
Vatican City, Jun 1, 2017 / 08:54 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Thursday Pope Francis spoke with the Vatican department in charge of priests, saying he is always happy when he sees young priests, because they are important for Christ and represent the youthful face of the Church.
“I am always joyful when I meet young priests, because in them I see the youth of the Church,” the Pope said June 1.
He pointed to various young biblical figures, such as David, who was not presented by his father as a potential king because of his young age, and the prophet Jeremiah, who thought that he was too young for the mission the Lord entrusted to him.
Speaking directly to young priests, Francis said “you are chosen, you are dear to the Lord! God looks at you with the tenderness of a Father and, after making your heart fall in love, will not let your steps waver.”
“You are important in his eyes and he has confidence that you will be at the height of the mission to which you have been called,” he said, stressing that it’s important for young priests to find pastors and bishops “who encourage them in this perspective, and not only wait for them because there is need for a replacement and to fill empty places!”
Pope Francis spoke to members of the Congregation for Clergy currently participating in their plenary assembly.
The gathering takes place just six months after the promulgation of the congregation’s new “Ratio Fundamentalis,” the Vatican’s document on priestly formation, which was released Dec. 7, 2016.
This document, Francis said, “speaks of integral formation, capable of including all aspects of life; and so it indicates the path to form the missionary disciple. A fascinating and demanding path.”
In reflecting on the fascinating and demanding aspects of this path, the Pope said he immediately thought of young priests, who “live the joy of the beginning of ministry and, together, feel the weight.”
A young priest, he said, “lives between the enthusiasm of the first projects and the anxiety of apostolic fatigue, in which they immerse themselves with a certain fear, which is a sign of wisdom.”
While the joy and strength of his recent anointing is acutely felt, the new priest’s shoulders gradually become “burdened” by the weight of the responsibility of his various pastoral commitments and the expectations of his flock, the Pope observed.
“How does a young priest live all this? What does he carry in his heart? What does he need so that his feet, which run to bring the joyful announcement of the Gospel, are not paralyzed in front of the fear of the first difficulties?” the Pope asked.
He noted that young people today are frequently judged “a bit superficially, and are too easily labeled as a ‘liquid’ generation, deprived of passions and ideals.”
While there are certainly youth who are fragile, disoriented and “infected by the culture of consumerism and individualism,” this doesn’t mean that youth capable of generous service and involvement don’t exist, Francis said.
“With all their limits, they are always a resource,” he said, and urged participants to ask themselves how they, in their parishes, view young priests.
Turning again to the new Ratio, which speaks of the priest as “a missionary disciple in permanent formation,” Pope Francis underlined three attitudes he said are key for any priest, but especially those who are just beginning their ministry.
These attitudes, he said, are: to pray without ceasing, to always walk and to share with your heart.
Consistent prayer is essential in the life of a priest “because we can be fishers of men only if we first recognize that we have been ‘caught’ by the tenderness of the Lord,” he said.
Like the fishermen of Galilee who dropped their nets and followed Jesus, priests have also left behind their own personal plans in order to take up their own nets and “catch” the faithful entrusted to them, the Pope said, adding that “if we are not strictly linked to (the Lord), our fishing will never be successful.”
To live in harmony in prayer, work and rest “represents a precious resource to face apostolic fatigues,” Francis said, stressing that “every day we need to stop ourselves, putting ourselves in a position to listen to the Word of God and to pause in front of the tabernacle.”
He also touched on the need to listen to one’s body, “which is a good doctor,” and which tells us when we’ve reached the limit.
On the need to always keep walking, the Pope said this is important because a priest never really “arrives,” but remains a disciple, a pilgrim “overlooking the threshold of the ministry of God and the holy ground of the people entrusted to him.”
A priest, Pope Francis said, can never “feel satisfied” or let go of a certain “healthy apprehension that makes him stretch out his hands to the Lord” in order to be trained and fulfilled.
He told priests to always “be open to the surprises of God,” adding that with this openness to what is new, young priests especially “can be creative in evangelization, frequenting with discernment the new places of communication, where faces, stories and the questions of people are met, developing the ability to socialize, to relate and to announce the faith.”
Finally, Francis pointed to the need to share with one’s heart, because “priestly life is not a bureaucratic office nor a collection of religious or liturgical practices to get through.”
Priests, he said, carry in their own flesh “the joys and anguish of the people,” spending time with them and listening “in order to heal the wounds of others, and offering the tenderness of the Father to all.”
New priests have a prime opportunity to live this experience by sharing with youth and teens, Francis said, explaining that this means being with them “not only as a friend among others, but as the one who knows how to share their life with his heart, to listen to their questions and participate concretely in the different ups and downs of their lives.”
“Youth don’t need a professional on the sacred or a hero who, from above and from the outside, responds to their questions,” he said. “Rather, they are attracted by whoever sincerely commits their lives, supporting them with respect and listening to them with love.”
To genuinely share their experiences “means having a heart full of passion and compassion, above all toward youth,” the Pope said, adding that these three qualities imply the priestly life is lived by “looking up and thinking big.”
“It’s not an easy task, but one can full trust in the Lord, because always precedes us on the journey!” he said, and asked for Mary’s intercession and guidance.
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Oh, good heavens! The punch lines write themselves!
Never mind the uncanny resemblance between Bergoglio and Stan Laurel of Laurel ‘n’ Hardy.
Anyone old enough to have seen the Ed Sullivan Show in the sixties should get this one:
I’m wondering if Bergoglio will do his impression of the pontifical Italian mouse, Popo Gigio.
Good ones, Briney, but frankly, Hardy fills Imbroglio’s shoes better since he is the heavier half of the two.
It’s one thing to enjoy a joke, or to even take a joke, but it’s quite another to be a joke. Of course court-jester James Martin “is slated to attend.”
Did they invite Krusty the Clown? Oh veh! Who’s paying for all this? It’s a boondoggle for bozos.
Should be a great time for a clown Mass. They might even get the Pope to preside again. Maybe Fr. Martin will wear a rainbow wig?
Maybe the comedians could cram into Cardinal Burke’s apartment, like a Fiat. And the circus performers could be called back to join them. Together, they could hang around to run the Synod on Synodaling II, providing a fitting finale to this pontificate.
That clown finale would resound and re-echo. If only the echo would end the show Speaking of sound. Deleting the “S” leaves “Ynod” and “Ynodaling.” Don’t those sound just like “Yodel” or “Ya Know”?
Onto the pope musing on music. Who knew? Wikipedia defines yodeling: “…
repeated and rapid changes of pitch between the low-pitch chest register (or “chest voice”) and the high-pitch head register or falsetto. The English word yodel is derived from the German word jodeln, meaning “to utter the syllable jo” (pronounced “yo”).
YO!
I’ve said before on this site that the Bergoglian Anti-papacy is akin to a circus. Now we have more proof that Bergoglio is assembling his fellow clowns. I suggest a theme song for this papacy: Judy Collins singing “Send in the Clowns.”
I’ll wait for the likes of Robert Royal and Gavin Ashenden to comment on this latest Francis move.
Comedians are serious guys. They cannot be taken lightly. Through their comic stuff, comedians provide joy to fellow pilgrims on common journey.
Indubitably Dr. C., the comic stuff of comedians is serious. 🧐
!!!BRAVO!!!
I’m wondering whether Jay Leno will cop a red beanie when all is said and done!
He’d surely do a better job than the rest of Bergoglio’s cardinals!
And maybe Bergoglio and Jim Carrey will do a scene from “Dumb and Dumber”! (With a nod to our esteemed commentary colleague, God’s Fool.)
“Just when I think you couldn’t be any dumber, you go and do something like this, and totally redeem yourself!!!”
LOLOL!
Nicely done, dear Fool! You always have the apropos bon mot!
Isn’t this the best all-time story from the Bergoglio Imbroglio?
So funny! So fitting! So absurd!
God is good to us!
Putting it all into the proper perspective as only He can!
Aha! Now I understand!
This entire Bergoglian papacy has been an extended exercise in schtick! Jorge is just a Borscht Belt holdover whose buddies call him “Shecky.”
And Tucho’s problem isn’t that he’s a heretic. It’s just that he’s stepped over the line by airing his blue material during matinees.
Cupich? McElroy? Hollerich? Martin? Stowe? Paglia?
They’re not really serious about excusing sin and condemning orthodoxy.
They’re just Uncle Bergie’s Vat Pack, trying to get a chuckle from an admittedly sedate and backwardist audience.
So ease off, you Rad-Trad retreads! Don’t forget to tip your servers, and the Vat Pack will be here all week!
Given to speed read, I saw “comic” as “con.”
This show “aims to establish a link between the Catholic Church and comic artists…”
Because con art is good for the Church.
And Briney: That rad-trad retreat was the best! As was the VAT pack!
The gathering won’t be complete if it does not include Fr. Guido Sarducci.
If the Pope really wanted a laugh, he should have invited America’s #1 late-night comic, Greg Gutfeld, to mix it up with Whoopi and Colbert.
No question. Bergoglio’s will be remembered as…
The Papacy With The Big Red Nose.