Confessor Knew the Importance of the Basics
NEW YORK,
June 26, 2009, 14.30 Hrs (Karna Swanson / Zenit.org):
After more
than 2,000 years of existence, there isn't much the Church hasn't
addressed, faced or witnessed.
Granted,
times change. New challenges continually present themselves.
Progress is made. And while the Church continually works to
keep step with the twists and turns of history, it sometimes
breaks step and simply returns to the basics.
This is
what Benedict XVI did recently when he declared a yearlong celebration
of one of the most basic and fundamental elements of the Catholic
Church: the priesthood.
Beginning
today, the Church will dedicate one full year to remembering
what it is to be a priest. This will not only be an opportunity
for priests to rediscover their vocation, mission and passion
for Christ, but it's also a chance for the rest of us to rediscover
what a gift the priesthood is for our own lives.
The Pontiff
chose as the occasion for this jubilee year the 150th anniversary
of the death of St. John Mary Vianney, known as the Curé
d'Ars.
By linking
the Year for Priests with St. Vianney, who is also the patron
of parish priests, the jubilee not only celebrates the basics
of the Church, but also the basics of the priesthood itself.
As a priest,
Father Vianney took upon himself many of the projects parish
priests take on. He set about to restore the parish church,
he founded an orphanage and did acts of charity for the poor.
He also did some pretty extraordinary things. He had supernatural
knowledge of the future and the past, and he performed healing
miracles, particularly on children.
But it was
in the basic duties of parish life that he excelled, namely
preaching, offering spiritual direction, and, most notably,
hearing confessions.
Rocky
road
John Mary
Vianney was born in Dardilly, near Leon, in 1786. His early
faith formation took place within the context of the French
Revolution, which pushed the practice of the Catholic faith
underground. Later in his ministry, he would deal with the consequences
of the revolution, which led many of the faithful to leave the
Church.
The road
to the priesthood wasn't an easy path for Vianney. After finally
getting his father's permission to pursue his calling, he still
needed to get caught up on his studies, as the revolution had
interrupted his education. If he wanted to be a priest, he'd
have to go back to school with children half his age to learn
the basics of reading, writing, and Latin.
Almost nine
years later, in 1815, Vianney was ordained. He was 29. Less
than three years later, in 1818, the young priest was assigned
as the assistant pastor of the church in Ars, a small country
village located about 25 miles from Lyon in eastern France.
This is where he would spend the rest of his priestly life.
Arriving
in Ars, the young priest noticed the loss of Christian faith
and morals around him, a lingering by-product of the French
Revolution. Father Vianney soon began to awaken the faith of
his parishioners through his preaching, but most of all by his
prayer and his way of life. His notoriety as a holy priest grew
slowly, and Father Vianney soon became known as, simply, the
Curé d'Ars (priest of Ars).
Not
paparazzi, penitents
By the 1830s,
his popularity swelled to the extent that the holy priest became
somewhat of a prisoner in the confessional, held there by the
hundreds of faithful arriving daily to the village to see the
holy curé. Between 1830 and 1845, sometimes as many as
300 people a day would pass through Ars for a chance to confess
with Father Vianney.
Overwhelmed
with his own sense of unworthiness and weakness in the face
of such a great mission, the holy priest tried three times to
escape, but all attempts failed. On the third attempt his parishioners
actually sent out a search crew in the middle of the night to
find him and put him back in the confessional. He stayed there
until the wee hours of the morning -- hearing confessions.
In 1853,
a group of diocesan missionaries came to the aid of the overworked
parish priest, who couldn't seem to get out of his confessional,
let alone out of his own parish to take a holiday. His own bishop
even told him not to attend diocesan retreats, as Father Vianney
had too many souls to attend to in Ars.
By 1855,
the number of pilgrims had reached 20,000 a year, and some 100,000
in 1858. There are reports that during the last 10 years of
his life, he spent as many as 18 hours a day in the confessional,
and that toward the end of his life, he confessed up to 80,000
penitents a year.
Father Vianney
spent the last five days of his life hearing his confessions
from his deathbed. Exhausted, the Curé d'Ars died Aug.
4, 1859. He was 73.
The parish
priest was beatified in 1905, and declared the patron of the
priests of France that same year. He was canonized 20 years
later in 1925, and declared the patron saint of all parish priests
in 1929.
A
hero
In 1959,
Pope John XXIII wrote a 13,000-word encyclical on St. John Mary
Vianney on the centenary of the saint's death. He hailed the
holy priest an "outstanding model of priestly asceticism,
of piety, especially in the form of devotion to the Eucharist,
and, finally, of pastoral zeal."
He was a
"tireless worker for God," the Holy Father continued,
and "a hero."
"His
only motives were the love of God and the desire for the salvation
of the souls of his neighbors," the Pontiff affirmed.
John XIII
offered St. Vianney as a model for other priests because the
saint was a man of God. This, he said, was the secret to the
priesthood: "A man who is filled with Christ will not find
it hard to discover ways and means of bringing others to Christ."
The Curé
d'Ars is also a model for priests because he, like few others,
knew what being a priest was all about.
"Holy
Orders," he wrote in his Catechism on the Priesthood, "is
a sacrament which seems to relate to no one among you, and which
yet relates to everyone."
A priest,
he continued, is "a man who holds the place of God -- a
man who is invested with all the powers of God."
"Everything
has come to us through the priest; yes, all happiness, all graces,
all heavenly gifts," St. Vianney affirmed. "If we
had not the sacrament of orders, we should not have Our Lord.
"Who
placed him there, in that tabernacle? It was the priest. Who
was it that received your soul, on its entrance into life? The
priest. Who nourishes it, to give it strength to make its pilgrimage?
The priest. Who will prepare it to appear before God, by washing
that soul, for the last time, in the blood of Jesus Christ?
The priest -- always the priest."
St. Vianney
spoke of the priest as the doorway to the treasures of heaven,
"He is the steward of the good God, the distributor of
his wealth."
"Oh,
how great is a priest," he exclaimed. So great, he noted,
that it would be impossible for a priest to "understand
the greatness of his office till he is in heaven. If he understood
it on earth, he would die, not of fear, but of love."
And a priest,
he continued, "is not a priest for himself."
It's often
overlooked that a priest does not confess himself or administer
the sacraments for himself. All of his priestly duties and functions
are done for others. "He is not for himself," the
holy Curé reminds us. "He is for you."
When you
see a priest, you should say, "There is he who made me
a child of God, and opened heaven to me by holy baptism; he
who purified me after I had sinned; who gives nourishment to
my soul."
"The
priesthood is the love of the heart of Jesus," he added.
"When you see the priest, think of Our Lord Jesus Christ."
This year,
we have the opportunity to just do that.