F
frjuan
Guest
Hello again Matt,
Sorry, it’s been a while since I last replied you, and I still owe you to finish my answer (sorry, a lot of things have happened in the last days). I’ll try to remember the things I had in mind back then and put them here:
In the first place, prayer life is essential. I know it can sound like a topic, but it is heard so often because it is true. You need, as a priest, to find time every day to spend with the Lord, and only with Him. John Paul II said, in an encounter with priests: “Do never forget that your first duty is to stay with Christ. It is absolutely necessary that you find time to stay with Him in prayer [translated from Spanish]”. So all the duties of priesthood can never be an excuse to abandon prayer. (See Matthew 26:38.41)
Second, community life is important. It can be the regular community life of parish priests at the rectory, or being part of some priestly association or congregation with community life. But, in any case, having some community life is important for many reasons:
Well, these three points are the ones I can think off the top of my head. There will for sure be more, but these three are important. If some other brother priest wants to add something, I will surely appreciate it.
God Bless, Matt.
Sorry, it’s been a while since I last replied you, and I still owe you to finish my answer (sorry, a lot of things have happened in the last days). I’ll try to remember the things I had in mind back then and put them here:
In the first place, prayer life is essential. I know it can sound like a topic, but it is heard so often because it is true. You need, as a priest, to find time every day to spend with the Lord, and only with Him. John Paul II said, in an encounter with priests: “Do never forget that your first duty is to stay with Christ. It is absolutely necessary that you find time to stay with Him in prayer [translated from Spanish]”. So all the duties of priesthood can never be an excuse to abandon prayer. (See Matthew 26:38.41)
Second, community life is important. It can be the regular community life of parish priests at the rectory, or being part of some priestly association or congregation with community life. But, in any case, having some community life is important for many reasons:
- We live in a world that is contrary to Christian life in many ways, so you won’t find support on it. If you are by yourself, it is much easier that the world swallows you and dissolves your identity, while the support and example of other priests helps you to stay firm on that identity.
- It is also a support for keeping order in your life: for example, maybe some day that you wouldn’t get up in time to do your prayers if you were by yourself, you’ll do it if there are other people waiting for you to join them in the morning prayer.
- It helps you to “get out of yourself”, in the sense of having a life less self-centered. If you live by yourself, and have everything in every moment according to your whim, you’ll become weird very soon. On the other hand, having beside you a brother that makes you have lunch earlier that you would like to, or who snorts in the next room and gives you trouble when sleeping, or puts the things where you don’t like them to be, etc., that is an excellent medicine to stay normal. After all, those are the things that happen in any regular family, aren’t they?
(See Ecclesiastes 4:9-12, Luke 10:1)
Well, these three points are the ones I can think off the top of my head. There will for sure be more, but these three are important. If some other brother priest wants to add something, I will surely appreciate it.
God Bless, Matt.