I've read through the responses thus far on this thread and I'm trying to chose my words carefully and constructively contribute to this conversation. My first question is this: V2Lit, do you see "priest" and "pastor of a parish" as the same thing? Being a priest does NOT mean you have to be a pastor. If you enter a diocesan seminary, it may be very likely though.
QUOTE(VaticanIILiturgist @ Jun 20 2007, 01:30 PM) [snapback]1298985[/snapback]
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In regards to seminaries....I'm not concerned about learning the wrong stuff. I'm concerned about NOT learning the right stuff. Seminaries don't prepare men for parish ministry. They prepare them to use the index in the Catechism. There is little formation for personnel management, multicultural concerns, and general parish leadership. I want to pastor souls to more active service to Christ, formed and transformed by the liturgy and commissioned for real service to the Kingdom. So rare is it that a pastor is formed to do that.
I agree--especially with your last line. I attend a Catholic graduate school/house of formation for a religious order. Here religious men and women study along side lay men and women. Time and time again--especially after I interned with the DRE at a parish--I am thankful that I've had classes for academic formation (doctrine, etc)
AND ministerial/professional formation (leadership skills, class/race/gender ministry). Finding a balance b/w the academic and the ministerial isn't easy--but it's to the detriment of the church overall if it's not the goal for priests and laity in ministerial training.
QUOTE(VaticanIILiturgist @ Jun 24 2007, 09:50 AM) [snapback]1300487[/snapback]
... There are staff members in the US with doctoral degrees and 25 years experience in ministry. Many seminaries give precious little time to pastoral formation, while the laity are immersing themselves in it. To simply say "I'm the dad and I say so" is recipe for disastrous results (I've seen it happen all too frequently - a hot-headed priest thinks he knows everything because he had oil smeared on his hands and he burns every bridge in sight). By the way, my dad died last month, so we aren't really speaking...
Also, remember a parish is also a civil corporation with a budget of, in some cases, well over $1 million. Am I really trained and competent to administer that budget?
In terms of multicultural concerns, I'm not worried about bilingual Masses. I'm concerned about pastoring a flock made up of an old German parish merged with a Hispanic community, one dying and one just beginning to thrive. I worry about being able to minister to a dying way of life while a new way of life is taking root.
These are my concerns...not reasons to say "no"...just concerns.
We read and study case studies just like the ones you describe in my classes. Your experience in ministry is a very real description of what's going on there. And I couldn't agree with you more--they don't become reasons to flat-out deny a call. But they do become very real concerns in discernment.
QUOTE(Era Might @ Jun 24 2007, 02:35 PM) [snapback]1300580[/snapback]
The Priest is an icon of Christ. The primary duty of a Priest is to offer the Sacraments, which are the ordinary means of grace and salvation. He is also a representative of the Church in a way that the laity cannot be. His ministry is an extension of the ministry of the Bishop. This comes attached with practical administration (such as finances), but no Priest will ever go to hell because he was a poor administrator (unless he was was purposely negligent). Many Priests may go to hell because they did not fulfill their primary duties: to offer the Sacraments, to proclaim the truth according to the teaching of the Church, and to make the people holy. We must all proclaim and die for the Gospel, but the Priest is our shepherd. He must protect the sheep on the narrow path. Parents don't know how they will deal with every problem that children bring, but they undertake their vocation with faith and trust in God's grace; like Priests, they learn as they go. I'm not trying to minimize the practical concerns of a Priest, but if you have a vocation you can learn what you need to learn. What matters most is that you want to serve God and help his people become Saints.
I agree, it's impossible to know everything you need to know in a career or vocation. And much of that way of life will require a person to "learn as they go." But we can't recklessly advocate walking blindly through life and picking up only what we need to at that very moment. That's why parents can enroll themselves in parenting classes--and why engaged couples go through pre-Cana--and why being a priest or a religious takes YEARS of education formation. We all ought to reflect and learn from previous life experiences. But at the same time, we hone our gifts and become even more aware of the good that God works through as us we prepare ourselves for the vocation He has in store for us. And in my opinion, it is critical that those working in religious ministry--priests, lay workers, religious--have the breadth and depth of training that will equip them to be the best faciliatators of grace possible.