SACERDOTALIS CAELIBATUS
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PAUL VI
ON THE CELIBACY OF THE PRIEST
JUNE 24, 1967
To the Bishops, Priests and Faithful of
the Whole Catholic World.
Priestly celibacy has been guarded by the
Church for centuries as a brilliant jewel, and retains its value undiminished
even in our time when the outlook of men and the state of the world have
undergone such profound changes.
Amid the modern stirrings of opinion, a tendency has
also been manifested, and even a desire expressed, to ask the Church to
re-examine this characteristic institution. It is said that in the world of our
time the observance of celibacy has come to be difficult or even impossible.
2. This state of affairs is troubling consciences,
perplexing some priests and young aspirants to the priesthood; it is a cause for
alarm in many of the faithful and constrains Us to fulfill the promise We made
to the Council Fathers. We told them that it was Our intention to give new
luster and strength to priestly celibacy in the world of today. (1) Since saying
this We have, over a considerable period of time earnestly implorred the
enlightenment and assistance of the Holy Spirit and have examined before God
opinions and petitions which have come to Us from all over the world, notably
from many pastors of God's Church.
Some Serious Questions
3. The great question concerning the sacred celibacy of
the clergy in the Church has long been before Our mind in its deep seriousness:
must that grave, ennobling obligation remain today for those who have the
intention of receiving major orders? Is it possible and appropriate nowadays to
observe such an obligation? Has the time not come to break the bond linking
celibacy with the priesthood in the Church? Could the difficult observance of it
not be made optional? Would this not be a way to help the priestly ministry and
facilitate ecumenical approaches? And if the golden law of sacred celibacy is to
remain, what reasons are there to show that it is holy and fitting? What means
are to be taken to observe it, and how can it be changed from a burden to a help
for the priestly life?
4. Our attention has rested particularly on the
objections which have been and are still made in various forms against the
retention of sacred celibacy. in virtue of Our apostolic office We are obliged
by the importance, and indeed the complexity, of the subject to give faithful
consideration to the facts and the problems they involve, at the same time
bringing to them—as it is Our duty and Our mission to do—the light of truth
which is Christ. Our intention is to do in all things the will of Him who has
called Us to this office and to show what we are in the Church: the servant of
the servants of God.
OBJECTIONS AGAINST PRIESTLY CELIBACY
5. It may be said that today ecclesiastical celibacy
has been examined more penetratingly than ever before and in all its aspects. It
has been examined from the doctrinal, historical, sociological, psychological
and pastoral point of view. The intentions prompting this examination have
frequently been basically correct although reports may sometimes have distorted
them.
Let us look openly at the principal objections against
the law that links ecclesiastical celibacy with the priesthood.
The first seems to come from the most authoritative
source, the New Testament which preserves the teaching of Christ and the
Apostles. It does not openly demand celibacy of sacred ministers but proposes it
rather as a free act of obedience to a special vocation or to a special
spiritual gift. (2) Jesus Himself did not make it a prerequisite in His choice
of the Twelve, nor did the Apostles for those who presided over the first
Christian communities. (3)
The Fathers of the Church
6. The close relationship that the Fathers of the
Church and ecclesiastical writers established over the centuries between the
ministering priesthood and celibacy has its origin partly in a mentality and
partly in historical circumstances far different from ours. In patristic texts
we more frequently find exhortations to the clergy to abstain from marital
relations rather than to observe celibacy; and the reasons justifying the
perfect chastity of the Church's ministers seem often to be based on an overly
pessimistic view of man's earthly condition or on a certain notion of the purity
necessary for contact with sacred things. In addition, it is said that the old
arguments no longer are in harmony with the different social and cultural
milieus in which the Church today, through her priests, is called upon to work.
Vocation and Celibacy
7. Many see a difficulty in the fact that in the
present discipline concerning celibacy the gift of a vocation to the priesthood
is identified with that of perfect chastity as a state of life for God's
ministers. And so people ask whether it is right to exclude from the priesthood
those who, it is claimed, have been called to the ministry without having been
called to lead a celibate life.
The Shortage of Priests
8. It is asserted, moreover, that the maintaining of
priestly celibacy in the Church does great harm in those regions where the
shortage of the clergy—a fact recognized with sadness and deplored by the same
Council (4)—gives rise to critical situations: that it prevents the full
realization of the divine plan of salvation and at times jeopardizes the very
possibility of the initial proclamation of the Gospel. Thus the disquieting
decline in the ranks of the clergy is attributed by some to the heavy burden of
the obligation of celibacy.
9. Then there are those who are convinced that a
married priesthood would remove the occasions for infidelity, waywardness and
distressing defections which hurt and sadden the whole Church. These also
maintain that a married priesthood would enable Christ's ministers to witness
more fully to Christian living by including the witness of married life, from
which they are excluded by their state of life.
Human Values
10. There are also some who strongly maintain that
priests by reason of their celibacy find themselves in a situation that is not
only against nature but also physically and psychologically detrimental to the
development of a mature and well-balanced human personality. And so it happens,
they say, that priests often become hard and lacking in human warmth; that,
excluded from sharing fully the life and destiny of the rest of their brothers,
they are obliged to live a life of solitude which leads to bitterness and
discouragement.
So they ask: Don't all these things indicate that
celibacy does unwarranted violence to nature and unjustifiably disparages human
values which have their source in the divine work of creation and have been made
whole through the work of the Redemption accomplished by Christ?
Inadequate Formation
11. Again, in view of the way in which a candidate for
the priesthood comes to accept an obligation as momentous as this, the objection
is raised that in practice this acceptance results not from an authentically
personal decision, but rather from an attitude of passivity, the fruit of a
formation that neither is adequate nor makes sufficient allowance for human
liberty. For the degree of knowledge and power of decision of a young person and
his psychological and physical maturity fall far below—or at any rate are
disproportionate to—the seriousness of the obligation he is assuming, its real
difficulties and its permanence.
12. We well realize that there are other objections
that can be made against priestly celibacy. This is a very complex question,
which touches intimately upon the very meaning of being alive, yet is penetrated
and resolved by the light of divine revelation. A never-ending series of
difficulties will present themselves to those who cannot "receive this precept''
(5) and who do not know or have forgotten it is a "gift of God," (6) and who
moreover are unaware of the loftier reasoning, wonderful efficacy and abundant
riches of this new insight into life.
Testimony of the Past and Present
13. The sum of these objections would appear to drown
out the solemn and age-old voice of the pastors of the Church and of the masters
of the spiritual life, and to nullify the living testimony of the countless
ranks of saints and faithful ministers of God, for whom celibacy has been the
object of the total and generous gift of themselves to the mystery of Christ, as
well as its outward sign. But no, this voice, still strong and untroubled, is
the voice not just of the past but of the present too. Ever intent on the
realities of today, we cannot close our eyes to this magnificent, wonderful
reality: that there are still today in God's holy Church, in every part of the
world where she exercises her beneficent influence, great numbers of her
ministers—subdeacons, deacons, priests and bishops—who are living their life of
voluntary and consecrated celibacy in the most exemplary way.
Nor can we overlook the immense ranks of men and women
in religious life, of laity and of young people too, united in the faithful
observance of perfect chastity. They live in chastity, not out of disdain for
the gift of life, but because of a greater love for that new life which springs
from the Paschal mystery. They live this life of courageous self-denial and
spiritual joyfulness with exemplary fidelity and also with relative facility.
This magnificent phenomenon bears testimony to an exceptional facet of the
kingdom of God living in the midst of modern society, to which it renders humble
and beneficial service as the "light of the world" and the "salt of the earth."
(7) We cannot withhold the expression of Our admiration; the spirit of Christ is
certainly breathing here.
The Law of Celibacy Confirmed
14. Hence We consider that the present law of celibacy
should today continue to be linked to the ecclesiastical ministry. This law
should support the minister in his exclusive, definitive and total choice of the
unique and supreme love of Christ; it should uphold him in the entire dedication
of himself to the public worship of God and to the service of the Church; it
should distinguish his state of life both among the faithful and in the world at
large.
15. The gift of the priestly vocation dedicated to the
divine worship and to the religious and pastor al service of the People of God ,
is undoubtedly distinct from that which leads a person to choose celibacy as a
state of consecrated life. (8) But the priestly vocation, although inspired by
God, does not become definitive or operative without having been tested and
accepted by those in the Church who hold power and bear responsibility for the
ministry serving the ecclesial community. It is, therefore, the task of those
who hold authority in the Church to determine, in accordance with the varying
conditions of time and place, who in actual practice are to be considered
suitable candidates for the religious and pastoral service of the Church, and
what should be required of them.
Purpose of the Encyclical
16. In a spirit of faith, therefore, We look on this
occasion afforded Us by Divine Providence as a favorable opportunity for setting
forth anew, and in a way more suited to the men of our time, the fundamental
reasons for sacred celibacy. If difficulties against faith "can stimulate our
minds to a more accurate and deeper understanding" of it, (9) the same is true
of the ecclesiastical discipline which guides and directs the life of the
faithful.
We are deeply moved by the joy this occasion gives Us
of contemplating the richness in virtue and the beauty of the Church of Christ.
These may not always be immediately apparent to the human eye, because they
derive from the love of the divine Head of the Church and because they are
revealed in the perfection of holiness (10) which moves the human spirit to
admiration, and which human resources cannot adequately explain.
1. REASONS FOR PRIESTLY CELIBACY
17. Virginity undoubtedly, as the Second Vatican
Council declared, "is not, of course, required by the nature of the priesthood
itself. This is clear from the practice of the early Church and the traditions
of the Eastern Churches.'' (11) But at the same time the Council did not
hesitate to confirm solemnly the ancient, sacred and providential present law of
priestly celibacy. In addition, it set forth the motives which justify this law
for those who, in a spirit of faith and with generous fervor, know how to
appreciate the gifts of God.
18. Consideration of how celibacy is "particularly
suited" (12) to God's ministers is not something recent. Even if the explicit
reasons have differed with different mentalities and different situations, they
were always inspired by specifically Christian considerations; and from these
considerations we can get an intuition of the more fundamental motives
underlying them. (13) These can be brought into clearer light only under the
influence of the Holy Spirit, promised by Christ to His followers for the
knowledge of things to come (14) and to enable the People of God to increase in
the understanding of the mystery of Christ and of the Church. In this process
the experience gained through the ages from a deeper penetration of spiritual
things also has its part.
Christological Significance
19. The Christian priesthood, being of a new order, can
be understood only in the light of the newness of Christ, the Supreme Pontiff
and eternal Priest, who instituted the priesthood of the ministry as a real
participation in His own unique priesthood. (15) The minister of Christ and
dispenser of the mysteries of God, (16) therefore, looks up to Him directly as
his model and supreme ideal. (l7) The Lord Jesus, the only Son of God, was sent
by the Father into the world and He became man, in order that humanity which was
subject to sin and death might be reborn, and through this new birth (18) might
enter the kingdom of heaven. Being entirely consecrated to the will of the
Father, (19) Jesus brought forth this new creation by means of His Paschal
mystery; (20) thus, He introduced into time and into the world a new form of
life which is sublime and divine and which radically transforms the human
condition. (21)
Matrimony and Celibacy
20. Matrimony, according to the will of God, continues
the work of the first creation; (22) and considered within the total plan of
salvation, it even acquired a new meaning and a new value. Jesus, in fact, has
restored its original dignity, (23) has honored it (24) and has raised it to the
dignity of a sacrament and of a mysterious symbol of His own union with the
Church. (25) Thus, Christian couples walk together toward their heavenly
fatherland in the exercise of mutual love, in the fulfillment of their
particular obligations, and in striving for the sanctity proper to them. But
Christ, "Mediator of a superior covenant," (26) has also opened a new way, in
which the human creature adheres wholly and directly to the Lord, and is
concerned only with Him and with His affairs; (27) thus, he manifests in a
clearer and more complete way the profoundly transforming reality of the New
Testament.
Christ's Example
21. Christ, the only Son of the Father, by the power of
the Incarnation itself was made Mediator between heaven and earth, between the
Father and the human race. Wholly in accord with this mission, Christ remained
throughout His whole life in the state of celibacy, which signified His total
dedication to the service of God and men. This deep concern between celibacy and
the priesthood of Christ is reflected in those whose fortune it is to share in
the dignity and mission of the Mediator and eternal Priest; this sharing will be
more perfect the freer the sacred minister is from the bonds of flesh and blood.
(28)
The Motive for Celibacy
22. Jesus, who selected the first ministers of
salvation, wished them to be introduced to the understanding of the "mysteries
of the kingdom of heaven," (29) but He also wished them to be coworkers with God
under a very special title, and His ambassadors. (30) He called them friends and
brethren, (31) for whom He consecrated Himself so that they might be consecrated
in truth; (32) He promised a more than abundant recompense to anyone who should
leave home, family, wife and children for the sake of the kingdom of God. (33)
More than this, in words filled with mystery and hope, He also commended an even
more perfect consecration (34) to the kingdom of heaven by means of celibacy, as
a special gift. (35) The motive of this response to the divine call is the
kingdom of heaven; (36) similarly, this very kingdom, (37) the Gospel (38) and
the name of Christ (39) motivate those called by Jesus to undertake the work of
the apostolate, freely accepting its burdens, that they may participate the more
closely in His lot.
23. To them this is the mystery of the newness of
Christ, of all that He is and stands for; it is the sum of the highest ideals of
the Gospel and of the kingdom; it is a particular manifestation of grace, which
springs from the Paschal mystery of the Savior. This is what makes the choice of
celibacy desirable and worthwhile to those called by our Lord Jesus. Thus they
intend not only to participate in His priestly office, but also to share with
Him His very condition of living.
Fullness of Love
24. The response to the divine call is an answer of
love to the love which Christ has shown us so sublimely. (40) This response is
included in the mystery of that special love for souls who have accepted His
most urgent appeals. (41) With a divine force, grace increases the longings of
love. And love, when it is genuine, is all-embracing, stable and lasting, an
irresistible spur to all forms of heroism. And so the free choice of sacred
celibacy has always been considered by the Church "as a symbol of, and stimulus
to, charity": (42) it signifies a love without reservations; it stimulates to a
charity which is open to all. In a life so completely dedicated and motivated,
who can see the sign of spiritual narrowness or selfseeking, and not see rather
that celibacy is and ought to be a rare and very meaningful example of a life
motivated by love, by which man expresses his own unique greatness? Who can
doubt the moral and spiritual richness of such a life, consecrated not to any
human ideal, no matter how noble, but to Christ and to His work to bring about a
new form of humanity in all places and for all generations?
Invitation to Study
25. This biblical and theological view associates our
ministerial priesthood with the priesthood of Christ; the total and exclusive
dedication of Christ to His mission of salvation provides reason and example for
our assimilation to the form of charity and sacrifice proper to Christ our
Savior. This vision seems to Us so profound and rich in truth, both speculative
and practical, that We invite you, venerable brothers, and you, eager students
of Christian doctrine and masters of the spiritual life, and all you priests who
have gained a supernatural insight into your vocation, to persevere in the study
of this vision, and to go deeply into the inner recesses and wealth of its
reality. In this way, the bond between the priesthood and celibacy will more and
more be seen as closely knit—as the mark of a heroic soul and the imperative
call to unique and total love for Christ and His Church.
Ecclesiological Significance
26. "Laid hold of by Christ" (43) unto the complete
abandonment of one's entire self to Him, the priest takes on a closer likeness
to Christ, even in the love with which the eternal Priest has loved the Church
His Body and offered Himself entirely for her sake, in order to make her a
glorious, holy and immaculate Spouse. (44)
The consecrated celibacy of the sacred ministers
actually manifests the virginal love of Christ for the Church, and the virginal
and supernatural fecundity of this marriage, by which the children of God are
born, "not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh." (45 46)
27. The priest dedicates himself to the service of the
Lord Jesus and of His Mystical Body with complete liberty, which is made easier
by his total offering, and thus he depicts more fully the unity and harmony of
the priestly life. (47) His ability for listening to the word of God and for
prayer increases. Indeed, the word of God, as preserved by the Church, stirs up
vibrant and profound echoes in the priest who daily meditates on it, lives it
and preaches it to the faithful.
The Divine Office and Prayer
28. Like Christ Himself, His minister is wholly and
solely intent on the things of God and the Church, (48) and he imitates the
great High priest who lives ever in the presence of God in order to intercede in
our favor. (49) So he receives joy and encouragement unceasingly from the
attentive and devout recitation of the Divine Office, by which he dedicates his
voice to the Church who prays together with her Spouse, (50) and he recognizes
the necessity of continuing his diligence at prayer, which is the profoundly
priestly occupation. (51)
A Full and Fruitful Life
29. The rest of a priest's life also acquires a greater
richness of meaning and sanctifying power. In fact, his individual efforts at
his own sanctification find new incentives in the ministry of grace and in the
ministry of the Eucharist, in which "the whole spiritual good of the Church is
contained": (52) acting in the person of Christ, the priest unites himself most
intimately with the offering, and places on the altar his entire life, which
bears the marks of the holocaust.
30. What other considerations can We offer to describe
the increase of the priest's power, his service, his love and sacrifice for the
entire people of God? Christ spoke of Himself when He said: "Unless a grain of
wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears
much fruit." (53) And the Apostle Paul did not hesitate to expose himself to a
daily death in order to obtain among his faithful glory in Christ Jesus. (54) In
a similar way, by a daily dying to himself and by giving up the legitimate love
of a family of his own for the love of Christ and of His kingdom, the priest
will find the glory of an exceedingly rich and fruitful life in Christ, because
like Him and in Him, he loves and dedicates himself to all the children of God.
31. In the community of the faithful committed to his
charge, the priest represents Christ. Thus, it is most fitting that in all
things he should reproduce the image of Christ and in particular follow His
example, both in his personal and in his apostolic life. To his children in
Christ, the priest is a sign and a pledge of that sublime and new reality which
is the kingdom of God; he dispenses it and he possesses it to a more perfect
degree. Thus he nourishes the faith and hope of all Christians, who, as such,
are bound to observe chastity according to their proper state of life.
The Pastoral Efficacy of Celibacy
32. The consecration to Christ under an additional and
lofty title like celibacy evidently gives to the priest, even in the practical
field, the maximum efficiency and the best disposition of mind, mentally and
emotionally, for the continuous exercise of a perfect charity. (55) This charity
will permit him to spend himself wholly for the welfare of all, in a fuller and
more concrete way. (56) It also obviously guarantees him a greater freedom and
flexibility in the pastoral ministry, (57) in his active and living presence in
the world, to which Christ has sent him (58) so that he may pay fully to all the
children of God the debt due to them. (59)
Eschatological Significance
33. The kingdom of God, which "is not of this world,"
(60) is present here on earth in mystery, and will reach its perfection only
with the glorious coming of the Lord Jesus. (61) The Church here below
constitutes the seed and the beginning of this kingdom. And as she continues to
grow slowly but surely, she longs for the perfect kingdom and ardently desires
with all her energy to unite herself with her King in glory. (62)
The pilgrim People of God are on a journey through the
vicissitudes of this life toward their heavenly homeland, (63) where the divine
sonship of the redeemed (64) will be fully revealed and where the transformed
loveliness of the Spouse of the Lamb of God will shine completely. (65)
A Sign of Heavenly Treasures
34. Our Lord and Master has said that "in the
resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like angels
in heaven." (66) In the world of man, so deeply involved in earthly concerns and
too often enslaved by the desires of the flesh, (67) the precious and almost
divine gift of perfect continence for the kingdom of heaven stands out precisely
as "a special token of the rewards of heaven"; (68) it proclaims the presence on
earth of the final stages of salvation (69) with the arrival of a new world, and
in a way it anticipates the fulfillment of the kingdom as it sets forth its
supreme values which will one day shine forth in all the children of God. This
continence, therefore, stands as a testimony to the ever-continuing progress of
the People of God toward the final goal of their earthly pilgrimage, and as a
stimulus for all to raise their eyes to the things above, "where Christ is
seated at the right hand of God" and where "our life is hid with Christ in God"
until it appears "with him in glory." (70)
CELIBACY IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH
35. Although it would be highly instructive to go
through the writings of past centuries on ecclesiastical celibacy, this would
take so long that We will let a brief account suffice. In Christian antiquity
the Fathers and ecclesiastical writers testify to the spread through the East
and the West of the voluntary practice of celibacy by sacred ministers (71)
because of its profound suitability for their total dedication to the service of
Christ and His Church.
36. From the beginning of the 4th century, the Church
of the West strengthened, spread and confirmed this practice by means of various
provincial councils and through the supreme pontiffs. (72) More than anyone
else, the supreme pastors and teachers of the Church of God, the guardians and
interpreters of the patrimony of the faith and of holy Christian practices,
promoted, defended, and restored ecclesiastical celibacy in successive eras of
history, even when they met opposition from the clergy itself and when the
practices of a decadent society did not favor the heroic demands of virtue. The
obligation of celibacy was then solemnly sanctioned by the Sacred Ecumenical
Council of Trent (73) and finally included in the Code of Canon Law. (74)
37. The most recent sovereign pontiffs who preceded Us,
making use of their doctrinal knowledge and spurred on by ardent zeal, strove to
enlighten the clergy on this matter and to urge them to its observance. (75) We
do not wish to fail to pay homage to them, especially to Our well-loved
immediate predecessor, whose memory is still fresh in the hearts of men all over
the world. During the Roman Synod, with the sincere approval of all the clergy
of the city, he spoke as follows: "It deeply hurts Us that . . . anyone can
dream that the Church will deliberately or even suitably renounce what from time
immemorial has been, and still remains, one of the purest and noblest glories of
her priesthood. The law of ecclesiastical celibacy and the efforts necessary to
preserve it always recall to mind the struggles of the heroic times when the
Church of Christ had to fight for and succeeded in obtaining her threefold
glory, always an emblem of victory, that is, the Church of Christ, free, chaste
and catholic." (76)
The Church of the East
38. If the legislation of the Eastern Church is
different in the matter of discipline with regard to clerical celibacy, as was
finally established by the Council of Trullo held in the year 692, (77) and
which has been clearly recognized by the Second Vatican Council, (78) this is
due to the different historical background of that most noble part of the
Church, a situation which the Holy Spirit has providentially and supernaturally
influenced.
We Ourselves take this opportunity to express Our
esteem and Our respect for all the clergy of the Eastern Churches, and to
recognize in them examples of fidelity and zeal which make them worthy of
sincere veneration.
39. We find further comforting reasons for continuing
to adhere to the observance of the discipline of clerical celibacy in the
exaltation of virginity by the Eastern Fathers. We hear within Us, for example,
the voice of St. Gregory of Nyssa, reminding us that "the life of virginity is
the image of the blessedness that awaits us in the life to come." (79) We are no
less assured by St. John Chrysostom's treatise on the priesthood, which is still
a fruitful subject for reflection. Intent on throwing light on the harmony which
must exist between the private life of him who ministers at the altar and the
dignity of the order to which his sacred duties belong, he affirmed: ". . . it
is becoming that he who accepts the priesthood be as pure as if he were in
heaven." (80)
40. Further, it is by no means futile to observe that
in the East only celibate priests are ordained bishops, and priests themselves
cannot contract marriage after their ordination to the priesthood. This
indicates that these venerable Churches also possess to a certain extent the
principle of a celibate priesthood and even of the appropriateness of celibacy
for the Christian priesthood, of which the bishops possess the summit and
fullness. (81)
The Tradition of the Western Church
41. In any case, the Church of the West cannot weaken
her faithful observance of her own tradition. Nor can she be regarded as having
followed for centuries a path which instead of favoring the spiritual richness
of individual souls and of the People of God, has in some way compromised it, or
of having stifled, with arbitrary juridical prescriptions, the free expansion of
the most profound realities of nature and of grace.
Particular Cases
42. In virtue of the fundamental norm of the government
of the Catholic Church, to which We alluded above, (82) while on the one hand,
the law requiring a freely chosen and perpetual celibacy of those who are
admitted to Holy Orders remains unchanged, on the other hand, a study may be
allowed of the particular circumstances of married sacred ministers of Churches
or other Christian communities separated from the Catholic communion, and of the
possibility of admitting to priestly functions those who desire to adhere to the
fullness of this communion and to continue to exercise the sacred ministry. The
circumstances must be such, however, as not to prejudice the existing discipline
regarding celibacy.
And that the authority of the Church does not hesitate
to exercise her power in this matter can be seen from the recent Ecumenical
Council, which foresaw the possibility of conferring the holy diaconate on men
of mature age who are already married. (83)
43. All this, however, does not signify a relaxation of
the existing law, and must not be interpreted as a prelude to its abolition.
There are better things to do than to promote this hypothesis, which tears down
that vigor and love in which celibacy finds security and happiness, and which
obscures the true doctrine that justifies its existence and exalts its splendor.
It would be much better to promote serious studies in defense of the spiritual
meaning and moral value of virginity and celibacy. (84)
The Mind of the Council
44. Holy virginity is a very special gift.
Nevertheless, the whole present-day Church, solemnly and universally represented
by the pastors responsible for her welfare (with due respect, as We have said,
for the discipline of the Eastern Churches), manifested her absolute faith "in
the Holy Spirit that the grace of leading a celibate life, so desirable in the
priesthood of the New Testament, will be readily granted by God the Father if
those who by ordination share the priesthood of Christ humbly and earnestly ask
it together with the whole Church." (85)
The Prayer of the People of God
45. We wholeheartedly call on the entire People of God
to do their duty in bringing about an increase in priestly vocations. (86) We
ask them fervently to beg the Father of all, the divine Spouse of the Church,
and the Holy Spirit, her principle of life, through the intercession of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of Christ and of His Church, to pour out, especially
at present, this divine gift, which the Father certainly does not wish to give
stintingly. They should also fervently pray, in like manner, that souls may
dispose themselves to receive this gift by a profound faith and a generous love.
In this way, in our world which needs God's glory, (81) priests, ever more
perfectly conformed to the one and supreme Priest, will be a real glory to
Christ, (88) and, through them, "the glory of the grace" of God will be
magnified in the world of today. (89)
46. Yes, venerable and well-beloved brothers in the
priesthood, whom We cherish "with the affection of Christ Jesus," (90) it is
indeed this world in which we live, tormented by the pains of growth and change,
justly proud of its human values and human conquests, which urgently needs the
witness of lives consecrated to the highest and most sacred spiritual values.
This witness is necessary in order that the rare and incomparable light
radiating from the most sublime virtues of the spirit may not be wanting to our
times.
The Hidden Wisdom of God
47. Our Lord Jesus Christ did not hesitate to confide
the formidable task of evangelizing the then-known world to a handful of men to
all appearances lacking in number and quality. He bade this little flock not to
lose heart, (91) for, thanks to His constant assistance, (92) through Him and
with Him, they would overcome the world. (93) Jesus has also taught us that the
kingdom of God has an intrinsic and unobservable dynamism which enables it to
grow "without [man's] knowing it." (94) The harvest of God's kingdom is great,
but the laborers, as in the beginning, are few. Actually, they have never been
as numerous as human standards would have judged sufficient. But the heavenly
King demands that we pray "the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His
harvest." (95) The counsels and prudence of man cannot supersede the hidden
wisdom of Him who, in the history of salvation, has challenged man's wisdom and
power by His own foolishness and weakness. (96)
The Courage of Faith
48. Supported by the power of faith, We express the
Church's conviction on this matter. Of this she is certain: if she is prompter
and more persevering in her response to grace, if she relies more openly and
more fully on its secret but invincible power, if, in short, she bears more
exemplary witness to the mystery of Christ, then she will never fall short in
the performance of her salvific mission to the world—no matter how much
opposition she faces from human ways of thinking or misrepresentations. We must
all realize that we can do all things in Him who alone gives strength to souls
(97) and increase to His Church. (98)
49. We are not easily led to believe that the abolition
of ecclesiastical celibacy would considerably increase the number of priestly
vocations: the contemporary experience of those Churches and ecclesial
communities which allow their ministers to marry seems to prove the contrary.
The causes of the decrease in vocations to the priesthood are to be found
elsewhere—for example, in the fact that individuals and families have lost their
sense of God and of all that is holy, their esteem for the Church as the
institution of salvation through faith and the sacraments. The problem must be
examined at its real source.
CELIBACY AND HUMAN VALUES
50. As We said above, (99) the Church is not unaware
that the choice of consecrated celibacy, since it involves a series of hard
renunciations which affect the very depths of a man, presents also grave
difficulties and problems to which the men of today are particularly sensitive.
In fact, it might seem that celibacy conflicts with the solemn recognition of
human values by the Church in the recent Council. And yet more careful
consideration reveals that this sacrifice of the human love experienced by most
men in family life and given up by the priest for the love of Christ, is really
a singular tribute paid to that great love. For it is universally recognized
that man has always offered to God that which is worthy of both the giver and
the receiver.
Grace and Nature
51. Moreover, the Church cannot and should not fail to
realize that the choice of celibacy—provided that it is made with human and
Christian prudence and responsibility—is governed by grace which, far from
destroying or doing violences to nature, elevates it and imparts to it
supernatural powers and vigor. God, who has created and redeemed man, knows what
He can ask of him and gives him everything necessary to be able to do what his
Creator and Redeemer asks of him. St. Augustine, who had fully and painfully
experienced in himself the nature of man, exclaimed: "Grant what You command,
and command what You will.'' (100)
52. A true knowledge of the real difficulties of
celibacy is very useful, even necessary, for the priest, so that he may be fully
aware of what his celibacy requires in order to be genuine and beneficial. But
with equal fidelity to the truth, these difficulties must not be given greater
value or weight than they actually have in the human or religious sphere, or be
declared impossible of solution.
Celibacy Not Against Nature
53. Considering what contemporary scholarly
investigation has ascertained, it is not right to continue repeating (l01) that
celibacy is against nature because it runs counter to lawful physical, psychic
and affective needs, or to claim that a completely mature human personality
demands fulfillment of these needs. Man, created to God's image and likeness,
(102) is not just flesh and blood; the sexual instinct is not all that he has;
man has also, and pre-eminently, understanding, choice, freedom, and thanks to
these powers he is, and must remain, the chief work of creation; they give him
mastery over his physical, mental and emotional appetites.
54. The true, profound reason for dedicated celibacy
is, as We have said, the choice of a closer and more complete relationship with
the mystery of Christ and the Church for the good of all mankind: in this choice
there is no doubt that those highest human values are able to find their fullest
expression.
An Exaltation of Man
55. The choice of celibacy does not connote ignorance
of or contempt for the sexual instinct and man's capacity for giving himself in
love. That would certainly do damage to his physical and psychological balance.
On the contrary, it demands clear understanding, careful self-control and a wise
elevation of the mind to higher realities. In this way celibacy sets the whole
man on a higher level and makes an effective contribution to his perfection.
The Development of Personality
56. We readily grant that the natural and lawful desire
a man has to love a woman and to raise a family is renounced by the celibate in
sacred orders; but it cannot be said that marriage and the family are the only
way for fully developing the human person. In the priest's heart love is by no
means extinct. His charity is drawn from the purest source, (103) practiced in
the imitation of God and Christ, and is no less demanding and real than any
other genuine love. (l04) It gives the priest a limitless horizon, deepens and
gives breadth to his sense of responsibility—a mark of mature personality—and
inculcates in him, as a sign of a higher and greater fatherhood, a generosity
and refinement of heart (105) which offer a superlative enrichment.
The Testimony of Total Dedication
57. All the People of God must give testimony to the
mystery of Christ and His kingdom, but this witnessing does not take the same
form for all. The Church leaves to her married children the function of giving
the necessary testimony of a genuinely and fully Christian married and family
life. She entrusts to her priests the testimony of a life wholly dedicated to
pondering and seeking the new and delightful realities of God's kingdom.
If this means that the priest is without a direct
personal experience of married life, he nevertheless will be able through his
training, his ministry and the grace of his office, to gain even deeper insights
into every human yearning. This will allow him to meet problems of this kind at
their source and give solid support by his advice and assistance to married
persons and Christian families.(106) For the Christian family, the example of
the priest who is living his life of celibacy to the full will underscore the
spiritual dimension of every love worthy of the name, and his personal sacrifice
will merit for the faithful united in the holy bond of matrimony the grace of a
true union.
The Priest and Solitude
58. By reason of his celibacy the priest is a man
alone: that is true, but his solitude is not meaningless emptiness because it is
filled with God and the brimming riches of His kingdom. Moreover, he has
prepared himself for this solitude—which should be an internal and external
plenitude of charity—if he has chosen it with full understanding, and not
through any proud desire to be different from the rest of men, or to withdraw
himself from common responsibilities, or to alienate himself from his brothers,
or to show contempt for the world. Though set apart from the world, the priest
is not separated from the People of God, because he has been "appointed to act
on behalf of men," (107) since he is "consecrated" completely to charity (108)
and to the work for which the Lord has chosen him. (109)
The Loneliness of Christ
59. At times loneliness will weigh heavily on the
priest, but he will not for that reason regret having generously chosen it.
Christ, too, in the most tragic hours of His life was alone—abandoned by the
very ones whom He had chosen as witnesses to, and companions of, His life, and
whom He had loved "to the end" (110)—but He stated, "I am not alone, for the
Father is with me." (111) He who has chosen to belong completely to Christ will
find, above all, in intimacy with Him and in His grace, the power of spirit
necessary to banish sadness and regret and to triumph over discouragement. He
will not be lacking the protection of the Virgin Mother of .Jesus nor the
motherly solicitude of the Church, to whom he has given himself in service. He
will not be without the kindly care of his father in Christ, his bishop; nor
will the fraternal companionship of his fellow priests and the love of the
entire People of God, most fruitful of consolations, be lacking to him. And if
hostility, lack of confidence and the indifference of his fellow men make his
solitude quite painful, he will thus be able to share, with dramatic clarity,
the very experience of Christ, as an apostle who must not be "greater than he
who sent him," (112) as a friend admitted to the most painful and most glorious
secret of his divine Friend who has chosen him to bring forth the mysterious
fruit of life in his own life, which is only apparently one of death. (ll3)
II. PRIESTLY FORMATION
60. Our reflection on the beauty, importance and
intimate fittingness of holy virginity for the ministers of Christ and His
Church makes it incumbent on those who hold the office of teacher and pastor of
that Church to take steps to assure and promote its positive observance, from
the first moment of preparation to receive such a precious gift.
In fact, the difficulties and problems which make the
observance of chastity very painful or quite impossible for some, spring, not
infrequently, from a type of priestly formation which, given the great changes
of these last years, is no longer completely adequate for the formation of a
personality worthy of a "man of God." (114)
Carrying Out the Council's Norms
61. The Second Vatican Council has already indicated
wise criteria and guidelines to this end. They are in conformity with the
progress of psychology and pedagogy, as well as with the changed conditions of
mankind and of contemporary society. (115) It is Our wish that appropriate
instructions be drawn up with the help of truly qualified men, treating with all
necessary detail the theme of chastity. They should be sent out as soon as
possible to provide competent and timely assistance to those who have the great
responsibility within the Church of preparing future priests.
Personal Response to the Divine
Vocation
62. The priesthood is a ministry instituted by Christ
for the service of His Mystical Body which is the Church. To her belongs the
authority to admit to that priesthood those whom she judges qualified—that is,
those to whom God has given, along with other signs of an ecclesiastical
vocation, the gift of a consecrated celibacy. (116)
In virtue of such a gift, confirmed by canon law, the
individual is called to respond with free judgment and total dedication,
adapting his own mind and outlook to the will of God who calls him. Concretely,
this divine calling manifests itself in a given individual with his own definite
personality structure which is not at all overpowered by grace. In candidates
for the priesthood, therefore, the sense of receiving this divine gift should be
cultivated; so too, a sense of responsibility in their meeting with God, with
the highest importance given to supernatural means.
63. It is likewise necessary that exact account be
taken of the physical and psychological state of the candidate in order to guide
and orient him toward the priestly ideal; so a truly adequate formation should
harmoniously coordinate grace and nature in the man in whom one clearly sees the
proper conditions and qualifications. These conditions should be ascertained as
soon as signs of his holy vocation are first indicated—not hastily or
superficially, but carefully, with the assistance and aid of a doctor or a
competent psychologist. A serious investigation of hereditary factors should not
be omitted.
Unsuitable Candidates
64. Those who are discovered to be unfit for physical,
psychological or moral reasons should be quickly removed from the path to the
priesthood. Let educators appreciate that this is one of their very grave
duties. They must neither indulge in false hopes and dangerous illusions nor
permit the candidate to nourish these hopes in any way, with resultant damage to
himself or to the Church. The life of the celibate priest, which engages the
whole man so totally and so delicately, excludes in fact those of insufficient
physical, psychic and moral qualifications. Nor should anyone pretend that grace
supplies for the defects of nature in such a man.
65. After the capability of a man has been ascertained
and he has been admitted to the course of studies leading to the goal of the
priesthood, care should be taken for the progressive development of a mature
personality through physical, intellectual and moral education directed toward
the control and personal dominion of his temperament, sentiments and passions.
The Necessity of Discipline
66. This will be proved by the firmness of the spirit
with which he accepts the personal and community type of discipline demanded by
the priestly life. Such a regime, the lack or deficiency of which is to be
deplored because it exposes the candidate to grave disorders, should not be
borne only as an imposition from without. It should be inculcated and implanted
as an indispensable component within the context of the spiritual life.
Personal Initiative
67. The educator should skillfully stimulate the young
man to the evangelical virtue of sincerity (117) and to spontaneity by approving
every good personal initiative, so that the young man will come to know and
properly evaluate himself, wisely assume his own responsibilities, and train
himself to that self-control which is of such importance in priestly education.
68. The exercise of authority, the principle of which
should be maintained firmly, will be animated by wise moderation and a pastoral
attitude. It will be used in a climate of dialogue and will be implemented in a
gradual way which will afford the educator an ever deepening understanding of
the psychology of the young man, and will appeal to personal conviction.
A Free Choice
69. The complete education of the candidate for the
priesthood should be directed to help him acquire a tranquil, convinced and free
choice of the grave responsibilities which he must assume in conscience before
God and the Church. Ardor and generosity are marvelous qualities of youth;
illuminated and supported, they merit, along with the blessing of the Lord, the
admiration and confidence of the whole Church as well as of all men. None of the
real personal and social difficulties which their choice will bring in its train
should remain hidden to the young men, so that their enthusiasm will not be
superficial and illusory. At the same time it will be right to highlight with at
least equal truth and clarity the sublimity of their choice, which, though it
may lead on the one hand to a certain physical and psychic void, nevertheless on
the other brings with it an interior richness capable of elevating the person
most profoundly.
A Demanding Asceticism
70. Young candidates for the priesthood should be
convinced that they cannot follow their difficult way without a special type of
asceticism proper to themselves and more demanding than that which is required
of the other faithful. It will be a demanding asceticism but not a suffocating
one which consists in the deliberate and assiduous practice of those virtues
which make a man a priest: self-denial in the highest degree—an essential
condition if one would follow Christ; (118) humility and obedience as
expressions of internal truth and of an ordered liberty; prudence, justice,
courage and temperance—virtues without which it is impossible for true and
profound religious life to exist; a sense of responsibility, fidelity and
loyalty in the acceptance of one's obligations; a balance between contemplation
and action; detachment and a spirit of poverty, which will give tone and vigor
to evangelical freedom; chastity, the result of a persevering struggle,
harmonized with all the other natural and supernatural virtues; a serene and
secure contact with the world to whose service the young man will dedicate
himself for Christ and for His kingdom.
In such a way the aspirant to the priesthood will
acquire, with the help of a divine grace, a strong, mature and balanced
personality, a combination of inherited and acquired qualities, harmony of all
his powers in the light of the faith and in intimate union with Christ, whom he
has chosen for himself and for the ministry of salvation to the world.
Trial Periods
71. However, to judge with more certainty the young
man's fitness for the priesthood and to have successive proofs of his attained
maturity on both the human and supernatural levels—for "it is more difficult to
conduct oneself correctly in the service of souls because of dangers coming from
outside" (119)—it will be advisable to have a preliminary trial period before
the observance of holy celibacy becomes something definitive and permanent
through ordination to the priesthood. (120)
A Gift to the Lord and His Church
72. Once moral certainty has been obtained that the
maturity of the candidate is sufficiently guaranteed, he will be in a position
to take on himself the heavy and sweet burden of priestly chastity as a total
gift of himself to the Lord and to His Church.
In this way, the obligation of celibacy, which the
Church makes a condition of Holy Orders, is accepted by the candidate through
the influence of divine grace and with full reflection and liberty, and, as is
evident, not without the wise and prudent advice of competent spiritual
directors who are concerned not to impose the choice, but rather to dispose the
candidate to make it more consciously. Hence, in that solemn moment when the
candidate will decide once and for his whole life, he will not feel the weight
of an imposition from outside, but rather the interior joy that accompanies a
choice made for the love of Christ.
THE PRIESTLY LIFE
73. The priest must not think that ordination makes
everything easy for him and screens him once and for all from every temptation
or danger. Chastity is not acquired all at once but results from a laborious
conquest and daily affirmation. Our world today stresses the positive values of
love between the sexes but has also multiplied the difficulties and risks in
this sphere. In order to safeguard his chastity with all care and affirm its
sublime meaning, the priest must consider clearly and calmly his position as a
man exposed to spiritual warfare against seductions of the flesh in himself and
in the world, continually renewing his resolution to give an ever increasing and
ever better perfection to the irrevocable offering of himself which obliges him
to a fidelity that is complete, loyal and real.
74. Christ's priest will daily receive new strength and
joy as he deepens in meditation and prayer the motives for his gift and the
conviction that he has chosen the better part. He will ask humbly and
perseveringly for the grace of fidelity, never denied to those who ask it
sincerely. At the same time he will use the natural and supernatural means at
his disposal. In particular he will not disregard those ascetical norms which
have been substantiated by the Church's experience and are no less necessary in
modern circumstances than in former times. (121)
Intense Spiritual Life
75. The priest should apply himself above all else to
developing, with all the love grace inspires in him, his close relationship with
Christ, and exploring this inexhaustible and enriching mystery; he should also
acquire an ever deeper sense of the mystery of the Church. There would be the
risk of his state of life seeming unreasonable and unfounded if it is viewed
apart from this mystery.
Priestly piety, nourished at the table of God's word
and the Holy Eucharist, lived within the cycle of the liturgical year, inspired
by a warm and enlightened devotion to the Virgin Mother of the supreme and
eternal High Priest and Queen of the Apostles, (122) will bring him to the
source of a true spiritual life which alone provides a solid foundation for the
observance of celibacy.
The Spirit of the Priestly Ministry
76. In this way the priest, with grace and peace in his
heart, will face with generosity the manifold tasks of his life and ministry. If
he performs these with faith and zeal he will find in them new occasions to show
that he belongs entirely to Christ and His Mystical Body, for his own
sanctification and the sanctification of others. The charity of Christ which
urges him on, (123) will help him not to renounce his higher feelings but to
elevate and deepen them in a spirit of consecration in imitation of Christ the
High Priest, who shared intimately in the life of men, loved and suffered for
them, (l24) and of Paul the Apostle who shared in the cares of all (125) in
order to bring the light and power of the Gospel of God's grace to shine in the
world. (126)
77. Rightly jealous of his full self-giving to the
Lord, the priest should know how to guard against emotional tendencies which
give rise to desires not sufficiently enlightened or guided by the Spirit. He
should beware of seeing spiritual or apostolic pretexts for what are in fact
dangerous inclinations of the heart.
Virile Asceticism
78. The priestly life certainly requires an authentic
spiritual intensity in order to live by the Spirit; (127) it requires a truly
virile asceticism—both interior and exterior—in one who, belonging in a special
way to Christ, has in Him and through Him "crucified the flesh with its passions
and desires," (128) not hesitating to face arduous and lengthy trials in order
to do so. (l29) In this way Christ's minister will be the better able to show to
the world the fruits of the Spirit, which are "charity, joy, peace, patience,
benignity, goodness, longanimity, mildness, faith, modesty, continency,
chastity.'' (l30)
The Brotherhood of Priests
79. Moreover, priestly chastity is increased, guarded
and defended by a way of life, surroundings and activity suited to a minister of
God. For this reason the "close sacramental brotherhood (131) which all priests
enjoy in virtue of their ordination must be fostered to the utmost. Our Lord
Jesus Christ has taught the urgency of the new commandment of charity. He gave a
wonderful example of it when He instituted the sacrament of the Eucharist and
the Catholic priesthood, (l32) and prayed to His Heavenly Father that the love
the Father bore for Him from all eternity should be in His ministers and that He
too should be in them. (133)
80. So the unity of spirit among priests should be
active in their prayers, friendship and help of all kinds for one another. Ore
cannot sufficiently recommend to priests a life lived in common and directed
entirely toward their sacred ministry; the practice of having frequent meetings
with a fraternal exchange of ideas, counsel and experience with their brother
priests; the movement to form associations which encourage priestly holiness.
Charity For Fellow Priests
81. Priests should reflect on the advice of the
Council, (134) which reminds them of their common sharing in the priesthood so
that they may feel a lively responsibility for fellow priests troubled by
difficulties which gravely endanger the divine gift they have. They should have
a burning charity for those who have greater need of love, understanding and
prayer, who have need of prudent but effective help, and who have a claim on
their unbounded charity as those who are, and should be, their truest friends.
82. Venerable brothers in the episcopacy, priest and
ministers of the altar, by way of completing and leaving a remembrance of this
written conversation with you, we should like to suggest this resolution to you:
that on the anniversary of his ordination, or on Holy Thursday when all are
united in spirit commemorating the mystery of the institution of the priesthood,
each one should renew his total gift of himself to Christ our Lord; reviving in
this way the awareness that He has chosen you for His divine service, and
repeating at the same time, humbly and courageously, the promise of our
unswerving faithfulness to His love alone in your offering of perfect chastity.
(l35)
LAMENTABLE DEFECTIONS
83. Now, with fatherly love and affection, Our heart
turns anxiously and with deep sorrow to those unfortunate priests who always
remain Our dearly beloved brothers and whose absence
We keenly regret. We speak of those who, retaining the
sacred character conferred by their priestly ordination, have nonetheless been
sadly unfaithful to the obligations they accepted when ordained.
Their sad state and its consequences to priests and to
others move some to wonder if celibacy is not in some way responsible for such
dramatic occurrences and for the scandals they inflict on God's People. In fact,
the responsibility falls not on consecrated celibacy in itself but on a judgment
of the fitness of the candidate of the priesthood which was not always adequate
or prudent at the proper time, or else it falls on the way in which sacred
ministers live their life of total consecration.
Reasons for Dispensations
84. The Church is very conscious of the sad state of
these sons of hers and judges it necessary to make every effort to avert or to
remedy the wounds she suffers by their defection. Following the example of Our
immediate predecessors, We also have, in cases concerning ordination to the
priesthood, been prepared to allow inquiry to extend beyond the provisions of
the present canon law (l36) to other very grave reasons which give ground for
really solid doubts regarding the full freedom and responsibility of the
candidate for the priesthood and his fitness for the priestly state. This has
been done to free those who, on careful judicial consideration of their case,
are seen to be really unsuited.
The Church's Concern
85. The dispensations which are granted after such
considerations—a minimal percentage when they are compared with the great number
of good, worthy priests—provide in justice for the spiritual salvation of the
individual and show at the same time the Church's concern to safeguard celibacy
and the complete fidelity of all her ministers. In granting such dispensations
the Church always acts with heartfelt regret, especially in the particularly
lamentable cases in which refusal to bear worthily this sweet yoke of Christ
results from crises in faith, or moral weakness, and is thus frequently a
failure in responsibility and a source of scandal to the Christian people.
86. If these priests knew how much sorrow, dishonor and
unrest they bring to the holy Church of God, if they reflected on the
seriousness and beauty of their obligations and on the dangers to which they are
exposed in this life and in the next, there would be greater care and reflection
in their decisions; they would pray more assiduously and show greater courage
and logic in forestalling the causes of their spiritual and moral collapse.
87. Mother Church takes particular interest in what
befalls young priests who, no matter how great the zeal and enthusiasm with
which they entered the sacred ministry, have nevertheless been troubled later on
in performing their duties by feelings of hopelessness, doubt, desire, or folly.
Hence, especially in these circumstances, it is the wish of the Church that
every persuasive means available be used to lead our brothers from this wavering
state and restore to them peace of soul, trust, penance, and their former zeal.
It is only when no other solution can be found for a priest in this unhappy
condition that he should be relieved of his office.
The Granting of Dispensations
88. There are some whose priesthood cannot be saved,
but whose serious dispositions nevertheless give promise of their being able to
live as good Christian lay people. To these the Holy See, having studied all the
circumstances with their bishops or with their religious superiors, sometimes
grants a dispensation, thus letting love conquer sorrow. In order, however, that
her unhappy but always dear son may have a salutary sign of her maternal grief
and a keener remembrance of the universal need of God's mercy, in these cases
she imposes some works of piety and reparation .
Encouragement and Warning
89. Inspiring this discipline, which is at once severe
and merciful, are justice and truth, prudence and reserve. It is without doubt a
discipline which will confirm good priests in their determination to live lives
of purity and holiness. At the same time it will be a warning to those aspiring
to the priesthood. Guided by the wisdom of those who educate them, they will
approach their priesthood fully aware of its obligations and entirely
forgetfully of self, responding generously to divine grace and the will of
Christ and His Church.
90. Finally, and with deep joy, We thank our Lord
because many priests who for a time had been unfaithful to their obligations
have again, with the grace of the High Priest, found the path and given joy to
all by becoming anew exemplary pastors. With admirable good will, they used all
the means which were helpful to ensure their return, especially an intense life
of prayer, humility, persevering effort sustained by regular reception of the
Sacrament of Penance.
THE BISHOP'S FATHERLINESS
91. There is an irreplaceable and very effective means
to ensure for our dear priests an easier and happier way of being faithful to
their obligations, and it is one which they have the right and duty to find in
you, venerable brother bishops. It was you who called them and destined them to
be priests; it was you who placed your hands on their heads; with you they are
one in sharing the honor of the priesthood by virtue of the Sacrament of Orders;
it is you whom they make present in the community of the faithful; with you they
are united in a spirit of trust and generosity since, in as far as is compatible
with their order, they take upon themselves your duties and concerns. (137) In
choosing a life dedicated to celibacy they follow the ancient examples of the
prelates of the East and West; this provides a new motive for union between
bishop and priest and a sound hope that they will live together more closely.
92. The love which Jesus had for His Apostles showed
itself very clearly when he made them ministers of His real and Mystical Body;
(138) and even you in whose person "Our Lord Jesus Christ, the high priest, is
present in the midst of those who believe," (139) know that you owe the best
part of your hearts and pastoral care to your priests and to the young men
preparing to be priests. (l40) In no other way can you better show this
conviction than in the conscious responsibility and sincere and unconquerable
love with which you preside over the education of your seminarians, and help
your priests in every way possible to remain faithful to their vocation and
their duties.
A Bishop's Kindness
93. Your fraternal and kindly presence must fill up in
advance the human loneliness of the priest, which is so often the cause of his
discouragement and temptations. (141) Before being the superiors and judges of
your priests, be their teachers, fathers, friends, their good and kind brothers
always ready to understand, to sympathize and to help. Encourage your priests in
every possible way to be your personal friends and to be very open with you.
This will not weaken the relationship of juridical obedience; rather it will
transform it into pastoral love so that they will obey more willingly, sincerely
and securely. If they have a filial trust in you, your priests will be able in
time to open up their souls and to confide their difficulties in you in the
certainty that they can rely on your kindness to be protected from eventual
defeat, without a servile fear of punishment, but in the filial expectation of
correction, pardon and help, which will inspire them to resume their difficult
journey with a new confidence.
Authority and Fatherliness
94. Venerable brothers, all of you are certainly
convinced that to restore to the soul of a priest joy in and enthusiasm for his
vocation, interior peace and salvation, is an urgent and glorious ministry which
has an incalculable influence on a multitude of souls. There will be times when
you must exercise your authority by showing a just severity toward those few
who, after having resisted your kindness, by their conduct cause scandal to the
People of God; but you will take the necessary precautions to ensure their
seeing the error of their ways. Following the example of our Lord Jesus, "the
Shepherd and Guardian of your souls," (142) do not crush the "bruised reed" nor
quench the "smoldering wick"; (l43) like Jesus, heal their wounds, (144) save
what was lost; (145) with eagerness and love go in search of the lost sheep and
bring him back to the warmth of the sheepfold (146) and like Him, try until the
end (147) to call back the unfaithful friend.
95. We are certain, venerable brothers, that you will
leave nothing undone to foster, by your teaching, prudence and pastoral zeal,
the ideal of consecrated celibacy among your clergy. We are sure too that you
will never neglect those priests who have strayed from the house of God, their
true home, no matter where their painful odyssey has led them; for they still
remain your sons.
ROLE OF THE FAITHFUL
96. Priestly virtue is a treasure that belongs to the
whole Church. It is an enrichment and a splendor above the ordinary, which
redounds to the building up and the profit of the entire People of God. We wish
therefore to address to all the faithful, Our children in Christ, an
affectionate and urgent exhortation. We wish that they too feel responsible for
the virtue of t ho se brothers of theirs who have undertaken the mission of
serving them in the priesthood for the salvation of their souls. They should
pray and work for priestly vocations; they should help priests wholeheartedly,
with filial love and ready collaboration; they should have the firm intention of
offering them the consolation of a joyous response to their pastoral labors.
They should encourage these, their fathers in Christ, to overcome the
difficulties of every sort which they encounter as they fulfill their duties,
with entire faithfulness, to the edification of all. In a spirit of faith and
Christian love, they should foster a deep respect and a delicate reserve in
their dealings with priests, on account of their condition as men entirely
consecrated to Christ and to the Church.
Invitation to the Laity
97. Our invitation goes out specially to those lay
people who seek God with greater earnestness and intensity, and strive after
Christian perfection while living in the midst of their fellow men. By their
devoted and warm friendship they can be of great assistance to the Church's
ministers since it is the laity, occupied with temporal affairs while at the
same time aiming at a more generous and perfect conformity to their baptismal
vocation, who are in a position, in many cases, to enlighten and encourage the
priest. The integrity of his vocation, one that plunges him into the mystery of
Christ and the Church, can suffer harm from various circumstances and from
contamination by a destructive worldliness. In this way the whole People of God
will honor Christ our Lord in those who represent Him and of whom He has said:
"He who receives you receives me, and he who receives me receives him who sent
me," (148) promising an assured reward to anyone who in any way shows charity
toward those whom He has sent. (149)
CONCLUSION
98. Venerable brothers, pastors of God's flock
throughout the world, and dearly beloved priests, Our sons and brothers: as We
come to the end of this letter which We have addressed to you, We invite you,
with a soul responsive to Christ's great love, to turn your eyes and heart with
renewed confidence and filial hope to the most loving Mother of Jesus and Mother
of the Church, and to invoke for the Catholic priesthood her powerful and
maternal intercession. In her the People of God admire and venerate the image of
the Church, and model of faith, charity and perfect union with Him. May Mary
Virgin and Mother obtain for the Church, which also is hailed as virgin and
mother, (150) to rejoice always, though with due humility, in the faithfulness
of her priests to the sublime gift of holy virginity they have received, and to
see it flourishing and appreciated ever more and more in every walk of life, so
that the army of those who "follow the divine Lamb wherever He goes'' (151) may
increase throughout the earth.
99. The Church proclaims her hope in Christ; she is
conscious of the critical shortage of priests when compared with the spiritual
necessities of the world's population; but she is confident in her expectation
which is founded on the infinite and mysterious power of grace, that the high
spiritual quality of her ministers will bring about an increase also in their
numbers, for everything is possible to God. (l52)
In this faith and in this hope, may the apostolic
blessing which we impart with all Our heart be for all a pledge of heavenly
graces and the testimony of Our fatherly affection.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, June 24, 1967, the
feast of St. John the Baptist, in the fifth year of Our pontificate.
PAUL VI
NOTES
LATIN TEXT:
Acta Apostolicae Sedis, 59 (1967), 657-97.
ENGLISH
TRANSLATION: The Pope Speaks, 12 (Summer,1967), 291-319.
REFERENCES:
(1) See
letter of Oct. 10, 1965, to Cardinal Tisserant, read in the general session of
the next day.
(2) See
Mt 19. 11-12.
(3) See 1
Tm 3. 2-5; Ti 1. 5-6.
(4) See
Second Vatican Council, Decree on the Pastoral Office of Bishops in the
Church, no. 35: AAS 58 (1966), 690 [TPS XI, 195-96]; Decree on the
Apostolate of the Laity, no. 1: AAS 58 (1966), 837 [TPS XI, 119-20];
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, nos. 10 ff.: AAS 58 (1966),
1007-08 [TPS XI, 455-56]; Decree on the Missionary Activity of the Church,
nos. 19, 38; AAS 58 (1966), 969, 984 [TPS XI, 426, 437-38].
(5) Mt
19. 11.
(6) Jn
4. 10.
(7) See
Mt 5. 13-14.
(8) See
above, nos. 5 and 7 [pp. 292-93].
(9) Second
Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the World of
Today, no. 62: AAS 58 (1966), 1082 [TPS XI, 300].
(10) See
Eph 5. 25-27.
(11)
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 16: AAS 58 (1966), 1015 [TPS
XI, 461].
(12)
Ibid.
(13) See
Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation, no.
8: AAS 58 (1966), 820 [TPS XI, 75-76.].
(14) See
Jn 16. 13.
(15) Second
Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, no. 28: AAS 57
(1965), 33-36 [TPS X, 378-79]; Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life,
no. 2: AAS 58 (1966), 991-93 [TPS XI, 442-44].
(16) See 1
Cor 4. 1.
(17) See 1
Cor 11. 1.
(18) See
Jn 3. 5; Ti 3. 5.
(19) See
Jn 4. 34; 17. 4.
(20) See 2
Cor 5. 17; Gal 6. 15.
(21) See
Gal 3. 28.
(22) See
Gn 2. 18.
(23) See
Mt 19. 3-8.
(24) See
Jn 2. 1-11.
(25) See
Eph 5. 32.
(26) Heb
8. 6.
(27) See 1
Cor 7. 33-35.
(28) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 16: AAS 58 (1966), 1015-17
[TPS XI, 461-62].
(29) Mt
13. 11.; see Mk 4. 11; Lk 8. 10.
(30) See 2
Cor 5. 20.
(31) See
Jn 15. 15; 20. 17.
(32)
Ibid., 17. 19.
(33) See
Lk 18. 29-30.
(34) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 16: AAS 58 (1966), 1015-17
[TPS XI, 461 -62].
(35) See
Mt 19. 11.
(36)
Ibid., 19. 12.
(37) See
Lk 18. 29-30.
(38) Mk
10. 29-30.
(39) Mt
19. 29.
(40) See
Jn 3. 16; 15, 13.
(41) See
Mk 10. 21.
(42)
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, no. 42: AAS 57 (1965), 48 [TPS X, 388].
(43)
Phil 3.12.
(44) See
Eph 5.25-27.
(45) Jn
1, 13.
(46) See
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, no. 42: AAS 57 (1965), 48 [TPS X, 388];
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 16: AAS 58 (1966), 1015-17
[TPS XI, 461-62].
(47) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 14: AAS 58 (1966), 1013 [TPS
XI, 459-60].
(48) See
Lk 2.49; 1 Cor 7.32-33.
(49) See
Heb 9.24; 7.25.
(50)
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 13: AAS 58 (1966), 1012 [TPS
XI, 458-59].
(51) See
Acts 6. 4.
(52)
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 5: AAS 58 (1966), 997 [TPS XI,
447].
(53) Jn
12. 24-25.
(54) See 1
Cor 15. 31.
(55) See
Second Vatican Council, Decree on Training for the Priesthood, no. 10:
AAS 58 (1966), 719-20 [TPS XI, 23-24].
(56) See 2
Cor 12.15.
(57) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 16: AAS 58 (1966), 1015-17
[TPS XI, 461 -62].
(58) See
Jn 17. 18.
(59) See
Rom 1. 14.
(60) Jn
18. 36.
(61) See
Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the World of Today, no. 39:
AAS 58 (1966), 1056-57 [TPS XI, 282-83].
(62) See
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church , no . 5: AAS 57 (1965), 7-8 [TPS X,
361].
(63) See
Phil 3. 20.
(64) See 1
Jn 3. 2.
(65) See
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, no. 48: AAS 57 (1965), 53-54 [TPS X,
391-92].
(66) Mt
22. 30.
(67) See 1
Jn 2. 16.
(68) Second
Vatican Council, Decree on the Adaptation and Renewal of the Religious Life,
no. 12: AAS 58 (1966), 107 [TPS XI, 147].
(69) See 1
Cor 7. 29-31.
(70) Col
3. 1-4.
(71) See
tertullian, De exhort. castitatis, 13: PL 2. 930; St. Epiphanius, Adv.
Haer. II, 48.9 and 59.4: PG 41.869, 1025; St. Efrem, Carmina nisibena,
XVIII, XIX: ed. G. Bickell, Leipzig (1866), p. 122; Eusebius of Caesarea,
Demonstr. evan., 1.9: PG 22.81; St. Cyril of Jerusalem. Catechesis,
12.25: PG 33.757; St. Ambrose, De officiis ministr., 1.50: PL 16.97 ff.;
St. Augustine, De moribus Eccl. cath., 1.32: PL 32.1339; St. Jerome,
Adversus Vigilantium, 2: PL 23.340-41; Bishop Synesius of Ptolemais,
Epist. 105: PG 66.1485.
(72) First
done at the Council of Elvira, c. 300, can. 33: Mansi II, 11.
(73) Sess.
XXIV, can. 9-10.
(74) Can.
132, §1.
(75) See
St. Pius X, apost. exhortation Haerent animo: AAS 41 (1908), 555-57;
Benedict XV, letter to Francis Kordac, Archbishop of Prague: AAS 12 (1920),
57-58; consistorial address, Dec. 16, 1920: AAS 12 (1920), 585-88; Pius XI,
encyc.letter Ad catholici sacerdotii: AAS 28 (1936), 24-30; Pius XII,
apost. exhortation Menti Nostrae: AAS 42
(1950),
657-702; encyc.letter Sacra virginitas: AAS 46 (1954), 161-91 [TPS 1,
101-23]; John XXIII, encyc. letter Sacerdotii Nostri primordia:
AAS51 (1959), ;54-56 [TPS VI, 14-16].
(76) Second
address, Jan. 26, 1960: AAS 52 (1960), 226.
(77) Can.
6, 12, 13, 48: Mansi XI, 944-48, 965.
(78) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. l6: AAS 58 (1966), 1015-16
[TPS XI, 461-62].
(79) De
Virginitate, 13: PG 381-82.
(80) De
Sacerdotio, 1, 111: PG 48. 642.
22. 81
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, nos. 21, 28, 64: AAS 57 (1965), 24-25;
33-36; 64 [TPS X, 372-73, 378-79, 398].
23. (82)
See above, no. 15.
(83) See
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, no. 29: AAS 57 (1965), 36 [TPS X, 380].
(84)
Ibid., 47-49 [TPS X, 387-88]
(85)
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 16: AAS 58 (1966), 1015-16
[TPS XI, 462].
(86) See
Decree on Training for the Priesthood, no. 2: AAS 58 (1966), 714-15 [TPS XI,
17-19]; Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 11: AAS 58 (1966),
1008-09 [TPS XI, 455-56].
(87) See
Rom 3. 23.
(88) See 2
Cor 8. 23.
(89) See
Eph 1. 6.
(90)
Phil 1. 8.
(91) See
Lk 12. 32.
(92) See
Mt 28. 20.
(93) See
Jn 16. 33.
(94) See
Mk 4. 26-29.
(95) Mt
9. 37-38.
(96) See 1
Cor 1. 20-31.
(97) See
Phil 4. 13.
(98) See 1
Cor 3. 67.
(99) See
above, no. 10.
(100)
Conf. X, 29, 40: PL 32. 796.
(101) See
above, no. 10.
(102) Gn
1. 26-27.
(103) See 1
Jn 4. 8-16.
(104)
Ibid., 3. 16-18.
(105) See 1
Thes 2.11 1Cor.4.15; 1 Cor 6.13; Gal 4.19; 1 Tm
5.1-2.
(106) See 1
Cor 2. 15.
(107)
Heb 5. 1.
(108) See 1
Cor 14. 4 ff.
(109) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 3: AAS 58 (1966), 993-95
[TPS XI, 444-45].
(110) Jn
13. 1.
(111)
Ibid., 16. 32.
(112) See
ibid., 13. 16; 15. 18.
(113) See
ibid., 15 15-16, 20.
(114) See 1
Tm 6. 11.
(115) See
Decree on Training for the Priesthood, nos. 3-11: AAS 58 (1966), 715-21
[TPS XI, 19-24]; Decree on the Adaptation and Renewal of the Religious Life,
no. 12: AAS 58 (1966), 721 [TPS XI, 147].
(116) See
above, no. 15.
(117) See
Mt 5. 37.
(118) See
ibid., 16. 24; Jn 12. 25.
(119) St.
Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theol., II-II, q. 184, a. 8 c.
(120) See
Decree on Training for the Priesthood, no. 12: AAS 58 (1966), 721 [TPS
XI, 24-25].
(121) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, nos. 16, 18: AAS 58 (1966),
1015-16, 1019 [TPS XI, 461-62, 463-64].
(122)
Ibid., no. 18.
(123) See 2
Cor 5. 14.
(124) See
Heb 4. 15.
(125) See 1
Cor 9. 22; 2 Cor 11. 29.
(126) See
Acts 20. 24.
(127) See
Gal 5. 25.
(128)
Ibid., 5. 24.
(129) See 1
Cor 9. 26-27.
(130)
Gal 5. 22-23.
(131) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 8: AAS 58 (1966), 1003 [TPS
XI, 452].
(132) See
Jn 13. 15 and 34-35.
(133)
Ibid., 17. 26.
(134) See
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 8: AAS 58 (1966), 1003-05 [TPS
XI, 452-53].
(135) See
Rom 12. 1.
(136) See
Code of Canon Law, can. 214.
(137) See
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, no. 28: AAS 57 (1965), 34-35 [TPS X,
378-79].
(138) See
Jn chaps. 13-17.
(139)
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, no. 21: AAS 57 (1965), 24 [TPS X,
372-73].
(140)
Decree on the Priestly Ministry and Life, no. 7: AAS 58 (1966), 1001-03 [TPS
XI, 450-52].
(141) See
ibid.
(142) 1
Pt 2. 25.
(143) See
Mt 12. 20.
(144) See
Lk 9. 11.
(145) See
Mt 18. 11.
(146) See
Lk 15.4 ff.
(147)
Ibid., 22. 48.
(148) Mt
10. 40.
(149) See
ibid., 10. 42.
(150)
Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, nos. 63.64: AAS 57 (1965), 64 [TPS X,
398].
(151) Ap
14. 4.
(152) Mk
10, 27; see Lk 1. 37.