PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, JUNE 13, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is
a reflection by Cardinal Justin Rigali, archbishop of Philadelphia and
chairman of the U.S. bishops´ Committee on Pro-life Activities, regarding
the upcoming Year for Priests.
The article was originally presented
June 4 in the archdiocesan newspaper, The Catholic Standard and
Times.
* * *
Pope Benedict XVI has declared a "Year
of the Priest," which will begin on June 19. Since
this will be a time of special prayer by and
for our priests, this week we will dwell on this
topic given to us by our Holy Father.
Saint
John Vianney
Saint Pius X (1903-1914) was the first Pope
to be photographed regularly. Some of the photographs show him
giving an instruction on the Gospel to the faithful of
Rome, which he liked to do each Sunday. Others show
him explaining the catechism to children, which was also a
favorite apostolate of his. Some photographs show him seated at
his desk in the Vatican.
Looking at the
photographs of the Pope at his desk, we see something
quite interesting. On his desk, along with the crucifix, is
a large statue. It is not an image of one
of the Apostles or of a great Doctor of the
Church. It is a statue of John Marie Vianney, a
humble French parish priest, whom Pius X beatified in 1905.
It was another Pope, Pius XI (1922-1939) who declared Saint
John Vianney the Patron of Parish Priests throughout the world.
This year is the 150th anniversary of Saint
John Vianney´s death in 1859 and Pope Benedict is using
this occasion to declare a Year dedicated to the mission
of the priest. It is interesting to note that Pope
Benedict XVI, who is universally acknowledged as one of the
greatest minds of our time, has brought such attention to
Saint John Vianney, a priest who came very close to
never being ordained because of his poor marks in the
Seminary. This is because our Holy Father not only possesses
intellectual knowledge but also knows the importance of holiness, especially
for the priest. Saint John Vianney is a great model
and example of that holiness and that is why all
the popes of this century have called attention to him
as a model for priests. This includes Saint Pius X,
who had been a parish priest himself, and Pope Benedict
XVI, who never served in a parish on a regular
basis.
Saint John Vianney was born at a very
unfortunate time in the history of his native France. Three
years after his birth in 1786, the French Revolution broke
out. The spirit of this Revolution was filled with a
hatred for the Church. Many French churches were destroyed and
bishops, priests and Religious Sisters were massacred. He received his
First Holy Communion in secret as the public celebration of
the Mass by loyal priests was forbidden. When he first
expressed his desire to be a priest, his father would
not allow it because young John was needed to work
on the farm. He was twenty when he was finally
able to pursue his studies for the priesthood, under the
direction of a priest who ran a small school.
Once the Revolution and the subsequent Napoleonic wars were
over, he eventually was able to enroll in a seminary.
He found the studies very difficult and, although the authorities
recognized his goodness and made special provision for his slowness
in learning, after doing poorly in his studies, he was
about to be dismissed from the seminary. The Vicar General
of the Diocese allowed his studies to continue by asking
the Rector: "Is Monsieur Vianney good?" The Rector replied: "He
is a model of goodness." The Vicar General said: "Let
him be ordained. The grace of God will do the
rest." Later, at John Vianney´s ordination in 1815, the same
Vicar General said: "The Church wants not only learned priests
but, even more, holy ones."
In 1817, young
Father Vianney was sent to the small town of Ars,
whose parish consisted of 230 people. He took upon himself
a life of great penance and prayer as one of
the means of drawing the people of his village away
from sin and closer to God. He became a great
apostle of the confessional and his fame for sanctity and
for being a wise but challenging confessor eventually made it
necessary for him to spend upward of eighteen hours a
day in the confessional. The little town of Ars became
famous throughout France and, eventually, throughout the world because of
the holiness of its Pastor. It is this necessity for
priestly holiness that Pope Benedict wants to draw attention to
during this Year of the Priest.
The Heart of
Jesus
It is appropriate that Pope Benedict will begin the
Year of the Priest on June 19 which, this year,
is the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Saint
John Vianney said: "The Priesthood is the love of the
Heart of Jesus," and so we see the intimate connection
among these concepts of the Sacred Heart, the Priesthood and
Saint John Vianney. The love of the Heart of Jesus
culminates in the events of the Last Supper and the
Death of Jesus. With great anxiety, Jesus approaches His "hour,"
as He calls it. He says to His Apostles: "I
have eagerly desired to eat this Passover with you before
I suffer" (Luke 22:15).
The Gospel of Saint
John tells us that Jesus "loved His own in the
world and he loved them to the end" (John 13:1).
His love overflowed when He gave to the Apostles, and
to all of us, the gift of His very self
in the Holy Eucharist. This reminds us that the love
of Jesus is not a static love. It is living
and enduring. Likewise, we are reminded that we do not
believe only in a book or in a set of
rules, nor do we believe only in an institution. We
believe above all in a Person, Jesus who loves us
with an everlasting love and asks that we love Him
in return with an individual and personal love. We love
His words, His commandments and His Church because they are
an extension of Him.
Since the love of Jesus
is living and perduring, it must continue in the world
until the end of time. The Eucharist is the ongoing
gift of the love of Jesus. According to God´s plan,
the Eucharistic Presence is brought about through the Priesthood. Jesus
chose a marvelous means to give us His love in
the Holy Mass, in Holy Communion and in the Tabernacle.
He makes use of human instruments, imperfect men, whom He
calls to continue the role and mission of the Apostles,
to do what He did. For two thousand years, this
"gift and mystery," as Pope John Paul II called the
priesthood, has been transmitted to those whom God mysteriously calls
so that His love may be known in the world
through His Word and through the Word made Flesh in
the most Blessed Sacrament.
The priest in relation to
Christ and the Church
The theme of the Year of
the Priest, according to the wishes of our Holy Father,
is: "Faithfulness of Christ, Faithfulness of Priests." In this way,
the ongoing love of Christ and His fidelity to His
promises, which are manifested in the Eucharist, given to us
through the Priesthood, are also seen as a challenge to
the priest to live a life worthy of the calling
to which he has received (cf. Ephesians 4:1). The Year
of the Priest is not a "pep rally" for individuals
or groups; it is a loving challenge to follow the
example of Saint John Vianney, whose intense love for Jesus
expressed itself in his zealous and faithful living out of
his priestly vocation.
In announcing this special year, Pope
Benedict explained what it means for the priest to live
out his vocation in the midst of and at the
service of, the Church. He said: "The priest´s mission is
carried out ‘in the Church.´ This ecclesial, communal, hierarchical and
doctrinal dimension is absolutely indispensable to every authentic mission and
alone guarantees its spiritual effectiveness. The four aspects mentioned must
always be recognized as intimately connected: the mission is ‘ecclesial´
because no one proclaims himself in the first person. Every
priest must be well aware that he is bringing to
the world Another, God himself. God is the only treasure
which people ultimately desire to find in a priest. The
mission is ‘communal´ because it is carried out in unity
and communion (with the Church). Moreover, these derive essentially from
that divine intimacy in which the priest is called to
be an expert, so that he may be able to
lead the souls entrusted to him humbly and trustingly to
the same encounter with the Lord. Lastly, the ‘hierarchical´ and
‘doctrinal´ dimensions suggest reaffirming the importance of discipline, doctrinal training
and theological and continuing formation" (Address to the members of
the Congregation for the Clergy announcing the Year of the
Priest, 16 March 2009).
Throughout this year, the priests
and bishops of the Archdiocese, along with me, will reflect
more deeply on the calling to which we have been
called. We will make use of the example of Saint
John Vianney and attempt to follow his example of prayer,
penance, humility and apostolic zeal in the service of Jesus
and you, our people. At the same time, we ask
you to pray for us. As Cardinal Claudio Hummes, the
Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, recently wrote in
reflecting on this upcoming Year of the Priest: "May this
year be an occasion for a period of intense appreciation
of the priestly identity, of the theology of the Catholic
priesthood, and of the extraordinary meaning of the vocation and
mission of priests within the Church and in society with
the warm participation of our Catholic people who undoubtedly love
their priests and want to see them happy, holy and
joyous in their daily apostolic labors."