VATICAN CITY, JUNE 15, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation
of the first question of the question-and-answer session with Benedict
XVI and priests held Friday evening at the prayer vigil
in St. Peter´s Square on the occasion of the International
Meeting of Priests promoted at the end of the Year
for Priests.
Part 2 of the session will
appear Wednesday.
* * *
America
Q: Most Blessed Father,
I am Father Jose Eduardo Oliveira y Silva and I
come from America, specifically from Brazil. The majority of us
here present are involved in direct pastoral care in the
parish, and not only with one community, but at times
we are parish priests of more parishes, or of particularly
extensive communities. With all good will we seek to meet
the needs of a society that is very changed, no
longer wholly Christian, but we are aware that our "doing"
is not enough. How should we proceed, Holiness? In what
direction?
R: Dear friends, first of all I would
like to express my great joy because gathered here are
priests from all parts of the world, in the joy
of our vocation and our willingness to serve the Lord
with all our strength in this, our time.
In regard
to the question: I am well aware that today it
is very difficult to be a parish priest, also and
above all in countries of ancient Christianity; parishes become increasingly
more extensive, pastoral unity ... it is impossible to know
everyone, it is impossible to do all the works that
are expected of a parish priest. And thus, we really
ask ourselves how we should proceed, as you have said.
But I would like to say first of all: I
know that there are so many parish priests in the
world that give all their strength to evangelization, to have
the presence of the Lord and of his sacraments, and
to these I would like to say a big "thank
you," at this time. I have said that it isn´t
possible to do all that one wishes to do, which
perhaps should be done, because our strengths are limited and
the situations are difficult in a society that is increasingly
diversified, more complicated. Above all, I think it is important
that the faithful can see that the priest does not
just do a job, hours of work, and then is
free and lives only for himself, but that he is
a man impassioned for Christ, who bears in himself the
fire of the love of Christ.
If the faithful see
that he is full of the joy of the Lord,
they also understand that he cannot do everything, they accept
the limitations, and help the parish priest. This it seems
to me is the most important point: that one be
able to see and feel that the parish priest really
feels himself called by the Lord; and is full of
love of the Lord and of his own. If this
is the case, one understands and can also see the
impossibility of doing everything. Hence, the first condition is to
be full of the joy of the Gospel with our
whole being. Then choices must be made, priorities set, to
see how much is possible and how much is impossible.
I would say that we know the three fundamental priorities:
they are the three columns of our being priests. First,
the Eucharist, the sacraments: to render the Eucharist possible and
present, above all to offer Sunday Mass, in so far
as possible, for all, and to celebrate it in a
way that it really becomes the visible act of love
of the Lord for us. Then, the proclamation of the
Word in all the dimensions: from personal dialogue to the
homily. The third point is "caritas," the love of Christ:
to be present for the suffering, for the little ones,
for children, for persons in difficulty, for the marginalized; to
really render present the love of the Good Shepherd.
And
then, a very important priority also is the personal relationship
with Christ. In the Breviary, on Nov. 4, we read
a beautiful text of St. Charles Borromeo, great pastor, who
truly gave all of himself, and who says to us,
to all priests: "Do not neglect your own soul: if
your soul is neglected, you cannot even give to others
what you should give them. Hence, also for yourself, for
your soul, there must be time," or, in other words,
the relationship with Christ, personal conversation with Christ is a
fundamental pastoral priority, it is the condition of our work
for others! And prayer is not something marginal: it is
in fact the "profession" of the priest to pray, also
as representative of the people who do not know how
to pray and do not find the time to pray.
Personal prayer, above all the Prayer of the Hours, is
essential nourishment for our soul, for all our action.
And,
finally, to recognize our limitations, to open ourselves also to
this humility. Let us recall a scene of Mark, Chapter
6, where the disciples are "stressed," they want to do
everything, and the Lord says: "Come away by yourselves to
a lonely place, and rest a while" (cf. Mark 6:31).
This also is work -- I would say -- pastoral
work: to find and to have the humility, the courage
to rest. Hence, I think that passion for the Lord,
love of the Lord, shows us the priorities, the choices,
helps us to find the way. The Lord will help
us. Thank you all!
[Translation by ZENIT]