| Part 1 Interview With Official From Apostolic
Signature
ROME, 3 SEPT. 2009 (ZENIT)
It is hard for priests to fulfill the role that God has entrusted to
them, but there are tools to help both parishes and their pastors to
stay focused on true priorities, according to the assistant promoter of
justice at the Supreme Court of the Apostolic Signature.
ZENIT spoke with Franciscan Father Nikolaus Schöch about the challenges
priests face and traits that should characterize parishes. He gives
advice on how to organize schedules and the importance of fostering
intergenerational friendships among priests.
Part 2 of this interview will be published Friday.
ZENIT: Nowadays, what is the main service a parish priest should provide
the faithful?
Father Schöch: In their ministry today, priests seem to suffer from
being spread too thin amid increasing pastoral activities and, faced
with the issues of present day society and culture, they tend to
reconsider their lifestyles and the priorities of pastoral work, all the
while seeing a growing need for permanent formation.
In this respect, one must bear in mind that the parish itself
—
and sometimes the diocese, too
—
despite its autonomy, cannot remain isolated, particularly in these
times when so many means of transportation and communication are
available. Parishes are living members of the one and only Body of
Christ, the one and only Church, which welcome and serve both the
members of local communities and all those who, for any reason, approach
it at any given time
—
perhaps bringing the action of God's grace to someone's conscience or to
someone's life. Naturally, this should not give way to disorder, nor
irregularities in terms of canon l aw, which are also intended to serve
pastoral activity.
Also, the parish priest's role as shepherd guiding the community stems
from his particular relationship with Christ, the Head and Shepherd. It
is a sacramental role.
It is not entrusted to the priest by the community but, rather, by the
Lord himself, through the bishop.
ZENIT: What guidelines should there be in a parish to ensure appropriate
organization and attention of the faithful?
Father Schöch: In a parish's liturgical celebrations and services,
attention must be placed on people's mobility, the coming together of
many people in certain places, and the new general assimilation of
trends, habits, fashions and timetables.
In establishing the timetables of parish Masses and confessions, the
parish priest should consider the most appropriate schedule for most of
the faithful, while also allowing those with special time limitations
easy access to the sacraments. Timetables should be based not so much on
priests' convenience, but on people's needs, considering work and school
hours. For example, there is not much point in offering the sacrament of
penance only during work hours, if this means that exclusively elderly
people will be able to attend.
ZENIT: What criteria should parish priests take into account in
administrating a parish efficiently while endeavoring to save souls?
Father Schöch: Insofar as he shares in the directive action of Christ,
Head and Shepherd, over his Body, the priest is specifically endowed
with the capacity to be the "point of communion" from a pastoral
viewpoint: "To make the Church the home and the school of communion:
that is the great challenge facing us in the millennium which is now
beginning, if we wish to be faithful to God's plan and respond to the
world's deepest yearnings." ("Novo Millennio Ineunte," No. 43).
At a time when there is an abundance of councils, it is necessary to
bear in mind the parish priest's personal responsibility in moderating
the parish. On the other hand, this governmental function requires that
he be the point of communion; in other words, a man who unites the
entire parish and who is not
—
separately
— friendly with certain faithful or groups. He must be a man who
unites the rich with the poor, intellectuals with simple people, young
people with the elderly, mothers with single women, religious with
laypeople, conservatives with progressives, etc.
No parish priest can fully carry out his mission in an isolated or
individual manner, but only joining forces with other priests, under the
direction of Church authorities. In the future, cooperation will become
increasingly important between priests of several parishes; parish
priests and their vicars; diocesan clergy and the members of institutes
of consecrated life; clergy and laypeople.
Mutual understanding and assistance, and even relationships, between
older priests and younger ones, are desirable and should be especially
fostered: Both stages are equally necessary for the Christian community
and are appreciated by the bishops and the Pope.
The Second Vatican Council recommends that older priests show
understanding and sympathy toward younger priests' initiatives; and it
advises young ones to respect the experience of older priests and to
trust them; it suggests that both treat each other with sincere
affection, following the example of so many priests of yesterday and
today; the parish priest and other priests, including the religious, are
called upon to testify to communion in everyday life.
Part 2
Interview With Official From Apostolic Signature
ROME, 4 SEPT. 2009 (ZENIT)Though priests have an irreplaceable role
in parish life, cooperation from laypeople is key to enabling them to
carry out their God-given mission, according to the assistant promoter
of justice at the Supreme Court of the Apostolic Signature.
ZENIT spoke with Franciscan Father Nikolaus Schöch about how
laypeople can help parishes be a true instrument of God's grace and the
future of parishes amid the changing face of the Church.
Part 1 of this interview was published Thursday.
ZENIT: How can laypeople in a parish contribute to pastoral development?
Father Schöch: The parish priest is not obliged to carry out all parish
activities personally, but rather, to see to it that they are performed
opportunely, in keeping with sound doctrine and Church discipline,
according to the particular circumstances and always under his own
supervision.
The ideal is not a parish where the priest does everything. The priest
should help laypeople discover and fulfill their specific vocation in
communion with other faithful. The Holy Spirit is the one who brings
about this communion and integrates the priest within God's people in
communion. As the Holy Spirit fills and motivates the entire sphere of
existence, he also penetrates and shapes each person's specific
vocation. That is how the particular spirituality of priests, religious,
parents, entrepreneurs, catechists, etc. is molded and developed. Each
vocation has a concrete and distinctive way of living its spirituality,
which gives depth and enthusiasm to the tasks performed.
The apostolate of the laity is mainly carried out within associations
and movements that operate in full harmony with the Church and in
obedience to pastors' guidelines. These associations of faithful should
be encouraged and supported.
However, within the parish structure, any kind of exclusive or isolated
activity on the part of individual groups should be avoided. On the
other hand, the parish and associations are not free of dangers from
within such as bureaucratization, functionalism, democratism or planning
that focuses more on management than on pastoral activities.
ZENIT: What is a parish priest's main challenge in contemporary society?
Father Schöch: Each parish needs to be viewed from the overall
perspective of the diocese and not the other way around; and due account
needs to be taken of laypeople, religious, and other consecrated persons
in the Church, both within the Christian community and in the world.
There is a growing awareness that, in addition to the problems of
postmodern culture, there is the problem of a high percentage of
non-practicing Catholics, a drastic decrease for various reasons in the
number of people who claim to be Catholics; and at the same time, there
is the problem of the extraordinary surge in so-called evangelical
Pentecostal sects and other sects.
In the face of this situation, there should be an urgent and generous
response to Benedict XVI's invitation in Brazil to undertake a real
"mission," focused on those who, though having been baptized, have not,
for various historical circumstances, been sufficiently evangelized.
In this task, we must make the most of communication to avoid the
expansion of a culture trying to reject God and deeply marked by
secularism, relativism, scientificism, religious indifference,
agnosticism, and by frequently militant and antireligious secularism.
ZENIT: The pastoral work carried out in a parish is often very broad and
diverse, according to various concrete situation. Such is the case, for
example, of family ministry, and the health care ministry, among others.
What aspects of pastoral activity should be the priority in the world of
today, looking to the future of the Church?
Father Schöch: I think the seven pastoral priorities highlighted by the
Servant of God John Paul II in "Novo Millennio Ineunte" are still valid:
holiness, prayer, Sunday Eucharist, sacrament of reconciliation, the
primacy of grace, and listening to the Word and proclaiming the Word.
According to the example of the holy Curé d'Ars and other exemplary
pastors, at the heart of the parish priest's pastoral activity is the
administration of the sacraments, particularly of the Eucharist and
penance.
Among the many activities that take place in a parish, none is so vital
or formative for the community as the Sunday celebration of the Lord's
Day and his Eucharist . Ultimately, each parish is founded on a
theological reality, because of being a Eucharistic community.
For this reason, Vatican II recommends that pastors should see to it
that the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice is the center and
culmination of the whole life of the Christian community (cf. "Christus
Dominus," No. 30). This means that the parish is a suitable community in
which to celebrate the Eucharist, which contains the living source of
its building up and the sacramental bond of its existence in full
communion with the whole Church.
Parish priests should devote special attention to individual
confessions, according to the spirit and manner established by the
Church, as well as to spiritual direction for those who request it. One
cannot evangelize in the long term without giving supremacy to God and
without interior life. The moral and social crisis of our times, with
its consequent problems both for people and families, intensifi es the
need of priestly assistance in spiritual life. Priests should be
fervently encouraged to give new acknowledgement and new zeal to the
ministry of the confessional and spiritual direction, also because of
the new demands among laypeople, who are more willing to follow the way
of Christian perfection set forth in the Gospel.
In the context of the Year for Priests, which has recently begun,
attention to vocations to the priesthood and to consecrated life
constitutes a pastoral priority.
ZENIT: In a global society, how can priests imitate the holy Curé d'Ars,
St. John Vianney, in their priestly ministry?
Father Schöch: In a world in which the common view of life is
increasingly heedless of the sacred, and where "functional" is the only
important category, the Catholic vision of the priesthood risks losing
its natural consideration, sometimes even within ecclesial circles.
The parish of Ars was a parish of peasants, and a very small one, with
only 230 faithful. However, St. John Vianney not only assisted sick
priests from neighboring parishes but offered his permanent service as
confessor and director of souls to thousands of faithful who flocked in
ever surging numbers from all over France.
Often, both in theological environments and in concrete pastoral
practice, and in clergy formation, two different visions of the
priesthood become distinguishable and are sometimes in confrontation, as
described recently by Benedict XVI:
a) A social functional vision that defines the nature of the priesthood
as a "service" to the community in the fulfillment of a function. The
vision of service relates to the primacy of the Word and to the service
of proclaiming it.
b) The ontological-sacramental vision which, while not denying the
servicial character of the priesthood, "sees it anchored in the
existence of the ministry, an existence that was determined by a gift
called a sacrament and granted to him by the Lord through the Church”
(J. Ratzinger, Life and Ministry of Priests, in Elementi di Teologia
fondamentale. Saggio su fede e ministerio, Brescia 2005, p.165).
The ontological-sacramental vision is related to the primacy of the
Eucharist, in the binomial "priesthood-sacrifice."
ZENIT: What role is the parish supposed to fulfill in the world today,
or is it an outdated institution?
Father Schöch: The parish is a concrete "communitas christifidelium,"
with a stable existence within the sphere of a particular Church, and
whose pastoral activity is entrusted to a parish priest as its own
pastor, under the authority of a diocesan bishop. Therefore, the parish
will always be valid, it will always have a future. The parish is not
destined to disappear.
This does not mean there is no need for change. In several parts of
Europe, there are parishes more than 1,000 years old, whose boundaries
have remained unchanged for centuries. It should be hardly surprising if
parishes merge, since some of these regions are depleted of parishioners
due to migration, or are now occupied mainly by non-Catholics.
In other places, the clergy is insufficient to provide for all the
services requiring a parish priest. In many dioceses of Africa and Latin
America, the task of dividing overpopulated parishes to allow a closer
pastoral service to the faithful is still pending.
City parishes are overpopulated. It is impossible for the parish priest
of a parish with 100,000 inhabitants to continue to know his flock
personally. Such parishes will have to be divided into smaller and more
accessible units. A priest from my country was a parish priest in a
rural parish in Bolivia bigger than a diocese in Europe, and including
50 communities. In these cases too, new parish boundaries should be
marked, to contribute to easier pastoral work, closer to the faithful.
Parishes undoubtedly have a future. The point is just how much
restructuring will be required in some regions so that parishes are able
to fulfill their tasks. In the future, transport and communications will
make it essential to improve cooperation between parishes.
In several European countries, "pastoral units" are arising, under
particular diocesan regulations. These pastoral units are made up of
several parishes which, in conjunction, are called upon by the bishop to
constitute efficacious "missionary communities" working within a
specific territory, under the diocesan pastoral program. It is therefore
a form of cooperation and coordination between two or more bordering
parishes. Parishes are not going to be suppressed, but mutual
cooperation is being organized.
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