By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis told a group of
seminarians that seeking a so-called “normal” life in the priesthood
would turn them into pastors who were “mediocre or worse.”
A priest who is tempted to live the way most people live
today “begins to settle for getting some attention, judges his ministry on
the basis of his achievements and eases into seeking what he likes — becoming
lukewarm and without any real concern for others,” he said.
“Instead, ‘normalcy’ for us is pastoral holiness,
giving one’s life,” Pope Francis said. “If a priest chooses to be
just a regular person, he will be a priest who is mediocre or worse.”
The pope’s remarks came during an audience Jan. 25 with
seminarians and staff of Rome’s Sts. Ambrose and Charles Pontifical Seminary,
which trains priests for Italy’s Lombardy region. Cardinal Angelo Scola of
Milan, metropolitan of Lombardy, also attended the private audience.
The pope told the men that preparing for the priesthood
in Rome wasn’t just about completing their studies, but was also a time for
“true and genuine priestly formation” that included deep inner
conversion.
By following the Holy Spirit, they would be the future of
the church “according to God’s heart,” and according to the demands
of the Gospel, he said, “not according to individual preferences or
current trends.”
St. Charles Borromeo, he said, saw his ministry as a
continual journey of conversion. He wanted priests to be servants of God and
fathers for the people, especially the poor, the pope said.
Priests need to have an active, personal relationship
with God and live in constant dialogue with his word, “or better, with God
who speaks,” he said.
This dialogue entails taking what was learned during
their studies and applying it when speaking to God during prayer and to others.
The pope urged the seminarians not to pigeonhole their
pursuits but to consider prayer, culture and pastoral ministry as
“cornerstones of one building.”
Evangelization today requires that priests live and speak
simply and be preachers not “of complex doctrine, but proclaimers of
Christ.” The pope said they must avoid “every form of duplicity and
worldliness” and be someone “for whom genuine communion with the Lord
and others is enough.”
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