Saturday, June 19, 2010

Priests as Spiritual Fathers

(Sharing at the Novena to Our Mother of Perpetual Help on 19 June 2010)

(Year for Priests June 2009 ~ June 2010)

This week, in our series of sharings in conjunction with the Year for Priests, and remembering Fathers’ Day, we will talk about priests as spiritual fathers.

I would like to share with you this beautiful article written by Thomas Connelly, a seminarian in Rome.

Father Mike, Father Jim, Father Mark... without much effort we can name a score of priests, but no matter what the name they all have something in common, the title “Father” always comes first. Why “Father” and not something like “Elder,” or just “Priest?” Does fatherhood have anything to do with priesthood?  Why do we call priests “Father?” The first reason is that they represent God the Father as his ministers, and the second is the spiritual fatherhood they assume in the care of the souls entrusted to them.

The parish priest is a spiritual father for his parishioners, since he guides and leads them on the path of spiritual growth. He cares about all of them just as a father cares for his children, though in the spiritual realm. The priest steps in at all the important moments of our lives with the sacraments. He is there at the beginning of our life in the Church when he baptizes; he is there to bless our marriages; he is there at life’s close to help us make the step from here to heaven. All throughout this time he is there to call God down from heaven and make him really present for us in the Eucharist, where Christ is our spiritual food, and strength for the journey.

St John Vianney, who the Pope has called us to recognize in a special way this year, was a father of souls. He was renowned for his curing of souls in confession. Hundreds of people would flock to the tiny village of Ars just to receive the sacrament of reconciliation. The devil hated him for all the conversions he was bringing about and tempted him strongly, many times not giving him a chance to sleep. The Curé of Ars never allowed himself to be disturbed by this, because he discovered that the more Satan bothered him at night the bigger the sinner who would come to him the next day for confession.

Another firm example of a father of souls was the Italian saint Don Bosco. He saw the many boys who lived on the streets who needed someone to guide them and watch over their spiritual growth. At least for starters they needed to know right from wrong. Perhaps he could have just preached fire and brimstone to them to try to put them in line, but none of us want to listen to someone who doesn’t care about us. So he went about it in a different way. He sought to be a spiritual father for them, not just teaching them how to obey the law, but also putting his entire person at their disposal. He put enormous trust in them and they responded with openness and loyalty. At a certain point he had the spiritual care of a group of boys who were in prison. The guards let them leave the prison for a day to go with Don Bosco. The condition was that if he didn’t bring them all back, he would be the one to go to prison. When it was time to return in the evening there were two missing from the line as they filed in. The guard gave Don Bosco a stern look but just before he could open his mouth the two came bolting around the corner and up to the prison door. They had been tempted to make a break for it, but their loyalty to their spiritual father was stronger than the urge to escape.

"Through his celibacy, the Priest becomes the ‘man for others’, in a different way from the man who, by marriage also becomes, as husband and father, a man ‘for others’ . . . The Priest, by renouncing this fatherhood proper to married men, seeks another fatherhood.  The pastoral vocation of priests is great . . . The heart of the priest, in order that it may be available for this service, must be free. Celibacy is a sign of a freedom that exists for the sake of service" (Ioannis Pauli PP. II, Epistula ad universos Ecclesiae Sacerdotes, adveniente Feria V in Cena Domini, 8, die 8 apr. 1979: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, II (1979) 854 s.).

The spiritual fatherhood of the priest is born form his desire to bring all souls to heaven. He is the intermediary between God and man, a footbridge that allows us to cross the abyss that separates us from God. It isn’t through his own merit, but by the grace of God, who chooses his priests as instruments. God is the artist of the masterpiece of a soul’s holiness; he is the one who deserves all the credit. The priest, through his ministry, strives to transmit to us this love of a father, the love of God, Our Father.

Thomas Connelly, LC studies for the priesthood with the Legionaries of Christ in Rome.

Taken from www.catholic.net.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary

(Homily at the Novena to Our Mother of Perpetual Help on 12 June 2010)

Dear Brothers & Sisters in Christ,

Every year we celebrate the Feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary on the Saturday after the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Although these 2 feasts became prominent through apparitions, visions and miracles, they have significantly different histories and purposes.

On the cross, where Christ was hung, He suffered the direct blows of human cruelty and in His heart, He bore the sins of the world. In the Sacred Heart we see the wounds of sin inflicted upon Christ’s Heart; and in return for our sins, is the outpouring of His love for us. However, right below the cross of Christ was another Heart which according to Simeon was a heart pierced with a sword. Mary. Mary although was not struck physically, bore the same sufferings of Christ on the Cross, in her heart. Hence the Immaculate Heart also bears the pains and sorrows of mankind.

The Immaculate Heart became significant when in 1917 our Lady appeared to three children named Lucia, Jacinta and Francisco in a small village in Fatima, Portugal. Our Lady revealed to them the secrets in which the Fires of Hell was shown to them. To avoid hell, she asked for the Communion of Reparation on First Saturdays so that souls may be saved. She also asked for the consecration of Russia and of the entire world to be made to the Immaculate Heart of Mary so that “Russia will be converted, and there will be peace in the world”.

Let us listen to what Our Lady has to say concerning Communion of Reparation:

“all those who, on the first Saturday of five consecutive months shall confess, receive Holy Communion, recite five decades of the Rosary, and keep Me company for fifteen minutes while meditating on the fifteen mysteries of the Rosary, with the intention of making Reparation to Me.”

We go to Mary in times of need knowing that Our Lady of Perpetual Help will never fail us. By the help and graces we constantly receive, we are also encouraged in turn to give ourselves to God through Mary. This we could do by consecrating ourselves to the Immaculate Heart of Mary for the salvation of our souls and that of the world. Through regular Confession, receiving Holy Communion, praying and meditating on the Rosary mysteries and making sacrifices, we draw ourselves closer to God and witness the fulfillment of the promise of peace in our world.

On this Feast Day of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, let us pray to Mary.


Saturday, June 5, 2010

The Sacred Heart, the Eucharist and the Priesthood


(Sharing at the Novena to Our Mother of Perpetual Help on 5 June 2010)

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,


To Jesus through Mary. So it is that our devotion to Mary last month leads us to Jesus in the month of June, which is dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

This year, the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus falls on 11 June, which is next Friday. After Eastertide, as we move from the Solemnities of the Most Holy Trinity, the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ or Corpus Christi, and His Most Sacred Heart, our spirit is guided by God towards the centre of our faith, as highlighted by Pope Benedict XVI (Angelus, 1 June 2008).

Fr. Thomas Williams (ZENIT, 26 Apr 2010) said that devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus is “devotion to Jesus himself,…and, in a particular way, to the love of God in human form”. Pope JPII said that in the Sacred Heart of Jesus “beats God’s infinite love for everyone, for each one of us individually.” [cf. Neilson, 1988] It is a celebration of the love of Christ’s Sacred Heart, the love of God who sacrificed Himself for us. Thus, Pope Benedict XVI said, the devotion is absolutely important “for our faith and for our life in love”.

The Holy Father said that devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus means:

“adoring that Heart which, after having loved us to the end, was pierced by a spear and from high on the Cross poured out blood and water, an inexhaustible source of new life”. (Angelus, 5 June 2005).

When we adore the Blessed Sacrament, the Eucharist, we adore the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Fr. Richard Neilson wrote in his beautiful article The Sacred Heart and the Eucharist, that the Sacred Heart, the Holy Eucharist, and Love itself, are one and the same thing. I quote him further:

“…for in the Eucharist dwells Jesus, in Jesus His Heart, and in His Heart is infinite love. The Eucharist can be explained only by love; the love of Jesus is the love of His Heart, and so the Eucharist is explained only by the Sacred Heart.” (Neilson, June 1988)

Tomorrow’s Corpus Christi celebration is one of God’s giving of Himself in the Eucharist. So it is that when we visit the Blessed Sacrament, and gaze upon the One "whom they have pierced" (Jn 19: 37; cf. Zc 12: 10), we receive from Him “life and holiness”, “peace and reconciliation”, and all the graces of His Sacred Heart. Didn’t Jesus say in Mt. 11: 29, “Learn from me; for I am gentle and lowly in heart”? Only then can we be transformed to live our lives for others and be God’s instruments. Pope Pius XII in his famous encyclical, Haurietis Aquas, declared that “devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus is the most effective school of the love of God…”

Jesus revealed to St. Margaret Mary, that in the Garden of Gethsemane, His great suffering was due to men’s ingratitude, especially towards the Blessed Sacrament. Do you know, brothers and sisters, our Lord thirsts to be loved in the Blessed Sacrament? When we pass Him by in the tabernacle without a thought of Him, receive Him unworthily in Holy Communion, or do not bother if we receive Holy Communion or not, we grieve our Saviour so. As reparation, Jesus asked for Communion every first Friday, as part of the devotion to His Sacred Heart.

This devotion also calls for consecration of ourselves to the Sacred Heart as an act of offering and binding ourselves to Jesus Christ. (Pope Leo XIII, Annum Sacrum, 1899)

By now, you must have known this quote of the CurĂ© of Ars: "The priesthood is the love of the heart of Jesus.” Out of His infinite love, Jesus instituted the priesthood, to remain with us in the Blessed Sacrament. Fr. Neilson wrote: “In His priests, Christ perpetuates Himself, living through them unceasingly His life of love for all mankind.” Therefore, “…It is especially to priests that the Sacred Heart wishes to show His love so that they can communicate it to the world.” It is in the Heart of Christ that priests can achieve the ideal holiness that they are especially called to. As Pope JPII once pointed out, it is no coincidence then, that the World Day of Prayer for the Sanctification of Priests is also celebrated on the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

As the special Year for Priests ends on the Solemnity next Friday, let us pray that priests and seminarians may spiritually “enter into the Heart of Jesus”. May they then become, as our present Holy Father said, “men of true love, mercy, humility and patience, renewed in holiness and pastoral zeal”.

Amen.

References:
Neilson, R. 1988. "The Sacred Heart and the Eucharist." in Lay Witness (June, 1988). Downloaded on 28 May 2010 from the Catholic Culture website: http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=8988