J
JReducation
Guest
As has been said above, the waiting period is a recommendation. Even if the bishops wanted to make it blanket statement, they don’t have that kind of jurisdictiion. Each bishop is the Ordinary of his diocese and each Provincial Superior is the Ordinary of his religious. The decision lies with the Ordinary and his formation team.It is simply improper to have blanket waiting periods.
It is not a matter of what a person knows or whether the person is a saint. It is a matter of whether the person has a vocation. Dioceses and religious communities decide how long a person should belong to the Church before they will consider whether a person has a vocation. The final voice on whether you have a vocation is either the bishop’s or the major superior of a religious community. Saints have been denied ordination, because the bishop or the religious superior have discerned that the person does not have a vocation to the priesthood or to the religious life. That’s not being Catholicentric. That’s being obedient to the Holy Spirit. Br. David has eloquently stated that one who aspires to be a priest must first be obedient.Each person is different. I know many converts who know significantly more and are far more spiritual than many life long catholics who do not have to wait and are mature enough not to be “too exicted” about conversion. Which to imply that everyone that converts has this “excited” level and therefore is incapable of proper thought is also extremely Cathlocentric.
I hate to sound blunt, but when it comes to deciding if a person has a calling to the priesthood or to the religious life, what the outside world thinks or believes plays no role in the process. This was an issue in the history of the Church where the opinion of the laity and political powers were considered in this process. The result was disastrous. That’s the reason that the Church decided that this is an internal matter of the diocese or the religious community and neither shall be influenced by any opinion from outside. Even the pope has no voice in who gets ordained for a diocese or in a religious community. The Church applies the principal of subsidiarity here. Basically, everyone else has to stay out of the process.This also makes the outside world look at this as Cathlocentric; only if you were born into the church or been a member long enough are you worthy, regardless of the level of spirituality or understanding.
This is not a question of leadership. Priests are not ordained to be “leaders”. They are ordained to be priests. The only leader in the local Church is the bishop. The only leader in a religious community is the canonically installed superior. Case in point, communities such as the Cistercians have ordained monks, but they are not leaders. They have no pastoral practice at all. The priesthood is a participation in the priesthood of Jesus Christ, not a ministry of leadership. Sometimes their superior is not even a priest, but he is the canonical leader, because he’s the superior.Thank goodness Jesus, Peter, Paul, and thousands after, for example, did not do this, as the first, immediate converts were so successful as leaders in the church.
The diocese or the religious community also judges people according to their gifts and their calling. We need men who have a vocation. As I said many times, that’s not decided by the individual alone. But it must be confirmed by the Church or the religious community in the name of the Church. Obedience is the first sign of a vocation.And I am glad God does not judge us this way, by time frame, instead of who and where we are in our spiritual lives. We need the enthusiastic converts that have that significant background and we need to stop being Cathlocentric about so many things.
Anyone who can’t obey does not belong in the Catholic Church to begin with.This is why so many people I know do not convert and why so many have left the church.
No one said that it is. But there is a requirement that must be met. The person seeking to enter a diocesan seminary or a religious community must prove that he or she is a faithful Catholic.I hear it all the time even with the use of our words, a lifelong Catholic who could only dream of knowing as much as a new convert, and not even close to the same spiritual level, calls the new convert a “newbie”, or “neophyte” or just by general attitude treats the convert as not as good as me the “life-long” Catholic. After, all as long as you “meet this requirement” you are OK, regardless of your level of development. Again how arrogant, whether you have been a member all your life or not is not the gage of spirituality or knowledge.
The Catholic Church will always have centrism. It is a kingly system, not a democratic one.This is simply ridiculous and leads to those high levels of dissatisfaction with the church and as recent studies have shown high levels of conversation to other churches where this type of centrism does not occur.
Waiting is not such a bad thing for the individual either. It allows the person to live his Catholic faith among the faithful and explore other options open to all Catholics.
In my own community, which is rather small because we’re only 15years old, we do not admit anyone to postulancy who has not been an active member of the Church for at least five years, lived a celibate life, been engaged in the apostolate of the laity, and have a reference from their pastor and the formation director who meets with the aspirant for at least six months prior to postulancy.
Every community and diocese has its requirements. Part of the proof of a vocation is the ability to live with those requirements. It’s a sign of obedience, patience and fidelity to the Church.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF