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On the Church’s Birthday, Let’s Pray for Our Priests (Archbishop Charles Chaput) [Catholic Caucus]
CatholicExchange.com ^ | May 22nd, 2010 | Archbishop Charles Chaput

Posted on 05/24/2010 5:11:06 PM PDT by Salvation

On the Church’s Birthday, Let’s Pray for Our Priests

May 22nd, 2010 by Archbishop Charles Chaput

Ten years ago, as St. John Vianney Theological Seminary opened its doors for the first time, I wrote the following words to the people of our local Church:

“The Church is not just a collection of individuals convened around a sacred text. She is a community — a community rooted both in God’s Word and in sacrament. No matter how many other things bear good fruit for the Gospel in our day, there is no on-going presence of Jesus Christ in the world without the Church; there is no Church without the Eucharist; and there is no Eucharist without the priest. We need priests: good men, well formed; men of joy and courage; men who love Jesus Christ, love the Church and are eager to serve God’s people. And — equally important — we need a community of faith which will foster and encourage these men, and support them as family in their sacrifices.”

I’ve thought about those words many times during this Year for Priests, but especially this month. On May 6, I dedicated a new Spirituality Year residence for men considering the seminary, an effort made possible only by the extraordinary generosity of major lay donors and faithful Catholics across northern Colorado. And on May 15, I had the privilege of ordaining five outstanding men as new priests for our people: Fathers Matthew Book, John Green, David Nix, José María Quera and Michael Rapp. Another five more men educated by St. John Vianney Theological Seminary for other U.S. dioceses will be ordained by their own bishops later this month and in June. Together, our two archdiocesan seminaries — St. John Vianney and Redemptoris Mater Archdiocesan Missionary Seminary — have become a source of new life in the archdiocese, forming a new generation of dedicated priests. These new men will build on the legacy of service created by the scores of good, unselfish priests who lead our parishes today and led our communities in decades past.

It’s never wise or fair to compare one diocese with another. Like any family, each local Church has its own set of unique strengths, resources, problems and challenges. But we can be thankful that God has blessed northern Colorado in a powerful way. At a time when the Church is struggling for many different reasons in some parts of the world, we have a brotherhood of good priests, strong seminaries, committed lay and religious workers, and tens of thousands of generous Catholic families who take their faith seriously and sacrifice to advance the Gospel through the work of the Church. These are tremendous gifts. We should never take them for granted.

I mention this for two reasons. Here’s the first. As we draw toward the close of the Year for Priests next month, we need to remember the many remarkable blessings we already have. The Church always needs renewal and reform because all of us — clergy, lay and religious — are human, and therefore sinners. As the Holy Father has reminded us, we need to be vigilant over our own hearts and actions, and we need to root out evil wherever we find it, including within the Church herself. This is a serious duty. But it’s not ultimately “news.” In fact it’s been the difficult reality of Christian life, to one degree or another, from the time of the Apostles themselves.

Here’s the second reason. As we head toward Pentecost Sunday — the great day of celebration that commemorates the birth of the Church — I ask you all to remember the priests of the archdiocese in your prayers, especially the five men newly ordained. Without the Church, there is no witness of Jesus Christ in the world. Without the Eucharist, there is no Church. And without the priest, there is no Eucharist. Please thank God for the priests who serve us; thank Him for sending new priests into the vineyard; and ask Him to surround his Church, his priests and his people with his joy and protection.

 
This article is courtesy of the Denver Catholic Register.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Prayer
KEYWORDS: archbishopchaput; catholic; catholiclist; chaput; priesthood; yearofthepriest
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To: Natural Law

http://www.reformcchdnow.com/

The evidence is overwhelming.


21 posted on 05/25/2010 12:16:15 PM PDT by schmootman
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To: Natural Law

http://www.reformcchdnow.com/

The evidence is overwhelming.


22 posted on 05/25/2010 12:16:46 PM PDT by schmootman
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To: schmootman
You seem to display a dismissive attitude toward prayer. I hope I am not misreading you when you say that we must pray but also seek Truth. Are you saying that prayer and Truth are exclusive? How so when at its heart, prayer is participation in the interior life of the Author of Truth.

Yes, the Mass is perfect prayer because of its self-sacrificial nature in the Body and Blood of Christ, but can only be so if people are predisposed to its sanctifying nature.

I'm not lecturing you about prayer, only reminding you that that is our true weapon. Invoking the saints to pray with us is more efficacious than going about in bitterness. Only in humility and sanctity will this Church be reformed from within. The condition upon which the Holy Spirit can work with amazing results is for the faithful to have humble hearts, not bitter hearts.

There are a few weeks left in this Year for Priests and so the exhortation to pray for our priests is most needful. They are our alter Christus. They need prayers for their sanctification. My spiritual director tells me all the time that when the faithful are mired in anger and bitterness toward a priest or bishop and refuse to pray for them the enemy rejoices. There is nothing that he likes more than a weak priest.

You can focus on the betrayal, or you can unite your suffering with that of Christ's for the sanctification of his holy priests. Which do you think has more salvific power?

23 posted on 05/25/2010 2:15:13 PM PDT by Carolina (Adoro te devote latens Deitas)
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To: Carolina

My point is that nearly every bishop in America allows the perfect prayer to be desecrated, with Bishop George leading the way.

Anyone who really believes in prayer (and the Mass) should be righteously outraged. You don’t seem to care.


24 posted on 05/25/2010 2:38:04 PM PDT by schmootman
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To: Carolina

Question: During the Protestant Revolt in England, when every bishop save one betrayed the Church, would you have called people who pointed out the betrayal “bitter”.

You don’t know anything about me, other than the fact that I am trying to awaken Catholics to the betrayal of the Church by their shepherds. If you don’t think that betrayal is real, please account for the fact that over half of the bishops covered up priestly sex abuse in some way, and when Bishop Bruskewitz made a motion to investigate the causes of the sex abuse problem at the Bishop’s Conference in 2002, not one bishop seconded it.


25 posted on 05/25/2010 3:33:31 PM PDT by schmootman
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To: Salvation

How exciting! I believe more people are praying for the priests than before The Year Of The Priest. We have to continue.


26 posted on 05/25/2010 7:44:05 PM PDT by johngrace
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To: dila813

If a thread “offends” you, DON”T FRIKKING CLICK on it!! GET over yourself, FRiend, and deal with your religious HATE elsewhere!


27 posted on 05/30/2010 10:57:24 PM PDT by Don W (I only keep certain folks' numbers in my 'phone so I know NOT to answer when they call)
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To: Don W

Read, discussion was what kind of thead this. Shame on you, I am Catholic too.


28 posted on 05/31/2010 3:24:54 AM PDT by dila813
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