Side jobs for priest?

  • Thread starter Thread starter archangel04
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Then, please, name some. That’s all I’ve been asking, but people have been quick to condemn and (except for Brother JR), slow to help with anything concrete.

What seminary do you know of, specifically, where the men go to class, meet with their spiritual director, attend daily Mass, maybe a few Hours throughout the week (especially on Sunday)…but then can do whatever else they want, except maybe that they have to be back by eleven or midnight or something “reasonable” like that?

I just haven’t found it. Most expect men to be at every meal, “evening prayer” and “night prayer” communally, etc. In themselves, those things don’t take very long and I don’t really mind them in themselves…but that sort of mandatory attendance even at these little events throughout the day…has the practical effect of forcing you to stay on campus because you need to be back for them, so it really puts bullet-holes in the allegedly free time. You can only go out for an hour or two at a time, even though the event itself only takes 10 minutes, because you have to be back on campus for it.

It does limit your radius of motion. It’s not like you can say, “I only have one morning class today, I think I’ll take a day at the museum” or even see a movie or anything like that. Being “allowed” to have outside friends is one thing, but that becomes a lot more complicated when your day is punctuated like that and you have to be at meals (because the main way people socialize is “over lunch” or “over dinner”)…

The conformity of thought is also still disturbing. I was placed by God in 21st-century America, not medieval Christendom. I don’t like an environment of all good-little Catholic boys, all wearing the same clothes, having the same haircuts, doing everything together at the same times. I just need more interpersonal diversity than that.
You can do that research, its not that hard. But anyways, each bishop decides where to send his seminarians and he does not always send them to the same place.

I think you need to remember that the seminary is not just a Graduate School they are doing something a little more than that there.
 
You have to separate here between the priest who is a secular and the priest who is a religious. The priest who is a religious has a full-time life being a religious. Being a priest is a ministry within his vocation to be a religious. When he’s not doing priestly ministry, he’s living religious life.
Interesting. Here in Australia we have a Jesuit, Fr Frank Brennan, who is also a well-known human rights lawyer. Apart from his legal work he also writes books, speaks at conferences and so on.

I don’t know whether he earns any money from so doing, or if so what happens to the money.

How does this fit in with your notion that if a priest is also a member of a religious order then his ‘full-time’ vocation consists in living the religious life? :hmmm:
 
Interesting. Here in Australia we have a Jesuit, Fr Frank Brennan, who is also a well-known human rights lawyer. Apart from his legal work he also writes books, speaks at conferences and so on.

I don’t know whether he earns any money from so doing, or if so what happens to the money.

How does this fit in with your notion that if a priest is also a member of a religious order then his ‘full-time’ vocation consists in living the religious life? :hmmm:
Most Jesuits have secular academic degrees. It’s part of their charism. In other religious orders, this is not as common, except for the medical and teaching orders where they must have licenses to practice.

As to the salary that he earns, I don’t know how your tax laws work in your country. In the USA, if you are a religious, we have what is called a 501(c)3 status. That means that the check is cut in the name of the community, not the individual, because the individual belongs to a non-profit organization and the contract is made with the organization, not with the individual.

Iin a case where civil law does not allow this, then the other arrangement is that the payment is made to the individual. He signs the check and turns it in to the community. In the USA we have many religious men who do work that pay a salary. This is common with chaplains in the police force and the Armed Forces. These institutions have different rules. They pay the individual and he turns the money over to his community.

If you watch EWTN, all of the religious who appear on EWTN are paid for being there. That is not done for free. Since they are in the USA, the money is paid directy to the religious community. Only those priests who are diocesan are paid directly. But they have to pay taxes on that income. Civil law considers that personal income. They do keep the rest of the money, unlike the religious who don’t keep any of it. Even Mother Angelica was paid for her work on EWTN. Actually, she was not paid, the Poor Clares were paid. Once EWTN became a 501(c)3 it no longer belonged to the Poor Clares. It became a non-profit corporation. Corporations pay salaries to their CEOs, even if th CEO is the founder and a religious, as was the case with Mother Angelica.

There is an excellent example of the difference between a secular cleric and a religious. Mother Angelica was not paid, the Poor Clares were paid. Mother never saw the money. The deacon who was her partner for many years, whose name I forget now, was paid directly. He’s a secular cleric.

I know that this beyond your question about the Jesuit priest, but it fits into this topic. We have to distinguish between the different kinds of secular clerics. Most secular clerics are diocesan priests. However, there are some secular clerics who belong to societies such as: The Oratory of St. Philip Neri, FSSP, SSPX, Maryknoll, Vincentians, Institute of Christ the King and others. These men live in community. Even though they are not religious, they do not get paid directly. The Society is paid for their work. They turn around and give their men a stipend. The reason is that they have common expensenses that they share, because they live in community house that is not maintained by a diocese. Unlike a rectory in a diocesan parish where the common expenses would be the cost of running the rectory. That is paid for by the parishioners. The diocesan priest in a parish keeps his salary.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Great post Br Jr but you know how I love playing the stick in the mud! 😃

We Carmelites vow obedience to our rule, constitutions, and superiors. We do not know who are founder is and the constitutions are set by the general and provincial chapters so they do not be vowed to as vowing obedience to the constitutions covers them.
Let’s not confuse people. The point is tthat a priest who is a Carmelite Friar vows obedience. He obeys your rule, your constitution and your superior, regardless of the wording at the time of profession. A secular priest, if he is a diocesan priest has no rule, constitution or superior.

Among the Franciscans the wording in the rite of profession doesn’t name every single person whom we obey, but the rule does.

Our rite of profession is very simple.

“I, Brother N, vow and promise to Almightly God, to the Blessed Virgin Mary to all the Angels and Saints to observe the Rule of the Friars Minor in obedience to our Holy Father St. Francis and his canonically elected successors, without property and in chastity all the days of my life.”

But when you open to the chapter on obedience in the rule St. Francis says, “I command the brothers, under obedience, to obey me, your brother Francis, my canonically elected successors, the holy rule, each other and the Lord Pope.” And futher on he says, “I command the brothers, under obedience, to hold a chapter every three years and the chapter is to govern the community according to the holy rule and the brothers shall be bound to obey the chapter.” It’s at the chapter where the constitutions are drawn up. Therefore, you end up obeying the chapter and the constituions, even though Francis never wrote a constitution, only a Rule and a final testament, which we promise to obey. And then he concludes that “the brothers are to be like a corpse in the hands of the superior, submissive to his will in all things but sin.” We cover all this with one simple statement when we make profession. We vow to obey Francis.

Secular priests do not have all of these additional elements: rule, founder, cosntitution, chapter, local superior and so forth. Their obedience is pretty similar to that of the man in the pew, with the exception that they obey the bishop on all matters of faith, morals, and pastoral. To a certain extent, so do the secular men and women in the pew. With the exception that the bishop can’t fire them. /

Stop trying to paly games with my head and confuse these good people or I’ll send you back to Mt. Carmel. :eek:

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Then, please, name some. That’s all I’ve been asking, but people have been quick to condemn and (except for Brother JR), slow to help with anything concrete.

What seminary do you know of, specifically, where the men go to class, meet with their spiritual director, attend daily Mass, maybe a few Hours throughout the week (especially on Sunday)…but then can do whatever else they want, except maybe that they have to be back by eleven or midnight or something “reasonable” like that?

I just haven’t found it. Most expect men to be at every meal, “evening prayer” and “night prayer” communally, etc. In themselves, those things don’t take very long and I don’t really mind them in themselves…but that sort of mandatory attendance even at these little events throughout the day…has the practical effect of forcing you to stay on campus because you need to be back for them, so it really puts bullet-holes in the allegedly free time. You can only go out for an hour or two at a time, even though the event itself only takes 10 minutes, because you have to be back on campus for it.

It does limit your radius of motion. It’s not like you can say, “I only have one morning class today, I think I’ll take a day at the museum” or even see a movie or anything like that. Being “allowed” to have outside friends is one thing, but that becomes a lot more complicated when your day is punctuated like that and you have to be at meals (because the main way people socialize is “over lunch” or “over dinner”)…

The conformity of thought is also still disturbing. I was placed by God in 21st-century America, not medieval Christendom. I don’t like an environment of all good-little Catholic boys, all wearing the same clothes, having the same haircuts, doing everything together at the same times. I just need more interpersonal diversity than that.
There is one thing that has to be said in defense of secular seminaries. They are dealing with a much larger number of people than you have in a rectory. It is much more difficult to have everyone eat whenever they please or make their own schedules. I know that our diocesan seminary has a schedule for meals, classes, mass and Liturgy of the Hours. The policy there is that if you miss it, you’re out of luck. There is no sneaking into the kitchen to make yourself dinner. You eat with the rest of the community or find your own food. I don’t think that they require that you attend every hour of the Divine Office. They do have a restriction on involvement in activities outside of the seminary, but not because they have to live in community as do friars and monks.

The way that it was explained to me was that they want the seminarians to focus on their studies. Therefore, they discourage outside activities. They are very demanding on grades. On the other hand, the seminarians have friends visit them in their dorm rooms, which most religious houses do not allow. I have never seen them dress alike, except for formal occasions when they wear a Roman collar. Other than that, our diocesan seminarians are usually in street clothes. Some may own a cassock, but it’s only worn for ceremony, unlike religious in formation who wear a habit most of the time. (In my community you wear only a habit or a work tunic, because you don’t own anything else).

They do have required house meetings. But that makes sense. It’s a group of 80 men. You need some kind of structure. But this disappears when they go to a rectory, unlike religious who have a house chapter on a regular schedule. They don’t have community recreation. They have rec time. The guys get together for a game or two on the court or in the rec room. But they don’t have to attend, unlike a religiuos house where you’re expected to be there unless you have a very good reason not to be.

I guess, my impression of the major seminary in my diocese is that it operates like a boarding school for adults. But there is a difference in the environment between that of a seminary and that of a religious house of formation. The focus in the seminary is to prepare for the priesthood. The focus in a religious house of formation is to prepare to becoome a permanent member of the religious community and if it is your vocation, to study for whatever: priesthood, medicine, nursing, teaching, etc. The academics are important, but they are not the primary focus in a religious house, as they are in a diocesan seminary. There is a much more secular environment in a seminary.

Probably the greatest difference is in the spiritual life. Each member carves out his own spirituality, just as any other secular man does. Whereas in a religious house of formation, you all have one common spirituality: Carmelite, Franciscan, Dominican, Jesuit, Salesian, etc.

The diocesan seminary that I know, tries very hard to protect the secular state of their seminarians. There are a few diocesan seminaries that imitate the conventual model, but that does not seem to work well. Their men tend to be a little lost when they are out on their own. Even those seminaries encourage their guys to go out and be guys when they’re on vacation. Another big difference is the contact with family. Diocesan seminarians do not give up their families as do members of religious orders. Most religoius in formation see their families once or twice a year. Diocesan seminarians see their families frequently, if they live in the area.

They are not as uniform as religious are. A religious can move from a priory in the USA to a priory in Australia and find the same lifestyle, expectations, spirituality, schedule and the same organization. This does not happen when you’re a diocesan. Life is very different from one rectory to another within the same diocese, never mind from one diocese to another. In this regard, they are very much like secular men who move from one place ot another. There is diversity in policies, procedures, expectations and even relationships.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Well, I hope what you say is true. It certainly paints a different picture of the secular seminaries than certain other posters on a certain other thread were giving. They didn’t deny that seminary was like what that blog described, they simply tried to defend that (which implies that it is true).

Perhaps that’s part of the problem with the vocations crisis: the romanticization, by the laity even (or mainly), of the secular priesthood into this sort of pseudo-religious life with this almost-monastic formation.

And that is true in many places. I’ve seen personally. But if there are places that are like you describe, that is very reassuring. I just worry that many places are not, in fact, as secular as that, and that the hierarchy is going to be reactive in the coming years and naively go forward with policies that assume the solutions to our problems are more strictness.
 
Well, I hope what you say is true. It certainly paints a different picture of the secular seminaries than certain other posters on a certain other thread were giving. They didn’t deny that seminary was like what that blog described, they simply tried to defend that (which implies that it is true).

Perhaps that’s part of the problem with the vocations crisis: the romanticization, by the laity even (or mainly), of the secular priesthood into this sort of pseudo-religious life with this almost-monastic formation.

And that is true in many places. I’ve seen personally. But if there are places that are like you describe, that is very reassuring. I just worry that many places are not, in fact, as secular as that, and that the hierarchy is going to be reactive in the coming years and naively go forward with policies that assume the solutions to our problems are more strictness.
Giving the seminary more structure is not the same as turning it into a religious house. It should be a place where people can live, pray, study and grow spiritually and intellectually. It’s not a frat house.

I also know that many lay people confuse the practices that are proper to the formation of priests with those that are proper to the formation of religious. That’s because most lay people don’t really know the canonical, theological and historical differences between religious life and priesthood.

The very fact that people still think that priests are “consecrated” men tells you that they don’t understand. Priests are not consecrated men. They are ordained, which means to be sent. Only religious men and religious women are consecrated, which means to be preserved for God alone.

People still think that religious life is for women and that men who are religious are all priests. What does this tell you? It tells me that people don’t know that religious life did not begin with priests, but with lay men and lay women who consecrated their lives to live in a very specific manner. They eventually admitted priests who wanted to live the same life. The priesthood was already in existence since the time of the Apostles, whereas religious life was born with the Desert Fathers and Mothers. Many priests went off to the desert to join them But most lay people don’t know this history.

The fact that people don’t know that cleric includes a deacon and that if you say that a secular cleric has to imitate the religious, then you also impose that on a deacon who may be married with 10 kids. . . tells you that most people in the pew do not understand the Sacrament of Holy Orders as independent and different from the vowed life.

The fact that people still refer to the Carmelite Fathers, when there is not such an order. They are Carmelite Friars meaning brothers. And that many of their brothers are ordained . . . this tells us that we have to educate the person in the pews. The fault is not all theirs. A lot of the fault lies with the clergy and religious. We have found it to be more comfortable to allow people to make this mistakes when speaking than to correct them and teach them.

It is no surprise that some people believe that the Church wants diocesan priests to be “honorary religious”. Nothing can be further from the truth. The Church wants them to be good and holy priests, not honorary religious any more than she wants every religious male to be a priest. She wants religious males to be truly consecrated men of prayer, penance, community, and living signs of the coming Kingdom.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Our rite of profession is very simple.

“I, Brother N, vow and promise to Almightly God, to the Blessed Virgin Mary to all the Angels and Saints to observe the Rule of the Friars Minor in obedience to our Holy Father St. Francis and his canonically elected successors, without property and in chastity all the days of my life.”
Wow, that is simple. I wish ours was that way, When I was writing out my vows for my simple profession I had to start over as I ran out of space on the page. We name each vow, as well as the rule, the constitutions, and the superior. Among other things. I forget as it was two years ago and I did not keep a copy or if I did it is packed away, most likely in DC. I will be reminded if I am allowed to make final vows in the next couple of years, most likely 2. We average 4 to 5 years in simple vows.
 
Wow, that is simple. I wish ours was that way, When I was writing out my vows for my simple profession I had to start over as I ran out of space on the page. We name each vow, as well as the rule, the constitutions, and the superior. Among other things. I forget as it was two years ago and I did not keep a copy or if I did it is packed away, most likely in DC. I will be reminded if I am allowed to make final vows in the next couple of years, most likely 2. We average 4 to 5 years in simple vows.
We’re not allowed to write our own profession. Our rite of profession was decided by St. Bonaventure when he was Minister General in the 13th century and he forbade the three orders to ever change it. The friars, the nuns and the seculars each have the same rite of profession with every prayer prescribed from beginning to end. It takes about 15 minutes. There is the interrogation, the litany of the saints, the profession above and the promise of salvation made by the major superior. Then it’s over. The only difference between simple profession and solemn profession is the change of habit. At the end of simple profession you change your habit from that of the novice to that of the professed.

Our fomation period is divided into several stages:

Aspirant: 6 - 12 months
Postulant 12 - 24 months
Novice 12 - 24 months
Simple vows 3 - 6 years

We don’t have a college program. Everyone must have a college degree before they enter. Some guys have never had philosophy so they take philosophy courses during aspirancy and postulancy. But we don’t require a degree in philosophy, just enough credits to enter graduate school.

Even if you put in the minimum time you’re in formation for 5 1/2 years. But the max is 10 years. You can’t use all of the maximums because they add up to more than 10 years. It takes longer to become a solemnly professed friar than it does to become a priest. I think that’s because we do not consider ourselves a clerical order. Therefore, we are never in a hurry to ordain anyone. Some guys are in solemn vows for several years before they are allowed to be ordained and others are never allowed. Permanent deacons are an exception, not the norm.

We try to keep it very simple. But it’s a big celebration with all kinds of receptions and parties. Never let it be said that Franciscans don’t know how to party. LOL

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
No, not “the Church”. People invoke that too flippantly. If anything, it is disagreement with the current hierarchy on changeable prudential/disciplinary matters (and we may disagree with those things, just not disobey as long as the policy is in place).
The ‘current hierarchy’ did not institute any of what you want to change. As ASinner noted they were codified by Trent (Trent codified many things, very few were wholly new) and reiterated by the 2nd Vatican Council. The matters may be prudential, but I do wish you would at least try to engage the documents that you disagree with, not just tilting at an idea.

A note on the phrase “current hierarchy”: The Church does hold definitively, from Patristic sources to the present day, that where the bishop is, there is the Church. You can’t at one and the same time profess loyalty to the Church and not Her current shepherds, nor denigrate Her Councils. This is where you dig yourself into a hole. (And this coming from the one who gave you the basics of the canonical case for the reform of the seminaries…)
However, even that I’m not sure. JReducation’s clarification is very helpful and very reassuring. And it that’s the official policy, it is very good. I just worry that, in practice, especially when it comes to Seminary, that distinction between seculars and religious…is extremely blurred still.
The line, while clearly drawn for religious (in theory, and in a growing number of communities in practice), is not as clearly drawn for secular priests. They are called in a special way to perfection, (paraphrasing, again, from Presbyterorum Ordinis), the ‘proven’ route for that is the evangelical counsels (expressed differently due to their state in life, ie, they generally need a car and cell phone, and the freedom to make decisions in their ministry).

A certain amount of the regulation in seminary life is just the effects of having a large number of men in formation, hence the need for meals in common, or the fact that the Liturgy of the Hours is designed to prayed in common (which ought to translate into at least the occasional offering of the major hours in the parish, but I digress).

It is, among priests I’ve talked to, a generally acknowledged fact that the stronger the philosophical and theological training in a given seminary the weaker the human formation, and vice versa. (Essentially it is the old saw about conservative and liberals: liberals push forward making new mistakes while conservatives keep mistakes from being fixed).
I know that I do not feel comfortable in a homogenous environment like a seminary. Where it’s all men like me, wearing the same clothes, being required to be at the same place at the same time all day, not able to make independent decisions about free time as much, being distanced from outside relationships.
I assure you, there is a good deal of diversity among the men in most seminaries. From pacifists to war vets, baby-faced kids to 50 yr old “2nd career” men, studious to partiers, there is variety. (Most seminaries do not have the regularities of dress, and even those that do for classes have varieties among cassoks and collar types, and cliques who identify themselves by their choices :rolleyes: ).
I feel called to be out in the world, out among “the sinners,” out among a diverse crowd of men and women, Catholic and non-Catholic. The conformism of seminary life is just not appealing to me and at least several other young men I’ve spoken to now. Even though we’d like being priests, are willing to go through classes and spiritual direction, are even willing to be celibate.

It seems to me like they’re shooting themselves in the foot keeping a model that, according to Br JR’s description of the difference between secular and religious ways of living, is not at all essential to the secular priesthood. Which seems to be this attempt at pseudo-monastic life for seminarians.
The problem is that there have been a great number of scandals before the establishment of seminaries and since they were allowed more latitude. (I do still know of one or two run the “old way” that make all others look lax…) There are reasons for what you want to throw out. I know because exactly a year ago I was fed up with the whole thing myself and had to deal with similar issues (I was, at that time, a monastic postulant and seminarian, commuting to a large seminary [btw, bad mix]). I was bored to tears with the academics, most of it is irrelevant to the *immediate *demands of the priesthood but being steeped in philosophy and theology helps curb some of the inanity that crops up in pop theology.
Perhaps that’s part of the problem with the vocations crisis: the romanticization, by the laity even (or mainly), of the secular priesthood into this sort of pseudo-religious life with this almost-monastic formation.

And that is true in many places. I’ve seen personally. But if there are places that are like you describe, that is very reassuring. I just worry that many places are not, in fact, as secular as that, and that the hierarchy is going to be reactive in the coming years and naively go forward with policies that assume the solutions to our problems are more strictness.

There is some truth to saying that a life without romance is not worth living. The ‘romanticization’ as you call it (and in a sense you are right it is a Romanizing influence), does not stem from the laity, but from Church counsels. The Church is not naive in holding course, but is holding course because there are other problems that need to be addressed (and some far more serious than the issue of inadequately adjusted priests). Rushing to change, having had poor experiences of similar proposals in the past, would be (how can one put this nicely)… naive. The Church thinks in universal terms; centuries, not minutes, the world, not particular men. In many cases, this means that She avoids the rapid over-compensation seen in secular politics, making Her all the steadier over long periods of time.​

I have often com upon advise to Traditional seminarians attempting to survive seminaries that were less than hospitable to the idea: keep your head down and get through it. Enough of them managed to do so that the number of priests who have an outlook based on continuity with Tradition is set to become the majority in many places. If you really feel called to this reform, this is what I am suggesting.

The other thing that I know you are considering is whether this is a sign that you are not called to the priestly life, but rather to the Apostolate of the laity. (see: Apistolicam Acutositatem).

I would suggest (as is often done here) that Spiritual Direction may be where you find the answer to these questions. It is definitely harder to fight through them yourself.
 
The matters may be prudential, but I do wish you would at least try to engage the documents that you disagree with, not just tilting at an idea.
I’m not sure it is just “documents” though. How seminaries are run is not just a matter of “documents” (which I do not think necessarily exclude the model I imagine), but the practical decisions of the men who run them.
You can’t at one and the same time profess loyalty to the Church and not Her current shepherds
“loyalty” is different than agreeing with all administrative/disciplinary decisions. As I said, disagree but don’t disobey.

I firmly believe that as long as a policy is in place, we are bound to obey it. That doesn’t mean we have to think it is a prudent policy, nor that we can’t advocate for it to be changed.

As I said, if every bishop in the world from now until the day I die doesn’t think any other model is possible, then I will fully accept that means I’m not called. But otherwise, I’m well within my rights to keep trying, to keep asking.
some far more serious than the issue of inadequately adjusted priests
I think a lot of those issues STEM from that, though, and solutions would trickle down if we had priests who were real leaders instead of a bureaucracy where keeping-your-head-down is rewarded.
The Church thinks in universal terms; centuries, not minutes, the world, not particular men. In many cases, this means that She avoids the rapid over-compensation seen in secular politics, making Her all the steadier over long periods of time.
Another old saw that has only been true since 1789, really. The Church wheeled and dealed plenty in her day, made hasty alliances and even hastier retreats. 180-degree turn arounds between Popes of opposing factions, etc.

There is nothing essential about the current ossified conservatism to the Church. The hierarchy doesn’t have to act so reactively and so cautiously; it hasn’t for much of history. Frankly, the current phase of that stems only from after Vatican II, so I hardly think that’s essential.

Reforms are useless if they don’t affect individual men. A gradualism that abandons those alive today in favor of some hypothetical “future” that may never come…is useless.
 
Our fomation period is divided into several stages:

Aspirant: 6 - 12 months
Postulant 12 - 24 months
Novice 12 - 24 months
Simple vows 3 - 6 years

We don’t have a college program. Everyone must have a college degree before they enter. Some guys have never had philosophy so they take philosophy courses during aspirancy and postulancy. But we don’t require a degree in philosophy, just enough credits to enter graduate school.
This is strange to me, is it something new? When I spoke with the vocation director for the Assumption of the BVM province (that is where the Byzantine Franciscans receive their formation through) told me that I would do a 6 month postulantacy in one of their ministries and then a year novitiate and then would finish my college degree then moved on to the seminary. I have not asked any of the friars at WTU what they have done.
 
As I said, if every bishop in the world from now until the day I die doesn’t think any other model is possible, then I will fully accept that means I’m not called. But otherwise, I’m well within my rights to keep trying, to keep asking.
See, I think this is the problem we’re seeing here. You say you’ll accept that you’re not called if nothing is changed, but at that point you’re basing your own vocation on your terms. You’re getting into that “negotiating with God” idea where you say “ok, I’ll follow this vocation but only if x y and z happen”. It’s becomes all about what you want instead of what God wants. It’s the same thing we see in people who don’t want to become Catholic unless q p and r are changed to their liking.
 
This is strange to me, is it something new? When I spoke with the vocation director for the Assumption of the BVM province (that is where the Byzantine Franciscans receive their formation through) told me that I would do a 6 month postulantacy in one of their ministries and then a year novitiate and then would finish my college degree then moved on to the seminary. I have not asked any of the friars at WTU what they have done.
That may very well be the way that they do it. Each province has some margin as long as they don’t go beyond or below what the constitution requires. We don’t do it that way, because we can’t afford to pay for college. By having a long pre-novitiate program it allows those guys who need to go to college for the philosophy courses to do so, but they pay for the cost.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
This is strange to me, is it something new? When I spoke with the vocation director for the Assumption of the BVM province (that is where the Byzantine Franciscans receive their formation through) told me that I would do a 6 month postulantacy in one of their ministries and then a year novitiate and then would finish my college degree then moved on to the seminary. I have not asked any of the friars at WTU what they have done.
That may very well be the way that they do it. Each province and each obedience has some margin as long as they don’t go beyond or below what the constitution requires. We don’t do it that way, because we can’t afford to pay for college. By having a long pre-novitiate program it allows those guys who need to go to college for the philosophy courses to do so, but they pay for the cost.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
See, I think this is the problem we’re seeing here. You say you’ll accept that you’re not called if nothing is changed, but at that point you’re basing your own vocation on your terms. You’re getting into that “negotiating with God” idea where you say “ok, I’ll follow this vocation but only if x y and z happen”. It’s becomes all about what you want instead of what God wants. It’s the same thing we see in people who don’t want to become Catholic unless q p and r are changed to their liking.
OK, let’s look at this another way. A person who is looking to become a secular deacon or priest has a canonical right to request admission to the diocese where he feels that God is calling him to serve. There are differences in policies and formation programs among the dioceses. That’s one of the many reasons why they are called secular clergy. Like every secular man and woman in the Church, they have the right to shop around for a diocese where they feel at home, unlike religious. We don’t have that option. You join the order as it is and it is what it is around the world.

One of the big differences between us is that when join a religious order, whether you join in the USA or in Australia, you’re joinging the same order, with the same policies and way of life. That being said, even religious have some variations between provinces according to culture, geography, finances and history. Even a man who is looking to join a religious order can and should explore different provinces. Even though the rule and constitutions are the same, which guarantees that the way of life is the same, the formation policies may differ from one province to another, because that may not be locked in by the constitutioin.

In other words, because you don’t like the way that a particular diocese forms their men does not mean that you are not called to Holy Orders. Many men join a diocese other than their home diocese for this reason and they are called to Holy Orders. The confirmation of the call is when the bishop calls you to ordination. While you can’t join a diocese or an order and demand that they change to suit you, you can look for a diocese or an order that feels right for you. The Church deliberately allows such diversity to accommodate to the diversity of gifts that people bring.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Br. David, I was just curious(you do not have to respond). Are there any Carmelites of whom you know that teach? Similarily, what does the current Carmelitic Rule mean by “manual labor”(I read that it is a requirement)?
 
Br. David, I was just curious(you do not have to respond). Are there any Carmelites of whom you know that teach? Similarily, what does the current Carmelitic Rule mean by “manual labor”(I read that it is a requirement)?
My Province of the Carmelites runs 3 Catholic High Schools on our own and shares two with two different groups of sisters in the United States.

I am currently on internship and am assigned to our High School in Tucson, AZ. Currently at the school, counting me, we have 4 Carmelites teaching and one (a retired Carmelite who was Prior General of the whole order in the 1970’s) working to help out Campus Ministry.

We also have had some teaching in the university and seminary settings, also have had some working in the seminary as spiritual directors.

Recently we had a Carmelite pass away who was the Chair of the Music Department at Fordham.

We live the rule through the lens of the constitutions. Can you tell me what chapter of the rule you are speaking of? If you wish we can take this to PM as it is sort of off topic for this thread.
 
My Province of the Carmelites runs 3 Catholic High Schools on our own and shares two with two different groups of sisters in the United States.

I am currently on internship and am assigned to our High School in Tucson, AZ. Currently at the school, counting me, we have 4 Carmelites teaching and one (a retired Carmelite who was Prior General of the whole order in the 1970’s) working to help out Campus Ministry.

We also have had some teaching in the university and seminary settings, also have had some working in the seminary as spiritual directors.

Recently we had a Carmelite pass away who was the Chair of the Music Department at Fordham.

We live the rule through the lens of the constitutions. Can you tell me what chapter of the rule you are speaking of? If you wish we can take this to PM as it is sort of off topic for this thread.
Thank you; I apologize.
 
Seminaries? Why seminaries? What’s so strange? Secular students attend seminaries. Religious do not. Religious are formed in their own houses of formation and study theology at univesities or theologates. When neither are available or affordable, then a religious superior will strike up a deal with a diocesan seminary to have his religious study theoloyg there. Usually they do not live at the seminary to avoid mixing the waters, so to speak. You don’t want your secular seminarians being turned into religious or your religious turned into seculars. This happened a lot in the past.

Many secular seminarians, also known as diocesan seminarians, only if they belonged to a diocese, frequently these poor guys were subjected to a routine that was an imitation of life in a religious house: common liturgy of the hours, community mass, community times for meals, community recreation, community property, no freedom to enter and leave the grounds without permission, no personal property such as cars, telephones, TVs, radios, stereos, etc. In other words, they were imitation friars. But the big problem came when they were released from the seminary and found themselves in a parish. They were not ready to be responsible for themelves or to live alone. The result: most of these priests left during the 1970s. They were miserable, lonely and had little independent living skills.

On the other hand, those religious who were subjected to living with diocesans often lost their religious vocation. They became very independent. They had no sense of community life, community prayer, poverty, obedience to a superior, and became very clerical. Their life revolved aroiund their priesthood. They often mis-identified themselves as priests instead of: Franciscan Friars, Carmelite Friars, Dominican Friars, Benedictine Monks. They suddently became Franciscan Fathers, etc. When they found themselves in a house governed by a friar who was not a priest, they became condescending and angry. How dare a non-priest govern them. When they were required to surrender their cars, TVs, stereos, money, freedom, time and submit to community schedules, community rules and give up some of their pastoral work to allow time for community life, they were uspet and miserable. They left in the thousands during the 1980s and 90s. But God has a way of turning something wrong into something good.

Even though the numbers of ordained priests, secular and religious, went down, the men that we lost were very unhappy, broken and would have hurt their dioceses or their religious communities more than they would have contributed to them. They need to find their place in the world and in the Church. On the other hand, dioceses and religious communities had to reasses how they formed their men and their charism.

We confused and blended religious life with secular priesthood and created chaos. In the chaos, we tried quick fixes, instead of stepping back and recovering what was good and leaving what did not work. No one wanted to take the fall. So everyone blamed it on Vatican II. Some said Vatican II did not go far enough and others said it went too far. It’s easy to blame a Council, because councils cannot call you on your mistakes.

All Vatican II said was that priests should be priests and religious should be religious. Duh, this was a novelty? Many lay people opposed and still oppose the distinction between religious life and priesthood. As long as the laity resists and tries to mold every priest into an imitation friar and every friar into a priest, they are going to get resistance. This is not modernism. It’s priests and religious fighting for their right to be the men that God called them to be, not the men that the laity wants them to be.

We have to learn to appreciate the difference between Holy Orders and religious life, if we’re going to benefit from the richness that comes from having both priesthood and religious life working together, while maintaining their separate identity and mission in the Church. The whole idea of imposing poverty on secular priests is imposing something that is not pat of the priesthood. Only religious are called to make a vow of poverty. A religious who becomes a priest, already has a vow of poverty.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
This was a really insightful look at the diocesan/religious formation programs.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top