profoundly
connected with ordination, whereby a man takes on the likeness of Jesus Christ, the good
shepherd and spouse of the Church, and therefore as a choice of a greater and undivided love for
Christ and his Church, as a full and joyful availability in his heart for the pastoral ministry. Celibacy
is to be considered as a special grace, as a gift, for "not all men can receive this saying, but only
those to whom it is given" (Mt. 1911). Certainly it is a grace which does not dispense with, but
counts most definitely on, a conscious and free response on the part of the receiver. This charism
of the Spirit also brings with it the grace for the receiver to remain faithful to it for all his life and be
able to carry out generously and joyfully its concomitant commitments. Formation in priestly
celibacy should also include helping people to be aware of the "precious gift of God,"(153) which
will lead to prayer and to vigilance in guarding the gift from anything which could put it under
threat.
Through his celibate life, the priest will be able to fulfill better his ministry on behalf of the People
of God. In particular, as he witnesses to the evangelical value of virginity, he will be able to aid
Christian spouses to live fully the "great sacrament" of the love of Christ the bridegroom for his
spouse the Church, just as his own faithfulness to celibacy will help them to be faithful to each
other as husband and wife.(154)
The importance of a careful preparation for priestly celibacy, especially in the social and cultural
situations that we see today, led the synod fathers to make a series of requests which have a
permanent value, as the wisdom of our mother the Church confirms. I authoritatively set them
down again as criteria to be followed in formation for chastity in celibacy: "Let the bishops together
with the rectors and spiritual directors of the seminaries establish principles, offer criteria and give
assistance for discernment in this matter. Of the greatest importance for formation for chastity in
celibacy are the bishop's concern and fraternal life among priests. In the seminary, that is, in the
program of formation, celibacy should be presented clearly, without any ambiguities and in a
positive fashion. The seminarian should have a sufficient degree of psychological and sexual
maturity as well as an assiduous and authentic life of prayer, and he should put himself under the
direction of a spiritual father. The spiritual director should help the seminarian so that he himself
reaches a mature and free decision, which is built on esteem for priestly friendship and self -
discipline, as well as on the acceptance of solitude and on a physically and psychologically sound
personal state. Therefore, seminarians should have a good knowledge of the teaching of the
Second Vatican Council, of the encyclical Sacerdotalis Coelibatus and the Instruction for
Formation in Priestly Celibacy published by the Congregation for Catholic Education in 1974. In
order that the seminarian may be able to embrace priestly celibacy for the kingdom of heaven with
a free decision, he needs to know the Christian and truly human nature and purpose of sexuality in
marriage and in celibacy. It is necessary also to instruct and educate the lay faithful regarding the
evangelical, spiritual and pastoral reasons proper to priestly celibacy so that they will help priests
with their friendship, understanding and cooperation."(155)

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Intellectual Formation: Understanding the Faith
51. Intellectual formation has its own characteristics, but it is also deeply connected with, and
indeed can be seen as a necessary expression of, both human and spiritual formation: It is a
fundamental demand of the human intelligence by which one "participates in the light of God's
mind" and seeks to acquire a wisdom which in turn opens to and is directed toward knowing and
adhering to God.(156)
The intellectual formation of candidates for the priesthood finds its specific justification in the very
nature of the ordained ministry, and the challenge of the "new evangelization" to which our Lord is
calling the Church on the threshold of the third millennium shows just how important this formation
is. "If we expect every Christian," the synod fathers write, "to be prepared to make a defense of the
faith and to account for the hope that is in us (cf. 1 Pt. 3:15), then all the more should candidates
for the priesthood and priests have diligent care of the quality of their intellectual formation in their
education and pastoral activity. For the salvation of their brothers and sisters they should seek an
ever deeper knowledge of the divine mysteries."(157) The present situation is heavily marked by
religious indifference, by a widespread mistrust regarding the real capacity of reason lo reach
objective and universal truth, and by fresh problems and questions brought up by scientific and
technological discoveries. It strongly demands a high level of intellectual formation, such as will
enable priests to proclaim, in a context like this, the changeless Gospel of Christ and to make it
credible to the legitimate demands of human reason. Moreover, there is the present phenomenon
of pluralism, which is very marked in the field not only of human society but also of the community
of the Church herself. It demands special attention to critical discernment: It is a further reason
showing the need for an extremely rigorous intellectual formation.
These "pastoral" reasons for intellectual formation reconfirm what has been said above concerning
the unity of the educational process in its diverse aspects. The commitment to study, which takes
up no small part of the time of those preparing for the priesthood, is not in fact an external and
secondary dimension of their human, Christian, spiritual and vocational growth. In reality, through
study, especially the study of theology, the future priest assents to the word of God, grows in his
spiritual life and prepares himself to fulfill his pastoral ministry. This is the many sided and unifying
scope of the theological study indicated by the Council (158) and reproposed by the synod' s
Instrumentum Laboris: "To be pastorally effective, intellectual formation is to be integrated with a
spirituality marked by a personal experience of God. In this way a purely abstract approach to
knowledge is overcome in favor of that intelligence of heart which knows how 'to look beyond,' and
then is in a position to communicate the mystery of God to the people."(159)
52. A crucial stage of intellectual formation is the study of philosophy, which leads to a deeper
understanding and interpretation of the person, and of the person's freedom and relationships with
the world and with God. A proper philosophical training is vital, not only because of the links
between the great philosophical questions and the mysteries of salvation which are studied in

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theology under the guidance of the higher light of faith,(160) but also vis - a - vis an extremely
widespread cultural situation which emphasizes subjectivism as a criterion and measure of truth:
Only a sound philosophy can help candidates for the priesthood to develop a reflective awareness
of the fundamental relationship that exists between the human spirit and truth, that truth which is
revealed to us fully in Jesus Christ. Nor must one underestimate the importance of philosophy as a
guarantee of that "certainty of truth" which is the only firm basis for a total giving of oneself to
Jesus and to the Church. It is not difficult to see that some very specific questions, such as that
concerning the priest's identity and his apostolic and missionary commitment, are closely linked to
the question about the nature of truth, which is anything but an abstract question: If we are not
certain about the truth, how can we put our whole life on the line, how can we have the strength to
challenge others' way of living?
Philosophy greatly helps the candidate to enrich his intellectual formation in the "cult of truth,"
namely, in a kind of loving veneration the truth, which leads one to recognize that the truth is not
created or measured by man but is given to man as a gift by the supreme truth, God; that, albeit in
a limited way and often with difficulty, human reason can reach objective and universal truth, even
that relating to God and the radical meaning of existence; and that faith itself cannot do without
reason and the effort of "thinking through" its contents, as that great mind Augustine bore witness:
"I wished to see with my mind what I have believed, and I have argued and labored greatly."(161)
For a deeper understanding of man and the phenomena and lines of development of society, in
relation to a pastoral ministry which is as "incarnate" as possible, the so - called "human sciences"
can be of considerable use, sciences such as sociology, psychology, education, economics and
politics, and the science of social communication. Also in the precise field of the positive or
descriptive sciences, these can help the future priest prolong the living "contemporaneousness" of
Christ. As Paul VI once said, "Christ became the contemporary of some men and spoke their
language. Our faithfulness to him demands that this contemporaneousness should be
maintained."(162)
53. The intellectual formation of the future priest is based and built above all on the study of
sacred doctrine, of theology The value and genuineness of this theological formation depend on
maintaining a scrupulous respect for the nature of theology. The synod fathers summarized this as
follows: "True theology proceeds from the faith and aims at leading to the faith.(163) This is the
conception of theology which has always been put forward by the Church and, specifically, by her
magisterium. This is the line followed by the great theologians who have enriched the Church's
thinking down the ages. St. Thomas is extremely clear when he affirms that the faith is as it were
the habitus of theology, that is, its permanent principle of operation,(164) and that the whole of
theology is ordered to nourishing the faith.(165)
The theologian is therefore, first and foremost, a believer, a person of faith. But the theologian is a
believer who asks himself questions about his own faith (fides quaerens intellectum), with the aim

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of reaching a deeper understanding of the faith itself. The two aspects (of faith and mature
reflection) are intimately connected, intertwined: Their intimate coordination and interpenetration
are what make for true theology and as a result decide the contents, modalities and spirit
according to which the sacred doctrine (sacra doctrinal) is elaborated and studied.
Moreover, since the faith, which is the point of departure and the point of arrival of theology, brings
about a personal relationship between the believer and Jesus Christ in the Church, theology also
has intrinsic Christological and ecclesial connotations, which the candidate to the priesthood
should take up consciously, not only because of what they imply for his personal life but also
inasmuch as they affect his pastoral ministry. If our faith truly welcomes the word of God, it will
lead to a radical "yes" on the part of the believer to Jesus Christ, who is the full and definitive Word
of God to the world (cf. Heb. 1:1ff.). As a result, theological reflection is centered on adherence to
Jesus Christ, the wisdom of God: Mature reflection has to be described as a sharing in the
"thinking" of Christ (cf. 1 Cor. 2:16) in the human form of a science (scientia fidei): At the same
time, faith inserts believers in the Church and makes them partake in the life of the Church as a
community of faith. Hence theology has an ecclesial dimension, because it is a mature reflection
on the faith of the Church by the theologian who is a member of the Church.(166)
These Christological and ecclesial dimensions which are connatural to theology, while they help
candidates for the priesthood grow in scientific precision, will also help them develop a great and
living love for Jesus Christ and for his Church. This love will both nourish their spiritual life and
guide them to carry out their ministry with a generous spirit. This was what the Second Vatican
Council had in mind when it called for a revision of ecclesiastical studies, with a view to "a more
effective coordination of philosophy and theology so that they supplement one another in reveling
to the minds of the students with ever - increasing clarity the mystery of Christ, which affects the
whole course of human history, exercises an unceasing influence on the Church and operates
mainly through the ministry of the priest."(167)
Intellectual formation in theology and formation in the spiritual life, in particular the life of prayer,
meet and strengthen each other, without detracting in any way from the soundness of research or
from the spiritual tenor of prayer. St. Bonaventure reminds us: "Let no one think that it is enough
for him to read if he lacks devotion, or to engage in speculation without spiritual Joy, or to be
active if he has no piety, or to have knowledge without charity, or intelligence without humility, or
study without God's grace, or to expect to know himself if he is lacking the infused wisdom of
God."(168)
54. Theological formation is both complex and demanding. It should lead the candidate for the
priesthood to a complete and unified vision of the truths which God has revealed in Jesus Christ
and of the Church's experience of faith. Hence the need both to know "all" the Christian truths,
without arbitrarily selecting among them, and to know them in an orderly fashion. This means the
candidate needs to be helped to build a synthesis which will be the result of the contributions of

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the different theological disciplines, the specific nature of which acquires genuine value only in
their profound coordination.
In reflecting maturely upon the faith, theology moves in two directions. The first is that of the study
of the word of God: the word set down in holy writ, celebrated and lived in the living tradition of the
Church, and authoritatively interpreted by the Church's magisterium. Hence the importance of
studying sacred Scripture "which should be the soul, as it were, of all theological (169) the Fathers
of the Church, the liturgy, the history of the Church and the teachings of the magisterium. The
second direction is that of the human person, who converses with God: the person who is called
"to believe," "to live," "to communicate" to others the Christian faith and outlook. Hence the study
of dogmatic and moral theology, of spiritual theology, of canon law and of pastoral theology.
Because of its relationship to the believer, theology is led to pay particular attention both to the
fundamental and permanent question of the relationship between faith and reason and to a
number of requirements more closely related to the social and cultural situation of today. In regard
to the first we have the study of fundamental theology, whose object is the fact of Christian
revelation and its transmission in the Church. In regard to the second we have disciplines which
have been and are being developed as responses to problems strongly felt nowadays. This is true
of the study of the Church's social doctrine which "belongs to the field...of theology and, in
particular, of moral theology"(170) and is to be counted among the "essential components" of the
"new evangelization," of which it is an instrument.(171) This is likewise true of the study of
missiology, ecumenism, Judaism, Islam and other religions.
55. Theological formation nowadays should pay attention to certain problems which not
infrequently raise difficulties, tensions and confusion within the life of the Church. One can think of
the relationship between statements issued by the magisterium and theological discussion, a
relationship which does not always take the shape it ought to have, that is, within a framework of
cooperation. It is indeed true that the living magisterium of the Church and theology, while having
different gifts and functions, ultimately have the same goal: preserving the People of God in the
truth which sets free and thereby making them 'a light to the nations.' This service to the ecclesial
community brings the theologian and the magisterium into a mutual relationship. The latter
authentically teaches the doctrine of the apostles. And, befitting from the work of theologians, it
refutes objections to and distortions of the faith, and promotes, with the authority received from
Jesus Christ, new and deeper comprehension, clarification and application of revealed doctrine.
Theology - for its part - gains, by way of reflection, an ever deeper understanding of the word of
God found in the Scripture and handed on faithfully by the Church's living tradition under the
guidance of the magisterium. Theology strives to clarify the teaching of revelation with regard to
reason and gives it finally an organic and systematic form."(172) When, for a number of reasons,
this cooperation is lacking, one needs to avoid misunderstandings and confusion, and to know
how to distinguish carefully "the common teaching of the Church from the opinions of theologians
and from tendencies which quickly pass (the so - called trends) There is no "parallel" magisterium,

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for the one magisterium is that of Peter and the apostles, the pope and the bishops.(171)
Another problem, which is experienced especially when seminary studies are entrusted to
academic institutions, is that of the relationship between high scientific standards in theology and
its pastoral aim. This raises the issue of the pastoral nature of theology. It is a question, really, of
two characteristics of theology and how it is to be taught, which are not only not opposed to each
other, but which work together, from different angles, in favor of a more complete "understanding
of the faith." In fact the pastoral nature of theology does not mean that it should be less doctrinal or
that it should be completely stripped of its scientific nature. It means, rather, that it enables future
priests to proclaim the Gospel message through the cultural modes of their age and to direct
pastoral action according to an authentic theological vision. Hence, on the one hand, a respectful
study of the genuine scientific quality of the individual disciplines of theology will help provide a
more complete and deeper training of the pastor of souls as a teacher of faith; and, on the other
hand, an appropriate awareness that there is a pastoral goal in view will help The serious and
scientific study of theology be more formative for future priests.
A further problem that is strongly felt these days is the demand for the evangelization of cultures
and the inculturation of the message of faith. An eminently pastoral problem, this should enter
more broadly and carefully into the formation of the candidates to the priesthood: In the present
circumstances in which, in a number of regions of the world, the Christian religion is considered as
something foreign to cultures (be they ancient or modern), it is very important that in the whole
intellectual and human formation the dimension of inculturation be seen as necessary and
essential."(175) But this means we need a genuine theology, inspired by the Catholic principles on
inculturation. These principles are linked with the mystery of the incarnation of the word of God
and with Christian anthropology, and thus illumine the authentic meaning of inculturation. In the
face of all the different and at times contrasting cultures present in the various parts of the world,
inculturation seeks to obey Christ's command to preach the Gospel to all nations even unto the
ends of the earth. Such obedience does not signify either syncretism or a simple adaptation of the
announcement of the Gospel, but rather the fact that the Gospel penetrates the very life of
cultures, becomes incarnate in them, overcoming those cultural elements that are incompatible
with the faith and Christian living, and raising their values to the mystery of salvation which comes
from Christ.(176) The problem of inculturation can have a particularly great interest when the
candidates to the priesthood are themselves coming from indigenous cultures. In that case, they
will need to find suitable ways of formation, both to overcome the danger of being less demanding
and to strengthen their weaker education in human, Christian and priestly virtues, and also to
make proper use of the good and genuine elements of their own cultures and traditions.(177)
56. Following the teaching and the indications of the Second Vatican Council and their application
in the Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis Sacerdotalis, the Church decided upon a vast updating of
the teaching of the philosophical and especially theological disciplines in seminaries. This
updating, which in some cases still needs amendments and developments, has on the whole

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helped to make the education available a more effective medium for intellectual formation. In this
respect "the synod fathers have confirmed once again, frequently and clearly, the need - indeed
the urgency - to put the basic study plan both the general one which applies to the Church
worldwide, and those of the individual nations or episcopal conferences) into effect in seminaries
and in houses of formation."(178)
It is necessary to oppose firmly the tendency to play down the seriousness of studies and the
commitment to them. This tendency is showing itself in certain spheres of the Church, also as a
consequence of the insufficient and defective basic education of students beginning the
philosophical and theological curriculum. The very situation of the Church today demands
increasingly that teachers be truly able to face the complexity of the times and that they be in a
position to face competently, with clarity and deep reasoning, the questions about meaning which
are put by the people of today, questions which can only receive full and definitive reply in the
Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Pastoral Formation: Communion With the Charity of Jesus Christ the Good Shepherd
57. The whole formation imparted to candidates for the priesthood aims at preparing them to enter
into communion with the charity of Christ the good shepherd. Hence their formation in its different
aspects must have a fundamentally pastoral character. The Council's decree Optatam Totius
states so clearly when speaking of major seminaries; "The whole training of the students should
have as its object to make them true shepherds of souls after the example of our Lord Jesus
Christ, teacher, priest and shepherd. Hence, they should be trained for the ministry of he word so
that they may gain an ever - increasing understanding of the revealed word of God, making it their
own by meditation and giving it expression in their speech and in their lives. They should be
trained for the ministry of worship and sanctification so that by prayer and the celebration of the
sacred liturgical functions they may carry on the work of salvation through the eucharistic sacrifice
and the sacraments. They should be trained to undertake the ministry of the shepherd, that they
may know how to represent Christ to humanity, Christ who 'did not come to have service done to
him but to serve others and to give his life as a ransom for the lives of many ' (Mk. 10:45; Jn. 1
3:12-17), and that they may win over many by becoming the servants of all (1 Cor. 9:19)."(179)
The Council text insists upon the coordination of the different aspects of human, spiritual and
intellectual formation. At the same time it stresses that they are all directed to a specific pastoral
end. This pastoral aim ensures that the human, spiritual and intellectual formation has certain
precise content and characteristics; it also unifies and gives specificity to the whole formation of
future priests.
Like all other branches of formation, pastoral formation develops by means of mature reflection
and practical application, and it is rooted in a spirit, which is the hinge of all and the force which
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It needs to be studied therefore as the true and genuine theological discipline that it is; pastoral or
practical theology. It is a scientific reflection on the Church as she is built up daily, by the power of
the Spirit, in history; on the Church as the "universal sacrament of salvation,"(180) as a living sign
and instrument of the salvation wrought by Christ through the word, the sacraments and the
service of charity. Pastoral theology is not just an art. Nor is it a set of exhortations, experiences
and methods. It is theological in its own right, because it receives from the faith the principles and
criteria for the pastoral action of the Church in history, a Church that each day "begets" the Church
herself, to quote the felicitous expression of the Venerable Bede: "Nam et Ecclesia quotidie gignit
Ecclesiam."(181) Among these principles and criteria, one that is specially important is that of the
evangelical discernment of the socio - cultural and ecclesial situation in which the particular
pastoral action has to be carried out.
The study of pastoral theology should throw light upon its practical application through involvement
in certain pastoral services which the candidates to the priesthood should carry out, with a
necessary progression and always in harmony with their other educational commitments. It is a
question of pastoral "experiences," which can come together in a real program of "pastoral
training," which can last a considerable amount of time and the usefulness of which will itself need
to be checked in an orderly manner.
Pastoral study and action direct one to an inner source, which the work of formation will take care
to guard and make good use of: This is the ever - deeper communion with the pastoral charity of
Jesus, which - just as it was the principle and driving force of his salvific action - likewise, thanks to
the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the sacrament of orders, should constitute the principle d
driving force of the priestly ministry. It is a question of a type of formation meant not only to ensure
scientific, pastoral competence and practical skill, but also and especially a way of being in
communion with the very sentiments and behavior of Christ the good shepherd: "Have this mind
among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus" (Phil. 2:5).
58. And so pastoral formation certainly cannot be reduced to a mere apprenticeship, aiming to
make the candidate familiar with some pastoral techniques. The seminary which educates must
seek really and truly to initiate the candidate into the sensitivity of being a shepherd, in the
conscious and mature assumption of his responsibilities, in the interior habit of evaluating
problems and establishing priorities and looking for solutions on the basis of honest motivations of
faith and according to the theological demands inherent in pastoral work.
Thanks to an initial and gradual experience of ministry, future priests will be able to be inserted
into the living pastoral tradition of their particular church. They will learn to open the horizon of
their mind and heart to the missionary dimension of the Church's life. They will get practice in
some initial forms of cooperation with one another and with the priests alongside whom they will
be sent to work. These priests have a considerably important role, in union with the seminary
program, in showing the candidates how they should go about pastoral work.

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When it comes to choosing places and services in which candidates can obtain their pastoral
experience, the parish should be given particular importance(182) for it is a living cell of local and
specialized pastoral work in which they will find themselves faced with the kind of problems they
will meet in their future ministry. The synod fathers have proposed a number of concrete examples
such as visits to the sick; caring for immigrants, refugees and nomads; and various social works
which can be expressions of charitable zeal. Specifically, they write: "The priest must be a witness
of the charity of Christ himself who 'went about doing good' (Acts 10:38). He must also be a visible
sign of the solicitude of the Church who is mother and teacher. And given that man today is
affected by so many hardships, especially those who are sunk in inhuman poverty, blind violence
and unjust power, it is necessary that the man of God who is to be equipped for every good work
(cf. 2 Tm. 3:17) should defend the rights and dignity of man. Nevertheless, he should be careful
not to adopt false ideologies, nor should he forget, as he strives to promote its perfecting, that the
only redemption of the world is that effected by the cross of Christ."(183)
These and other pastoral activities will teach the future priest to live out as a "service" his own
mission of "authority" in the community, setting aside all attitudes of superiority or of exercising a
power if it is not simply that which is justified by pastoral charity.
If the training is to be suitable, the different experiences which candidates for the priesthood have
should assume a clear "ministerial" character and should be intimately linked with all the demands
that befit preparation to the priesthood and (certainly not neglecting their studies) in relation to the
services of the proclamation of the word, of worship and of leadership. These services can
become a specific way of experiencing the ministries of lector, acolyte and deacon.
59. Since pastoral action is destined by its very nature to enliven the Church, which is essentially
"mystery," "communion" and "mission," pastoral formation should be aware of and should live
these ecclesial aspects in the exercise of the ministry.
Of fundamental importance is awareness that the Church is a "mystery," that is, a divine work, fruit
of the Spirit of Christ, an effective sign of grace, the prescience of the Trinity in the Christian
community. This awareness, while never lessening the pastor's genuine sense of responsibility,
will convince him that the Church grows thanks to the gratuitous work of the Spirit and that his
service - thanks to the very grace of God that is entrusted to the free responsibility of man - is the
Gospel service of the "unworthy servant" (cf. Lk. 17:10).
Awareness of the Church as "communion" will prepare the candidate for the priesthood to carry
out his pastoral work with a community spirit, in heartfelt cooperation with the different members of
the Church: priests and bishop, diocesan and religious priests, priests and lay people. Such a
cooperation presupposes a knowledge and appreciation of the different gifts and charisms, of the
diverse vocations and responsibilities which the Spirit offers and entrusts to the members of
Christ's body. It demands a living and precise consciousness of one's own identity in the Church

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and of the identity of others. It demands mutual trust, patience, gentleness and the capacity for
understanding and expectation. It finds its roots above all in a love for the Church that is deeper
than love for self and the group or groups one may belong to. It is particularly important to prepare
future priests for cooperation with the laity. The Council says: "They should be willing to listen to
lay people, give brotherly consideration to their wishes and recognize their experience and
competence in the different fields of human activity. In this way they will be able to recognize with
them the signs of the times."(184) The recent synod too has insisted upon pastoral solicitude for
the laity: "The student should become capable of proposing and introducing the lay faithful, the
young especially, to the different vocations (marriage, social services, apostolate, ministries and
other responsibilities in pastoral activity, the consecrated life, involvement in political and social
leadership, scientific research, teaching). Above all it is necessary that he be able to teach and
support the laity in their vocation to be present in and to transform the world with the light of the
Gospel, by recognizing this task of theirs and showing respect for it."(185)
Lastly, awareness of the Church as a "missionary" communion will help the candidate; for the
priesthood to love and live the essential missionary dimension of the Church and her different
pastoral activities. He should be open and available to all the possibilities offered today for the
proclamation of the Gospel, not forgetting the valuable service which can and should be given by
the media.(186) He should prepare himself for a ministry which may mean in practice that his
readiness to follow the indications of the Holy Spirit and of his bishop will lead him to be sent to
preach the Gospel even beyond the frontiers of his own country.(187)
II. The Setting of Priestly Formation
The Major Seminary - A Formation Community
60. The need for the major seminary - and by analogy for the religious house - for the formation of
candidates for priesthood, was affirmed with authority by the Second Vatican Council (188) and
has been reaffirmed by the synod as follows: "The institution of the major seminary, as the best
place for formation, is to be certainly reaffirmed as the normal place, in the material sense as well,
for a community and hierarchical life, indeed as the proper home for the formation of candidates
for the priesthood, with superiors who are truly dedicated to this service. This institution has
produced many good results down the ages and continues to do so all over the world."(189) The
seminary can be seen as a place and a period in life. But it is above all an educational community
in progress: It is a community established by the bishop to offer to those called by the Lord to
serve as apostles the possibility of re - living the experience of formation which our Lord provided
for the Twelve. In fact, the Gospels present a prolonged and intimate sharing of life with Jesus as
a necessary premise for the apostolic ministry. Such an experience demands of the Twelve the
practice of detachment in a particularly clear and specific fashion, a detachment that in some way
is demanded of all the disciples, a detachment from their roots, from their usual work, from their
nearest and dearest (cf. Mk. 1:16-20; 10:28; Lk. 9:23, 57-62; 14:25-27). On several occasions we

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have referred to the Marcan tradition which stresses the deep link that unites the apostles to Christ
and to one another: Before being sent out to preach and to heal, they are called "to be with him"
(Mk. 3:14).
In its deepest identity the seminary is called to be, in its own way, a continuation in the Church of
the apostolic community gathered about Jesus, listening to his word, proceeding toward the Easter
experience, awaiting the gift of the Spirit for the mission. Such an identity constitutes the normative
ideal which stimulates the seminary in the many diverse forms and varied aspects which it
assumes historically as a human institution, to find a concrete realization, faithful to the Gospel
values from which it takes its inspiration and able to respond to the situations and needs of the
times.
The seminary is, in itself, an original experience of the Church's life. In it the bishop is present
through the ministry of the rector and the service of co - responsibility and communion fostered by
him with the other teachers, for the sake of the pastoral and apostolic growth of the students. The
various members of the seminary community, gathered by the Spirit into a single brotherhood,
cooperate, each according to his own gift in the growth of all in faith and charity so that they may
prepare suitably for the priesthood and so prolong in the Church and in history the saving
presence of Jesus Christ, the good shepherd.
The human point of view, the major seminary should strive to become "a community built on deep
friendship and charity so that it can be considered a true family living in joy."(190) As a Christian
institution, the seminary should become - as the synod fathers continue - an "ecclesial
community," a "community of the disciples of the Lord in which the one same liturgy (which imbues
life with a spirit of prayer) is celebrated; a community molded daily in the reading and meditation of
the word of God and with the sacrament of the Eucharist, and in the practice of fraternal charity
and justice; a community in which, as its life and the life each of its members progresses, there
shine forth the Spirit of Christ and love for the Church."(191) This ecclesial aspect of the seminary
is confirmed and concretized by the fathers when they add: "As an ecclesial community, be it
diocesan or interdiocesan, or even religious, the seminary should nourish the meaning of
communion between the candidates and their bishop and presbyterate, in such a way that they
share in their hopes and anxieties and learn to extend this openness to the needs of the universal
Church."(192)
It is essential for the formation of candidates for the priesthood and the pastoral ministry, which by
its very nature is ecclesial, that the seminary should be experienced not as something external
and superficial, or simply a place in which to live and study, but in an interior and profound way. It
should be experienced as a community, a specifically ecclesial community, a community that
relives the experience of the group of Twelve who were united to Jesus.(193)
61. The seminary is, therefore, an educational ecclesial community, indeed a particular educating

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community. And it is the specific goal which determines its physiognomy: the vocational
accompanying of future priests, and therefore discernment of a vocation; the help to respond to it
and the preparation to receive the sacrament of orders with its own graces and responsibilities, by
which the priest is configured to Jesus Christ head and shepherd and is enabled and committed to
share the mission of salvation in the church and in the world.
Inasmuch as it is an educating community, the seminary and its entire life - in all its different
expressions - is committed to formation, the human, spiritual, intellectual and pastoral formation of
future priests. Although this formation has many aspects in common with the human and Christian
formation of all the members of the Church, it has, nevertheless, contents, modalities and
characteristics which relate specifically to the aim of preparation for the priesthood.
The content and form of the educational work require that the seminary should have a precise
program, a program of life characterized by its being organized and unified, by its being in
harmony or correspondence with one aim which justifies the existence of the seminary:
preparation of future priests.
In this regard, the synod fathers write: "As an educational community, (the seminary) should follow
a clearly defined program which will have, as a characteristic, a unity of leadership expressed in
the figure of the rector and his cooperators, a consistency in the ordering of life, formational
activity and the fundamental demands of community life, which also involves the essential aspects
of the task of formation. This program should be at the service of the specific finality which alone
justify the existence of the seminary, and it should do so without hesitation or ambiguity. That aim
is the formation of future priests, pastors of the Church."(194) And in order to ensure that the
programming is truly apt and effective, the fundamental outlines of the program will have to be
translated into more concrete details, with the help of particular norms that are aimed at regulating
community life, establishing certain precise instruments and timetables.
A further aspect is to be stressed here: The educational work is by its nature an accompanying of
specific individual persons who are proceeding to a choice of and commitment to precise ideals of
life. For this very reason, the work of education should be able to bring together into a harmonious
whole a clear statement of the goal to be achieved, the requirement that candidates proceed
seriously toward the goal, and third, attention to the "journeyer," that is, the individual person who
is embarked on this adventure, and therefore attention to a series of situations, problems,
difficulties and different rates of progress and growth. This requires a wise flexibility. And this does
not mean compromising, either as regards values or as regards the conscious and free
commitment of the candidates. What it does mean is a true love and a sincere respect for the
person who, in conditions which are very personal, is proceeding toward the priesthood. This
applies not only to individual candidates, but also to the diverse social and cultural contexts in
which seminaries exist and to the different life histories which they have. In this sense the
educational work requires continual renewal. The synod fathers have brought this out forcefully

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also when speaking about the structure of seminaries: "Without questioning the validity of the
classical forms of seminaries, the synod desires that the work of consultation of the episcopal
conferences on the present - day needs of formation should proceed as is established in the
decree Optatam Totius (no. 1), and in the 1967 synod. The rationes of the different nations or rites
should be revised where opportune whether on the occasion of requests made by the episcopal
conferences or in relation to apostolic visitations of the seminaries of different countries, in order to
bring into them diverse forms of formation that have proved successful, as well as to respond to
the needs of people with so - called indigenous cultures, the needs of the vocations of adult men
and the needs of vocations for the missions, etc."(195)
62. The purpose and specific educational form of the major seminary demand that candidates for
the priesthood have a certain prior preparation before entering it. Such preparation, at least until a
few decades ago, did not create particular problems. In those days most candidates to the
priesthood came from minor seminaries, and the Christian life of the community offered all, in
general, a suitable Christian instruction and education.
The situation in many places has changed. There is a considerable discrepancy between - on the
one hand - the style of life and basic preparation of boys, adolescents and young men, even when
they are Christians and at times have been involved in Church life, and - on the other hand - the
style of life of the seminary with its formational demands.
In this context, together with the synod fathers I ask that there be a sufficient period of preparation
prior to seminary formation: "It is a good thing that there be a period of human, Christian,
intellectual and spiritual preparation for the candidates to the major seminary. These candidates
should, however, have certain qualities: a right intention, a sufficient degree of human maturity, a
sufficiently broad knowledge of the doctrine of the faith, some introduction into the methods of
prayer and behavior in conformity with Christian tradition. They should also have attitudes proper
to their regions, through which they can express their effort to find God and the faith (cf. Evangelii
Nuntiandi, no. 48)."(196)
The "sufficiently broad knowledge of the doctrine of the faith" which the synod fathers mention is a
primary condition for theology. It simply is not possible to develop an "intelligentia fidei" (an
understanding of he faith), if the content of the "fides" is not known. Such a gap can be filled more
easily when the forthcoming Universal Catechism appears.
While there is increasing consensus regarding the need for preparation prior to the major
seminary, there are different ideas as to what such preparation should contain and what its
characteristics should be: Should it be directed mainly to spiritual formation to discern the vocation
or to intellectual and cultural formation? On the other hand, we cannot overlook the many and
deep diversities that exist, not only among the individual candidates but also in the different
regions and countries. This implies the need for a period of study and experimentation in order to

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define as clearly and suitably as possible the different elements of this prior preparation or
"propaedeutic period": the duration, place, form, subject matter of this period, all of which will have
to be coordinated with the subsequent years of formation offered by the seminary.
In this sense I take up and propose to the Congregation for Catholic Education a request
expressed by the synod fathers: "The synod asks that the Congregation for Catholic Education
gather all the information on experiments of such initial formation that have been done or are
being done. At a suitable time, the congregation is requested to communicate its findings on this
matter to the episcopal conferences."(197)
The Minor Seminary and Other Forms of Fostering Vocations
63. As long experience shows, a priestly vocation tends to show itself in the preadolescent years
or in the earliest years of youth. Even in people who decide to enter the seminary later on it is not
infrequent to find that God's call had been perceived much earlier. The Church's history gives
constant witness of calls which the Lord directs to people of tender age. St. Thomas, for example,
explains Jesus' special love for St. John the Apostle "because of his tender age" and draws the
following conclusion: "This explains that God loves in a special way those who give themselves to
his service from their earliest youth."(198)
The Church looks after these seeds of vocations sown in the hearts of children by means of the
institution of minor seminaries, providing a careful though preliminary discernment and
accompaniment. In a number of parts of the world, these seminaries continue to carry out a
valuable educational work, the aim of which is to protect and develop the seeds of a priestly
vocation so that the students may more easily recognize it and be in a better position to respond to
it. The educational goal of such seminaries tends to favor in a timely and gradual way the human,
cultural and spiritual formation which will lead the young person to embark on the path of the major
seminary with an adequate and solid foundation. "To be prepared to follow Christ the Redeemer
with generous souls and pure hearts": This is the purpose of the minor seminary as indicated by
the Council in the decree Optatam Totius, which thus outlines its educational aspect: The students
"under the fatherly supervision of the superiors - the parents too playing their appropriate part -
should lead lives suited to the age, mentality and development of young people. Their way of life
should be fully in keeping with the standards of sound psychology and should include suitable
experience of the ordinary affairs of daily life and contact with their own families."(199)
The minor seminary can also be in the diocese a reference point for vocation work, with suitable
forms of welcome and the offering of opportunities for information to adolescents who are looking
into the possibility of a vocation or who, having already made up their mind to follow their vocation,
have to delay entry into the seminary for various family or educational reasons.
64. In those cases where it is not possible to run minor seminaries (which "in many regions seem

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necessary and very useful"), other "institutions" need to be provided, as for example vocational
groups for adolescents and young people.(200) While they lack the quality of permanence, such
groups can offer a systematic guide, in a community context, with which to check the existence
and development of vocations. While such young people live at home and take part in the
activities of the Christian community which helps them along the path of formation, they should not
be left alone. They need a particular group or community to refer to and where they can find
support to follow through the specific vocational journey which the gift of the Holy Spirit has
initiated in them.
We should also mention the phenomenon of priestly vocations arising among people of adult age
after some years of experience of lay life and professional involvement. This phenomenon, while
not new in the Church's history, at present appears with some novel features and with a certain
frequency. It is not always possible and often it is not even convenient to invite adults to follow the
educative itinerary of the major seminary. Rather, after a careful discernment of the genuineness
of such vocations, what needs to be provided is some kind of specific program to accompany them
with formation in order to ensure, bearing in mind all the suitable adaptations, that such persons
receive the spiritual and intellectual formation they require. A suitable relationship with other
candidates to the priesthood and periods spent in the community of the major seminary can be a
way of guaranteeing that these vocations are fully inserted in the one presbyterate and are in
intimate and heartfelt communion with it.(201)
III. The Agents of Priestly Formation
The Church and the Bishop
65. Given that the formation of candidates for the priesthood belongs to the Church's pastoral care
of vocations, it must be said that the Church as such is the communal subject which has the grace
and responsibility to accompany those whom the Lord calls to become his ministers in the
priesthood.
In this sense the appreciation of the mystery of the Church helps us to establish more precisely
the place and role which her different members have - be it individually or as members of a body -
in the formation of candidates for the priesthood.
The Church is by her very nature the "memorial" or "sacrament" of the presence and action of
Jesus Christ in our midst and on our behalf. The call to the priesthood depends on his saving
presence: not only the call, but also the accompanying so that the person called can recognize the
Lord's grace and respond to it freely and lovingly. It is the Spirit of Jesus that throws light on and
gives strength to vocational discernment and the journey to the priesthood. So we can say that
there cannot exist any genuine formational work for the priesthood without the influence of the
Spirit of Christ. Everyone involved in the work of formation should be fully aware of this. How can

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we fail to appreciate this utterly gratuitous and completely effective "resource," which has its own
decisive "weight" in the effort to train people for the priesthood? How can we not rejoice when we
consider the dignity of every human being involved in formation, who for the candidate to the
priesthood becomes, as it were, the visible representative of Christ? If training for the priesthood
is, as it should be, essentially the preparation of future "shepherds" in the likeness of Jesus Christ
the good shepherd, who better than Jesus himself, through the outpouring of his Spirit, can give
them and fully develop in them that pastoral charity which he himself lived to the point of total self -
giving (cf. Jn. 15:13; 10:11) and which he wishes all priests to live in their turn?
The first representative of Christ in priestly formation is the bishop. What Mark the evangelist tells
us, in the text we have already quoted more than once, can be applied to the bishop, to every
bishop: "He called to him those whom he desired; and they came to him. And he appointed twelve
to be with him, and to be sent out" (Mk. 3:13-14). The truth is that the interior call of the Spirit
needs to be recognized as the authentic call of the bishop. Just as all can "go" to the bishop,
because he is shepherd and father to all, his priests who share with him the one priesthood and
ministry can do so in a special way: The bishop, the Council tell us should consider them and treat
them as "brothers" and friends."(202) By analogy the same can be said of those who are preparing
for the priesthood. As for "being with him," with the bishop, the bishop should make a point of
visiting them often and in some way "being" with them as a way of giving significant expression to
his responsibility for the formation of candidates for the priesthood.
The presence of the bishop is especially valuable, not only because it helps the seminary
community live its insertion in the particular church and its communion with the pastor who guides
it, but also because verifies and encourages the pastoral purpose which is what specifies the
entire formation of candidates for the priesthood. In particular, with his presence and by his
sharing with candidates for the priesthood all that has to do with the pastoral progress of the
particular church, the bishop offers a fundamental contribution to formation in the "sensus
ecclesiae," as a central spiritual and pastoral value in the exercise of the priestly ministry.
The Seminary as an Educational Community
66. The educational community of the seminary is built round the various people involved in
formation: the rector, the spiritual father or spiritual director, the superiors and professors. These
people should feel profoundly united to the bishop, whom they represent in their different roles and
in various ways. They should also maintain among themselves a frank and genuine communion.
The unity of the educators not only helps the educational program to be put into practice properly,
but also and above all it offers candidates for the priesthood a significant example and a practical
introduction to that ecclesial communion which is a fundamental value of Christian living and of the
pastoral ministry.
It is evident that much of the effectiveness of the training offered depends on the maturity and

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strength of personality of those entrusted with formation, both from the human and from the
Gospel points of view. And so it is especially important both to select them carefully and to
encourage them to become ever more suitable for carrying out the task entrusted to them. The
synod fathers were very aware that the future of the preparation of candidates for the priesthood
depends on the choice and formation of those entrusted with the work of formation, and so they
describe at length the qualities sought for in them. Specifically they wrote: "The task of formation
of candidates for the priesthood requires not only a certain special preparation of those to whom
this work is entrusted, one that is professional, pedagogical, spiritual, human and theological, but
also a spirit of communion and of cooperating together to carry out the program, so that the unity
of the pastoral action of the seminary is always maintained under the leadership of the rector. The
body of formation personnel should witness to a truly evangelical lifestyle and total dedication to
the Lord. It should enjoy a certain stability, and its members as a rule should live in the seminary
community. They should be intimately joined to the bishop, who is the first one responsible for the
formation of the priests."(203)
The bishops first of all should feel their grave responsibility for the formation of those who have
been given the task of educating future priests. For this ministry, priests of exemplary life should
be chosen, men with a number of qualities: "human and spiritual maturity, pastoral experience,
professional competence, stability in their own vocation, a capacity to work with others, serious
preparation in those human sciences (psychology especially) which relate to their office, a
knowledge of how to work in groups."(204)
While safeguarding the distinctions between internal and external forum, and maintaining a
suitable freedom in the choice of confessors and the prudence and discretion which should be a
feature of the ministry of the spiritual director, the priestly community of teachers should feel united
in the responsibility of educating candidates for the priesthood. It is their duty, always with regard
to the authoritative evaluation made by the bishop and the rector together, to foster and verify in
the first place the suitability of the candidates in regard to their spiritual, human and intellectual
endowments, above all in regard to their spirit of prayer, their deep assimilation of the doctrine of
the faith, their capacity for true fraternity and the charism of celibacy.(205)
Bearing in mind (as the synod fathers have indeed done) the indications of the exhortation
Christifideles Laici(206) and of the apostolic letter Mulieris Dignitatem, which stress the suitability
of a healthy influence of lay spirituality and of the charism of femininity in every educational
itinerary, it is worthwhile to involve, in ways that are prudent and adapted to the different cultural
contexts, the cooperation also of lay faithful, both men and women, in the work of training future
priests. They are to be selected with care, within the framework of Church laws and according to
their particular charisms and proven competence. We can expect beneficial fruits from their
cooperation, provided it is suitably coordinated and integrated in the primary educational
responsibilities of those entrusted with the formation of future priests, fruits for a balanced growth
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the candidates to the priesthood.(207)
The Professors of Theology
67. Those who by their teaching of theology introduce future priests to sacred doctrine and
accompany them in it have a particular educational responsibility. Experience teaches that they
often have a greater influence on the development of the priest's personality than other educators.
The responsibility of the teachers of theology will lead them, even before they consider the
teaching relationship they are to establish with candidates for the priesthood, to look into the
concept they themselves should have of the nature of theology and the priestly, ministry, and also
of the spirit and style in which they should carry out their teaching of theology. In this sense the
synod fathers have rightly affirmed that "the theologian must never forget that as a teacher he is
not presenting his personal doctrines but opening to and communicating to others the
understanding of the faith, in the last analysis in the name of the Lord and his Church. In such a
way, the theologian, using all the methods and techniques provided by his science, carries out his
task at the mandate of the Church and cooperates with the bishop in his task of teaching. Since
theologians and bishops are at the service of the Church herself in promoting the faith, they should
develop and foster trust in each other and, in this spirit, overcome tensions and conflicts (for fuller
treatment, cf. Instruction of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on The Ecclesial
Vocation of the Theologian)."(208)
The teacher of theology, like any other teacher, should remain in communion and sincerely
cooperate with all the other people who are involved in the formation of future priests and offer
with scientific precision, generosity, humility and enthusiasm his own original and expert
contribution, which is not simply the communication of doctrine - even though it be sacred doctrine
- but is above all the presentation of the point of view which unifies, in the plan of God, all the
different branches of human knowledge and the various expressions of life.
In particular, the formative effect of the teachers of theology will depend, above all, on whether
they are "men of faith who are full of love for the Church, convinced that the one who really knows
the Christian mystery is the Church as such and, therefore, that their task of teaching is really and
truly an ecclesial ministry, men who have a richly developed pastoral sense which enables them to
discern not only content but forms that are suitable for the exercise of their ministry. In particular,
what is expected of the teachers is total fidelity to the magisterium; for they teach in the name of
the Church, and because of this they are witnesses to the faith.(209)
Communities of Origin and Associations and Youth Movements
68. The communities from which the candidate for the priesthood comes continue, albeit with the
necessary detachment which is involved by the choice of a vocation, to bear considerable

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influence on the formation of the future priest. They should therefore be aware of their specific
share of responsibility.
Let us mention first of all the family: Christian parents, as also brothers and sisters and the other
members of the family, should never seek to call back the future priest within the narrow confines
of a too human (if not worldly) logic, no matter how supported by sincere affection that logic may
be (cf. Mk. 3 :20-21, 31-35). Instead, driven by the same desire "to fulfill the will of God," they
should accompany the formative journey with prayer, respect, the good example of the domestic
virtues and spiritual and material help, especially in difficult moments. Experience teaches that, in
so many cases, this multiple help has proved decisive for candidates for the priesthood. Even in
the case of parents or relatives who are indifferent or opposed to the choice of a vocation, a clear
and calm facing of the situation and the encouragement which derives from it can be a great help
to the deeper and more determined maturing of a priestly vocation.
Closely linked with the families is the parish community. Both it and the family are connected in
education in the faith. Often, afterward, the parish, with its specific pastoral care for young people
and vocations, supplements the family's role. Above all, inasmuch as it is the most immediate local
expression of the mystery of the Church, the parish offers an original and especially valuable
contribution to the formation of a future priest. The parish community should continue to feel that
the young man on his way to the priesthood is a living part of itself; it should accompany him with
its prayer, give him a cordial welcome during the holiday periods, respect and encourage him to
form himself in his identity as a priest, and offer him suitable opportunities and strong
encouragement to try out his vocation for the priestly mission.
Associations and youth movements, which are a sign and confirmation of the vitality which the
Spirit guarantees to the Church, can and should contribute also to the formation of candidates for
the priesthood, in particular of those who are the product of the Christian, spiritual and apostolic
experience of these groups. Young people who have received their basic formation in such groups
and look to them for their experience of the Church should not feel they are being asked to uproot
themselves from their past or to break their links with the environment which has contributed to
their decision to respond to their vocation, nor should they erase the characteristic traits of the
spirituality which they have learned and lived there in all that they contain that is good, edifying
and rich.(210) For them too, this environment from which they come continues to be a source of
help and support on the path of formation toward the priesthood.
The Spirit offers to many young people opportunities to be educated in the faith and to grow as
Christians and as members of the Church through many kinds of groups, movements and
associations inspired in different ways by the Gospel message. These should be felt and lived as a
nourishing gift of a soul within the institution and at its service. A movement or a particular
spirituality "is not an alternative structure to the institution. It is rather a source of a presence which
constantly regenerates the existential and historical authenticity of the institution. The priest should

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therefore find within a movement the light and warmth which make him capable of fidelity to his
bishop and which make him ready for the duties of the institution and mindful of ecclesiastical
discipline, thus making the reality of his faith more fertile and his faithfulness more joyful."(211)
It is therefore necessary, in the new community of the seminary in which they are gathered by the
bishop, that young people coming from associations and ecclesial movements should learn
"respect for other spiritual paths and a spirit of dialogue and cooperation," should take in genuinely
and sincerely the indications for their training imparted by the bishop and the teachers in the
seminary, abandoning themselves with real confidence to their guidance and assessments."' Such
an attitude will prepare and in some way anticipate a genuine priestly choice to serve the entire
People of God in the fraternal communion of the presbyterate and in obedience to the bishop.
The fact that seminarians and diocesan priests take part in particular spiritualities or ecclesial
groupings is indeed, in itself, a factor which helps growth and priestly fraternity. Such participation,
however, should not be an obstacle, but rather a help to the ministry and spiritual life which are
proper to the diocesan priest, who "will always remain the shepherd of all. Not only is he a
'permanent' shepherd, available to all, but he presides over the gathering of all so that all may find
the welcome which they have a right to expect in the community and in the Eucharist that unites
them, whatever be their religious sensibility or pastoral commitment."(213)
The Candidate Himself
69. Lastly, we must not forget that the candidate himself is a necessary and irreplaceable agent in
his own formation: All formation, priestly formation included, is ultimately a self formation. No one
can replace us in the responsible freedom that we have as individual persons.
And so the future priest also, and in the first place, must grow in his awareness that the agent par
excellence of his formation is the Holy Spirit, who by the gift of a new heart configures and
conforms him to Jesus Christ the good shepherd. In this way the candidate to the priesthood will
affirm in the most radical way possible his freedom to welcome the molding action of the Spirit. But
to welcome this action implies also, on the part of the candidate, a welcome for the human
"mediating" forces which the Spirit employs. As a result, the actions of the different teachers
become truly and fully effective only if the future priest offers his own convinced and heartfelt
cooperation to this work of formation.
CHAPTER VI
I REMIND YOU TO REKINDLE THE GIFT OF GOD
THAT IS WITHIN YOU
The Ongoing Formation of Priests

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Theological Reasons Behind Ongoing Formation
70. "I remind you to rekindle the gift of God that is within you" (2 Tm. 1:6).
The words of St. Paul to Timothy can appropriately be applied to the ongoing formation to which
all priests are called by virtue of the "gift of God" which they have received at their ordination. The
passage helps us to grasp the full truth, the absolute uniqueness of the permanent formation of
priests. Here we are also helped by another text of St. Paul, who once more writes to Timothy: "Do
not neglect the gift you have, which was given you by prophetic utterance when the elders laid
their hands upon you. Practice these duties, devote yourself to them, so that all may see your
progress. Take heed to yourself and to your teaching; hold to that, for by so doing you will save
both yourself and your hearers" (1 Tm. 4:14-16).
Paul asks Timothy to "rekindle," or stir into flame, the divine gift he has received, much as one
might do with the embers of a fire, in the sense of welcoming it and living it out without ever losing
or forgetting that "permanent novelty" which is characteristic of every gift from God, who makes all
things new (cf. Rv. 21:5), and thus living it out in its unfading freshness and original beauty.
But this "rekindling" is not only the outcome of a task entrusted to the personal responsibility of
Timothy, nor only the result of his efforts to use his mind and will. It is also the effect of a
dynamism of grace intrinsic to God's gift. God himself, in other words, rekindles his own gift, so as
better to release all the extraordinary riches of grace and responsibility contained in it. With the
sacramental outpouring of the Holy Spirit who consecrates and sends forth, the priest is
configured to the likeness of Jesus Christ, head and shepherd of the Church, and is sent forth to
carry out a pastoral ministry. In this way the priest is marked permanently and indelibly in his inner
being as a minister of Jesus and of the Church. He comes to share in a permanent and
irreversible way of life and is entrusted with a pastoral ministry which, because it is rooted in his
being and involves his entire life, is itself permanent. The sacrament of holy orders confers upon
the priest sacramental grace which gives him a share not only in Jesus' saving "power" and
"ministry" but also in his pastoral "love." At the same time it ensures that the priest can count on all
the actual graces he needs, whenever they are necessary and useful for the worthy and perfect
exercise of the ministry he has received.
We thus see that the proper foundation and original motivation for ongoing formation is contained
in the dynamism of the sacrament of holy orders.
Certainly there are also purely human reasons which call for the priest to engage in ongoing
formation. This formation is demanded by his own continuing personal growth. Every life is a
constant path toward maturity, a maturity which cannot be attained except by constant formation. It
is also demanded by the priestly ministry seen in a general way and taken in common with other
professions, that is, as a service directed to others. There is no profession, job or work which does

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not require constant updating if it is to remain current and effective. The need to "keep pace" with
the path of history is another human reason justifying ongoing formation.
But these and other motivations are taken up and become even clearer by the theological
motivations mentioned previously and which demand further reflection.
The sacrament of holy orders, by its nature (common to all the sacraments) as a "sign" may be
considered, and truly is, a word of God. It is a word of God which calls and sends forth. It is the
strongest expression of the priest's vocation and mission. By the sacrament of holy orders, God
calls the candidate "to" the priesthood "coram ecclesia. " The "come, follow me" of Jesus is
proclaimed fully and definitively in the sacramental celebration of his Church. It is made manifest
and communicated by the Church's voice, which is heard in the words of the bishop who prays
and imposes his hands. The priest then gives his response, in faith, to Jesus' call. "I am coming, to
follow you." From this moment there begins that response which, as a fundamental choice, must
be expressed anew and reaffirmed through the years of his priesthood in countless other
responses, all of them rooted in and enlivened by that "yes" of holy orders.
In this sense one can speak of a vocation "within" the priesthood The fact is that God continues to
call and send forth, revealing his saving plan in the historical development of the priest's life and
the life of the Church and of society. It is in this perspective that the meaning of ongoing formation
emerges. Permanent formation is necessary in order to discern and follow this constant call or will
of God. Thus the apostle Peter is called to follow Jesus even after the risen Lord has entrusted his
flock to him: "Jesus said to him, 'Feed my sheep. Truly, truly, I say to you, when you were young,
you girded yourself and walked where you would; but when you are old, you will stretch out your
hands, and another will gird you and carry you where you do not wish to go.' (This he said to show
by what kind of death he was to glorify God .) And after this he said to him, ' Follow me. .. "' (Jn. 21
:17-19). Consequently there is a "follow me" which accompanies the apostle's whole life and
mission. It is a "follow me" in line with the call and demand of faithfulness unto death (cf. Jn.
21:22), a "follow me" which can signify a sequela Christi to the point of total self-giving in
martyrdom.(214)
The synod fathers explained the reason justifying the need for ongoing formation, while at the
same time revealing its deep nature as "faithfulness" to the priestly ministry and as a "process of
continual conversion."(215) It is the Holy Spirit, poured out in the sacrament, who sustains the
priest in this faithfulness and accompanies him and encourages him along this path of unending
conversion. The gift of the Spirit does not take away the freedom of the priest. It calls on the priest
to make use of his freedom in order to cooperate responsibly and accept permanent formation as
a task entrusted to him. Thus permanent formation is a requirement of the priest's own faithfulness
to his ministry, to his very being. It is love for Jesus Christ and fidelity to oneself. But it is also an
act of love for the People of God, at whose service the priest is placed. Indeed, an act of true and
proper justice: The priest owes it to God's people, whose fundamental "right" to receive the word

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of God, the sacraments and the service of charity, the original and irreplaceable content of the
priest's own pastoral ministry, he is called to acknowledge and foster. Ongoing formation is
necessary to ensure that the priest can properly respond to this right of the People of God. The
heart and form of the priest's ongoing formation is pastoral charity: The Holy Spirit, who infuses
pastoral charity, introduces and accompanies the priest to an ever deeper knowledge of the
mystery of Christ, which is unfathomable in its richness (cf. Eph. 3;14ff.) and, in turn, to a
knowledge of the mystery of Christian priesthood. Pastoral charity itself impels the priest to an
ever deeper knowledge of the hopes, the needs, the problems, the sensibilities of the people to
whom he ministers, taken in their specific situations, as individuals, in their families, in society and
in history.
All this constitutes the object of ongoing formation, understood as a conscious and free decision to
live out the dynamism of pastoral charity and of the Holy Spirit who is its first source and constant
nourishment. In this sense ongoing formation is an intrinsic requirement of the gift and
sacramental ministry received; and it proves necessary in every age. It is particularly urgent today,
not only because of rapid changes in the social and cultural conditions of individuals and peoples
among whom priestly ministry is exercised, but also because of that "new evangelization" which
constitutes the essential and pressing task of the Church at the end of the second millennium.
Different Dimensions of Ongoing Formation
71. The ongoing formation of priests, whether diocesan or religious, is the natural and absolutely
necessary continuation of the process of building priestly personality which began and developed
in the seminary or the religious house with the training program which aimed at ordination.
It is particularly important to be aware of and to respect the intrinsic link between formation before
ordination to the priesthood and formation after ordination. Should there be a break in continuity,
or worse a complete difference between these two phases of formation, there would be serious
and immediate repercussions on pastoral work and fraternal communion among priests, especially
those in different age groups. Ongoing formation is not a repetition of the formation acquired in the
seminary, simply reviewed or expanded with new and practical suggestions. Ongoing formation
involves relatively new content and especially methods; it develops as a harmonious and vital
process which - rooted in the formation received in the seminary - calls for adaptations, updating
and modifications, but without sharp breaks in continuity.
On the other hand, long - term preparation for ongoing formation should take place in the major
seminary, where encouragement needs to be given to future priests to look forward to it, seeing its
necessity, its advantages and the spirit in which it should be undertaken, and appropriate
conditions for its realization need to be ensured.
By the very fact that ongoing formation is a continuation of the formation received in the seminary,

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its aim cannot be the inculcation of a purely "professional" approach, which could be acquired by
learning a few new pastoral techniques. Instead its aim must be that of promoting a general and
integral process of constant growth, deepening each of the aspects of formation human, spiritual,
intellectual and pastoral - as well as ensuring their active and harmonious integration, based on
pastoral charity and in reference to it.
72. Fuller development is first required in the human aspect of priestly formation. Through his daily
contact with people, his sharing ill their daily lives, the priest needs to develop and sharpen his
human sensitivity so as to understand more clearly their needs, respond to their demands,
perceive their unvoiced questions and share the hopes and expectations, the joys and burdens
which are part of life: Thus he will be able to meet and enter into dialogue with all people. In
particular, through coming to know and share, through making his own the human experience Or
suffering in its many different manifestations, from poverty to illness, from rejection to ignorance,
loneliness and material or moral poverty, the priest can cultivate his own humanity and make it all
the more genuine and clearly apparent by his increasingly ardent love for his fellow men and
women.
In this task of bringing his human formation to maturity, the priest receives special assistance from
the grace of Jesus Christ. The charity of the good shepherd was revealed not only by his gift of
salvation to mankind, but also by his desire to share our life: Thus, the Word who became "flesh"
(cf. Jn. 1:14) desired to know joy and suffering, to experience weariness, to share feelings, to
console sadness. Living as a man among and with men, Jesus Christ offers the most complete,
genuine and perfect expression of what it means to be human. We see him celebrating at the
wedding feast of Cana, a friend's family, moved by the hungry crowd who follow him, giving sick or
even dead children back to their parents, weeping for the death of Lazarus, and so on.
The People of God should be able to say about the priest, who has increasingly matured in human
sensitivity, something similar to what we read about Jesus in the letter to the Hebrews: "For we
have not a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every
respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sinning" (Heb. 4:15).
The formation of the priest in its spiritual dimension is required by the new Gospel life to which he
has been called in a specific way by the Holy Spirit, poured out in the sacrament of holy orders.
The Spirit, by consecrating the priest and configuring him to Jesus Christ, head and shepherd,
creates a bond which, located in the priest's very being, demands to be assimilated and lived out
in a personal, free and conscious way through an ever richer communion of life and love and an
ever broader and more radical sharing in the feelings and attitudes of Jesus Christ. In this bond
between the Lord Jesus and the priest, an ontological and psychological bond, a sacramental and
moral bond, is the foundation and likewise the power for that "life according to the Spirit" and that
"radicalism of the Gospel" to which every priest is called today and which is fostered by ongoing
formation in its spiritual aspect. This formation proves necessary also for the priestly ministry to be

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genuine and spiritually fruitful. "Are you exercising the care of souls?" St. Charles Borromeo once
asked in a talk to priests. And he went on to say: "Do not thereby neglect yourself. Do not give
yourself to others to such an extent that nothing is left of yourself for yourself. You should certainly
keep in mind the souls whose pastor you are, but without forgetting yourself. My brothers, do not
forget that there is nothing so necessary to all churchmen that the meditation which precedes,
accompanies and follows all our actions: I will sing, says the prophet, and I will meditate (cf. Ps.
100:1). If you administer the sacraments, my brother, meditate upon what you are doing. If you
celebrate Mass, meditate on what you are offering. If you recite the psalms in choir, meditate to
whom and of what you are speaking. If you are guiding souls, meditate in whose blood they have
been cleansed. And let all be done among you in charity (1 Cor. 16:14). Thus we will be able to
overcome the difficulties we meet, countless as they are, each day. In any event, this is what is
demanded of us by the task entrusted to us. If we act thus, we will find the strength to give birth to
Christ in ourselves and in others."(216)
The priest's prayer life in particular needs to be continually "reformed." Experience teaches that in
prayer one cannot live off past gains. Every day we need not only to renew our external fidelity to
times of prayer, especially those devoted to the celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours and those
left to personal choice and not reinforced by fixed times of liturgical service, but also to strive
constantly for the experience of a genuine personal encounter with Jesus, a trusting dialogue with
the Father and a deep experience of the Spirit.
What the apostle Paul says of all Christians, that they must attain "to mature manhood, to the
measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ" (Eph. 4:13), can be applied specifically to priests,
who are called to the perfection of charity and therefore to holiness, even more so because their
pastoral ministry itself demands that they be living models for all the faithful.
The intellectual dimension of formation likewise needs to be continually fostered through the
priest's entire life, especially by a commitment to study and a serious and disciplined familiarity
with modern culture. As one who shares in the prophetic mission of Jesus and is part of the
mystery of the Church, the teacher of truth, the priest is called to reveal to others, in Jesus Christ,
the true face of God, and as a result the true face of humanity."(217) This demands that the priest
himself seek God's face and contemplate it with loving veneration (cf. Ps. 26:7; 41:2). Only thus
will he be able to make others know him. In particular, continuing theological study is necessary if
the priest is to faithfully carry out the ministry of the word, proclaiming it clearly and without
ambiguity, distinguishing it from mere human opinions, no matter how renowned and widespread
these might be. Thus he will be able to stand at the service of the People of God, helping them to
give an account, to all who ask, of their Christian hope (cf. 1 Pt. 3:15). Furthermore, the priest "in
applying himself conscientiously and diligently to theological study is in a position to assimilate the
genuine richness of the Church in a sure and personal way. Therefore, he can faithfully discharge
the mission which is incumbent on him when responding to difficulties about authentic Catholic
doctrine and overcome the inclination, both in himself and others, which leads to dissent and

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negative attitudes toward the magisterium and sacred tradition."(218)
The pastoral aspect of ongoing formation is well expressed by the words of the apostle Peter: "As
each has received a gift, employ it for one another, as good stewards of God's varied grace" (1 Pt.
4:10). If he is to live daily according to the graces he has received, the priest must be ever more
open to accepting the pastoral charity of Jesus Christ granted him by Christ's Spirit in the
sacrament he has received. Just as all the Lord's activity was the fruit and sign of pastoral charity,
so should the priest's ministerial activity be. Pastoral charity is a gift, but it is likewise a task, a
grace and a responsibility to which we must be faithful. We have, therefore, to welcome it and live
out its dynamism even to its most radical demands. This pastoral charity, as has been said, impels
the priest and stimulates him to become ever better acquainted with the real situation of the men
and women to whom he is sent, to discern the call of the Spirit in the historical circumstances in
which he finds himself and to seek the most suitable methods and the most useful forms for
carrying out his ministry today. Thus pastoral charity encourages and sustains the priest's human
efforts for pastoral activity that is relevant, credible and effective. But this demands some kind of
permanent pastoral formation.
The path toward maturity does not simply demand that the priest deepen the different aspects of
his formation. It also demands above all that he be able to combine ever more harmoniously all
these aspects, gradually achieving their inner unity. This will be made possible by pastoral charity.
Indeed, pastoral charity not only coordinates and unifies the diverse aspects, but it makes them
more specific, marking them out as aspects of the formation of the priest as such, that is, of the
priest as a clear and living image, a minister of Jesus the good shepherd.
Ongoing formation helps the priest to overcome the temptation to reduce his ministry to an
activism which becomes an end in itself, to the provision of impersonal services, even if these are
spiritual or sacred, or to a businesslike function which he carries out for the Church. Only ongoing
formation enables the priest to safeguard with vigilant love the "mystery" which he bears within his
heart for the good of the Church and of mankind.
The Profound Meaning of Ongoing Formation
73 The different and complementary dimensions of ongoing formation help us to grasp its
profound meaning. Ongoing formation helps the priest to be and act as a priest in the spirit and
style of Jesus the good shepherd.
Truth needs to be put into practice! St. James tells us as much: "Be doers of the word, and not
hearers only, deceiving yourselves" (Jas. 1:22). Priests are called to "live the truth" of their being,
that is to live "in love" (cf. Eph. 4:15) their identity and ministry in the Church and for the Church.
They are called to become ever more aware of the gift of God and to live it out constantly. This is
the invitation Paul makes to Timothy: "Guard the truth that has been entrusted to you by the Holy

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Spirit which dwells within us" (2 Tm. 1:14).
In the ecclesiological context which we have recalled more than once, we can consider the
profound meaning of ongoing priestly formation in relation to the priest's presence and activity in
the Church as mysterium, communio et missio.
Within the Church as "mystery" the priest is called, by his ongoing formation, to safeguard and
develop in faith his awareness of the total and marvelous truth of his being: He is a minister of
Christ and steward of the mysteries of God (cf. 1 Cor. 4:1). Paul expressly asks Christians to
consider him in this way. But even before that, he himself lives in the awareness of the sublime gift
he has received from the Lord. This should be the case with every priest, if he wishes to remain
true to his being. But this is possible only in faith, only by looking at things through the eyes of
Christ.
In this sense it can be said that ongoing formation has as its aim that the priest become a believer
and ever more of one: that he grow in understanding of who he truly is, seeing things with the eyes
of Christ. The priest must safeguard this truth with grateful and joyful love. He must renew his faith
when he exercises his priestly ministry; he must feel himself a minister of Christ, a sacrament of
the love of God for mankind, every time that he is the means and the living instrument for
conferring God's grace upon men and women. He must recognize this same truth in his fellow
priests, for this is the basis of his respect and love for other priests.
74. Ongoing formation helps priests, within the Church as "communion," to deepen their
awareness that their ministry is ultimately aimed at gathering together the family of God as a
brotherhood inspired by charity and to lead it to the Father through Christ in the Holy Spirit.(219)
The priest should grow in awareness of the deep communion uniting him to the People of God: He
is not only "in the forefront of" the Church, but above all "in" the Church. He is a brother among
brothers. By baptism, which marks him with the dignity and freedom of the children of God in the
only begotten Son, the priest is a member of the one body of Christ (cf. Eph. 4:16). His
consciousness of this communion leads to a need to awaken and deepen co - responsibility in the
one common mission of salvation, with a prompt and heartfelt esteem for all the charisms and
tasks which the Spirit gives believers for the building up of the Church. It is above all in the
exercise of the pastoral ministry, directed by its very nature to the good of the People of God, that
the priest must live and give witness to his profound communion with all. As Pope Paul VI wrote:
"We must become brothers to all at the very same time as we wish to be their shepherds, fathers
and teachers. The climate of dialogue is friendship. Indeed it is service."(220)
More specifically, the priest is called to deepen his awareness of being a member of the particular
church in which he is incardinated, joined by a bond that is juridical, spiritual and pastoral. This
awareness presupposes a particular love for his own church and it makes that love grow. This is

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truly the living and permanent goal of the pastoral charity which should accompany the life of the
priest and lead him to share in the history or life experience of this same particular church, in its
riches and in its weaknesses, in its difficulties and in its hopes, working in it for its growth. And
thus to feel himself both enriched by the particular church and actively involved in building it up,
carrying on - as an individual and together with other priests - that pastoral involvement typical of
his brother priests who have gone before him. A necessary requirement of this pastoral charity
toward one's own particular church and its future ministry is the concern which the priest should
have to find, so to speak, someone to replace him in the priesthood.
The priest must grow in his awareness of the communion existing between the various particular
churches, a communion rooted in their very being as churches which make present in various
places Christ's one universal Church. This awareness of the communion of the particular churches
will foster an "exchange of gifts," beginning with living and personal gifts, such as priests
themselves. There should be a readiness, indeed a generous commitment, to provide for a fair
distribution of clergy. (221) Among these particular churches, those should be kept in mind which,
because they are "deprived of freedom, cannot have their own vocations," as well as those
"churches which have emerged recently from persecution and poor churches which have been
given help already for many years and from many sources with great - hearted brotherliness and
still receive help.(222) Within the ecclesial communion, the priest is called in particular to grow,
thanks to his ongoing formation, in and with his own presbyterate in union with his bishop. The
presbyterate, in the fullness of its truth, is a mysterium: It is in fact a supernatural reality because it
is rooted in the sacrament of holy orders. This is its source and origin. This is its "place" of birth
and of its growth. Indeed, "priests by means of the sacrament of orders are tied with a personal
and indissoluble bond to Christ the one priest. The sacrament of holy orders is conferred upon
each of them as individuals, but they are inserted into the communion of the presbyterate united
with the bishop (Lumen Gentium, 28; Presbyterorum Ordinis, 7 and 8)."(223)
This sacramental origin is reflected and continued in the sphere of priestly ministry: from
mysterium to ministerium. "Unity among the priests with the bishop and among themselves is not
something added from the outside to the nature of their service, but expresses its essence
inasmuch as it is the care of Christ the priest for the people gathered in the unity of the Blessed
Trinity."(224) This unity among priests, lived in a spirit of pastoral charity, makes priests witnesses
of Jesus Christ, who prayed to the Father" that they may all be one" (Jn. 17:21).
The presbyterate thus appears as a true family, as a fraternity whose ties do not arise from flesh
and blood but from the grace of holy orders. This grace takes up and elevates the human and
psychological bonds of affection and friendship, as well as the spiritual bonds which exist between
priests. It is a grace that grows ever greater and finds expression in the most varied forms of
mutual assistance, spiritual and material as well. Priestly fraternity excludes no one. However it
can and should have its preferences, those of the Gospel, reserved for those who have greatest
need of help and encouragement. This fraternity "takes special care of the young priests,

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maintains a kind and fraternal dialogue with those of the middle and older age groups, and with
those who for whatever reasons are facing difficulties, as for those priests who have given up this
way of life or are not following it at this time, this brotherhood does not forget them but follows
them all the more with fraternal solicitude."(225)
Religious clergy who live and work in a particular church also belong to the one presbyterate,
albeit under a different title. Their presence is a source of enrichment for all priests. The different
particular charisms which they live, while challenging all priests to grow in the understanding of the
priesthood itself, help to encourage and promote ongoing priestly formation. The gift of religious
life, in the framework of the diocese, when accompanied by genuine esteem and rightful respect
for the particular features of each institute and each spiritual tradition, broadens the horizon of
Christian witness and contributes in various ways to an enrichment of priestly spirituality, above all
with regard to the proper relationship and interplay between the values of the particular church and
those of the whole People of God. For their part, religious will be concerned to ensure a spirit of
true ecclesial communion, a genuine participation in the progress of the diocese and the pastoral
decisions of the bishop, generously putting their own charism at the service of building up
everyone; in charity.(226)
Finally, it is in the context of the Church as communion and in the context of the presbyterate that
we can best discuss the problem of priestly loneliness treated by the synod fathers. There is a
loneliness which all priests experience and which is completely normal. But there is another
loneliness which is the product of various difficulties and which in turn creates further difficulties.
With regard to the latter, "active participation in the diocesan presbyterate, regular contact with the
bishop and with the other priests, mutual cooperation, common life or fraternal dealings between
priests, as also friendship and good relations with the lay faithful who are active in parish life are
very useful means to overcome the negative effects of loneliness which the priest can sometimes
experience."(227)
Loneliness does not however create only difficulties; it can also offer positive opportunities for the
priestly life: "When it is accepted in a spirit of oblation and is seen as an opportunity for greater
intimacy with Jesus Christ the Lord, solitude can be an opportunity for prayer and study, as also a
help for sanctification and also for human growth."(228)
It should be added that a certain type of solitude is a necessary element in ongoing formation.
Jesus often went off alone to pray (cf. Mt. 14:23). The ability to handle a healthy solitude is
indispensable for caring for one's interior life. Here we are speaking of a solitude filled with the
presence of the Lord who puts us in contact with the Father, in the light of the Spirit. In this regard,
concern for silence and looking for places and times of "desert" are necessary for the priest's
permanent formation, whether in the intellectual, spiritual or pastoral areas. In this regard too, it
can be said that those unable to have a positive experience of their own solitude are incapable of
genuine and fraternal fellowship.

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75. Ongoing formation aims at increasing the priest's awareness of his share in the Church's
saving mission. In the Church's "mission," the priest's permanent formation appears not only as a
necessary condition but also as an indispensable means for constantly refocusing on the meaning
of his mission and for ensuring that he is carrying it out with fidelity and generosity. By this
formation, the priest is helped to become aware of the seriousness and yet the splendid grace of
an obligation which cannot let him rest, so that, like Paul, he must be able to say: "If I preach the
Gospel, that gives me no ground for boasting. For necessity is laid upon me. Woe to me if I do not
preach the Gospel!" (1 Cor. 9:16) At the same time, he also becomes aware of a demand, whether
explicit or implicit, which insistently comes from all those whom God is unceasingly calling to
salvation.
Only a suitable ongoing formation will succeed in confirming the priest in the essential and
decisive element in his ministry, namely his faithfulness. The apostle Paul writes: "It is required of
stewards [of the mysteries of God] that they be found trustworthy" (1 Cor. 4:2). The priest must be
faithful no matter how many and varied the difficulties he meets, even in the most uncomfortable
situations or when he is understandably tired, expending all his available energy until the end of
his life. Paul's witness should be both an example and an incentive for every priest: "We put no
obstacle," he writes to the Christians at Corinth, "in anyone's way, so that no fault may be found
with our ministry, but as servants of God we commend ourselves in every way: through great
endurance, in afflictions, hardships, calamities, beatings, imprisonments, tumults, labors,
watching, hunger; by purity, knowledge, forbearance, kindness, the Holy Spirit, genuine love,
truthful speech and the power of God; with the weapons of righteousness for the right hand and for
the left; in honor and dishonor, in ill repute and good repute. We are treated as impostors, and yet
are true; as unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and behold, we live; as punished, and yet not
killed; as sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet
possessing everything" (2 Cor. 6:3-10).
At Every Age and in All Conditions of Life
76. Permanent or ongoing formation, precisely because it is "permanent," should always be a part
of the priest's life. In every phase and condition of his life, at every level of responsibility he has in
the Church, he is undergoing formation. Clearly then, the possibilities for formation and the
different kinds of formation are connected with the variety of ages, conditions of life and duties one
finds among priests.
Ongoing formation is a duty, in the first instance, for young priests. They should have frequent and
systematic meetings which, while they continue the sound and serious formation they have
received in the seminary, will gradually lead young priests to grasp and incarnate the unique
wealth of God's gift which is the priesthood and to express their capabilities and ministerial
attitude, also through an ever more convinced and responsible insertion in the presbyterate, and
therefore in communion and co - responsibility with all their brethren.

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With priests who have just come out of the seminary, a certain sense of "having had enough is
quite understandable when faced with new times of study and meeting. But the idea that priestly
formation ends on the day one leaves the seminary is false and dangerous, and needs to be
totally rejected.
Young priests who take part in meetings for ongoing formation will be able to help one another by
exchanging experiences and reflecting on how to put into practice the ideals of the priesthood and
of ministry which they have imbibed during their seminary years. At the same time, their active
participation in the formational meetings of the presbyterate can be an example and stimulus to
other priests who are ahead of them in years. They can thus show their love for all those making
up the presbyterate and how much they care for their particular church, which needs well - formed
priests.
In order to accompany the young priests in this first delicate phase of their life and ministry, it is
very opportune, and perhaps even absolutely necessary nowadays, to create a suitable support
structure, with appropriate guides and teachers. Here priests can find, in an organized way that
continues through their first years of ministry, the help they need to make a good start in their
priestly service. Through frequent and regular meetings - of sufficient duration and held within a
community setting, if possible - they will be assured of having times for rest, prayer, reflection and
fraternal exchange. It will then be easier for them, right from the beginning, to give a balanced
approach, based on the Gospel, to their priestly life. And in those cases where individual local
churches are not in a position to offer this service to their own young priests, it will be a good idea
for neighboring churches to pool resources and draw up suitable programs.
77. Ongoing formation is a duty also for priests of middle age. They can face a number of risks
precisely because of their age, as for example an exaggerated activism or a certain routine
approach to the exercise of their ministry. As a result, the priest can be tempted to presume he
can manage on his own, as if his own personal experience, which has seemed trustworthy to that
point, needs no contact with anything or anyone else. Often enough, the older priest has a sort of
interior fatigue which is dangerous. It can be a sign of a resigned disillusionment in the face of
difficulties and failures. Such situations find an answer in ongoing formation, in a continued and
balanced checking of oneself and one's activity, constantly looking for motivation and aids which
will enable one to carry on one's mission. As a result the priest will maintain a vigilant spirit, ready
to face the perennial yet ever new demands of salvation which people keep bringing to him as the
"man of God."
Ongoing formation should also involve those priests who by their advanced years can be called
elderly and who in some churches make up the greater part of the presbyterate. The presbyterate
should show them gratitude for the faithful service they have performed on behalf of Christ and his
Church, and also practical solidarity to help them in their condition. Ongoing formation for these
priests will not be a matter so much of study, updating and educational renewal, but rather a calm

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and reassuring confirmation of the part which they are still called upon to play in the presbyterate,
not only inasmuch as they continue - perhaps in different ways - their pastoral ministry, but also
because of the possibilities they themselves have, thanks to their experience of life and
apostolate, of becoming effective teachers and trainers of other priests.
Also those priests who because of the burden of work or illness find themselves in a condition of
physical weakness or moral fatigue can be helped by an on, going formation which will encourage
them to keep up their service to the Church in a calm and sustained fashion, and not to isolate
themselves either from the community or from the presbyterate. However, they should reduce their
external activities and dedicate themselves to those pastoral contacts and that personal spirituality
which can help them keep up their motivation and priestly joy. Ongoing formation will help such
priests to keep alive the conviction - which they themselves have inculcated in the faithful - that
they continue to be active members for the building up of the Church, especially by virtue of their
union with the suffering Christ and with so many other brothers and sisters in the Church who are
sharing in the Lord's passion, reliving Paul's spiritual experience when he said, "I rejoice in my
sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the
sake of his body, that is, the Church" (Col. 1:24).229
The Agents of Ongoing Formation
78. The conditions in which the ministry of priests - often and in many places - has to be carried
out nowadays do not make it easy to undertake a serious commitment to formation. The
multiplication of responsibilities and services, the complexity of human life in general and the life of
the Christian communities in particular, the activism and anxiety that arc features of vast areas of
society today often deprive priests of the time and energies they need to "take heed of
themselves" (cf. 1 Tm. 4:16).
This should increase the responsibility of priests to overcome these difficulties and see them as a
challenge to plan and carry out a permanent formation which will respond appropriately to the
greatness of God's gift and to the urgency of the demands and requirements of our time.
Those responsible for the ongoing formation of priests are to be found in the Church as
"communion." In this sense, the entire particular church has the responsibility, under the guidance
of the bishop, to develop and look after the different aspects of her priests' permanent formation.
Priests are not there to serve themselves but the People of God. So, ongoing formation, in
ensuring the human, spiritual, intellectual and pastoral maturity of priests, is doing good to the
People of God itself. Besides, the very exercise of the pastoral ministry leads to a constant and
fruitful mutual exchange between the priest's life of faith and that of the laity. Indeed the very
relationship and sharing of life between the priest and the community, if it is wisely conducted and
made use of, will be a fundamental contribution to permanent formation, which cannot be reduced
to isolated episodes or initiatives, but covers the whole ministry and life of the priest.

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The truth is that the Christian experience of persons who are simple and humble, the spiritual
enthusiasm of people who truly love God, the courageous application of the faith to practical life by
Christians involved in all kinds of social and civil tasks - all these things are embraced by the priest
who, while illuminating them with his priestly service, at the same time draws from them a precious
spiritual nourishment. Even the doubts, crises and hesitations in the face of all kinds of personal or
social situations, the temptation to rejection or despair at times of pain, illness, death: All the
difficult circumstances which people find in their path as Christians are fraternally lived and
sincerely suffered in the priest's heart. And he, in seeking answers for others, is constantly spurred
on to find them first of all for himself.
And so the entire People of God, in each and every one of its members, can and should offer
precious assistance to the ongoing formation of its priests. In this sense the people should see
that priests are allowed time for study and prayer. They should ask of them that for which Christ
has sent them and not require anything else. They should offer to help in the various aspects of
the pastoral mission, especially in those related to human development and works of charity. They
should establish cordial and brotherly relations with them, helping priests to remember that they
are not "to lord it over" the faithful, but rather "work with them for their joy" (cf. 2 Cor. 1:24).
The particular church's responsibility for the formation of its priests is specific and depends on its
different members, starting with the priest himself.
79. In a certain sense, it is the priest himself, the individual priest, who is the person primarily
responsible in the Church for ongoing formation. Truly each priest has the duty, rooted in the
sacrament of holy orders, to be faithful to the gift God has given him and to respond to the call for
daily conversion which comes with the gift itself. The regulations and norms established by Church
authority, as also the example given by other priests, are not enough to make permanent
formation attractive unless the individual priest is personally convinced of its need and is
determined to make use of the opportunities, times and forms in which it comes. Ongoing
formation keeps up one's "youthfulness of spirit, which is something that cannot be imposed from
without. Each priest must continually find it within himself. Only those who keep ever alive their
desire to learn and grow can be said to enjoy this "youthfulness."
The responsibility of the bishop and, with him, of the presbyterate, is fundamental. The bishop's
responsibility is based on the fact that priests receive their priesthood from him and share his
pastoral solicitude for the People of God. He is responsible for ongoing formation, the purpose of
which is to ensure that all his priests are generously faithful to the gift and ministry received, that
they are priests such as the People of God wishes to have and has a "right" to. This responsibility
leads the bishop, in communion with the presbyterate, to outline a project and establish a program
which can ensure that ongoing formation is not something haphazard but a systematic offering of
subjects, which unfold by stages and take on precise forms. The bishop will live up to his
responsibility not only by seeing to it that his presbyterate has places and times for its ongoing

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formation, but also by being present in person and taking part in an interested and friendly way.
Often it will be suitable, or indeed necessary, for bishops of neighboring dioceses or of an
ecclesiastical region to come together and join forces to be able to offer initiatives for permanent
formation that are better organized and more interesting, such as in - service training courses in
biblical, theological and pastoral studies, residential weeks, conference series and times to reflect
on and examine how, from the pastoral point of view, the affairs of the presbyterate and the
ecclesial community are progressing.
To fulfill his responsibility in this field, the bishop will also ask for help from theological and pastoral
faculties or institutes; seminaries, offices and federations that bring together people - priests,
religious and lay faithful - who are involved in priestly formation.
In the context of the particular churches, families have a significant role to play. The life of
ecclesial communities, led and guided by priests, looks to families inasmuch as they are "domestic
churches." In particular the role of the family into which the priest is born needs to be stressed. By
being one with their son in his aims, the family can offer him its own important contribution to his
mission. The plan of providence chose the priest's family to be the place in which his vocation was
planted and nourished, an indispensable help for the growth and development of his vocation.
Now the family, with the greatest respect for their son who has chosen to give himself to God and
neighbor, should always remain as a faithful and encouraging witness of his mission, supporting
that mission and sharing in it with devotion and respect. In this way the family will help bring God's
providential plan to completion.
Times, Forms and Means for Ongoing Formation
80. While every moment can be an "acceptable time" (2 Cor. 6:2) for the Holy Spirit to lead the
priest to a direct growth in prayer, study and an awareness of his own pastoral responsibilities,
nevertheless there are certain "privileged" moments for this, even though they may be common
and prearranged.
Let us recall, in the first place, the meetings of the bishop with his presbyterate, whether they be
liturgical (in particular the concelebration of the Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday), or pastoral and
educational, related to pastoral activity or to the study of specific theological problems.
There are also spiritual gatherings for priests, such as spiritual exercises, days of recollection and
spirituality, etc. These are opportunities for spiritual and pastoral growth, in which one can devote
more time to pray in peace; opportunities to get back to what it means deep down to be a priest, to
find fresh motives for faithfulness and pastoral endeavor.
Study workshops and sessions for reflection in common are also important. They help to prevent
cultural impoverishment or getting entrenched in one's ways, even in the pastoral field, as a result

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of mental laziness. They help to foster a greater synthesis between the various elements of the
spiritual, intellectual and apostolic life. They open minds and hearts to the new challenges of
history and to the new appeals which the Spirit addresses to the Church.
81. Many ways and means are at hand to make ongoing formation an ever more precious living
experience for priests. Among them, let us recall the different forms of common life among priests,
which have always existed, though they have appeared in different ways and with different
degrees of intensity, in the life of the Church: "Today, it is impossible not to recommend them,
especially among those who live together or are pastorally involved in the same place. Besides the
advantage which comes to the apostolate and its activities, this common life of priests offers to all,
to fellow priests and lay faithful alike, a shining example of charity and unity."(230)
Another help can be given by priestly associations, in particular by priestly secular institutes -
which have as their characteristic feature their being diocesan - through which priests are more
closely united to their bishop, and which constitute "a state of consecration in which priests by
means of vows or other sacred bonds consecrate themselves to incarnate in their life the
evangelical counsels."(231) All the forms of "priestly fraternity" approved by the Church are useful
not only for the spiritual life but also for the apostolic and pastoral life.
Spiritual direction too contributes in no small way to the ongoing formation of the priests. It is a
well - tried means and has lost none of its value. It ensures spiritual formation. It fosters and
maintains faithfulness and generosity in the carrying out of the priestly ministry. As Pope Paul VI
wrote before his election to the pontificate: "Spiritual direction has a wonderful purpose. We could
say it is indispensable for the moral and spiritual education of young people who want to find what
their vocation in life is and follow it wherever it may lead, with utter loyalty. It retains its beneficial
effect at all stages of life, when in the light and affection of a devout and prudent counsel one asks
for a check on one s own right intention and for support in the generous fulfillment of one's own
duties. It is a very delicate but immensely valuable psychological means. It is an educational and
psychological art calling for deep responsibility in the one who practices it. Whereas for the one
who receives it, it is a spiritual act of humility and trust."(232)
CONCLUSION
82. "I will give you shepherds after my own heart" (Jer. 3:15).
Today, this promise of God is still living and at work in the Church. At all times, she knows she is
the fortunate receiver of these prophetic words. She sees them put into practice daily in so many
parts of the world, or rather, in so many human hearts, young hearts in particular. On the threshold
of the third millennium, and in the face of the serious and urgent needs which confront the Church
and the world, she yearns to see this promise fulfilled in a new and richer way, more intensely and
effectively: She hopes for an extraordinary outpouring of the Spirit of Pentecost.

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The Lord's promise calls forth from the heart of the Church a prayer, that is a confident and
burning petition in the love of the Father, who, just as he has sent Jesus the good shepherd, the
apostles, their successors and a countless host of priests, will continue to show to the people of
today his faithfulness, his goodness.
And the Church is ready to respond to this grace. She feels in her heart that God's gift begs for a
united and generous reply: The entire People of God should pray and work tirelessly for priestly
vocations. Candidates for the priesthood should prepare themselves very conscientiously to
welcome God's gift and put it into practice, knowing that the Church and the world have an
absolute need of them. They should deepen their love for Christ the good shepherd, pattern their
hearts on his, be ready to go out as his image into the highways of the world to proclaim to all
mankind Christ the way, the truth and the life.
I appeal especially to families. May parents, mothers in particular, be generous in giving their sons
to the Lord when he calls them to the priesthood. May they cooperate joyfully in their vocational
journey, realizing that in this way they will be increasing and deepening their Christian fruitfulness
in the Church and that, in a sense, they will experience the blessedness of Mary, the virgin
mother: "Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb!" (Lk. 1:42)
To today's young people I say: Be more docile to the voice of the Spirit, let the great expectations
of the Church, of mankind, resound in the depths of your hearts. Do not be afraid to open your
minds to Christ the Lord who is calling. Feel his loving look upon you and respond enthusiastically
to Jesus when he asks you to follow him without reserve.
The Church responds to grace through the commitment which priests make to receive that
ongoing formation which is required by the dignity and responsibility conferred on them by the
sacrament of holy orders. All priests are called to become aware how especially urgent it is for
them to receive formation at the present time: The new evangelization needs new evangelizers,
and these are the priests who are serious about living their priesthood as a specific path toward
holiness.
God promises the Church not just any sort of shepherds, but shepherds "after his own heart." And
God's "heart" has revealed itself to us fully in the heart of Christ the good shepherd. Christ's heart
continues today to have compassion for the multitudes and to give them the bread of truth, the
bread of love, the bread of life (cf. Mk. 6:30ff.), and it pleads to be allowed to beat in other hearts -
priests' hearts: "You give them something to eat" (Mk. 6:37). People need to come out of their
anonymity and fear. They need to be known and called by name, to walk in safety, along the paths
of life, to be found again if they have become lost, to be loved, to receive salvation as the supreme
gift of God's love. All this is done by Jesus, the good shepherd - by himself and by his priests with
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Now, as I bring this exhortation to a close, I turn my thoughts to all aspirants to the priesthood, to
seminarians and to priests who in all parts of the world - even in the most difficult and dramatic
conditions, but always with the joyous struggle to be faithful to the Lord and to serve his flock
unswervingly - are offering their lives daily in order that faith, hope and charity may grow in human
hearts and in the history of the men and women of our day.
Dear brother priests, you do this because our Lord himself, with the strength of his Spirit, has
called you to incarnate in the earthen vessels of your simple lives the priceless treasure of his
good shepherd's love.
In communion with the synod fathers and in the name of all the bishops of the world and of the
entire community of the Church I wish to express all the gratitude which your faithfulness and
service deserve.(233)
And while I wish for all of you the grace to rekindle daily the gift of God you have received with the
laying on of hands (cf. 2 Tm. 1:6), to feel the comfort of the deep friendship which binds you to
Jesus and unites you with one another, the comfort of experiencing the joy of seeing the flock of
God grow in an ever greater love for him and for all people, of cultivating the tranquil conviction
that the one who began in you the good work will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ
(cf. Phil. 1:6), l turn with each and every one of you in prayer to Mary, Mother and Teacher of our
priesthood.
Every aspect of priestly formation can be referred to Mary, the human being who has responded
better than any other to God's call. Mary became both the servant and the disciple of the Word to
the point of conceiving, in her heart and in her flesh, the Word made man, so as to give him to
mankind. Mary was called to educate the one eternal priest, who became docile and subject to her
motherly authority. With her example and intercession the Blessed Virgin keeps vigilant watch
over the growth of vocations and priestly life in the Church.
And so we priests are called to have an ever firmer and more tender devotion to the Virgin Mary
and to show it by imitating her virtues and praying to her often.
O Mary,
Mother of Jesus Christ and Mother of priests,
accept this title which we bestow on you
to celebrate your motherhood
and to contemplate with you the priesthood
of, your Son and of your sons,
O holy Mother of God.
O Mother of Christ,

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to the Messiah - priest you gave a body of flesh
through the anointing of the Holy Spirit
for the salvation of the poor and the contrite of heart;
guard priests in your heart and in the Church,
O Mother of the Savior.
O Mother of Faith,
you accompanied to the Temple the Son of Man,
the fulfillment of the promises given to the fathers;
give to the Father for his glory
the priests of your Son,
O Ark of the Covenant.
O Mother of the Church,
in the midst of the disciples in the upper room
you prayed to the Spirit
for the new people and their shepherds;
obtain for the Order of Presbyters
a full measure of gifts,
O Queen of the Apostles.
O Mother of Jesus Christ,
you were with him at the beginning
of his life and mission,
you sought the Master among the crowd,
you stood beside him when he was lifted
up from the earth
consumed as the one eternal sacrifice,
and you had John, your son, near at hand;
accept from the beginning those
who have been called,
protect their growth,
in their life ministry accompany
your sons,
O Mother of Priests.
Amen.
Given in Rome, at St. Peter's on March 25, the Solemnity of the Annunciation of the Lord, in the
year 1992, the fourteenth of my Pontificate.
JOHN PAUL II

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NOTES
1. Cf. Proposition 2.
2. Discourse at the end of the Synod (Oct. 27, 1990), 5: L'Osservatore Romano, Oct. 28, 1990.
3. Cf. Proposition 1.
4. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 28; Decree on the Ministry and Life of
Priests Presbyterorum Ordinis; Decree on Priestly Formation Optatam Totius.
5. Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis Sacerdotalis (Jan. 6, 1970): AAS 62 (1970), 321-384.
6. Discourse at the end of the Synod, 3.
7. Ibid., 1.
8. Message of the Synod Fathers to the People of God, III: L'Osservatore Romano, Oct. 29-30,
1990.
9. Angelus (Jan. 14, 1990), 2: L'Osservatore Romano, Jan. 15-16, 1990.
10. Ibid., 3.
11. Cf. Proposition 3.
12. Paul VI, homily at the ninth session of the Second Vatican Council (Dec. 7, 1965): AAS 58
(1966), 55.
13. Cf. Proposition 3.
14. Cf. ibid.
15. Cf. Synod of Bishops, "The Formation of Priests in the Circumstances of the Present Day,"
Lineamenta, 5-6.
16. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes, 4.
17. Cf. Message of the Synod Fathers to the People of God, 1;
18. Discourse at the end of the Synod, 4; cf letter to priests for Holy Thursday 1991 (March 10,

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1991): L 'Osservatore Romano, March 15, 1991.
19. Cf. Lumen Gentium; Presbyterorum Ordinis; Optatam Totius; Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis
Sacerdotalis; Synod of Bishops, second ordinary general assembly, 1971.
20. Proposition 7.
21. Lumen Gentium, 5.
22. Post - synodal apostolic exhortation Christifideles Laici (Dec. 30, 1988),8: AAS 81 (1989), 405;
cf. Synod of Bishops, second extraordinary general assembly, 1985.
23. Cf. Proposition 7.
24. Cf. Lumen Gentium, 1.
25. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 7-8.
26. Cf. Proposition 7.
27. Ibid.
28. Proposition 7.
29. Synod of Bishops, eighth ordinary general assembly, "The Formation of Priests in the
Circumstances of the Present Day," Instrumentum Laboris, 16; cf. Proposition 7.
30. Angeles (Feb. 25, 1990): L'Osservatore Romano, Feb. 26-27, 1990.
31. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 7-9.
32. Ibid., 8; cf. Proposition 7.
33. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 9.
34. Lumen Gentium, 10.
35. Cf. Proposition 7.
36. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 10.
37. Optatam Totius, 20.

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38. Cf. Proposition 12.
39. Final message, III.
40. Lumen Gentium, 40.
41. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12.
42. Sermo 340, 1: PL 38:1483.
43. Ibid.
44. Cf. Proposition 8.
45. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 2; 12.
46. Cf. Proposition 8.
47. Sermo Morin Guelferbytanus, 32, 1: PLS 2, 637.
48. Roman Missal, Communion Antiphon from the Mass of the Fourth Sunday of Easter.
49. Apostolic letter Mulieris Dignitatem (Aug. 15, 1988), 26: AAS 80 (1988),1715-1716.
50. Proposition 7.
51. Homily at eucharistic adoration, Seoul (Oct. 7, 1989), 2: Insegnamenti XII/2 (1989), 785.
52. St. Augustine, In Iohannis Evangelium Tractatus 123,5: CCL 36, 678.
53. To priests taking part in an assembly organized by the Italian episcopal conference (Nov.
4,1980): Insegnamenti III/2 (1980), 1055.
54. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 14.
55. Ibid.
56. Ibid.
57. Paul VI, apostolic exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi (Dec. 8, 1975), 75: AAS 68 (1976), 64-67.
58. Cf. Proposition 8.

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59. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12.
60. In Iohannis Evangelium Tractatus 123, 5.
61. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12.
62. Ibid., 5.
63. Cf. Council of Trent, Decree on Justification, Cap. 7; Decree on Sacraments, Can. 6.
64. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12.
65. St. Augustine, Sermo de Nat. Sanct. Apost. Petri et Pauli ex Evangelio in quo ait: Simon
Iohannis diligis me?: Bibliotheca Casinensis, in "Miscellenea Augustiniana," Vol. 1, ed. G. Morin,
O.S.B., Rome, Typ. Poligl. Vat., 1930, p. 404.
66. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 4-6;13.
67. Cf. Evangelii Nuntiandi, 15.
68. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation Dei Verbum, 8, 10.
69. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 5.
70. Post - synodal apostolic exhortation Reconciliatio Paenitentia (Dec. 2,1984),31, VI: AAS 77
(1985), 265-266.
71. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 6.
72. Cf. Lumen Gentium, 42.
73. Cf. Proposition 9.
74. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 15.
75. Cf. ibid.
76. Lumen Gentium, 42.
77. Apostolic exhortation Familiaris Consortio (Nov. 22,1981) 16: AAS 74 (1982), 98.
78. Proposition 11.

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79. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 16.
80. Ibid.
81. Proposition 8.
82. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 17.
83. Proposition 10.
84. Ibid.
85. Cf. Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes and Congregation for Bishops, Directives
for Mutual Relations Between Bishops and Religious in the Church Mutuae Relationes, (May 14,
1978), 18: AAS 70 (1978), 484-485.
86. Cf. Proposition 25; 38.
87. Cf. Lumen Gentium, 23.
88. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 10; cf. Proposition 12.
89. Encyclical letter Redemptoris Missio (Dec. 7, 1990),67: AAS 83 (1991),315-316.
90. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 10.
91. Homily to 5,000 priests from throughout the world (Oct. 9, 1984),2: Insegnamenti VII/2 (1984),
839.
92. Discourse at the end of the Synod, 5.
93. Cf. Proposition 6.
94. Cf. Proposition 13.
95. Cf. Proposition 4.
96. Lumen Gentium, 9.
97. Ibid.
98. St. Cyprian, De Dominica Oratione, 23: CCL 3/A, 105.

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99. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity Apostolicam Actuositatem,
3.
100. Proposition 5.
101. Angeles (Dec. 3, 1989), 2: Insegnamenti XII/2 (1989), 1417.
102. Message for the fifth World Day of Prayer for Priestly Vocations(April 19,1968): Insegnamenti
VI (1968), 134-135.
103. Cf. Proposition 5.
104. Cf. Lumen Gentium, 10; Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12.
105. Cf. Proposition 13.
106. Gaudium et Spes, 16.
107. Roman Missal, Collect of the Mass for Vocations to Holy Orders.
108. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum Concilium, 10.
109. Proposition 15.
110. Ibid.
111. Cf. Code of Canon Law, Canon 220: "It is not lawful for anyone...to violate the right which
each person has of defending his own privacy"; cf. Canon 642.
112. Optatam Totius, 2.
113. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree on the Pastoral Office of Bishops in the Church Christus
Dominus, 15.
114. Cf. Optatam Totius, 2.
115. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 6.
116. Ibid., 11.
117. Cf. Optatam Totius, 2.

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118. Proposition 14.
119. Proposition 15.
120. Cf. Proposition 16.
121. Message for the 22nd World Day of Prayer for Priestly Vocations (April 13, 1985), 1: AAS 77
(1985), 982.
122. Message of the Synod Fathers to the People of God, IV.
123. Proposition 21.
124. Cf. Optatam Totius, 11; Presbyterorum Ordinis 3; Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis
Sacerdotalis, 51.
125. Cf. Proposition 21.
126. Redemptoris Hominis, 10.
127. Familiaris Consortio, 37.
128. Ibid.
129. Proposition 21.
130. Cf. Gaudium et Spes, 24.
131. Cf. Proposition 21.
132. Proposition 22.
133. Cf. St. Augustine, Confessions, 1, 1: CSEL 33, 1.
134. Synod of Bishops, eighth ordinary general assembly, Instrumentum Laboris, 30.
135. Proposition 22.
136. Proposition 23.
137. Optatam Totius, 8.

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138. Dei Verbum, 24.
139. Ibid., 2.
140. Ibid., 25.
141. Angeles (March 4, 1990), 2-3: L'Osservatore Romano, March 5-6, 1990.
142. Sacrosanctum Concilium, 14.
143. St. Augustine, In lohannis Evangelium Tractatus, 26, 13.
144. Liturgy of the Hours, Magnificat Antiphon of Second Vespers of the Solemnity of the Body
and Blood of Christ.
145. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 13.
146. Angeles (July 1, 1990), 3: L'Osservatore Romano, July 2-3, 1990.
147. Proposition 23.
148. Ibid.
149. Cf. ibid.
150. Optatam Totius, 9.
151. Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis Sacerdotalis, (Jan. 6, 1970) AAS 62 (1970), 354.
152. Optatam Totius, 10.
153. Ibid.
154. Letter to all the priests of the Church on Holy Thursday 1979 (April 8, 1979): Insegnamenti
11/1 (1979), 841 -862.
155. Proposition 24.
156. Gaudium et Spes, 15.
157. Proposition 26.

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158. Optatam Totius, 16.
159. Instrumentum Laboris, 39.
160. Cf. Congregation for Catholic Education, Letter to Bishops De necessitate Philosophiae
studia in Seminariis impensius promovendi (Jan. 20, 1972).
161. "Desideravi intellectu videre quod credidi, et multum disputavi et laboravi," De Trinitate XV,
28: CCL 50/A, 534.
162. Paul VI, Address to the participants in the 21st Italian Biblical Week (Sept. 25, 1970): AAS
62, (1970), 618.
163. Proposition 26.
164. "Fides, quae est quasi habitus theologiae": In Lib. Boethii de Trinitate, V, 4 ad 8.
165. Cf. St. Thomas, In I Sentent. Prolog., q. l, a. 1-5.
166. Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction on the Ecclesial Vocation of the
Theologian Donum Veritatis (May 24, 1990), 11; 40: AAS 82 (1990), 1554-1555; 1568-1569.
167. Optatam Totius, 14.
168. Itinerarium mentis in Deum, Prol., 4: Opera Omnia, Tomus V, Ad Aquas Claras 1891, 296.
169. Optatam Totius, 16.
170. Encyclical letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (Dec. 30, 1987) 41: AAS 80 (1988), 571.
171. Cf. Encyclical letter Centesimus Annus (May 1,1991),54: AAS 83 (1991),859-860.
172. Donum Veritatis, 21.
173. Proposition 26.
174. For example, St. Thomas Aquinas wrote: "We have to be more on the side of the authority of
the Church than on that of Augustine or Jerome, or any other doctor" (Summa Theol. 11-11, q. 10,
a. 12). And again: "No one can shield himself with the authority of Jerome or Augustine or any
other doctor against the authority of Peter" (ibid. I-II, q.11, a. 2 ad 3).
175. Proposition 32.

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176. Cf. Redemptoris Missio, 67.
177. Cf. Proposition 32.
178. Proposition 27.
179. Optatam Totius, 4.
180. Lumen Gentium, 48.
181. Explanatio Apocalypsis, lib. II, 12: PL 93, 166.
182. Cf. Proposition 28.
183. Ibid.
184. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 9; cf. Christifideles Laici, 61.
185. Proposition 28.
186. Cf. ibid.
187. Cf. Redemptoris Missio, 67-68.
188. Optatam Totius, 4.
189. Proposition 20.
190. Ibid.
191. Ibid.
192. Ibid.
193. Cf. Address to the students and former students of the Almo Collegio Capranica (Jan. 21,
1983): Insegnamenti VI/ 1(1983), 173-178.
194. Proposition 20.
195. Ibid.
196. Proposition 19.

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197. Ibid.
198. In Iohannem Evangelistam Expositio, c. 21, lect. V, 2.
199. Optatam Totius, 3.
200. Cf. Proposition 17.
201. Ratio Fundamentalis Institutionis Sacerdotalis, 19.
202. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 7.
203. Proposition 29.
204. Ibid.
205. Cf. Proposition 23.
206. Cf. Christifideles Laici 61; 63; Mulieris Dignitatem, 29-31.
207. Cf. Proposition 29.
208. Proposition 30.
209. Ibid.
210. Cf. Proposition 25.
211. Address to priests connected with the Communion and Liberation movement (Sept. 12,
1985); AAS 78 (1986), 256.
212. Cf. Proposition 25.
213. Meeting with members of the Swiss clergy, Einsiedeln (June 15, 1984), 10: Insegnamenti
VII/I (1984), 1798.
214. Cf. In Iohannis Evangelium Tractatus, 123, S.
215. Cf. Proposition 31.
216 St. Charles Borromeo, Acta Ecclesiae Mediolanensis, Milan 1599, 1178.

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217. Cf. Gaudium et Spes, 22.
218. Instrumentum Laboris, 55.
219. Cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 6.
220. Paul VI, encyclical letter Ecclesiam Suam (Aug. 6, 1964), III: AAS 56 (1964), 647.
221. Cf. Congregation for the Clergy, Directives for the promotion of mutual cooperation between
particular churches and especially for a more suitable distribution of the clergy Postquam Apostoli
(March 25, 1980): AAS 72 (1980), 343-364.
222. Proposition 39.
223. Proposition 34.
224. Ibid.
225. Ibid.
226. Cf. Proposition 38; Presbyterorum Ordinis, 1; Optatam Totius, 1; Mutuae Relationes, 2; 10.
227. Proposition 35.
228. Ibid.
229. Proposition 36.
230. Instrumentum Laboris, 60: cf. Christus Dominus, 30; Presbyterorum Ordinis, 8; Code of
Canon Law, Canon 550.2.
231. Proposition 37.
232. G.B. Moneini, Pastorl Letter on the Moral Sense. 1961.
233. Cf. Proposition 40.
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