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Pope
Urges Priests to Believe, Think and Speak With Church
VATICAN
CITY, MARCH 20, 2008 (zenit):
The essence of priestly ministry is service, Pope Benedict XVI
says, encouraging priests to renew their "yes" to the
call of God.
The
Pope spoke about the essence of the priesthood today at the Holy
Thursday chrism Mass held this morning at St. Peter's Basilica.
The Mass brought together some 1,600 priests, and cardinals and
bishops to renew the promises they made on the day of their ordination.
According
to the Old Testament, the Holy Father explained, there are two
tasks that define the essence of the priestly ministry: to be
present before the Lord and to serve.
"To
be present before the Lord should always be, in its depths, to
take charge of mankind before the Lord who, for his part, takes
charge of all of us before the Father," he said. In the second
place, the Pontiff continued, the priest should serve.
He
said that this service is manifested in a concrete way in the
Eucharistic celebration. There, the Pope said, what the priest
does "is serve, to complete a service to God and a service
to man. […] The homage that Christ offered to the Father
consisted in giving himself unto the end for man. The priest should
unite himself with this homage, with this service."
The
word "serve," in its many dimensions, implies "the
correct celebration of the liturgy and the sacraments in general,
carried out with interior participation," the Pontiff affirmed.
Learning
Benedict
XVI continued, saying that an attitude of service implies that
the priest should always be in a state of learning: learning to
pray, "always anew and always in a deeper way," and
learning to know the Lord in his word so that his preaching becomes
effective.
"In
this sense, 'to serve' means closeness, demands familiarity,"
the Pope said.
But
he cautioned that this familiarity also implies a danger: that
the sacred, with which priests come into constant contact, becomes
a routine.
"In
this way, holy fear is snuffed out," the Holy Father warned.
"Conditioned by all the habits, we don't perceive the fact
that is most great, new, surprising -- that he himself is present,
speaks to us, gives himself to us. We should fight unrelentingly
against this habitualness in the extraordinary reality, against
the indifference of the heart, recognizing anew our insufficiency
and the grace there is in the fact that he surrenders himself
in this way into our hands."
Obeying
To
serve implies obedience, the Bishop of Rome affirmed: "The
servant is at the command of the Word. […] The temptation
of humanity is always to want to be totally autonomous, follow
one's own will alone and to think that only in that way, will
we be free -- that only thanks to a limitless liberty will man
be completely man. But in this way we put ourselves on the side
contrary to the truth."
We
are only free, he cautioned, if "we share our liberty with
the rest" and "if we participate in the will of God.
This fundamental obedience that forms part of the essence of man
is much more concrete in the priest.
"We
do not proclaim ourselves, but rather him and his word, which
we cannot dream up on our own. Our obedience is to believe with
the Church, think and speak with the Church, serve with her,"
the Pope continued. This implies, he acknowledged, what Christ
predicted for Peter, "They will lead you where you do not
want to go."
"This
allowing ourselves to be led where we do not want is an essential
dimension of our service, and it is precisely in this way that
we become free," Benedict XVI asserted. "If we allow
ourselves to be led, even though it could be against our ideas
and our projects, we experience again the richness of the love
of God."
The
Pope concluded with an allusion to the washing of the feet, with
which Christ, "the true High Priest of the world" wants
"to be the servant of all. [… ] With the gesture of
love to the end, he washes our soiled feet; with the humility
of his service, he purifies us of the illness of our pride."
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