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Year of the Priest
Pope Holds Up St. John Vianney as Example for 2009-2010
BY TIM DRAKE Register Senior Writer
April 12-18, 2009 Issue |
Posted 4/3/09 at 9:02 AM
ROME — Holy Thursday is a day
dedicated to the priesthood. How about a whole year?
Hoping to reinvigorate the
priesthood, Pope Benedict XVI announced a Jubilee Year of the Priest beginning
June 19, 2009.
During a March 16 plenary assembly
with members of the Congregation for the Clergy, the Pope called for the event
to mark the 150th anniversary of the death of St. John Vianney, the Curé of
Ars, and for the “spiritual perfection” of the Church’s priests.
St. John Vianney died on Aug. 4,
1859.
“The
missionary dimension of a priest arises from his sacramental configuration to
Christ the head,” said the Pope, highlighting the “indispensable struggle for
moral perfection which must dwell in every truly priestly heart.”
“The ecclesial, communional,
hierarchical and doctrinal dimension is absolutely indispensible for any
authentic mission, and this alone guarantees its spiritual effectiveness,” said
Pope Benedict, adding that priests must be “present, identifiable and
recognizable — for their judgment of faith, personal virtues and attire — in
the fields of culture and of charity, which have always been at the heart of
the Church’s mission.”
“The announcement was a great
surprise,” admitted Father Jim Steffes, executive director of the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life and
Vocations. Father Steffes hopes the year will help renew the priesthood.
Father Steffes said that just as the
identity of Christ, the High Priest, was in his relationship with God the
Father, “that, too, is where we find our identity as priests — in relationship
with God.”
But too often priests’ identity is
wrapped up in the things that they do. “Pastoral ministry and all that we need
to be responsible for … that isn’t what our identity is,” he said. “We need to
know who we are so that we can bring that to those entrusted to us. The Year of
the Priest gives us a wonderful opportunity.”
Pope Benedict highlighted this
dimension of the priesthood, as well.
“The centrality of Christ leads to a
correct valuation of priestly ministry, without which there would be no
Eucharist, no mission, not even the Church,” said the Pope. “It is necessary
then, to ensure that ‘new structures’ or pastoral organizations are not planned
for a time in which it will be possible to ‘do without’ ordained ministry, on
the basis of an erroneous interpretation of the promotion of the laity, because
this would lay the foundations for a further dilution in priestly ministry, and
any supposed ‘solutions’ would, in fact, dramatically coincide with the real
causes of the problems currently affecting the ministry.”
Said Father John Cihak, a former
professor of theology at Mount St. Angel Seminary who has recently been
assigned to the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops, “The clergy and the laity
are indispensable in the body of Christ. They complement one another as a man
and woman do in marriage. There is a differentiation. The body of Christ has
those who represent Christ the head. That’s about service and self-giving. When
we confuse clergy and laity with a false sense of equality, that’s to the
detriment of the whole body.”
Patron of Priests
In highlighting the Year of the Priest, Pope Benedict called upon the
example of St. John Vianney. The humble French diocesan priest was assigned to
the rural and spiritually dying town of Ars in central France. Through his
example of personal holiness and attention to the sacraments, St. John was able
to transform his parish. Pilgrims from all over the world came to receive the
sacrament of reconciliation from the Curé of Ars, as he became known.
“He
is not really well known,” said Father Cihak. “Most parish priests know very
little about their patron.”
“In
the New Evangelization, we need a renewal of parish life, and that means a
renewal of the parish priesthood,” said Father Cihak. “St. Vianney is helpful
for that because he shows us the parish priesthood is not so much about
programs, but about personal holiness and personal witness.
“When
you look at St. John Vianney, you don’t see a charismatic, talented sort of
individual, but a humble man who knew what it means to get close to Christ —
through confession, Mass, personal prayer and works of mercy. He took a fallow
parish and made it a hotbed of holiness in about 10 years.”
Father
Steffes agreed.
“He
was a simple man who opened himself up to the will of the Father,” said Father
Steffes.
In
describing the saint, Father Cihak noted similarities between St. John
and the Italian St. Pio of Pietrelcina.
“They
both saw the importance of confession, and both had explicit battles with
Satan,” said Father Cihak. “The parish priest’s battle against Satan cannot be
overlooked. He does this through his priestly ministry, especially confession,
where he is pulling souls out of the kingdom of darkness, and also as a
spiritual father protecting his flock from evil.”
“A priest must fight if he’s to be a
true spiritual father,” said Father Cihak. “We don’t enter the world on neutral
ground.”
Example for Vocations
While it’s too early to know what
sort of activities will be planned by the U.S. bishops’ conference to highlight
the year, some seminaries, dioceses and individuals already have special plans.
The Diocese of Fall River, Mass., is
planning a speaker series to include Father George Rutler, who penned a
biography of St. John Vianney. Mount St. Mary’s Seminary is organizing a symposium
on St. John Vianney in the fall.
In
addition, Catholic actor Leonardo Defilippis has providentially been working on
a one-man drama focused on St. John Vianney for the past 2 1/2 years. He plans
to launch the drama on the saint’s feast day — Aug. 4, 2009.
Over
the past two years, Defilippis has been asking his audiences if they’ve ever
heard of the saint.
“About a fourth of the crowd has
heard of him,” said Defilippis. “He’s a forgotten saint.”
And yet an important saint for
today, he said. “We’re in an identity crisis — a crisis of ignorance,
indifference and lukewarmness, and there’s no other priest like Vianney in the
history of the Church.”
Defilippis hopes that his drama
might help to create a movement for renewal in each diocese.
“St. Vianney converted everything by
creating a movement of adoration within his parish, and then converted sinners
through confession,” added Defilippis. “He came at a time following the French
Revolution when it looked like the Church might be destroyed.”
“The
Curé of Ars is the saint who will inspire all of us, especially young people,
with a deeper understanding of the heroic life of the priest,” said Defilippis.
“I believe we’ll see a tremendous upsurge in vocations because our youth are
seeking a radical choice, a way to make a difference in our world, and John
Vianney points the way through his dramatic life of self-sacrifice and his
struggle with evil.”
Tim
Drake is based in
St.
Joseph, Minnesota.
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