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DECREE ON THE MINISTRY AND LIFE OF
PRIESTS
PRESBYTERORUM ORDINIS
PROMULGATED BY HIS HOLINESS,
POPE PAUL VI
ON DECEMBER 7, 1965
PREFACE
1. The excellence of the order of
priests in the Church has already been recalled to the minds of all by
this sacred synod.(1) Since, however, in the renewal of Christ's Church
tasks of the greatest importance and of ever increasing difficulty are
being given to this order, it was deemed most useful to treat of the
subject of priests at greater length and with more depth. What is said
here applies to all priests, especially those devoted to the care of
souls, with suitable adaptations being made for priests who are religious.
Priests by sacred ordination and mission which they receive from the
bishops are promoted to the service of Christ the Teacher, Priest and
King. They share in his ministry, a ministry whereby the Church here on
earth is unceasingly built up into the People of God, the Body of Christ
and the Temple of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, in order that their ministry
be carried on more effectively and their lives be better provided for, in
pastoral and human circumstances which very often change so profoundly,
this sacred synod declares and decrees as follows.
CHAPTER I
THE PRIESTHOOD IN THE MINISTRY OF THE
CHURCH
2. The Lord Jesus, "whom the Father has
sent into the world" (Jn 10:36) has made his whole Mystical Body a sharer
in the anointing of the Spirit with which he himself is anointed.(1) In
him all the faithful are made a holy and royal priesthood; they offer
spiritual sacrifices to God through Jesus Christ, and they proclaim the
perfections of him who has called them out of darkness into his marvelous
light.(2) Therefore, there is no member who does not have a part in the
mission of the whole Body; but each one ought to hallow Jesus in his
heart,(3) and in the spirit of prophecy bear witness to Jesus.(4)
The same Lord, however, has established
ministers among his faithful to unite them together in one body in which,
"not all the members have the same function" (Rom 12:4). These ministers
in the society of the faithful are able by the sacred power of orders to
offer sacrifice and to forgive sins,(5) and they perform their priestly
office publicly for men in the name of Christ. Therefore, having sent the
apostles just as he himself been sent by the Father,(6) Christ, through
the apostles themselves, made their successors, the bishops,(7) sharers in
his consecration and mission. The office of their ministry has been handed
down, in a lesser degree indeed, to the priests.(8) Established in the
order of the priesthood they can be co-workers of the episcopal order for
the proper fulfillment of the apostolic mission entrusted to priests by
Christ.(9)
The office of priests, since it is
connected with the episcopal order, also, in its own degree, shares the
authority by which Christ builds up, sanctifies and rules his Body.
Wherefore the priesthood, while indeed it presupposes the sacraments of
Christian initiation, is conferred by that special sacrament; through it
priests, by the anointing of the Holy Spirit, are signed with a special
character and are conformed to Christ the Priest in such a way that they
can act in the person of Christ the Head.(10)
In the measure in which they participate
in the office of the apostles, God gives priests a special grace to be
ministers of Christ among the people. They perform the sacred duty of
preaching the Gospel, so that the offering of the people can be made
acceptable and sanctified by the Holy Spirit.(11) Through the apostolic
proclamation of the Gospel, the People of God are called together and
assembled. All belonging to this people, since they have been sanctified
by the Holy Spirit, can offer themselves as "a sacrifice, living, holy,
pleasing to God" (Rom 12:1). Through the ministry of the priests, the
spiritual sacrifice of the faithful is made perfect in union with the
sacrifice of Christ. He is the only mediator who in the name of the whole
Church is offered sacramentally in the Eucharist and in an unbloody manner
until the Lord himself comes.(12) The ministry of priests is directed to
this goal and is perfected in it. Their ministry, which begins with the
evangelical proclamation, derives its power and force from the sacrifice
of Christ. Its aim is that "the entire commonwealth of the redeemed and
the society of the saints be offered to God through the High Priest who
offered himself also for us in his passion that we might be the body of so
great a Head."(13)
The purpose, therefore, which priests
pursue in their ministry and by their life is to procure the glory of God
the Father in Christ. That glory consists in this-that men working freely
and with a grateful spirit receive the work of God made perfect in Christ
and then manifest it in their whole lives. Hence, priests, while engaging
in prayer and adoration, or preaching the word, or offering the
Eucharistic Sacrifice and administering the other sacraments, or
performing other works of the ministry for men, devote all this energy to
the increase of the glory of God and to man's progress in the divine life.
All of this, since it comes from the Pasch of Christ, will be crowned by
the glorious coming of the same Lord, when he hands over the Kingdom to
God the Father.(14)
3. Priests, who are taken from among men
and ordained for men in the things that belong to God in order to offer
gifts and sacrifices for sins,(15) nevertheless live on earth with other
men as brothers. The Lord Jesus, the Son of God, a Man sent by the Father
to men, dwelt among us and willed to become like his brethren in all
things except sin.(16) The holy apostles imitated him. Blessed Paul, the
doctor of the Gentiles, "set apart for the Gospel of God" (Rom 1:1)
declares that he became all things to all men that he might save all.(17)
Priests of the New Testament, by their vocation and ordination, are in a
certain sense set apart in the bosom of the People of God. However, they
are not to be separated from the People of God or from any person; but
they are to be totally dedicated to the work for which the Lord has chosen
them.(18) They cannot be ministers of Christ unless they be witnesses and
dispensers of a life other than earthly life. But they cannot be of
service to men if they remain strangers to the life and conditions of
men.(19) Their ministry itself, by a special title, forbids that they be
conformed to this world;(20) yet at the same time it requires that they
live in this world among men. They are to live as good shepherds that know
their sheep, and they are to seek to lead those who are not of this
sheepfold that they, too, may hear the voice of Christ, so that there
might be one fold and one shepherd.(21) To achieve this aim, certain
virtues, which in human affairs are deservedly esteemed, contribute a
great deal: such as goodness of heart, sincerity, strength and constancy
of mind, zealous pursuit of justice, affability, and others. The Apostle
Paul commends them saying: "Whatever things are true, whatever honorable,
whatever just, whatever holy, whatever loving, whatever of good repute, if
there be any virtue, if anything is worthy of praise, think upon these
things" (Phil 4:8).(22)
CHAPTER II
The Ministry of Priests
SECTION I
Priests' Functions
4. The People of God are joined together
primarily by the word of the living God.(1) And rightfully they expect
this from their priests.(2) Since no one can be saved who does not first
believe,(3) priests, as co-workers with their bishops, have the primary
duty of proclaiming the Gospel of God to all.(4) In this way they fulfill
the command of the Lord: "Going therefore into the whole world preach the
Gospel to every creature" (Mk 16:15),(5) and they establish and build up
the People of God. Through the saving word the spark of faith is lit in
the hearts of unbelievers, and fed in the hearts of the faithful. This is
the way that the congregation of faithful is started and grows, just as
the Apostle describes: "Faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the
word of Christ" (Rom 10:17).
To all men, therefore, priests are
debtors that the truth of the Gospel(6) which they have may be given to
others. And so, whether by entering into profitable dialogue they bring
people to the worship of God,(7) whether by openly preaching they proclaim
the mystery of Christ, or whether in the light of Christ they treat
contemporary problems, they are relying not on their own wisdom for it is
the word of Christ they teach, and it is to conversion and holiness that
they exhort all men.(8) But priestly preaching is often very difficult in
the circumstances of the modern world. In order that it might more
effectively move men's minds, the word of God ought not to be explained in
a general and abstract way, but rather by applying the lasting truth of
the Gospel to the particular circumstances of life.
The ministry of the word is carried out
in many ways, according to the various needs of those who hear and the
special gifts of those who preach. In areas or communities of
non-Christians, the proclaiming of the Gospel draws men to faith and to
the sacraments of salvation.(9) In the Christian community, especially
among those who seem to understand and believe little of what they
practice, the preaching of the word is needed for the very ministering of
the sacraments. They are precisely sacraments of faith, a faith which is
born of and nourished by the word.(10) This is especially true of the
Liturgy of the Word in the celebration of Mass, in which the proclaiming
of the death and resurrection of Christ is inseparably joined to the
response of the people who hear, and to the very offering whereby Christ
ratified the New Testament in his blood. In this offering the faithful are
united both by their dispositions and by their discernment of the
sacrament.(11)
5. God, who alone is holy and who alone
bestows holiness, willed to take as his companions and helpers men who
would humbly dedicate themselves to the work of sanctification. Hence,
through the ministry of the bishop, God consecrates priests, that being
made sharers by special title in the priesthood of Christ, they might act
as his ministers in performing sacred functions. In the liturgy they
continue to carry on his priestly office by the action of his Spirit.(12)
By Baptism men are truly brought into the People of God; by the sacrament
of Penance sinners are reconciled to God and his Church; by the Anointing
of the Sick, the ill are given solace; and especially by the celebration
of Mass they offer sacramentally the Sacrifice of Christ. In administering
all sacraments, as St. Ignatius Martyr(13) has borne witness from the
early days of the Church, priests by various titles are bound together
hierarchically with the bishop. And so in a certain way they make him
present in every congregation.(14)
The other sacraments, as well as with
every ministry of the Church and every work of the apostolate, are tied
together with the Eucharist and are directed toward it.(15) The Most
Blessed Eucharist contains the entire spiritual boon of the Church,(16)
that is, Christ himself, our Pasch and Living Bread, by the action of the
Holy Spirit through his very flesh vital and vitalizing, giving life to
men who are thus invited and encouraged to offer themselves, their labors
and all created things, together with him. In this light, the Eucharist
shows itself as the source and the apex of the whole work of preaching the
Gospel. Those under instruction are introduced by stages to a sharing in
the Eucharist, and the faithful, already marked with the seal of Baptism
and Confirmation, are through the reception of the Eucharist fully joined
to the Body of Christ.
Thus the Eucharistic Action, over which
the priest presides, is the very heart of the congregation. So priests
must instruct their people to offer to God the Father the Divine Victim in
the Sacrifice of the Mass, and to join to it the offering of their own
lives. In the spirit of Christ the Shepherd, they must prompt their people
to confess their sins with a contrite heart in the sacrament of Penance,
so that, mindful of his words "Repent for the kingdom of God is at hand"
(Mt 4:17), they are drawn closer to the Lord more and more each day.
Priests likewise must instruct their people to participate in the
celebrations of the sacred liturgy in such a way that they become
proficient in genuine prayer. They must coax their people on to an ever
more perfect and constant spirit of prayer for every grace and need. They
must gently persuade everyone to the fulfillment of the duties of his
state of life, and to greater progress in responding in a sensible way to
the evangelical counsels. Finally, they must train the faithful to sing
hymns and spiritual songs in their hearts to the Lord, always giving
thanks to God the Father for all things in the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ.(17)
Priests themselves extend to the other
hours of the day the praise and thanksgiving of the Eucharistic
celebration in praying the Divine Office, offered in the name of the
Church for all the people entrusted to their care, and indeed for the
whole world.
The house of prayer in which the Most
Holy Eucharist is celebrated and reserved, where the faithful gather and
where the presence of the Son of God, our Savior, offered for us on the
altar of sacrifice bestows strength and blessings on the faithful, must be
spotless and suitable for prayer and sacred functions.(18) There pastors
and the faithful are called to acknowledge with grateful heart the gift of
him, Who through his humanity constantly pours divine life into the
members of his Body.(19) Let priests take care so to foster a knowledge of
and facility in the liturgy, that by their own liturgical ministry
Christian communities entrusted to their care may ever more perfectly give
praise to God, the Father, and Son, and Holy Spirit.
6. Exercising the office of Christ, the
Shepherd and Head, and according to their share of his authority, priests,
in the name of the bishop, gather the family of God together as a
brotherhood enlivened by one spirit. Through Christ they lead them in the
Holy Spirit to God the Father.(20) For the exercise of this ministry, as
for the other priestly duties, spiritual power is conferred upon them for
the building up of the Church.(21) In building up of the Church, priests
must treat all with exceptional kindness in imitation of the Lord. They
should act toward men, not as seeking to please them,(22) but in accord
with the demands of Christian doctrine and life. They should teach them
and admonish them as beloved sons,(23) according to the words of the
Apostle: "Be urgent in season, out of season, reprove, entreat, rebuke in
all patience and doctrine" (2 Tim 4:2).(24)
Priests therefore, as educators in the
faith, must see to it either by themselves or through others that the
faithful are led individually in the Holy Spirit to a development of their
own vocation according to the Gospel, to a sincere and practical charity,
and to that freedom with which Christ has made us free.(25) Ceremonies
however beautiful, or associations however flourishing, will be of little
value if they are not directed toward the education of men to Christian
maturity.(26) In furthering this, priests should help men to see what is
required and what is God's will in the important and unimportant events of
life. Also, Christians should be taught that they live not only for
themselves, but, according to the demands of the new law of charity; as
every man has received grace, he must administer the same to others.(27)
In this way, all will discharge in a Christian manner their duties in the
community of men.
Although they have obligations toward
all men, priests have a special obligation to the poor and weak entrusted
to them, for our Lord himself showed that he was united to them,(28) and
their evangelization is mentioned as a sign of messianic activity.(29)
With special diligence, attention should be given to youth and also to
married people and parents. It is desirable that these join together in
friendly meetings for mutual aid in leading more easily and fully and in a
Christian manner a life that is often difficult. Priests should remember
that all religious, both men and women, who certainly have a distinguished
place in the house of the Lord, deserve special care in their spiritual
progress for the good of the whole Church. Finally, and above all, priests
must be solicitous for the sick and the dying, visiting them and
strengthening them in the Lord.(30)
The office of pastor is not confined to
the care of the faithful as individuals, but also in a true sense is
extended to the formation of a genuine Christian community. Yet the spirit
of the community should be so fostered as to embrace not only the local
church, but also the universal Church. The local community should promote
not only the care of its own faithful, but, filled with a missionary zeal,
it should prepare also the way to Christ for all men. In a special way,
catechumens and the newly-baptized who must be educated gradually to know
and to live the Christian life are entrusted to his care.
No Christian community, however, is
built up unless it has its basis and center in the celebration of the most
Holy Eucharist; from this, therefore, all education to the spirit of
community must take its origin.(31) This celebration, if it is to be
genuine and complete, should lead to various works of charity and mutual
help, as well as to missionary activity and to different forms of
Christian witness.
The ecclesial community by prayer,
example, and works of penance, exercise a true motherhood toward souls who
are to be led to Christ. The Christian community forms an effective
instrument by which the path to Christ and his Church is pointed out and
made smooth for non-believers. It is an effective instrument also for
arousing, nourishing and strengthening the faithful for their spiritual
combat.
In building the Christian community,
priests are never to put themselves at the service of some human faction
of ideology, but, as heralds of the Gospel and shepherds of the Church,
they are to spend themselves for the spiritual growth of the Body of
Christ.
SECTION 2
Priests' Relationships with Others
7. All priests, in union with bishops,
so share in one and the same priesthood and ministry of Christ that the
very unity of their consecration and mission requires their hierarchical
communion with the order of bishops.(32) At times in an excellent manner
they manifest this communion in liturgical concelebration as joined with
the bishop when they celebrate the Eucharistic Sacrifice.(33) Therefore,
by reason of the gift of the Holy Spirit which is given to priests in Holy
Orders, bishops regard them as necessary helpers and counselors in the
ministry and in their role of teaching, sanctifying and nourishing the
People of God.(34) Already in the ancient ages of the Church we find
liturgical texts proclaiming this with insistence, as when they solemnly
call upon God to pour out upon the candidate for priestly ordination "the
spirit of grace and counsel, so that with a pure heart he may help and
govern the People of God,"(35) just as in the desert the spirit of Moses
was spread abroad in the minds of the seventy prudent men,(36) "and using
them as helpers among the people, he easily governed countless
multitudes."(37)
Therefore, on account of this communion
in the same priesthood and ministry, bishops should regard priests as
their brothers and friends(38) and be concerned as far as they are able
for their material and especially for their spiritual well-being. For
above all upon the bishops rests the heavy responsibility for the sanctity
of their priests.(39) Therefore, they should exercise the greatest care in
the continual formation of their priests.(40) They should gladly listen to
their priests, indeed consult them and engage in dialogue with them in
those matters which concern the necessities of pastoral work and welfare
of the diocese. In order to put this into effect, there should be-in a
manner suited to today's conditions and necessities,(41) and with a
structure and norms to be determined by law-a body or senate(42) of
priests representing all the priests. This representative body by its
advice will be able to give the bishop effective assistance in the
administration of the diocese.
Priests, never losing sight of the
fullness of the priesthood which the bishops enjoy, must respect in them
the authority of Christ, the Supreme Shepherd. They must therefore stand
by their bishops in sincere charity and obedience.(43) This priestly
obedience, imbued with a spirit of cooperation is based on the very
sharing in the episcopal ministry which is conferred on priests both
through the Sacrament of Orders and the canonical mission.(44)
This union of priests with their bishops
is all the more necessary today since in our present age, for various
reasons, apostolic undertakings must necessarily not only take on many
forms but frequently extend even beyond the boundaries of one parish or
diocese. No priest, therefore, can on his own accomplish his mission in a
satisfactory way. He can do so only by joining forces with other priests
under the direction of the Church authorities.
8. Priests by virtue of their ordination
to the priesthood are united among themselves in an intimate sacramental
brotherhood. In individual dioceses, priests form one priesthood under
their own bishop. Even though priests are assigned to different duties,
nevertheless they carry on one priestly ministry for men. All priests are
sent as co-workers in the same apostolate, whether they engage in
parochial or extra-parochial ministry. This is true whether they devote
their efforts to scientific research or teaching, or whether by manual
labor they share in the lot of the workers themselves-if there is need for
this and competent authority approves-or finally whether they fulfill some
other apostolic tasks or labor designed for the apostolate. All, indeed,
are united in the building up of the Body of Christ which, especially in
our times, requires manifold duties and new methods. It is very important
that all priests, whether diocesan or religious, help one another always
to be fellow workers in the truth.(45) Each one, therefore, is united in
special bonds of apostolic charity, ministry and brotherhood with the
other members of this priesthood. This has been manifested from ancient
times in the liturgy when the priests present at an ordination are invited
to impose hands together with the ordaining bishop on the new candidate,
and with united hearts concelebrate the Sacred Eucharist. Each and every
priest, therefore, is united with his fellow priests in a bond of charity,
prayer and total cooperation. In this manner, they manifest that unity
which Christ willed, namely, that his own be perfected in one so that the
world might know that the Son was sent by the Father.(46)
Older priests, therefore, should receive
younger priests as true brothers and help them in their first undertakings
and priestly duties. The older ones should likewise endeavor to understand
the mentality of younger priests, even though it be different from their
own, and follow their projects with good will. By the same token, young
priests should respect the age and experience of their seniors; they
should seek their advice and willingly cooperate with them in everything
that pertains to the care of souls. In a fraternal spirit, priests should
extend hospitality,(47) cultivate kindliness and share their goods in
common.(48) They should be particularly solicitous for the sick, the
afflicted, those overburdened with work, the lonely, those exiled from
their homeland, and those who suffer persecution.(49) They should gladly
and joyfully gather together for recreation, remembering Christ's
invitation to the weary apostles: "Come aside to a desert place, and rest
awhile" (Mk 6:31). And further, in order that priests may find mutual
assistance in the development of their spiritual and intellectual life,
that they may be able to cooperate more effectively in their ministry and
be saved from the dangers of loneliness which may arise, it is necessary
that some kind of common life or some sharing of common life be encouraged
among priests. This, however, may take many forms, according to different
personal or pastoral needs, such as living together where this is
possible, or having a common table, or at least by frequent and periodic
meetings. One should hold also in high regard and eagerly promote those
associations which, having been recognized by competent ecclesiastical
authority, encourage priestly holiness in the ministry by the use of an
appropriate and duly approved rule of life and by fraternal aid, intending
thus to do service to the whole order of priests.
Finally, by reason of the same communion
in the priesthood, priests should realize that they are obliged in a
special manner toward those priests who labor under certain difficulties.
They should give them timely help, and also, if necessary, admonish them
discreetly. Moreover, they should always treat with fraternal charity and
magnanimity those who have failed in some matters, offer urgent prayers to
God for them, and continually show themselves as true brothers and
friends.
9. Though priests of the New Testament,
in virtue of the sacrament of Orders, exercise the most outstanding and
necessary office of father and teacher among and for the People of God,
they are nevertheless, together with all Christ's faithful, disciples of
the Lord, made sharers in his Kingdom by the grace of God's call.(50) For
priests are brothers among brothers(51) with all those who have been
reborn at the baptismal font. They are all members of one and the same
Body of Christ, the building up of which is required of everyone.(52)
Priests, therefore, must take the lead
in seeking the things of Jesus Christ, not the things that are their
own.(53) They must work together with the lay faithful, and conduct
themselves in their midst after the example of their Master, who among men
"came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life as
redemption for many" (Mt 20:28). Priests must sincerely acknowledge and
promote the dignity of the laity and the part proper to them in the
mission of the Church. And they should hold in high honor that just
freedom which is due to everyone in the earthly city. They must willingly
listen to the laity, consider their wants in a fraternal spirit, recognize
their experience and competence in the different areas of human activity,
so that together with them they will be able to recognize the signs of the
times. While trying the spirits to see if they be of God,(54) priests
should uncover with a sense of faith, acknowledge with joy and foster with
diligence the various humble and exalted charisms of the laity. Among the
other gifts of God, which are found in abundance among the laity, those
are worthy of special mention by which not a few of the laity are
attracted to a higher spiritual life. Likewise, they should confidently
entrust to the laity duties in the service of the Church, allowing them
freedom and room for action; in fact, they should invite them on suitable
occasions to undertake worlds on their own initiative.(55)
Finally priests have been placed in the
midst of the laity to lead them to the unity of charity, "loving one
another with fraternal love, eager to give one another precedence" (Rom
12:10). It is their task, therefore, to reconcile differences of mentality
in such a way that no one need feel himself a stranger in the community of
the faithful. They are defenders of the common good, with which they are
charged in the name of the bishop. At the same time, they are strenuous
assertors of the truth, lest the faithful be carried about by every wind
of doctrine.(56) They are united by a special solicitude with those who
have fallen away from the use of the sacraments, or perhaps even from the
faith. Indeed, as good shepherds, they should not cease from going out to
them.
Mindful of the prescripts on
ecumenism,(57) let them not forget their brothers who do not enjoy full
ecclesiastical communion with us.
Finally, they have entrusted to them all
those who do not recognize Christ as their Savior.
The Christian faithful, for their part,
should realize their obligations to their priests, and with filial love
they should follow them as their pastors and fathers. In like manner,
sharing their cares, they should help their priests by prayer and work
insofar as possible so that their priests might more readily overcome
difficulties and be able to fulfill their duties more fruitfully.(58)
SECTION 3
The Distribution of Priests, and Vocations to the Priesthood
10. The spiritual gift which priests
receive at their ordination prepared them not for a sort of limited and
narrow mission but for the widest possible and universal mission of
salvation "even to the ends of the earth" (Acts 1:8), for every priestly
ministry shares in the universality of the mission entrusted by Christ to
his apostles. The priesthood of Christ, in which all priests really share,
is necessarily intended for all peoples and all times, and it knows no
limits of blood, nationality or time, since it is already mysteriously
prefigured in the person of Melchisedech.(59) Let priests remember,
therefore, that the care of all churches must be their intimate concern.
Hence, priests of such dioceses as are rich in vocations should show
themselves willing and ready, with the permission of their own ordinaries
(bishops), to volunteer for work in other regions, missions or endeavors
which are poor in numbers of clergy.
Present norms of incardination and
excardination should be so revised that, while this ancient institution
still remains intact, they will better correspond to today's pastoral
needs. Where a real apostolic spirit requires it, not only should a better
distribution of priests be brought about but there should also be favored
such particular pastoral works as are necessary in any region or nation
anywhere on earth. To accomplish this purpose there should be set up
international seminaries, special personal dioceses or prelatures
(vicariates), and so forth, by means of which, according to their
particular statutes and always saving the right of bishops, priests may be
trained and incardinated for the good of the whole Church.
Priests should not be sent singly to a
new field of labor, especially to one where they are not completely
familiar with the language and customs; rather, after the example of the
disciples of Christ,(60) they should be sent two or three together so that
they may be mutually helpful to one another. Likewise, thoughtful care
should be given to their spiritual life as well as their mental and bodily
welfare; and, so far as is possible, the circumstances and conditions of
labor should be adapted to individual needs and capabilities. At the same
time it will be quite advantageous if those priests who go to work in a
nation new to them not only know well the language of that place but also
the psychological and social milieu peculiar to the people they go to
serve, so that they may communicate with them easily, thus following the
example of Paul the Apostle who could say of himself: "For when I was free
of all I made myself the servant of all, that I might win over many. Among
Jews I was a Jew that I might win over the Jews" (1 Cor 9:19-20).
11. The Shepherd and Bishop of our
souls(61) so constituted his Church that the people whom he chose and
acquired by his blood(62) would have its priests to the end of time, and
that Christians would never be like sheep without a shepherd.(63)
Recognizing Christ's desire, and at the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,
the apostles considered it their duty to select men "who will be capable
of teaching others" (2 Tim 2:2). This duty, then, is a part oœ the
priestly mission by which every priest becomes a sharer in the care of the
whole Church, lest ministers be ever lacking for the People of God on
earth. Since, however, there is common cause between the captain of a ship
and the sailors,(64) let all Christian people be taught that it is their
duty to cooperate in one way or another, by constant prayer and other
means at their disposal,(65) that the Church will always have a sufficient
number of priests to carry out her divine mission. In the first place,
therefore, it is the duty of priests, by the ministry of the word and by
the example of their own lives, showing forth the spirit of service and
the paschal joy to demonstrate to the faithful the excellence and
necessity of the priesthood; then they should see to it that young men and
adults whom they judge worthy of such ministry should be called by their
bishops to ordination, sparing no effort or inconvenience in helping them
to prepare for this call, always saving their internal and external
freedom of action. In this effort, diligent and prudent spiritual
direction is of the greatest value. Parents and teachers and all who are
engaged in any way in the education of boys and young men should so
prepare them that they will recognize the solicitude of our Lord for his
flock, will consider the needs of the Church, and will be prepared to
respond generously to our Lord when he calls, saying: "Here I am Lord,
send me" (Is 6:8). This voice of the Lord calling, however, is never to be
expected as something which in an extraordinary manner will be heard by
the ears of the future priest. It is rather to be known and understood in
the manner in which the will of God is daily made known to prudent
Christians. These indications should be carefully noted by priests.(66)
Works favoring vocations, therefore,
whether diocesan or national, are highly recommended to the consideration
of priests.(67) In sermons, in catechetical instructions, and written
articles, priests should set forth the needs of the Church both locally
and universally, putting into vivid light the nature and excellence of the
priestly ministry, which consoles heavy burdens with great joys, and in
which in a special way, as the Fathers of the Church point out, the
greatest love of Christ can be shown.(68)
CHAPTER III
The Life of Priests
SECTION 1
The Vocation of Priests to the Life of Perfection
12. Priests are made in the likeness of
Christ the Priest by the Sacrament of Orders, so that they may, in
collaboration with their bishops, work for the building up and care of the
Church which is the whole Body of Christ, acting as ministers of him who
is the Head. Like all other Christians they have received in the sacrament
of Baptism the symbol and gift of such a calling and such grace that even
in human weakness(1) they can and must seek for perfection, according to
the exhortation of Christ: "Be you therefore perfect, as your Heavenly
Father is perfect" (Mt 5:48). Priests are bound, however, to acquire that
perfection in special fashion. They have been consecrated by God in a new
manner at their ordination and made living instruments of Christ the
Eternal Priest that they may be able to carry on in time his marvelous
work whereby the entire family of man is again made whole by power from
above.(2) Since, therefore, every priest in his own fashion acts in place
of Christ himself, he is enriched by a special grace, so that, as he
serves the flock committed to him and the entire People of God, he may the
better grow in the grace of him whose tasks he performs, because to the
weakness of our flesh there is brought the holiness of him who for us was
made a High Priest "holy, guiltless, undefiled not reckoned among us
sinners" (Heb 7:26).
Christ, whom the Father sanctified,
consecrated and sent into the world,(3) "gave himself for us that he might
redeem us from all iniquity and cleanse for himself an acceptable people,
pursuing good works" (Tt 2:14), and thus through suffering entered into
his glory.(4) In like fashion, priests consecrated by the anointing of the
Holy Spirit and sent by Christ must mortify the works of the flesh in
themselves and give themselves entirely to the service of men. It is in
this way that they can go forward in that holiness with which Christ
endows them to perfect man.(5)
Hence, those who exercise the ministry
of the spirit and of justice(6) will be confirmed in the life of the
spirit, so long as they are open to the Spirit of Christ, who gives them
life and direction. By the sacred actions which are theirs daily as well
as by their entire ministry which they share with the bishop and their
fellow priests, they are directed to perfection in their lives. Holiness
does much for priests in carrying on a fruitful ministry. Although divine
grace could use unworthy ministers to effect the work of salvation, yet
for the most part God chooses, to show forth his wonders, those who are
more open to the power and direction of the Holy Spirit, and who can by
reason of their close union with Christ and their holiness of life say
with St. Paul: "And yet I am alive; or rather, not I; it is Christ that
lives in me" (Gal 2:20).
Hence, this holy council, to fulfill its
pastoral desires of an internal renewal of the Church, of the spread of
the Gospel in every land and of a dialogue with the world of today,
strongly urges all priests that they strive always for that growth in
holiness by which they will become consistently better instruments in the
service of the whole People of God, using for this purpose those means
which the Church has approved.(7)
13. Priests who perform their duties
sincerely and indefatigably in the Spirit of Christ arrive at holiness by
this very fact.
Since they are ministers of God's word,
each day they read and hear the word of God, which it is their task to
teach others. If at the same time they are ready to receive the word
themselves they will grow daily into more perfect followers of the Lord.
As St. Paul wrote to Timothy, "Let this be thy study, these thy
employments, so that all may see how well thou doest. Two things claim thy
attention, thyself and the teaching of the faith, spend thy care on them;
so wilt thou and those who listen to thee achieve salvation" (1 Tim
4:15-16). As they seek how they may better teach others what they have
learned,(8) they will better understand "the unfathomable riches of
Christ" (Eph 3:8) and the manifold wisdom of God.(9) If they keep in mind
that it is God who opens hearts,(10) and that power comes not from
themselves but from the might of God,(11) in the very fact of teaching
God's word they will be brought closer to Christ the Teacher and led by
his Spirit. Thus those who commune with Christ share in God's love, the
mystery of which, kept hidden from the beginning of time,(12) is revealed
in Christ.
Priests act especially in the person of
Christ as ministers of holy things, particularly in the Sacrifice of the
Mass, the sacrifice of Christ who gave himself for the sanctification of
men. Hence, they are asked to take example from that with which they deal,
and inasmuch as they celebrate the mystery of the Lord's death they should
keep their bodies free of wantonness and lusts.(13) In the mystery of the
Eucharistic Sacrifice, in which priests fulfill their greatest task, the
work of our redemption is being constantly carried on;(14) and hence the
daily celebration of Mass is strongly urged, since even if there cannot be
present a number of the faithful, it is still an act of Christ and of the
Church.(15) Thus when priests join in the act of Christ the Priest, they
offer themselves entirely to God, and when they are nourished with the
body of Christ they profoundly share in the love of him who gives himself
as food to the faithful. In like fashion they are united with the
intention and love of Christ when they administer the sacraments. This is
true in a special way when in the performance of their duty in the
sacrament of Penance they show themselves altogether and always ready
whenever the sacrament is reasonably sought by the faithful. In the
recitation of the Divine Office, they offer the voice of the Church which
perseveres in prayer in the name of the whole human race, together with
Christ who "lives on still to make intercession on our behalf."
As they direct and nourish the People of
God, may they be aroused by the example of the Good Shepherd that they may
give their life for their sheep,(16) ready for the supreme sacrifice
following the example of priests who, even in our own day, have not shrunk
from giving their lives. As they are leaders in the faith and as they
"enter the sanctuary with confidence, through the blood of Christ" (Heb
10:19) they approach God "with sincere hearts in the full assurance of the
faith" (Heb 10:22) they set up a sure hope for their faithful,(17) that
they may comfort those who are depressed by the same consolation wherewith
God consoles them.(18) As leaders of the community they cultivate an
asceticism becoming to a shepherd of souls, renouncing their personal
convenience, seeking not what is useful to themselves but to many, for
their salvation,(19) always making further progress to do their pastoral
work better and, where needful, prepared to enter into new pastoral ways
under the direction of the Spirit of Love, which breathes where it
will.(20)
14. In the world of today, when people
are so burdened with duties and their problems, which oftentimes have to
be solved with great haste, range through so many fields, there is
considerable danger of dissipating their energy. Priests, too, involved
and constrained by so many obligations of their office, certainly have
reason to wonder how they can coordinate and balance their interior life
with feverish outward activity. Neither the mere external performance of
the works of the ministry, nor the exclusive engagement in pious devotion,
although very helpful, can bring about this necessary coordination.
Priests can arrive at this only by following the example of Christ our
Lord in their ministry. His food was to follow the will of him who had
sent him to accomplish his work.(21)
In order to continue doing the will of
his Father in the world, Christ works unceasingly through the Church. He
operates through his ministers, and hence he remains always the source and
wellspring of the unity of their lives. Priests, then, can achieve this
coordination and unity of life by joining themselves with Christ to
acknowledge the will of the Father. For them this means a complete gift of
themselves to the flock committed to them.(22) Hence, as they fulfill the
role of the Good Shepherd, in the very exercise of their pastoral charity
they will discover a bond of priestly perfection which draws their life
and activity to unity and coordination. This pastoral charity(23) flows
out in a very special way from the Eucharistic sacrifice. This stands as
the root and center of the whole life of a priest. What takes place on the
altar of sacrifice, the priestly heart must make his own. This cannot be
done unless priests through prayer continue to penetrate more deeply into
the mystery of Christ.
In order to measure and verify this
coordination of life in a concrete way, let priests examine all their
works and projects to see what is the will of God(24)-namely, to see how
their endeavors compare with the goals of the Gospel mission of the
Church. Fidelity to Christ cannot be separated from faithfulness to his
Church. Pastoral charity requires that priests avoid operating in a
vacuum(25) and that they work in a strong bond of union with their bishops
and brother priests. If this be their program, priests will find the
coordination and unity of their own life in the oneness of the Church's
mission. They will be joined with the Lord and through him with the Father
in the Holy Spirit. This will bring them great satisfaction and a full
measure of happiness.(26)
SECTION 2
Special Spiritual Requirements in the Life of a Priest
15. Among the virtues that priests must
possess for their sacred ministry none is so important as a frame of mind
and soul whereby they are always ready to know and do the will of him who
sent them and not their own will.(27) The divine task that they are called
by the Holy Spirit to fulfill(28) surpasses all human wisdom and human
ability. "God chooses the weak things of the world to confound the strong"
(1 Cor 1:27). Aware of his own weakness, the true minister of Christ works
in humility trying to do what is pleasing to God.(29) Filled with the Holy
Spirit,(30) he is guided by him who desires the salvation of all men. He
understands this desire of God and follows it in the ordinary
circumstances of his everyday life. With humble disposition he waits upon
all whom God has sent him to serve in the work assigned to him and in the
multiple experiences of his life.
However, the priestly ministry, since it
is the ministry of the Church itself, can only function in the
hierarchical union of the whole body. Pastoral charity, therefore, urges
priests, as they operate in the framework of this union, to dedicate their
own will by obedience to the service of God and their fellow men. In a
great spirit of faith, let them receive and execute whatever orders the
holy father, their own bishop, or other superiors give or recommend.
With a willing heart let them spend and
even exhaust themselves(31) in whatever task they are given, even though
it be menial and unrecognized. They must preserve and strengthen a
necessary oneness with their brothers in the ministry, especially with
those whom God has selected as visible rulers of his Church. For in this
way they are laboring to build the Body of Christ which grows "through
every gesture of service."(32) This obedience is designed to promote the
mature freedom of the children of God; by its very nature it postulates
that in the carrying out of their work, spurred on by charity, they
develop new approaches and methods for the greater good of the Church.
With enthusiasm and courage, let priests propose new projects and strive
to satisfy the needs of their flocks. Of course, they must be ready to
submit to the decisions of those who rule the Church of God.
By this humility and by willing
responsible obedience, priests conform themselves to Christ. They make
their own the sentiments of Jesus Christ who "emptied himself, taking on
the form of a servant," becoming obedient even to death (Phil 2:7-9). By
this obedience he conquered and made up for the disobedience of Adam, as
the Apostle testifies, "for as by the disobedience of one man, many were
made sinners, so also by the obedience of one, many shall be made
just"(Rom 5:19).
16. (Celibacy is to be embraced and
esteemed as a gift). Perfect and perpetual continence for the sake of the
Kingdom of Heaven, commended by Christ the Lord(33) and through the course
of time as well as in our own days freely accepted and observed in a
praiseworthy manner by many of the faithful, is held by the Church to be
of great value in a special manner for the priestly life. It is at the
same time a sign and a stimulus for pastoral charity and a special source
of spiritual fecundity in the world.(34) Indeed, it is not demanded by the
very nature of the priesthood, as is apparent from the practice of the
early Church(35) and from the traditions of the Eastern Churches. where,
besides those who with all the bishops, by a gift of grace, choose to
observe celibacy, there are also married priests of highest merit. This
holy synod, while it commends ecclesiastical celibacy, in no way intends
to alter that different discipline which legitimately flourishes in the
Eastern Churches. It permanently exhorts all those who have received the
priesthood and marriage to persevere in their holy vocation so that they
may fully and generously continue to expend themselves for the sake of the
flock commended to them.(36)
Indeed, celibacy has a many-faceted
suitability for the priesthood. For the whole priestly mission is
dedicated to the service of a new humanity which Christ, the victor over
death, has aroused through his Spirit in the world and which has its
origin "not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man
but of God (Jn 1:13). Through virginity, then, or celibacy observed for
the Kingdom of Heaven,(37) priests are consecrated to Christ by a new and
exceptional reason. They adhere to him more easily with an undivided
heart,(38) they dedicate themselves more freely in him and through him to
the service of God and men, and they more expeditiously minister to his
Kingdom and the work of heavenly regeneration, and thus they are apt to
accept, in a broad sense, paternity in Christ. In this way they profess
themselves before men as willing to be dedicated to the office committed
to them-namely, to commit themselves faithfully to one man and to show
themselves as a chaste virgin for Christ(39) and thus to evoke the
mysterious marriage established by Christ, and fully to be manifested in
the future, in which the Church has Christ as her only Spouse.(40) They
give, moreover, a living sign of the world to come, by a faith and charity
already made present, in which the children of the resurrection neither
marry nor take wives.(41)
For these reasons, based on the mystery
of Christ and his mission, celibacy, which first was recommended to
priests, later in the Latin Church was imposed upon all who were to be
promoted to sacred orders. This legislation, pertaining to those who are
destined for the priesthood, this holy synod again approves and confirms,
fully trusting this gift of the Spirit so fitting for the priesthood of
the New Testament, freely given by the Father, provided that those who
participate in the priesthood of Christ through the sacrament of
Orders-and also the whole Church-humbly and fervently pray for it. This
sacred synod also exhorts all priests who, in following the example of
Christ, freely receive sacred celibacy as a grace of God, that they
magnanimously and wholeheartedly adhere to it, and that persevering
faithfully in it, they may acknowledge this outstanding gift of the Father
which is so openly praised and extolled by the Lord.(42) Let them keep
before their eyes the great mysteries signified by it and fulfilled in it.
Insofar as perfect continence is thought by many men to be impossible in
our times, to that extent priests should all the more humbly and
steadfastly pray with the Church for that grace of fidelity, which is
never denied those who seek it, and use all the supernatural and natural
aids available. They should especially seek, lest they omit them, the
ascetical norms which have been proved by the experience of the Church and
which are scarcely less necessary in the contemporary world. This holy
synod asks not only priests but all the faithful that they might receive
this precious gift of priestly celibacy in their hearts and ask of God
that he will always bestow this gift upon his Church.
17. (Relationship to the world and
temporal goods, and voluntary poverty.) In their friendly and brotherly
dealings with one another and with other men, priests are able to learn
and appreciate human values and esteem created goods as gifts of God. By
living in the world, let priests know how not to be of the world,
according to the word of our Lord and Master.(43) By using the world as
those who do not use it,(44) let them achieve that freedom whereby they
are free from every inordinate concern and become docile to the voice of
God in their daily life. From this freedom and docility grows spiritual
discretion in which is found the right relationship to the world and
earthly goods. Such a right relationship is of great importance to
priests, because the mission of the Church is fulfilled in the midst of
the world and because created goods are altogether necessary for the
personal development of man. Let them be grateful, therefore, for all that
the heavenly Father has given them to lead a full life rightly, but let
them see all that comes to them in the light of faith, so that they might
correctly use goods in response to the will of God and reject those which
are harmful to their mission.
For priests who have the Lord as their
"portion and heritage," (Num 18:20) temporal goods should be used only
toward ends which are licit according to the doctrine of Christ and the
direction of the Church.
Ecclesiastical goods, properly so
called, according to their nature and ecclesiastical law, should be
administered by priests with the help of capable laymen as far as possible
and should always be employed for those purposes in the pursuit of which
it is licit for the Church to possess temporal goods-namely, for the
carrying out of divine worship, for the procuring of honest sustenance for
the clergy, and for the exercise of the works of the holy apostolate or
works of charity, especially in behalf of the needy.(45) Those goods which
priests and bishops receive for the exercise of their ecclesiastical
office should be used for adequate support and the fulfillment of their
office and status, excepting those governed by particular laws.(46) That
which is in excess they should be willing to set aside for the good of the
Church or for works of charity. Thus they are not to seek ecclesiastical
office or the benefits of it for the increase of their own family
wealth.(47) Therefore, in no way placing their heart in treasures,(48)
they should avoid all greediness and carefully abstain from every
appearance of business.
Priests, moreover, are invited to
embrace voluntary poverty by which they are more manifestly conformed to
Christ and become eager in the sacred ministry. For Christ, though he was
rich, became poor on account of us, that by his need we might become
rich.(49) And by their example the apostles witnessed that a free gift of
God is to be freely given,(50) with the knowledge of how to sustain both
abundance and need.(51) A certain common use of goods, similar to the
common possession of goods in the history of the primitive Church,(52)
furnishes an excellent means of pastoral charity. By living this form of
life, priests can laudably reduce to practice that spirit of poverty
commended by Christ.
Led by the Spirit of the Lord, who
anointed the Savior and sent him to evangelize the poor,(53) priests,
therefore, and also bishops, should avoid everything which in any way
could turn the poor away. Before the other followers of Christ, let
priests set aside every appearance of vanity in their possessions. Let
them arrange their homes so that they might not appear unapproachable to
anyone, lest anyone, even the most humble, fear to visit them.
SECTION THREE
Aids to the Life of Priests
18. (Aids to encourage the spiritual
life.) In order that, in all conditions of life, they may be able to grow
in union with Christ, priests, besides the exercise of their conscious
ministry, enjoy the common and particular means, old and new, which the
Spirit never ceases to arouse in the People of God and which the Church
commends, and sometimes commands,(54) for the sanctification of her
members. Outstanding among all these spiritual aids are those acts by
which the faithful are nourished in the Word of God at the double table of
the Sacred Scripture and the Eucharist.(55) The importance of frequent use
of these for the sanctification of priests is obvious to all. The
ministers of sacramental grace are intimately united to Christ our Savior
and Pastor through the fruitful reception of the sacraments, especially
sacramental Penance, in which, prepared by the daily examination of
conscience, the necessary conversion of heart and love for the Father of
Mercy is greatly deepened. Nourished by spiritual reading, under the light
of faith, they can more diligently seek signs of God's will and impulses
of his grace in the various events of life, and so from day to day become
more docile to the mission they have assumed in the Holy Spirit. They will
always find a wonderful example of such docility in the Blessed Virgin
Mary, who was led by the Holy Spirit to dedicate herself totally to the
mystery of man's redemption.(56) Let priests love and venerate with filial
devotion and veneration this mother of the Eternal Highpriest, Queen of
Apostles and Protector of their own ministry.
In the fulfillment of their ministry
with fidelity to the daily colloquy with Christ, a visit to and veneration
of the Most Holy Eucharist, spiritual retreats and spiritual direction are
of great worth. In many ways, but especially through mental prayer and the
vocal prayers which they freely choose, priests seek and fervently pray
that God will grant them the spirit of true adoration whereby they
themselves, along with the people committed to them, may intimately unite
themselves with Christ the Mediator of the New Testament, and so as
adopted children of God may be able to call out "Abba, Father" (Rom 8:15).
19. (Study and pastoral knowledge.)
Priests are admonished by their bishop in the sacred rite of ordination
that they "be mature in knowledge" and that their doctrine be "spiritual
medicine for the People of God."(57) The knowledge of the sacred minister
ought to be sacred because it is drawn from the sacred source and directed
to a sacred goal. Especially is it drawn from reading and meditating on
the Sacred Scriptures,(58) and it is equally nourished by the study of the
Holy Fathers and other Doctors and monuments or tradition. In order,
moreover, that they may give apt answers to questions posed by men of this
age, it is necessary for priests to know well the doctrines of the
magisterium and the councils and documents of the Roman pontiffs and to
consult the best of prudent writers of theological science.
Since human culture and also sacred
science has progressed in our times, priests are urged to suitably and
without interruption perfect their knowledge of divine things and human
affairs and so prepare themselves to enter more opportunely into
conversation with their contemporaries.
Therefore, let priests more readily
study and effectively learn the methods of evangelization and the
apostolate. Let opportune aids be prepared with all care, such as the
institution of courses and meetings according to territorial conditions,
the erection of centers of pastoral studies, the establishment of
libraries, and the qualified supervision of studies by suitable persons.
Moreover, let bishops, either individually or united in groups, see to it
that all their priests at established intervals, especially a few years
after their ordination,(59) may be able to frequent courses in which they
will be given the opportunity to acquire a fuller knowledge of pastoral
methods and theological science, both in order that they may strengthen
their spiritual life and mutually communicate their apostolic experiences
with their brothers.(60) New pastors and those who have newly begun
pastoral work, as well as those who are sent to other dioceses or nations,
should be helped by these and other suitable means with special care.
Finally, the bishops will be solicitous
that there will be some who dedicate themselves to a deeper study of
theology, that there will not be lacking suitable teachers for the
formation of clerics, that the rest of the priests and the faithful will
be helped to acquire the doctrine they need, and that healthy progress
will be encouraged in the sacred disciplines, so necessary for the Church.
20. (Providing equitable remuneration
for priests.) As those dedicated to the service of God and the fulfillment
of the office entrusted to them, priests deserve to receive an equitable
remuneration, because "the laborer is worthy of his hire," (Lk 10:7)(61)
and "the Lord directed that those who preach the Gospel should have their
living from the Gospel" (1 Cor 9:14). Wherefore, insofar as an equitable
remuneration of the priests would not be provided otherwise, the faithful
themselves-that is, those in whose behalf the priest labors-are truly
obliged to see to it that they can provide what help is necessary for the
honorable and worthy life of the priests. The bishops, however, should
admonish the faithful concerning this obligation of theirs. And they
should see to if whether each individual for his own diocese or, more
aptly, several together for their common territory-that norms are
established according to which suitable support is rightly provided for
those who do fulfill or have fulfilled a special office in the service of
the People of God. The remuneration received by each one, in accord with
his office and the conditions of time and place, should be fundamentally
the same for all in the same circumstances and befitting his station.
Moreover, those who have dedicated themselves to the service of the
priesthood, by reason of the remuneration they receive, should not only be
able to honorably provide for themselves but also themselves be provided
with some means of helping the needy. For the ministry to the poor has
always been held in great honor in the Church from its beginnings.
Furthermore, this remuneration should be such that it will permit priests
each year to take a suitable and sufficient vacation, something which
indeed the bishops should see that their priests are able to have.
Special importance ought to be given to
the office fulfilled by sacred ministers. Therefore the so-called system
of benefices should be relinquished or at least so reformed that the place
of the benefits, or the right to revenue from the endowment attached to an
office, would be held as secondary, and the first place in law would be
given to the ecclesiastical office itself. From this it should be
understood that whatever office is conferred in a stable manner is to be
exercised for a spiritual purpose.
21. (On setting up common funds and
establishing a system of social assistance for priests.) We should always
keep before our eyes the example of the faithful of the early Church in
Jerusalem, who "held all things in common" (Acts 4;32) "and distribution
was made to each according to each one's need" (Acts 4:35). So it is
supremely fitting, at least in regions where the support of the clergy
completely or largely depends on the offerings of the faithful, that their
offerings for this purpose be collected by a particular diocesan
institution, which the bishop administers with the help of priests and,
when useful, of laymen who are expert in financial matters. Further it is
hoped that insofar as is possible in individual dioceses or regions there
be established a common fund enabling bishops to satisfy obligations to
other deserving persons and meet the needs of various dioceses. This would
also enable wealthier dioceses to help the poorer, that the need of the
latter might be supplemented by the abundance of the former.(62) These
common funds, even though they should be principally made up of the
offerings of the faithful, also should be provided for by other duly
established sources.
Moreover, in nations where social
security for the clergy is not yet aptly established, let the episcopal
conferences see to it that-in accord with ecclesiastical and civil
laws-there may be either diocesan institutes, whether federated with one
another or established for various dioceses together, or territorial
associations, which under the vigilance of the hierarchy would make
sufficient and suitable provision for a program of preventive medicine,
and the necessary support of priests who suffer from sickness, invalid
conditions or old age. Let priests share in this established institute,
prompted by a spirit of solidarity with their brothers to take part in
their tribulations(63) while at the same time being freed from an anxious
concern for their own future so that they can cultivate evangelical
poverty more readily and give themselves fully to the salvation of souls.
Let those in charge of this act to bring together the institutes of
various nations in order that their strength he more firmly achieved and
more broadly based.
CONCLUSION AND EXHORTATION
22. Having before our eyes the joys of
the priestly life, this holy synod cannot at the same time overlook the
difficulties which priests experience in the circumstances of contemporary
life. For we know how much economic and social conditions are transformed,
and even more how much the customs of men are changed, how much the scale
of values is changed in the estimation of men. As a result, the ministers
of the Church and sometimes the faithful themselves feel like strangers in
this world, anxiously looking for the ways and words with which to
communicate with it. For there are new obstacles which have arisen to the
faith: the seeming unproductivity of work done, and also the bitter
loneliness which men experience can lead them to the danger of becoming
spiritually depressed.
The world which today is entrusted to
the loving ministry of the pastors of the Church is that which God so
loved that he would give his only Son for it.(1) Truly this world, indeed
weighed down with many sins but also endowed with many talents, provides
the Church with the living stones(2) which are built up into the dwelling
place of God in the Spirit.(3) This same Holy Spirit, while impelling the
Church to open new ways to go to the world of today, suggests and favors
the growth of fitting adaptations in the ministry of priests.
Priests should remember that in
performing their office they are never alone, but strengthened by the
power of Almighty God, and believing in Christ who called them to share in
his Priesthood, they should devote themselves to their ministry with
complete trust, knowing that God can cause charity to grow in them.(4) Let
them be mindful of their brothers in the priesthood as well, and also of
the faithful of the entire world who are associated with them. For all
priests cooperate in carrying out the saving plan of God,(5) that is, the
Mystery of Christ, the sacrament hidden from the ages in God, which is
only brought to fulfillment little by little through the collaboration of
many ministries in building up the Body of Christ until it grows to the
fullness of time. All this, hidden with Christ in God,(6) can be uniquely
perceived by faith. For the leaders of the People of God must walk by
faith, following the example of faithful Abraham, who in faith "obeyed by
going out into a place which he was to receive for an inheritance; and he
went out not knowing where he was going" (Heb 11:8). Indeed, the dispenser
of the mysteries of God can see himself in the man who sowed his field, of
whom the Lord said: "then sleep and rise, night and day, and the seed
should sprout without his knowing" (Mk 4:27). As for the rest, the Lord
Jesus, who said: "Take courage, I have overcome the world," (Jn 16:33) did
not by these words promise his Church a perfect victory in this world.
Certainly this holy synod rejoices that the earth has been sown with the
seed of the Gospel which now bears fruit in many places, under the
direction of the Holy Spirit who fills the whole earth and who has stirred
up a missionary spirit in the hearts of many priests and faithful.
Concerning all this, this holy synod gives fervent thanks to the priests
of the entire world. "Now to him who is able to accomplish all things in a
measure far beyond what we ask or conceive in keeping with the power that
is at work in us-to him be glory in the Church and in Christ Jesus" (Eph
3:20-21).
NOTES
Preface
1. Second Vatican Council, Constitution
on the Sacred Liturgy, Dec. 4, 1963; AAS 56 (1964) pp 7ff; Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium Nov. 21, 1964: AAS 57 (1965) p 5ff; Decree
Christus Dominus on Pastoral Duties of Bishops, Oct. 28, 1965; Decree on
Priestly Training, Oct. 28, 1965.
Chapter 1
1. Cf. Mt 3:16; Lk 4:18; Acts 4:27,
10:38.
2. Cf. 1 Pt 2:5,9.
3. Cf. 1 Pt 3:15.
4.Cf. Rev 19:10; Second Vatican Council,
Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 35: AAS 57 (1965) p
40-41.
5. Council of Trent, 23rd session,
chapter 1, canon 1: Denzinger 957 and 961 (1764 and 1771).
6. Cf. Jn 20:21; Second Vatican Council,
Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 22: AAS 57 (1965) pp
21-28.
7. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 22: AAS 57 (1965) pp 33-36.
8. Cf. ibid
9. Cf. Roman Pontifical Ordination of a
Priest, preface. These words are already found in the Verona Sacramentary
(ed. L.C. Moehlberg, Rome 1956, p 122); also in Frankish Missal (ed. L.C.
Moehlberg, Rome 1957, p 9) and in the Book of Sacramentaries of the Roman
Church (ed. L.C. Moehlberg, Rome 1960, p 25) and Roman German Pontificals
(ed. Vogel-Elze, Vatican City 1963, vol. I, p 34).
10. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 10: AAS 57 (1965) pp 14-15.
11. Cf. Rom 15:16 (Greek).
12. Cf. 1 Cor 11:26.
13 St. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 10, 6:
PL 41, 284.
14. Cf. 1 Cor 15:24.
15. Cf. Heb 5:1.
16. Cf. Heb 2:17; 4:15.
17. Cf. 1 Cor 9:19-23 (Vg.).
18. Cf. Acts 13:2.
19. Paul VI, encyclical Ecclesiam Suam,
Aug.6, 1964: AAS 56 (1964), pp 627 and 638.
20. Cf. Rom 12:2.
21. Cf. Jn 10:14-16.
22. Cf. St. Polycarp, Epist. ad
Philippenses, 6, 1 (ed. F.X. Funk, Apostolic Fathers, I, p 303).
Chapter 2
1. Cf. 1 Pt 1:23; Acts 6:7; 12:24. "(The
apostles) preached the word of truth and founded Churches." (St.
Augustine, On Psalms, 44, 23; PL 36, 508).
2. Cf. Mal 2:7; 1 Tim 4:11-13; 1 Tim
1:9.
3. Cf. Mk 16:16.
4. Cf. 2 Cor 11:7. All that has been
said regarding bishops also applies to priests inasmuch as they are
cooperators of the bishops. Cf. Statuta Ecclesiae Antiqua, c. 3 (ed. Ch.
Munier, Paris 1960, p 79); Decree of Gracian, c. 6, D.88 (ed. Friedberg,
1, 307); Council of Trent, Decree De Reform., Session 5, c. 2, n 9
(Ecumenical Council Decrees, ed. Herder, Rome 1963, p 645); Session 24, c.
4 (p 739); Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium,
Nov. 21, 1964, n 25: AAS 57 (1965), pp 29-31.
5. Cf. Constitutiones Apostolorum II,
26, 7: "(Priests) are teachers of sacred science as the Lord himself
commanded when he said: 'Going, therefore, teach, etc.'" (ed. F.X. Funk,
Didascalia et Constitutiones Apostolorum, I, Paderborn 1905, p 105);
Leonine Sacramentary and other sacramentaries up to the Roman Pontifical,
preface of the ordination of priests: "By this providence, Lord, you have
added to the apostles of your Son fellow teachers of the faith through
whom the apostles have filled the whole world with their teaching." Ordo
Book of the Mozarabic Liturgy, preface to the ordination of priests:
"Teacher of peoples and ruler of subjects, he keeps intact the Catholic
faith and announces true salvation to all." (ed. M. Ferotin, Paris, 1904,
col. 55).
6. Cf. Gal 2:5.
7. Cf. 1 Pt 2:12.
8. Cf. Rite of priestly ordination in
the Alexandrian Jocobite Church: "...Gather your people to the word of
doctrine like a foster-mother who nourishes her children" (H. Denzinger,
Oriental Rites, Book II, Wurzburg 1863, p 14).
9. Cf. Mt 28:19; Mk 16:16; Tertullian,
On Baptism, 14, 2 (The Body of Christians, Latin Series, I p 289, 11-13);
St. Athanasius, Against the Arians, 2, 42 (PG 26, 237); St. Jerome, On
Matthew, 28, 19 (PL 26, 218 BC): "First let them teach all nations, and
then pour water on those who have learned. It cannot be that the body
receive the sacrament of baptism unless the soul first has received the
truth of faith;" St. Thomas, "Exposition of the first decretal," n 1:
"Sending his disciples to preach, our Savior enjoined on them three
things: first, that they teach the faith; second, that they confer the
sacraments on believers.... (ed. Marietti, Opuscula Theologica, Taurini-Rome
1954, 1138).
10. Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Dec. 4, 1963, n 35, 2: AAS 56 (1964),
p 109.
11. Cf. ibid, nn 33, 35, 48, 52 (pp
108-109, 113, 114).
12. Cf. ibid, n 7 (pp 100-101); Pius
XII, encyclical letter, Mystici Corporis, June 29, 1943: AAS 35 (1943), p
230.
13. St. Ignatius Martyr, Smyrn., 8, 1-2
(ed. F.X. Funk, p 282, 6-15); Constitutions of the Apostles, VIII, 12, 3
(ed. F.X. Funk, p 496); VIII,29, 2 (p 532).
14. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 28: AAS 57 (1965), pp 33-36.
15. "The Eucharist indeed is a quasi
consummation of the spiritual life, and the goal of all the sacraments"
(St. Thomas, Summa Theol. III, q.73, a.3 c); cf. Summa Theol. III, q. 65,
a. 3.
16. Cf. St. Thomas, Summa Theol. III, q.
65, a. 3, ad 1; q. 79, a.1, c. and ad 1.
17. Cf. Eph 5:19-20.
18. Cf. St. Jerome, Epistles, 114, 2 (PL
22, 934), See Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,
Dec. 4, 1963, nn 122-127: AAS 56 (1964), pp 130-132.
19. Paul VI, encyclical letter Mysterium
Fidei, Sept. 3, 1965: AAS 57 (1965), p 771.
20. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 28: AAS 57 (1965), pp 33-36.
21. Cf. 2 Cor 10:8; 13:10.
22. Cf. Gal 1:10.
23. Cf. 1 Cor 4:14.
24. Cf. Didascalia, II, 34, 3; II, 46,
6; II,47, 1; Constitutions of the Apostles, II, 47, 1 (ed. F.X. Funk,
Didascalia and Constitutions, I, pp 116, 142 and 143).
25. Cf. Gal 4:3; 5:1 and 13.
26. Cf. St. Jerome, Epistles, 58, 7 (PL
22, 584).
27. Cf. 1 Pt 4:10 ff.
28. Cf. Mt 25:34-45.
29. Cf. Lk 4:18.
30. Other categories could be named,
e.g. migrants, nomads, etc. The Decree on the Pastoral Duties of Bishops,
Oct. 28, 1965, treats of these.
31. Cf. Didascalia, II, 59, 1-3 (ed. F.X.
Funk, I, p 170); Paul VI, allocution to Italian clergy present at the 13th
week-long congress at Orvieto on pastoral aggiornamento, Sept. 6, 1963:
AAS 55 (1963) pp 750ff.
32. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 28: AAS 57 (1965), p 35.
33. Cf. cited Ecclesiastical
Constitution of the Apostles, XVIII: (ed. Th. Schermann, Die allgemeine
Kirchenordnung, I, Paderborn 1914, p 26; A. Harnack, T. u. U., II, 4, p
13, nn 18 and 19); Pseudo-Jerome, The Seven Orders of the Church (ed. A.W.
Kalff, Wurzburg 1937, p 45); St. Isidore of Hispali, Ecclesiastical
Offices, c. VII (PL 83, 787).
34. Cf. Didascalia, II, 28, 4 (ed. F.X.
Funk, p 108); Constitutions of the Apostles, II, 28, 4;II, 34, 3 (ibid.,
pp 109 and 117).
35. Constitutions of the Apostles, VIII,
16, 4 (ed. F.X. Funk, 1, p 522, 13); cf. Epitome of the Constitutions of
the Apostles, VI (ibid., II, p 80, 3-4); Testamentum Domini, (transl. I.E.
Rahmani, Moguntiae 1899, p 69). Also in Trad. Apost. (ed. B. Botte, La
Tradition Apostolique, Munster, i. W. 1963, p 20).
36. Cf. Nm 11:16-25.
37. Roman Pontifical on the ordination
of a priest, preface: these words are also found in the Leonine
Sacramentary, the Gelasian Sacramentary and the Gregorian Sacramentary.
Similar words can be found in the Oriental Liturgies: cf. Trad Apost.:
(ancient Latin version of Verona, ed. B. Botte, La Tradition Apostolique
de St. Hippolyte. Essai de reconstruction, Munster i. W. 1963, p 20);
Constitutions of the Apostles, VIII, 16, 4 (ed. F.X. Funk, I, p 522, 16-
17); Epitome on the Constitutions of the Apostles, 6 (ed. F.X. Funk, II, p
20, 5-7); Testamentum Domini (transl. I.E. Rahmani, Moguntiae 1899, p 69);
Euchologium Serapionis, XXVII (ed. F.X. Funk, Didascalia and
Constitutions, II, p 190, lines 1-7); Maronite Rite of Ordination (transl.
H. Denzinger, Rites of the Orientals, II, Wurzburg 1863, p. 161). Among
the Fathers can be cited: Theodore of Mopsuestia, On First Timothy, 3, 8
(ed. Swete, II, pp 119-121); Theodoretus, Questions on Numbers, XVIII (PG
80, 372 b).
38. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 28: AAS 57 (1965), p 35.
39. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter
Sacerdotii Nostri Primordia, Aug. 1, 1959: AAS 51 (1959), p 576; St. Pius
X, Exhortation to the Clergy Haerent Animo, Aug. 4, 1908: Acts of St. Pius
X, vol. IV (1908), pp 237 ff.
40. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree
on the Pastoral Duties of Bishops, Oct. 28, 1956 nn 15 and 16.
41. The Cathedral Chapter is already
found in established law, as the "senate and assembly" of the bishop (Code
of Canon Law, c.391), or if there is not one, an assembly of diocesan
consultors (cf. Code of Canon Law, cc. 423-428). It is our desire to give
recognition to such institutions so that modern circumstances and
necessities might better be provided for. As is evident, this synod of
priests forms the pastoral consilium spoken of in the Decree on the
Pastoral Duties of Bishops of Oct. 28, 1965 (n.27), of which the laity can
also be members, and whose function is mainly to map out a plan of action
for pastoral work. Concerning priests as counselors of the bishops, one
might refer to the Didascalia, II, 28, 4 (ed. F.X. Funk,II, p 108); also
Constitutions of the Apostles, II 28,4 (ed. F.X. Funk, I, p 109); St.
Ignatius Martyr, Magn. 6, 1 (ed. F.X. Funk, p 234, 10-16); Trall. 3, 1
(ed. F.X. Funk, p 244, 10-12); Origen, Against Celsus, 3, 30: "Priests are
counselors or 'bouleytai'" (PG 11, 957 d-960 a).
42. St. Ignatius Martyr, Magn. 6, 1:
(ed. F.X. Funk, p 234, 10-13); St. Ignatius Martyr, Trall., 3, 1: (ibid.,
p 244, 10-12); St. Jerome, On Isaiah, II, 3 (PL 24, 61 A).
43. Cf. Paul VI, allocution to the
family heads of Rome and Lenten speakers, March 1, 1965, in the Sistine
Hall: AAS 57 (1965), p 326.
44. Cf. Constitutions of the Apostles,
VIII 47, 39: (ed. F.X. Funk, p 577).
45. Cf. 3 Jn 8.
46. Cf. Jn. 17:23.
47. Cf. Heb 13:1-2.
48. Cf. Heb 13:16.
49. Cf. Mt 5:10.
50. Cf. 1 Thes 2:12; Col 1:13.
51. Cf. Mt 23:8. Also Paul VI,
encyclical letter Ecclesiam Suam, Aug. 6, 1964: AAS 58 (1964) p 647.
52. Cf. Eph 4:7 and 16; Constitutions of
the Apostles, VIII, 1, 20: (ed. F.X. Funk, I, p 467).
53. Cf. Phil 2:21.
54. Cf. 1 Jn 4:1.
55. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 37: AAS 57 (1965), pp 42-43.
56. Cf. Eph 4:14.
57.Cf.Second Vatican Council, Decree on
Ecumenism, Nov. 21, 1964: AAS 57 (1965), pp 90ff.
58. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov 21, 1964, n 37: AAS 57 (1965), pp 42-43.
59. Cf. Heb 7:3.
60. Cf. Lk 10:1.
61. Cf. 1 Pt 2:25.
62. Cf. Acts 20:28.
63. Cf. Mt 9:36.
64. Roman Pontifical, on the ordination
of a priest.
65. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree
on Priestly Training, Oct. 28, 1965, n 2.
66. Paul VI, allocution of May 5, 1965:
L'Osservatore Romano, 5-6-65, p 1.
67. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree
on Priestly Training, Oct. 28, 1965, n 2.
68. The Fathers teach this in their
explanations of Christ's words to Peter: "Do you love me? ...Feed my
sheep." (Jn 21:17); This St. John Chrysostom, On the Priesthood, II, 1-2
(PG 47-48, 633); St.Gregory the Great, Reg. Past. Liber, P I c. 5 (PL 77,
19 a).
Chapter 3
1. Cf. 2 Cor 12:9.
2. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Ad
Catholici Sacerdotii, Dec. 20, 1935: AAS 28 (1936) n 10.
3. Cf. Jn 10:36.
4. Lk 24:26.
5. Cf. Eph 4:13.
6. Cf. 2 Cor 3:8-9.
7. Cf. among others: St. Pius X,
exhortation to the clergy Haerent Animo, Aug. 4, 1908: St. Pius X, AAS 4
(1908), pp 237ff. Pius XI, encyclical letter Ad Catholici Sacerdotii, Dec.
20, 1935; AAS 28 (1936). Pius XII apostolic exhortation Menti nostrae,
Sept. 23, 1950: AAS (1950) 657ff. John XXIII, encyclical letter Sacerdoti
Nostri Primordia, Aug. 1, 1959: AAS 51 (1959) 545ff.
8. Cf. St. Thomas, Summa Theol. II-II,
q. 188, a. 7.
9. Cf. Heb 3:9-10.
10. Acts 16:14.
11. Cf. 2 Cor 4:7.
12. Cf. Eph 3:9.
13. Cf. Roman Pontifical on the
ordination of priests.
14. Cf. Roman Missal, Prayer over the
Offerings of the Ninth Sunday after Pentecost.
15. Paul VI, encyclical letter Mysterium
Fidei, Sept. 3, 1965: AAS 57 (1965), pp 761-762. Cf. Second Vatican
Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Dec. 4, 1963, nn 26 and 27;
AAS 56 (1964), p 107.
16. Cf. Jn 10:11.
17. Cf. 2 Cor 1:7.
18. Cf. 2 Cor 1:4.
19. Cf. 1 Cor 10:33.
20. Cf. Jn 3:8.
21. Cf. Jn 4:34.
22. Cf. 1 Jn 3:16.
23. "May it be a duty of love to feed
the Lord's flock" (St. Augustine, Tract on John, 123, 5: PL 35, 1967).
24. Cf. Rom 12:2.
25. Cf. Gal 2:2.
26. Cf. 2 Cor 7:4.
27. Cf. Jn 4:34; 5:30; 6:38.
28. Cf. Acts 13:2.
29. Cf. Eph 5:10.
30. Cf. Acts 20:22.
31. Cf. 2 Cor 12:15.
32. Cf. Eph 4:11-16.
33. Cf. Mt 19:22.
34. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964 n 42: AAS 57 (1965) pp 47-49.
35. Cf. 1 Tim 3:2-5: Tt 1:6.
36. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Ad
Catholici Sacerdotii Dec. 30, 1935: AAS 28 (1936) p 28.
37. Cf. Mt 19:12.
38. Cf. 1 Cor 7:32-34.
39. Cf. 2 Cor 11:2.
40. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 42 and 44: AAS 57 (1965), pp
47-49 and 50-51; Decree on the Renewal of Religious Life, Oct. 18, 1965, n
12.
41. Cf. Lk 20:35-36; Pius XI, encyclical
letter Ad Catholici Sacerdotii Dec.20, 1935, AAS 28 (1936) pp 24-28; Pius
XII, encyclical letter Sacra Virginitas, March 25, 1954, AAS 46 (1954) nn
169-172.
42. Cf. Mt 19:11.
43. Cf. Jn 17:14-16.
44. Cf. 1 Cor 7:31.
45. Council of Antioch, canon 25: Mansi
2, 1328; Decree of Gratian, c. 23, C. 12 q. 1. (ed. Friedberg, 1, pp
684-685).
46. This is to be understood especially
with regard to the laws and customs prevailing in the Eastern Churches.
47. Council of Paris a, 829, can 15:
M.G.H. Sect. III, Concilia, t. 2, para 6 622; Council of Trent, Session
XXV, De Reform., chapter 1.
48. Ps 62:11 (Vulgate 61).
49. Cf. 2 Cor 8:9.
50. Cf. Acts 8:18-25.
51. Cf. Phil 4:12.
52. Cf. Acts 2:42-47.
53. Cf. Lk 4:18.
54. Cf. Code of Canon Law, 125 ff.
55. Cf. Second Vatican Council Decree on
the Renewal of Religious Life, Oct. 28, 1965, n 6; Dogmatic Constitution
on Divine Revelation, Nov. 18, 1965, n 21.
56. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen Gentium, Nov. 21, 1964, n 65: AAS 57 (1965) pp 64-65.
57. Roman Pontifical On the Ordination
of Priests.
58. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic
Constitution on Divine Revelation, Nov. 18, n 25.
59. This course is not the same as the
pastoral course which is to be undertaken immediately after ordination,
spoken of in the Decree on Priestly Training, Oct.28, 1965, n 22.
60. Second Vatican Council, Decree on
the Pastoral Duties of Bishops. Oct.28, 1965, n 16.
61. Cf. Mt 10:10; 1 Cor 9:7; 1 Tim 5:18.
62. Cf. 2 Cor 8:14.
63. Cf. Phil 4:14.
Conclusion and exhortation
1. Cf. Jn 3:16.
2. Cf. 1 Pt 2:5.
3. Cf. Eph 2:22.
4. Cf. Roman Pontifical, on the
ordination of priests.
5. Cf. Eph 3:9.
6. Cf. Col 3:3.
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