I want to be a priest

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Because you are trying to correct those who have a lot more experience in religious life and actually know what they are talking about :rolleyes: If you think you are being called to the priesthood you should start working on humility. I am not saying this to be mean but you come across as rude when replying to some of the people on here 😦
That’s because I see I lot of adults suggesting that the original poster can’t wear a collar at school. Nobody amongst the adults who are supposed to have a lot more experience have actually answered my question - what does the clerical collar signify? It seems that a Seminary can willy-nilly decide that someone can be a cleric - is life that imprecise? Otherwise it signifies a life consecrated to Christ - why would it then exclude a teen who wanted to become a priest and was living a celibate and prayerful life already? What about the accusation against me that I thought counselling was a Sacrament?

Can you see why teens are totally fed up with so-called experts? Can you begin to suggest why so few teens even think about vocations. If expert adults in their wisdom have all the answers to the crisis in vocations, why are we not attracting thousands of vocations?

I’m actually doing something about the crisis
www.catholicpriest.me.uk

What do adults do except moan?
 
It is nice that your pastor allows you to wear the collar while you serve that I do not believe that is correct. As a lay person you could wear a cassock but you should not have the white part of the collar in.
That’s because I see I lot of adults suggesting that the original poster can’t wear a collar at school. Nobody amongst the adults who are supposed to have a lot more experience have actually answered my question - what does the clerical collar signify? It seems that a Seminary can willy-nilly decide that someone can be a cleric - is life that imprecise? Otherwise it signifies a life consecrated to Christ - why would it then exclude a teen who wanted to become a priest and was living a celibate and prayerful life already? What about the accusation against me that I thought counselling was a Sacrament?
This shows your lack of knowledge on the subject. The seminary does not decide. It is the seminarians bishop who allows the candidate to wear the Roman Collar. The Roman Collar is not only for clergy. It is the Church who decides, though the ordinaries (Bishops and Religious Superiors), who may wear it. It is not for us to decide that we want to wear it.

Just wearing the Roman Collar without proper authorization may be construed as impersonating clergy which, while not impeded in Canon Law, I am sure that it would be look very unfavorable for anyone who wished to later follow a vocation into the Church.

I will did not say that you said counseling is a sacrament. I replied to you and to RobNY, who seemed to imply that it is. Here is where he said that.
It seems that vowed religious, who are not ordained to the diaconate at least, are yet not clerics (according to the new canon law, and the suppression of the old rites), and yet I’m pretty sure they do wear “clericals.” That being said, a cleric without the major orders couldn’t “offer anything” even in the old system, for what special authority did a cleric have in the old system? Of the things you listed, he did not have to be a priest, be able to offer confessions, give counseling, offer anointing of the sick, or even preside at a baptism. Being a cleric is a juridical standing, not a sacramental standing.
I did not say you said it and I apologize that you assume I was talking to you even though I had RobNY’s quote (though without his name linked to it).
Can you see why teens are totally fed up with so-called experts? Can you begin to suggest why so few teens even think about vocations. If expert adults in their wisdom have all the answers to the crisis in vocations, why are we not attracting thousands of vocations?
It seems that you do not want to hear what we have to say but rather make up your own rules and whine when we point out that you are wrong. I pray for you that you will get over this before trying to follow a vocation into the Church because you will find that there are a lot of, as you put it, “so-called experts” who will have the final say and will not take the whining.
I’m actually doing something about the crisis
www.catholicpriest.me.uk
What do adults do except moan?
We try to help with our experiences and what we actually know from those experiences. That you do not want to hear it is not our fault.

A Roman Collar is not a toy, it is not a fashion statement. It is something that says something about your life and it is given to be (or allowed to be) worn by a man’s legitimate ordinary (be it a diocesen bishop or religious superior). Clergy (priests, deacons, and in the byzantine churches sub-deacons) as well as seminarians, vowed religious, and other members of religious communities who actually have the collar as part of their habit.
 
I will did not say that you said counseling is a sacrament. I replied to you and to RobNY, who seemed to imply that it is. Here is where he said that.

I did not say you said it and I apologize that you assume I was talking to you even though I had RobNY’s quote (though without his name linked to it).
Well, then we are in a happy position, because none of us intended to call counseling a sacrament. 😃

Let me briefly explain what I meant to say. My point was that “clericals” and the clerical state are distinct in notion from a sacramental state. The former treats of how one stands according to canon law, the latter treats of how one stands according to (1) an indelible mark on the soul, and (2) the authority to confer sacraments. Thus, wearing clericals in no way should imply that one has anything whatsoever to offer, except from our (as David Hume would say) constant experience of the conjunction of the clerical state and the sacramental state… and that’s the reason why we tend to associate clericals with sacramental authority. But that isn’t necessarily the case.

Now, I did group “counseling” in what I said, but under this interpretation: that since the clerical state is a juridical state, it is absolutely irrelevant what one can “offer,” only how one stands according to the Church law. Now, I treated primarily of sacraments in my response because it seemed most important, but I included hitherwood’s listing of “counseling” because that too is something irrelevant to the clerical state. No one should see the roman collar and assume that this man must be able to counsel oneself.

All I meant to do was exclude even “counseling” as something necessary for the clerical state, not to imply that it was a sacrament. God bless.
Can you see why teens are totally fed up with so-called experts? Can you begin to suggest why so few teens even think about vocations. If expert adults in their wisdom have all the answers to the crisis in vocations, why are we not attracting thousands of vocations?
I think the lack of vocations is a crisis in holiness. We don’t merit by our prayers the graces needed. It is surely a failure of the church.

There is only one answer, as there is in every age: “repent and believe in the gospel.”

I could get down to more concrete reasons (which in no way contradicts the more general reason), but I don’t think excluding ordinary laymen from using clericals counts.
What do adults do except moan?
You’d be surprised. There’s a great Mark Twain quote, about how when he was a boy of 14, he found his father to be so ignorant he could hardly stand a word he said. But, by the time he was 21, he was surprised how much the old man had learned in seven years. 😛 I think experience bears this out for most of us. It’s very easy when we’re younger to judge our elders harshly, but as we ourselves become adults we start to see the wisdom in how our elders treated us.

I don’t doubt that there are a lot of spirit o’ V2 dinosaurs pushing hand-holding, kumbayah, relativism, mininalism and indifferentism on you guys, wondering why in the world more people don’t commit themselves to the consecrated life. Steer clear of such nonsense. But still, make sure you’re careful to really prayerfully consider what your elders tell you. Whether any of us like it or not, as future men in consecrated life we have to learn the habit of careful and loving obedience to our elders and superiors. Be very careful about the habits you form now, because they will follow you into consecrated life. Remember that how you treat your own parents and elders now is going to be the basis for whether you follow your calling well in consecrated life.

God bless you and good luck with discerning. Get holy!

-Rob
 
Hitherwood1: That’s because I see I lot of adults suggesting that the original poster can’t wear a collar at school. Nobody amongst the adults who are supposed to have a lot more experience have actually answered my question - what does the clerical collar signify? It seems that a Seminary can willy-nilly decide that someone can be a cleric - is life that imprecise? Otherwise it signifies a life consecrated to Christ - why would it then exclude a teen who wanted to become a priest and was living a celibate and prayerful life already?

Would you agree that a young women who lives a “celibate and prayerful life” can wear a nun’s habit if she likes :confused:
 
Wow I seriously can’t believe that two of you (teens nonetheless) are arguing with people here who actually are living the Religious Life (ByzCath.) As a teen myself and as a teen discerning a vocation I would take any advice, corrections or comments from anyone especially someone who actually has Religious experience rather than insist that he or she is wrong. Count it as a blessing that we have these kind of resources available to us here.
 
Clerical dress is reserved to clerics. In light of longstanding practice, the privilege is extended to seminarians who under present law are not technically clerics until ordained Deacons and to altar servers while performing their liturgical duties. The proper dress of avowed religious is not the Roman Collar, but the habit. Religious who are also clerics of course have the option to wear both, according to the practice of their order.

As for people who are not entitled to wear clerical dress, but doing so anyway, this is considered “impersonating a cleric” by the Code of Canon Law. This is very bad, and subject to canonical sanctions (ie: it’s a crime and you could be punished). This is especially true if one is impersonating a cleric with malevolent cause - assuming honours not in accord with one’s personal dignity, abusing the confidence of the faithful, etc.

Basically, unless the Church tells you that you can wear a Roman Collar, you shouldn’t be anywhere near it. If your primary reason for wanting to be a priest is to wear the uniform… frankly, it’s not unheard of. All vocations start somewhere, and many priests have admitted that the first time they thought about it was imagining themselves in the collar.

But it takes prayer to get any further, prayer and study. Finding out what a deacon is might be a good start. =)
Religious men also wear Roman collars. In most religious orders men wear Roman collars from the time they enter the novitiate, since they are canonically religious, even though they have not professed vows.

Our community is a congregation of brothers. We wear a Roman collar when not in habit as do many other communities of men.

It is really up to the constitutions and traditions of the religious institute. Among seculars, the Roman collar is reserved for seminarians in the major seminary, deacons, priests and bishops. But that rule does not apply to religious men.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Is it true that minor orders have been suspended? I’m under the impression they are usually granted at a date closer to priestly ordination than in the past, but that they are still valid and conferred upon those approaching ordination.
There are no longer minor orders. They are called ministries and any faithful Catholic man can be installed as an acolyte or lector. They are no longer reserved for those who are preparing to be deacons or priests.

Also, tonsure was not only for clerics. Many monastic communities did and still have tonsure for all their monks, cleric and lay. It depends on the abbey.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
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