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We're With You, Priests
Posted by Tom Hoopes
Saturday, June 20, 2009 5:02 AM
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We’re collecting resources for the Year for Priests. Here is our editorial thanking priests.
Thank You, Father
As the Year
for Priests begins, we lay editors of the Register want to take a moment to
thank priests.
We want to thank not only the
priests who have been our friends, but also those we barely knew, who did more
for us than our friends ever could.
We want to thank not only the
priests who inspire us with their words, but also those who moved us more
deeply with the daily work of their priesthood than they ever could with words.
We want to thank not only those men
who gave up their retirement, and their well-deserved rest, to enter the
priesthood as late vocations, but also — especially — those who as young men
saw their whole life ahead of them and handed all of it to Christ.
We want to reassure them that the
attacks on the priesthood will not prevail, because Christ doesn’t take their
kind of generosity lightly.
We know that there have been
terrible, scandalous priests. This has been true from the beginning — from the
original Twelve Apostles through the early Christian heresies, from the
scandals before the Reformation to the scandals of the 20th century.
But we also know that the priesthood
is under attack.
Priests know it, too.
Whenever someone looks at them
suspiciously, whenever a mother hurries her children away from them, whenever
they read an antagonistic article about how the life of a priest makes them
prone to become monsters, they know it.
Their noble, loving sacrifice is so
often made to look ugly and twisted — the opposite of what it is. The whole
group is too often defined by the exceptions in a way few of us ever have to
deal with.
But the priesthood will survive, and
grow stronger. In fact, it is already growing stronger. There are more new
priests than we have seen in a long time, and the new generation of priests is
more committed to the Church’s mission than any in memory.
We want to tell the faithful priests
who unjustly suffer from these attacks that we’re on their side and, more
importantly, remind them what Christ said: Rejoice and be glad on this day, for
your name is great in heaven.
Thank you, priests, for sacrificing
the fulfillment of “making it in the world” in order to give us a chance to
make it in the next world. You don’t take on jobs — they are appointed to you.
You put your own will at the disposal of the Church, for us. We are grateful.
Thank you for bringing our children
into the Church, and sustaining their souls with the sacraments. And thank you
for welcoming them into the Church informally, as well. We see them look at you
like celebrities, and we’re glad the first “celebrity” they got to meet was a
man of God. Thank you for patiently listening to them, for taking such joy in
teasing them, and for showing them the true face of Christ: the gentle one who
said “Let the children come to me.”
Thank
you, priests, for presiding at our marriages, even while you yourselves live
such that you can be ready to serve your people at a moment’s notice. Sometimes
married people sigh and think envious thoughts about living alone. But in the
end, it’s hard for us to imagine how you do it. Thank you for risking
loneliness to serve us and our families.
Thank you, priests, for putting
yourself in the unenviable position of dealing with us at our worst moments —
when we’re anxious, upset, depressed, even a little out of our minds, focused
on our own problems to the exclusion of all else.
When we see the care you have to
take in listening to the problems of so many kinds of people, we can’t imagine
how you do it. How do you listen to angry people, whining people, weeping
people, nervous people, suspicious people and clueless people? How do you
listen to us?
Thank you, priests, for sitting in
empty confessionals on Saturday afternoons. You wait there, not even knowing if
we’ll come, like the Prodigal Son’s father on the road. Thank you for all the
times we hear “I absolve you from your sins” and feel a great burden lifted
from our hearts. This gift of God’s forgiveness brings the greatest joy back
into our lives. We can give you nothing in return that even comes close to
that.
And thank you, priests, most
of all, for bringing Christ himself into our lives. Where would we be without
your astonishing ability to make the body, blood, soul and divinity of Christ
present on our altars and in our tabernacles? You are there for us every
Sunday, every morning, giving us this infinite gift. Thank you.
In the end, that’s what is so great
about you: not you, in yourself, but who you bring us — Christ.
People call from the hospital and
say, “I need a priest.” They point to the confessional and ask, “Is there a
priest in there?” They approach in the airport and ask, “Are you a Catholic
priest?”
When people need a priest, any
priest will do.
Because a priest is nothing but a
representative of Christ. Christ is the main actor in the consecration at Mass.
It is Christ who forgives sins. It is in Christ that we are baptized.
“The story of my priestly vocation?”
wrote Pope John Paul II. “It is known above all to God. At its deepest level,
every vocation to the priesthood is a great mystery; it is a gift which
infinitely transcends the individual. Every priest experiences this clearly
throughout the course of his life. Faced with the greatness of the gift, we
sense our own inadequacy.”
Your inadequacy is your secret
weapon.
You aren’t acting on your own behalf
or through your own powers. You are acting for Christ. And that’s why, despite
all the attacks, the priesthood will prevail. We depend too much on you to ever
let you go.
Thank you, Father, for being Christ
for us.
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