Dear Brother Priests,
On
the forthcoming Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, Friday 19
June 2009 ? a day traditionally devoted to prayer for the sanctification
of the clergy, ? I have decided to inaugurate a “Year for Priests” in celebration
of the 150th anniversary of the “dies natalis” of John Mary Vianney,
the patron saint of parish priests worldwide. This Year, meant to deepen
the commitment of all priests to interior renewal for the sake of a stronger
and more incisive witness to the Gospel in today’s world, will conclude
on the same Solemnity in 2010. “The priesthood is the love of the heart
of Jesus,” the saintly Curé of Ars would often say. This touching
expression makes us reflect, first of all, with heartfelt gratitude on
the immense gift which priests represent, not only for the Church, but
also for humanity itself. I think of all those priests who quietly present
Christ’s words and actions each day to the faithful and to the whole world,
striving to be one with the Lord in their thoughts and their will, their
sentiments and their style of life. How can I not pay tribute to their
apostolic labours, their tireless and hidden service, their universal charity?
And how can I not praise the courageous fidelity of so many priests who,
even amid difficulties and incomprehension, remain faithful to their vocation
as “friends of Christ,” whom he has called by name, chosen and sent?
I still treasure the memory of the first parish priest
at whose side I exercised my ministry as a young priest: he left me an
example of unreserved devotion to his pastoral duties, even to meeting
his own death in the act of bringing viaticum to a gravely ill person.
I also recall the countless confreres whom I have met and continue to meet,
not least in my pastoral
visits to different countries: men generously dedicated to
the daily exercise of their priestly ministry. Yet the expression of Saint
John Mary also makes us think of Christ’s pierced Heart and the crown of
thorns which surrounds it. I also think, therefore, of the countless situations
of suffering endured by many priests, either because they themselves share
in the manifold human experience of pain or because they encounter misunderstanding
from the very persons to whom they minister. How can we not also think
of all those priests who are offended in their dignity, obstructed in their
mission and persecuted, even at times to offering the supreme testimony
of their own blood?
There are also, sad to say, situations which can never
be sufficiently deplored where the Church herself suffers as a consequence
of infidelity on the part of some of her ministers. Then it is the world
which finds grounds for scandal and rejection. What is most helpful to
the Church in such cases is not only a frank and complete acknowledgment
of the weaknesses of her ministers, but also a joyful and renewed realization
of the greatness of God’s gift, embodied in the splendid example of generous
pastors, religious afire with love for God and for souls, and insightful,
patient spiritual guides. Here the teaching and example of Saint John Mary
Vianney can serve as a significant point of reference for us all. The Curé
of Ars was very humble, yet as a priest he was conscious of being an immense
gift to his people: “A good shepherd, a pastor after God’s heart, is the
greatest treasure which the good Lord can grant to a parish, and one of
the most precious gifts of divine mercy.” He spoke of the priesthood as
if incapable of fathoming the grandeur of the gift and task
entrusted to a human creature: “O, how great is the priest! … If he realized
what he is, he would die… God obeys him: he utters a few words and the
Lord descends from heaven at his voice, to be contained within a small
host…” Explaining to his parishioners the importance of the sacraments,
he would say: “Without the Sacrament of Holy Orders, we would not have
the Lord. Who put him there in that tabernacle? The priest. Who welcomed
your soul at the beginning of your life? The priest. Who feeds your soul
and gives it strength for its journey? The priest. Who will prepare it
to appear before God, bathing it one last time in the blood of Jesus Christ?
The priest, always the priest. And if this soul should happen to die [as
a result of sin], who will raise it up, who will restore its calm and peace?
Again, the priest… After God, the priest is everything! … Only in heaven
will he fully realize what he is.” These words, welling up from the priestly
heart of the holy pastor, might sound excessive. Yet they reveal the high
esteem in which he held the sacrament of the priesthood. He seemed overwhelmed
by a boundless sense of responsibility: “Were we to fully realize what
a priest is on earth, we would die: not of fright, but of love… Without
the priest, the passion and death of our Lord would be of no avail. It
is the priest who continues the work of redemption on earth… What use would
be a house filled with gold, were there no one to open its door? The priest
holds the key to the treasures of heaven: it is he who opens the door:
he is the steward of the good Lord; the administrator of his goods … Leave
a parish for twenty years without a priest, and they will end by worshiping
the beasts there … The priest is not a priest for himself, he is a priest
for you.”
He arrived in Ars, a village of 230 souls, warned by his
Bishop beforehand that there he would find religious practice in a sorry
state: “There is little love of God in that parish; you will be the one
to put it there”. As a result, he was deeply aware that he needed to go
there to embody Christ’s presence and to bear witness to his saving mercy:
“[Lord,] grant me the conversion of my parish; I am willing to suffer whatever
you wish, for my entire life!”: with this prayer he entered upon his mission.
The Curé devoted himself completely to his parish’s conversion,
setting before all else the Christian education of the people in his care.
Dear brother priests, let us ask the Lord Jesus for the grace to learn
for ourselves something of the pastoral plan of Saint John Mary Vianney!
The first thing we need to learn is the complete identification of the
man with his ministry. In Jesus, person and mission tend to coincide: all
Christ’s saving activity was, and is, an expression of his “filial consciousness”
which from all eternity stands before the Father in an attitude of loving
submission to his will. In a humble yet genuine way, every priest must
aim for a similar identification. Certainly this is not to forget that
the efficacy of the ministry is independent of the holiness of the minister;
but neither can we overlook the extraordinary fruitfulness of the encounter
between the ministry’s objective holiness and the subjective holiness of
the minister. The Curé of Ars immediately set about this patient
and humble task of harmonizing his life as a minister with the holiness
of the ministry he had received, by deciding to “live,” physically,
in his parish church: As his first biographer tells us: “Upon his arrival,
he chose the church as his home. He entered the church before dawn and
did not leave it until after the evening Angelus. There he was to be sought
whenever needed.”
The pious excess of his devout biographer should not blind
us to the fact that the Curé also knew how to “live” actively within
the entire territory of his parish: he regularly visited the sick and families,
organized popular missions and patronal feasts, collected and managed funds
for charitable and missionary works, embellished and furnished his parish
church, cared for the orphans and teachers of the “Providence” (an
institute he founded); provided for the education of children; founded
confraternities and enlisted lay persons to work at his side.
His example naturally leads me to point out that there
are sectors of cooperation which need to be opened ever more fully to the
lay faithful. Priests and laity together make up the one priestly people
and in virtue of their ministry priests live in the midst of the lay faithful,
“that they may lead everyone to the unity of charity, ‘loving one another
with mutual affection; and outdoing one another in sharing honour.’” (Rom
12:10) Here we ought to recall the Second
Vatican Council’s hearty encouragement to priests “to be sincere
in their appreciation and promotion of the dignity of the laity and of
the special role they have to play in the Church’s mission. … They should
be willing to listen to lay people, give brotherly consideration to their
wishes, and acknowledge their experience and competence in the different
fields of human activity. In this way they will be able together with them
to discern the signs of the times.”
Saint John Mary Vianney taught his parishioners primarily
by the witness of his life. It was from his example that they learned to
pray, halting frequently before the tabernacle for a visit to Jesus in
the Blessed Sacrament. “One need not say much to pray well” ? the Curé
explained to them ? “We know that Jesus is there in the tabernacle: let
us open our hearts to him, let us rejoice in his sacred presence. That
is the best prayer.” And he would urge them: “Come to communion, my brothers
and sisters, come to Jesus. Come to live from him in order to live with
him… “Of course you are not worthy of him, but you need him!” This
way of educating the faithful to the Eucharistic presence and to communion
proved most effective when they saw him celebrate the Holy Sacrifice of
the Mass. Those present said that “it was not possible to find a finer
example of worship… He gazed upon the Host with immense love” “All good
works, taken together, do not equal the sacrifice of the Mass” ? he would
say ? “since they are human works, while the Holy Mass is the work of God.”
He was convinced that the fervour of a priest’s life depended entirely
upon the Mass: “The reason why a priest is lax is that he does not pay
attention to the Mass! My God, how we ought to pity a priest who celebrates
as if he were engaged in something routine!” He was accustomed, when celebrating,
also to offer his own life in sacrifice: “What a good thing it is for a
priest each morning to offer himself to God in sacrifice!”
This deep personal identification with the Sacrifice of
the Cross led him ? by a sole inward movement ? from the altar to the confessional.
Priests ought never to be resigned to empty confessionals or the apparent
indifference of the faithful to this sacrament. In France, at the time
of the Curé of Ars, confession was no more easy or frequent than
in our own day, since the upheaval caused by the revolution had long inhibited
the practice of religion. Yet he sought in every way, by his preaching
and his powers of persuasion, to help his parishioners to rediscover the
meaning and beauty of the sacrament of Penance, presenting it as an inherent
demand of the Eucharistic presence. He thus created a “virtuous” circle.
By spending long hours in church before the tabernacle, he inspired the
faithful to imitate him by coming to visit Jesus with the knowledge that
their parish priest would be there, ready to listen and offer forgiveness.
Later, the growing numbers of penitents from all over France would keep
him in the confessional for up to sixteen hours a day. It was said that
Ars had become “a great hospital of souls.” His first biographer relates
that “the grace he obtained [for the conversion of sinners] was so powerful
that it would pursue them, not leaving them a moment of peace!” The saintly
Curé reflected something of the same idea when he said: “It is not
the sinner who returns to God to beg his forgiveness, but God himself who
runs after the sinner and makes him return to him” “This good Saviour is
so filled with love that he seeks us everywhere.”
We priests should feel that the following words, which
he put on the lips of Christ, are meant for each of us personally: “I will
charge my ministers to proclaim to sinners that I am ever ready to welcome
them, that my mercy is infinite.” From Saint John Mary Vianney we can learn
to put our unfailing trust in the sacrament of Penance, to set it once
more at the centre of our pastoral concerns, and to take up the “dialogue
of salvation” which it entails. The Curé of Ars dealt with different
penitents in different ways. Those who came to his confessional drawn by
a deep and humble longing for God’s forgiveness found in him the encouragement
to plunge into the “flood of divine mercy” which sweeps everything away
by its vehemence. If someone was troubled by the thought of his own frailty
and inconstancy, and fearful of sinning again, the Curé would unveil
the mystery of God’s love in these beautiful and touching words: “The good
Lord knows everything. Even before you confess, he already knows that you
will sin again, yet he still forgives you. How great is the love of our
God: he even forces himself to forget the future, so that he can
grant us his forgiveness!” But to those who made a lukewarm and rather
indifferent confession of sin, he clearly demonstrated by his own tears
of pain how “abominable” this attitude was: “I weep because you don’t weep,”
he would say. “If only the Lord were not so good! But he is so good!
One would have to be a brute to treat so good a Father this way!” He awakened
repentance in the hearts of the lukewarm by forcing them to see God’s own
pain at their sins reflected in the face of the priest who was their confessor.
To those who, on the other hand, came to him already desirous of and suited
to a deeper spiritual life, he flung open the abyss of God’s love, explaining
the untold beauty of living in union with him and dwelling in his presence:
“Everything in God’s sight, everything with God, everything to please God…
How beautiful it is!” And he taught them to pray: “My God, grant me the
grace to love you as much as I possibly can.”
In his time the Curé of Ars was able to transform
the hearts and the lives of so many people because he enabled them to experience
the Lord’s merciful love. Our own time urgently needs a similar proclamation
and witness to the truth of Love: Deus caritas est (1 Jn: 4:8).
Thanks to the word and the sacraments of Jesus, John Mary Vianney built
up his flock, although he often trembled from a conviction of his personal
inadequacy, and desired more than once to withdraw from the responsibilities
of the parish ministry out of a sense of his unworthiness. Nonetheless,
with exemplary obedience he never abandoned his post, consumed as he was
by apostolic zeal for the salvation of souls. He sought to remain completely
faithful to his own vocation and mission through the practice of an austere
asceticism: “The great misfortune for us parish priests ? he lamented ?
is that our souls grow tepid;” meaning by this that a pastor can grow dangerously
inured to the state of sin or of indifference in which so many of his flock
are living. He himself kept a tight rein on his body, with vigils and fasts,
lest it rebel against his priestly soul. Nor did he avoid self-mortification
for the good of the souls in his care and as a help to expiating the many
sins he heard in confession. To a priestly confrere he explained: “I will
tell you my recipe: I give sinners a small penance and the rest I do in
their place.” Aside from the actual penances which the Curé of Ars
practised, the core of his teaching remains valid for each of us: souls
have been won at the price of Jesus’ own blood, and a priest cannot devote
himself to their salvation if he refuses to share personally in the “precious
cost” of redemption.
In today’s world, as in the troubled times of the Curé
of Ars, the lives and activity of priests need to be distinguished by a
determined witness to the Gospel. As Pope
Paul VI rightly noted, “modern man listens more willingly to
witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen to teachers, it is because
they are witnesses.” Lest we experience existential emptiness and the effectiveness
of our ministry be compromised, we need to ask ourselves ever anew: “Are
we truly pervaded by the word of God? Is that word truly the nourishment
we live by, even more than bread and the things of this world? Do we really
know that word? Do we love it? Are we deeply engaged with this word to
the point that it really leaves a mark on our lives and shapes our thinking?”
Just as Jesus called the Twelve to be with him (cf. Mk 3:14), and only
later sent them forth to preach, so too in our days priests are called
to assimilate that “new style of life” which was inaugurated by the Lord
Jesus and taken up by the Apostles.
It was complete commitment to this “new style of life”
which marked the priestly ministry of the Curé of Ars. Pope
John XXIII, in his Encyclical Letter Sacerdotii
nostri primordia, published in 1959 on the first centenary
of the death of Saint John Mary Vianney, presented his asceticism with
special reference to the “three evangelical counsels” which the Pope considered
necessary also for diocesan priests: “even though priests are not bound
to embrace these evangelical counsels by virtue of the clerical state,
these counsels nonetheless offer them, as they do all the faithful, the
surest road to the desired goal of Christian perfection.” The Curé
of Ars lived the “evangelical counsels” in a way suited to his priestly
state. His poverty was not the poverty of a religious or a monk,
but that proper to a priest: while managing much money (since well-to-do
pilgrims naturally took an interest in his charitable works), he realized
that everything had been donated to his church, his poor, his orphans,
the girls of his “Providence,” his families of modest means. Consequently,
he “was rich in giving to others and very poor for himself.” As he would
explain: “My secret is simple: give everything away; hold nothing back.”
When he lacked money, he would say amiably to the poor who knocked at his
door: “Today I’m poor just like you, I’m one of you.” At the end of his
life, he could say with absolute tranquillity: “I no longer have anything.
The good Lord can call me whenever he wants!” His chastity, too,
was that demanded of a priest for his ministry. It could be said that it
was a chastity suited to one who must daily touch the Eucharist, who contemplates
it blissfully and with that same bliss offers it to his flock. It was said
of him that “he radiated chastity”; the faithful would see this when he
turned and gazed at the tabernacle with loving eyes.” Finally, Saint John
Mary Vianney’s obedience found full embodiment in his conscientious
fidelity to the daily demands of his ministry. We know how he was tormented
by the thought of his inadequacy for parish ministry and by a desire to
flee “in order to bewail his poor life, in solitude.” Only obedience and
a thirst for souls convinced him to remain at his post. As he explained
to himself and his flock: “There are no two good ways of serving God. There
is only one: serve him as he desires to be served.” He considered this
the golden rule for a life of obedience: “Do only what can be offered to
the good Lord.”
In this context of a spirituality nourished by the practice
of the evangelical counsels, I would like to invite all priests, during
this Year dedicated to them, to welcome the new springtime which the Spirit
is now bringing about in the Church, not least through the ecclesial movements
and the new communities. “In his gifts the Spirit is multifaceted… He breathes
where he wills. He does so unexpectedly, in unexpected places, and in ways
previously unheard of… but he also shows us that he works with a view to
the one body and in the unity of the one body.” In this regard, the statement
of the Decree Presbyterorum
Ordinis continues to be timely: “While testing the spirits
to discover if they be of God, priests must discover with faith, recognize
with joy and foster diligently the many and varied charismatic gifts of
the laity, whether these be of a humble or more exalted kind.” These gifts,
which awaken in many people the desire for a deeper spiritual life, can
benefit not only the lay faithful but the clergy as well. The communion
between ordained and charismatic ministries can provide “a helpful impulse
to a renewed commitment by the Church in proclaiming and bearing witness
to the Gospel of hope and charity in every corner of the world.” I would
also like to add, echoing the Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
Dabo Vobis
of Pope
John Paul II Pope John Paul II, that the ordained ministry has
a radical
“communitarian form” and can be exercised only in the
communion of priests with their Bishop. This communion between priests
and their Bishop, grounded in the sacrament of Holy Orders and made manifest
in Eucharistic concelebration, needs to be translated into various concrete
expressions of an effective and affective priestly fraternity. Only thus
will priests be able to live fully the gift of celibacy and build thriving
Christian communities in which the miracles which accompanied the first
preaching of the Gospel can be repeated.
The Pauline Year now coming to its close invites us also
to look to the Apostle of the Gentiles, who represents a splendid example
of a priest entirely devoted to his ministry. “The love of Christ urges
us on” ? he wrote ? “because we are convinced that one has died for all;
therefore all have died” (2 Cor 5:14). And he adds: “He died for all, so
that those who live might live no longer for themselves, but for him who
died and was raised for them” (2 Cor 5:15). Could a finer programme be
proposed to any priest resolved to advance along the path of Christian
perfection?
Dear brother priests, the celebration of the 150th anniversary
of the death of Saint John Mary Vianney (1859) follows upon the celebration
of the 150th anniversary of the apparitions of Lourdes (1858). In 1959
Blessed Pope
John XXIII noted that “shortly before the Curé of Ars completed
his long and admirable life, the Immaculate Virgin appeared in another
part of France to an innocent and humble girl, and entrusted to her a message
of prayer and penance which continues, even a century later, to yield immense
spiritual fruits. The life of this holy priest whose centenary we are commemorating
in a real way anticipated the great supernatural truths taught to the seer
of Massabielle. He was greatly devoted to the Immaculate Conception of
the Blessed Virgin; in 1836 he had dedicated his parish church to Our Lady
Conceived without Sin and he greeted the dogmatic definition of this truth
in 1854 with deep faith and great joy.” The Curé would always remind
his faithful that “after giving us all he could, Jesus Christ wishes in
addition to bequeath us his most precious possession, his Blessed Mother.”
To the Most Holy Virgin I entrust this Year for Priests.
I ask her to awaken in the heart of every priest a generous and renewed
commitment to the ideal of complete self-oblation to Christ and the Church
which inspired the thoughts and actions of the saintly Curé of Ars.
It was his fervent prayer life and his impassioned love of Christ Crucified
that enabled John Mary Vianney to grow daily in his total self-oblation
to God and the Church. May his example lead all priests to offer that witness
of unity with their Bishop, with one another and with the lay faithful,
which today, as ever, is so necessary. Despite all the evil present in
our world, the words which Christ spoke to his Apostles in the Upper Room
continue to inspire us: “In the world you have tribulation; but take courage,
I have overcome the world” (Jn 16:33). Our faith in the Divine Master gives
us the strength to look to the future with confidence. Dear priests, Christ
is counting on you. In the footsteps of the Curé of Ars, let yourselves
be enthralled by him. In this way you too will be, for the world in our
time, heralds of hope, reconciliation and peace!
With my blessing.
From the Vatican, 16 June 2009.
BENEDICTVS PP. XVI