When will it all end?
That was the question raised to me by a newspaper reporter, conveying a message from a friend he described as a faithful Catholic. The friend was making a reference to the sex abuse crisis in the Church.
Over the past 10 years, with the implementation of reforms including a provision that even one-time priest offenders are no longer eligible to serve in ministry, we have made great strides. Still any single case of sex abuse by a trusted faith leader is one too many.
In the long run, we need to form priests who are happy in their vocation, see celibacy as an important spiritual gift, have developed a strong prayer life and are blessed with healthy relationships. All these factors are integral to forming priests. We need to constantly examine our programs of priestly formation to see if they are living up to these high ideals. In the process, we may need to rethink some assumptions.
The late Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger of
At this juncture, a crucial time in the Church in the
Here in the Diocese of Camden, our candidates for priesthood already receive a strong emphasis on pastoral training. After two years of studies, we require them to experience a year of parish life. We are then equipped to evaluate how they interact with their fellow priests, as well as laymen and women.
Ministry is about relationships, I tell our seminarians. If you are immature in your relationship skills, you shouldn’t be a priest. Our priests should model themselves on Jesus, who came to be among us, not to be cold and distant, aloof from others or, in the other extreme, so needy that they are unable to experience mature friendship.
Priestly formation is a process. It should, ideally, never end. All of us who are priests, no matter what age, should be growing in prayer and service.
We may be at the point, I believe, where seminaries, once a needed church reform, have outlived their usefulness in best nurturing this process. When I first began work as a parish priest in
