maandag 11 november 2013

Rome sabbatical aims to renew priests through prayer, formation

Msgr. Figueiredo speaks with CNA in Rome on Nov. 8 2013. Credit: Andreas Dueren/CNA.
Msgr. Figueiredo speaks with CNA in Rome on Nov. 8 2013. Credit: Andreas Dueren/CNA.
.- A special sabbatical program invites priests to come to the Eternal City to rest and receive classes on topics relevant in the Church today in order to give new ardor to their pastoral ministry.

“We want them to stir into flame the gift they received on the ordination day, to rediscover that zeal they had,” Msgr. Anthony Figueiredo told CNA during a Nov. 8 interview.

Msgr. Figueiredo is the director of the Institute for Continuing Theological Education of the Pontifical North American College in Rome, and plays a key role in deciding which topics will be discussed during the program each year.

The three month sabbatical takes place every fall and draws its inspiration from Bl. John Paul II’s post-synodal exhortation “Pastores Dabo Vobis,” or “I will give you Shepherds,” which calls for the continuous formation of priests.

“We need to go out to the people, but how do we do that unless we're formed,” explained Msgr. Figueiredo.

“Priests are in need of continuing formation,” he stressed, adding that “one would never imagine a doctor never being updated in his profession and it's very much the same for priests, particularly in the world we are living, where new issues are arising.”

One of the greatest challenges noted Msgr. Figueiredo, is “always to remain faithful to the teaching of Jesus, to his message,” but also “to make it relevant to people today.”

In order to aid in these efforts, the program offers special modules designed to “update” the priests who participate “on very important issues,” including many topics that, in light of “changing governments and legislation,” go against the teachings of the Church.

It is also important, the priest continued, that those who come are formed in a “spirit of deep fraternity,” because often times they “live on their own,” and “have large parishes distant from others.”

“So to be together again, as they were in the seminary, really strengthens a priest.”

Frequently, Msgr. Figueiredo noted, the priests arrive “very tired” due to “huge ministries, very big difficulties, challenges which take place in the world today,” so it is necessary to follow Jesus’ invitation to his apostles to “come away and rest awhile.”

Emphasizing also the need to be renewed in prayer in addition to intellectual formation, Msgr. Figueiredo said that “the best theology is done on our knees.”

“Ultimately,” he explained, the intellectual formation received “has to be nurtured by intimacy with Jesus Christ, otherwise it remains a dead book. We have something in our head but not of the heart.”

“So we combine really the two, we receive that intellectual formation but we take it to our heart and we are inspired by what the Holy Spirit is saying to us, in order to make that message a good news, make it applicable to people in their lives and to say the Christian message, the message of Jesus Christ, is not bad news, it's good news.”

“We know from the difficulties of a secularized world, priests today can be discouraged in their ministry,” Msgr. Figueiredo observed, revealing that he has “seen miracles” through the program.

Some of the priests who have participated, he reflected, might have otherwise “left the ministry because of discouragement,” but instead “go back strengthened and even holier through the experience here of prayer, fraternity and theological updating.”

Among the different topics offered in this year's modules are classes discussing spiritual direction, the Sacrament of Confession, how to address modern moral problems in society, as well as a scripture study tour of Rome and Turkey and a study in Christian art and architecture within Rome and Assisi.

As part of the efforts to encourage priests to participate in the sabbatical, the Institute for Continuing Theological Education has released a promotional DVD entitled “Good Priests, Better Priests,” which will be distributed in parishes across the U.S., as well as Canada and other English-speaking dioceses.

Pope Francis: corruption is 'varnished putrefaction' of whitewashed tomb




(Vatican Radio) Those who don’t truly repent and only pretend to be Christian are damaging the Church. These were the words of Pope Francis at Mass on Monday morning in the Vatican’s Santa Marta.

Pope Francis focused his homily on the Lord’s exhortation to forgive our brothers and sisters who have sinned. Jesus, he said, never tired of forgiving, and neither should we. As the Gospel says, if our brother wrongs us seven times in one day, and repents every time, we should forgive him.

However, Pope Francis warned, there is difference between being a sinner and being corrupt. Those who sin and repent, who ask for forgiveness, are humble before the Lord. But those who continue to sin, while pretending to be Christian, lead a double life, they are corrupt. A Christian who is a benefactor, Pope Francis said, who gives to the Church with one hand, but steals with the other hand from the country, from the poor, is unjust. And Jesus says: “It would be better for him if a millstone were put around his neck and he be thrown into the sea”. This is because, the Pope explained, that person is deceitful, and “where there is deceit, the Spirit of God cannot be”.

“We should all call ourselves sinners”, Pope Francis said, but those who are corrupt do not understand humility. Jesus called them whitewashed tombs: they appear beautiful, from the outside, but inside they are full of dead bones and putrefaction. And a Christian who boasts about being Christian, but does not lead a Christian life, is corrupt.

We all know such people, Pope Francis said, and they damage the Church because they don’t live in the spirit of the Gospel, but in the spirit of worldliness. St Paul in his letter to the Romans clearly urges them not to enter into the framework, into the mentality of worldliness, because it leads to this double life.

The corrupt life is a “varnished putrefaction”, Pope Francis said. Jesus did not say that those who are corrupt are sinners, but he said they’re hypocrites. Let us ask the Holy Spirit, Pope Francis concluded, for the grace to admit that we are sinners, but not corrupt.