The Priest - the Believer
The priest must be a believer, one who converses with God. If this
is not the case, then all his activities are futile. The most lofty and important
thing a priest can do for people is first of all being what he is: a believer.
Through faith he lets God, the other, come into the world. And if the other is
not at work, our work will never be enough; When
people sense that one is there who believes, who lives with God and from God,
hope becomes a reality for them as well. Through the faith of the priest, doors
open up all around for people: it is really possible to believe, even today.
All human believing is a believing-with, and for this reason the one who
believes before us is so important. In many ways this person is more exposed in
his faith than the others, since their faith depends on his and since, at any
given time, he has to withstand the hard-ships of faith for them….
There is a mutual given-and-take in faith in which priests and lay people
become mediators of the nearness of God for one another. The priest must also
nurture the humility of such receiving in himself ….
The first “task” a priest has to do is to be a believer and to become one ever
anew and ever more. Faith is never simply there automatically; it must be
lived. It leads us into conversation with God which involves speaking and
listening to the same degree. Faith and prayer belong together; they cannot be
separated. The time spent by a priest on prayer and listening to Scripture is
never time lost to pastoral care or time withheld from others. People sense
whether the work and words of their pastor spring from prayer fabricated at his
desk.
Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger, from A New Song for the Lord, tr.
by Martha M Matesich, NY: Crossroad Publishing Co.,
1996, and quoted in Magnificat for Holy Thursday,
March 24, 2005.
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