Saturday, December 22, 2012

DIOCESAN SPIRITUALITY: RESPONSE OF CATHOLIC SCHOOLS TO THE CHALLENGES OF THE NEW EVANGELIZATION


Spirituality
What in the world is diocesan spirituality? This question stems from the fact that “spiritualities” are customarily attributed to great founders of religious congregations such as St. Ignatius of Loyola, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Domi­nic de Guzman, St. Therese of Avila, etc. That is why it is very easy to talk about Francis­can, Dominican, or Jesuit spirituality. But hardly can we speak of a kind of spiritu­ality that dawn from the diocesan variety. Is there really a diocesan spirituality?
Before we speak about diocesan spirituality, let us first deal with spiritu­ality in general. Why do we need to reflect on spirituality? According to the CBCP Pastoral Letter on Filipino Spirituality, “The quality of our spirituality tells us who we are as a people. Our spiritu­ality defines who we are. We are a pilgrim people on our way to our true home. We are pilgrims who made a covenant with God pledging to contribute our talents to the estab­lishment of the Kingdom of God on earth (CBCP, Pastoral Letter on Filipino Spirituality, 10 July 1999). Needless to say, spirituality is very important.
The word “spirituality” goes back via the Latin term spiritualitas which is rooted in the biblical semantic field of ruach, pneuma or spirit: the Spirit of God and the spirit of man which interacts with and impacts each other. The term serves as an umbrella concept of asceticism and mysticism--the overarching concept for everything that has to do with “spiritual life.”[i] Spirituality is essentially the sense of intensification of a personal encounter with God that leads to a positive develop­ment in the sense of personal improvement. According to Teresa of Avila, “If you do not strive for the virtues and practice them, you will always remain dwarfs. Whoever does not increase decreases. I hold that love cannot possibly be content with remaining always the same.”[ii] Thus spiritual­ity can be understood as a process of maturation in Christian faith.
According to St. John of the Cross, becoming a Christian means giving in to maturity and this is a task of discerning. The classic rules for discernment of spir­its, as St. Ignatius of Loyola formulates them is “some interior motion wherein the soul began to be inflamed with the love of God that leads to increase of faith, hope and charity and all interior joy that attracts a person to heavenly things and to the salvation of his soul.” In fact, the complete title of St. Ignatius’ opus is “Spiri­tual Exercises to conquer oneself and regulate one’s life, and to avoid coming to a determination through any inordinate affection.” In the words of Gustavo Gutierrez: “All spirituality aims to be a way towards serving God and one’s neighbour better: to be free in order to be able to love.”[iii]
When Pope John Paul II first went to the Philippines in 1981, he observed that the faith of the Filipino people is like that of the Sto. Niño, meaning, lacking in maturity. In consequence, it is opportune that we speak about spirituality today because apparently, one aspect lacking in our Catholic religion as Filipinos is matu­ration in Christian faith. More so this year that we are celebrating the Year of Faith, Pope Benedict XVI calls on all Catholics to deepen our faith. And this deepen­ing of our faith takes on various nuances, one of which is the need to define the kind of spirituality that we as educators need to inculcate and develop among our studentry.
From this we can surmise that, in its far end, spirituality includes the purifi­cation of one’s faculties for the formation of one’s conduct. And when we talk about the formation of one’s conduct and values formation, we could very well say that this falls under the realm of education. But before we go into that, allow me first to venture into what we may eventually call a primordial under­standing of diocesan spirituality.

Diocesan Spirituality
Taking into consideration the Year of Faith that we celebrate this year in commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of Vatican II, a scorching topic that needs to be reflected on is the spirituality of the diocesan clergy. We can say that this is a nebulous topic, with a variety of worthwhile opinions. MAPSA, being an associa­tion of diocesan and parochial schools commonly administered by diocesan priests, has been quibbling about the meaning of this term. That is why it is opportune that we strive to reflect upon its meaning.
In general, the vocation of a religious priest is thought of primarily as the commitment to a community and a specific style of spirituality and way of life. For priests who belong to a religious congregation, it can be argued that their priest­hood itself is a secondary, though very important facet of their vocation--a sort of a “call within a call.” Even in specifically clerical orders like the Jesuits, men are only ordained after they have made their solemn or final profession.
In contrast, the vocation of diocesan priests consists solely in their participa­tion in the ministerial priesthood of Christ through the sacrament of Holy Orders, grounded within the context of service to a particular diocese. But the simplicity of their spirituality does not denote a lack, as is commonly thought. Rather, it indi­cates a certain universality, as the priesthood is not defined by any one culture or historical period; as well as a more intense, “streamlined” focus on the awesome mystery of their ordination.[iv]
The term “diocesan” categorically comes from the root word diocese--a district or see under the supervision of a bishop, divided into parishes. The word diocese is from the Greek term διοίκησις, meaning “administration.” It signi­fies management of a household, thence administration in general. Diocesan stands in contrast with a religious congregation. It refers to a group of priests tasked to pastor a particular church or parish. Thus a diocesan priest is basically tasked to be a shepherd of his local church or parish in the mould of the one and only Good Shepherd, Our Lord Jesus Christ.
In defining the essence of diocesan spirituality I will expound it by present­ing the characteristics of diocesan spirituality which I divided into three essentials: Eucharistic, Pastoral and Marian.

Eucharistic
In a 1983 address to U.S. bishops in Rome for their ad limina visit, Pope John Paul II said: “The spirituality of all diocesan priests is linked to the Eucharist. Here they obtain the strength to make the offering of their lives together with Jesus, high priest and victim of salvation. Through the Eucharistic sacrifice, celi­bacy is confirmed. From the cross the Lord speaks to all his priests, inviting him to be, with him, signs of contradiction…”[v]
The centrality of the Eucharist in the life of the diocesan priest is apparent. The Eucharistic celebration is a very important element in his life. He celebrates it every day and through this celebration, he is able to offer praise and worship to God and be in daily communion with his parish community. In his encyclical Ecclesia de Eucharistia, Pope John Paul II said: “If the Eucharist is the center and summit of the Church’s life, it is likewise the center and summit of priestly minis­try. For this reason, the Eucharist is the principal and central raison d’etre of the sacrament of priesthood, which effectively came into being at the moment of institution of the Eucharist” (EE 31).
The Holy Eucharist is the greatest of all the sacraments. Baptism of course is the most necessary sacrament; without Baptism we cannot receive the other sacraments. Yet, despite all the wonderful things the other six sacra­ments accom­plish in the soul, they still are but instruments of God for the giving of grace. But the Holy Eucharist is not merely an instrument for the giving of grace--here is the actual Giver of grace Himself, Jesus Christ our Lord truly and personally present. It is of no surprise then that Vatican II clearly specified that the Eucharist is the “source and summit of Christian life and the centre of the Christian community.” (Lumen Gentium 11; cf. CCC 1324).[vi]
The Holy Eucharist is the gift that Jesus Christ makes of himself, thus revealing to us God’s infinite love for every man and woman. This wondrous sacrament makes manifest that “greater” love which led him to “lay down his life for his friends” (Jn 15:13). Jesus did indeed love them “to the end” (Jn 13:1). In the same way, Jesus continues, in the sacrament of the Eucharist, to love us “to the end,” even to offering us his body and his blood. [vii]
The theology of the Eucharist is enormously pregnant with meaning. There are numerous ways to approach this topic and find great message vis-à-vis dioce­san spirituality. That is why I would like to go back to basics and apply the three key tenets of the Eucharistic theology namely: presence, sacrifice and commun­ion.
Presence. The Eucharist is the primordial sacrament of Christ everlasting presence here on earth. As he has promised, “I will be with you always until the end of times (Mt. 28: 20). Christ’s perpetual presence is made manifest in the holy mass where, according to the Council of Trent, Jesus is “truly, really and wholly present” (CCC 1376).[viii] Diocesan spirituality signifies that the diocesan priest is to make Christ’s presence real, perpetual and dynamic. As we were always told when we were seminarians, people should always see Christ in us. If they fail to see Jesus in us, it is because we are blocking his way. That’s why we have to always step aside so that Jesus can be seen and simply be a barometer that always point to Jesus and not to ourselves. As Mother Teresa said during the First Worldwide Retreat for Priests in Rome in 1991 which I had the privilege to attend, “Dear priests of God, give us Jesus, only Jesus, always Jesus.”
Sacrifice. When we say that the diocesan spirituality has to be Eucharistic, it connotes that the spiritual life of a diocesan priest must be patterned after the Lord Jesus who sacrificed his very life for the salvation of many. This means that a diocesan priest must continually endeavor to approximate and develop the special character of Christ’s Eucharistic act, that is, self-sacrificing love. The Eucharistic celebration must constantly remind diocesan priests that his priesthood is not to be a source of livelihood but an act of offering himself for the spiritual nourish­ment and an instrument of salvation of his parish community.
Communion. The relationship between Eucharist and communio is pointed out by the Pope John Paul II in his Encyclical Ecclesia de Eucharistia. He spoke of the memorial of Christ as “the supreme sacramental manifestation of communion in the Church”.[ix] The unity of ecclesial communion is concretely manifested in the Christian communities and is renewed at the celebration of the Eucharist, which unites them and differentiates them in the particular Churches, “in quibus et ex quibus una et unica Ecclesia catholica exsistit” (LG 23). The fact that the one Eucharist is cele­b­rated in each Diocese around its own Bishop helps us to see how those particular Churches subsist in and ex Ecclesia.[x]
The Eucharist is the sacrament of unity. The ultimate aim of the Eucharistic celebration is the building up of the Christian community. An important element for the spirituality of the Diocesan priest springing fort from the Eucharist is unity. For the diocesan priest, it entails his total availability to the diocese and to the flock through his faithful promises of obedience and celibacy. Through the Eucha­rist, the diocesan priest keeps his community united. Thus he becomes a unifier of his parish community.
          Indeed looking at diocesan spirituality in the perspective of the Holy Eucha­rist is not only a profoundly theological but also a practical approach to the spiri­tuality of the diocesan priest. Diocesan priests make their daily Mass the heart of the day. They prepare for it by meditating on the readings beforehand, by a spirit of prayer and recollection prior to Mass, by a reverent, sincere celebration of the Mass, and by a period of thanksgiving afterwards. If this could be faithfully done, we’re on our way to “the spirituality of a diocesan priest,” bringing Christ whom they have offered up and received to our people, in our ministry, throughout the day.[xi]

Pastoral
          Allow me to introduce this second element with an anecdote:
Six different priests were on retreat together. They were celebrating the Office of Compline (Night Prayer), when suddenly the lights went out. So what did they do?
The Benedictine priest continued on with the liturgy as though nothing had happened, since he had the breviary memorized;
The Franciscan priest assumed the power was cut off because the retreat house was unable to pay its electrical bill, and he rejoiced that they shared his love of evangelical poverty;
The Carmelite priest had a profound mystical insight as he connected the lack of exterior light with his own interior experience of darkness;
The Dominican and the Jesuit priests got into a heated debate about the theological impli­cations of the lights going out…
…And the diocesan priest went downstairs and changed the fuse![xii]
          This anecdote is understandably objectionable to the religious and self-serving to diocesan priests. But the fact cannot be denied that diocesan priests, primarily tasked to mission in parish communities, are in the forefront of pastoral ministry. This being the case, their mission is truly hands-on in their task of service to the Christian community and his spirituality can be said to be both practical and functional.
According to Bishop Leonardo Medroso of Tagbilaran, “The spirituality of the diocesan clergy and his effectiveness in the ministry is to be found from the very exercise of his priestly ministry. The priest becomes what he administers; he grows in spirituality according to the way he fulfils his priestly ministry; he becomes holy because he deals with holy things.”[xiii] This concept was given an authoritative account by the Second Plenary Council of the Philippines, when it boldly stated: “A ministerial spirituality requires the priest to exercise authentic, i.e. truthful ministry. He attunes his heart and demeanour to the meaning of his ministerial actions… He will seek to be an example of one who heeds the Word of God and thus be a light to others” (PCP II, IV, 537).[xiv] 
Diocesan priests are fundamentally tasked to become pastors of their parish community. They are appointed to become the administrator and spiritual care­taker of their communities. In essence, the diocesan priest embodies the shepherding ministry of the Lord Jesus, the one and only Good Shepherd (John 10,11). In order to understand this shepherding or pastoral ministry, we will once again go back to basics and look into the main functions of the Church otherwise called triplex munus: the priestly, prophetic and kingly ministry of the church.
The Catholic Church does not have an official “mission statement.” If it did, these words from Pope Benedict XVI’s encyclical Deus Caritas Est would be a good starting point: “The Church’s deepest nature is expressed in her threefold responsibility of celebrating the sacraments (leitorgia), proclaiming the Word of God (kerygma), and exercising the ministry of charity (diakonia). These duties pre­suppose each other and are inseparable” (DCE 25).
This threefold mission of the church is based on the biblical nature of Jesus Christ as “priest, prophet, and king” (Heb. 7:1). As the mission of the church stems from the person of Christ, this threefold function of Jesus becomes her threefold mission: to sanctify, to evangelize and to shepherd or to serve the community. And each Christian share in this ecclesial mission. In baptism, when the priest anoints the person with chrism, he says: “as Jesus was anointed Priest, Prophet, and King, so may you too live as a child of God.” Thus, all baptised share in the priestly, prophetic and kingly ministry of Christ and the church that high­lights the distinct aspects of his discipleship.[xv] That is why in our parishes we always have the worship, education and social service ministry, in order to accom­plish these missions.
The “priestly” ministry focuses in celebrating God’s love through the sacred rituals of the liturgy and the sacraments. The “prophetic” ministry is concerned about the proclamation of the Word of God, that includes taking a stand against the evils of society in the mould of the Jesus and the prophets of the Old Testa­ment. And the “kingly” or “shepherding” ministry of the church is concerned with the proper governance of the secular community, the common good and public order.[xvi] It necessarily includes the church’s concern towards integral human devel­opment and “action on behalf of justice and participation in the transfor­mation of the world” which, according the Synod of Bishops of 1971 “fully appears to us as a constitutive dimension of the preaching of the Gospel, or, in other words, of the Church’s mission for the redemption of the human race and its libe­ra­tion from every oppres­sive situation” (IM Intro­duction, empha­sis added).[xvii]
In view of this, diocesan spirituality is made manifest in its dedication towards the welfare and well-being of his community. A diocesan priest is called to shine forth the image of the Good shepherd, called and chosen to guide his people. He is encouraged by the love of Jesus, the Good Shepherd to offer his life for his sheep. A diocesan priest would only become true to his nature as pastor of his flock if he is in the forefront of promoting the common good based on social justice and the fraternal love of the members of his community to their neighbour. This is what it meant when we say that diocesan spirituality is pastoral. 

Marian
          The Blessed Virgin Mary is the only one true mother, spouse and exemplar of every diocesan priest. “With her example and intercession the Blessed Virgin keeps vigilant watch over the priestly life in the Church. And so priests are called to have an ever firmer and more tender devotion to the Virgin Mary and to show it by imitating her virtues and praying to her often.”[xviii] By her “fiat” to the plan of God’s love (cf. Lk 1:38), in the name of all humanity, the Blessed Mother accepts in history the Savior of mankind. In her Magnificat she proclaims the advent of the Mystery of Salvation, the coming of the “Messiah of the poor” (cf. Is 11:4; 61:1). The God of the Covenant, whom the Virgin of Nazareth praises in song as her spirit rejoices, is the God who casts down the mighty from their thrones and raises up the lowly, fills the hungry with good things and sends the rich away empty, scatters the proud and shows mercy to those who fear him (cf. Lk 1:50-53).
Looking to the heart of Mary, to the depth of her faith expressed in the words of the Magnificat, diocesan priests are called to renew ever more fully in themselves “the awareness that the truth about God who saves cannot be separated from the manifestation of his love of preference for the poor and humble, that love which, celebrated in the Magnificat, is later expressed in the words and works of Jesus”. Mary is totally dependent upon God and completely directed towards him by the impetus of her faith. She is “the most perfect image of faith, complete surrender on God and total obedience to the will of the Father.”[xix]
It is of little wonder that the Congregation for the Clergy urges that “Pastors should entrust themselves to Mary, so that, united with the Vicar of Christ they may discover new ways to evince a sincere desire for renewal among the Church's priests in their tasks as teachers of the Word, ministers of the Sacra­ments and leaders of the commu­nity.”[xx]
Putting all these elements into consideration we venture to define diocesan spirituality as a spirituality that is centred on the Eucharist, pastoral in nature and Marian in character. Beyond the dramatic drop in seminarians and the declining numbers of priests, beyond the sexual misconduct scandals shaking the confidence and trust once readily given to priests, a spiritual deepening and devotion to our Blessed Mother Mary could surely renew the spirit of the diocesan priest.

Response of Catholic Schools to the Challenges of the New Evangelization
Based on our foregoing reflection on diocesan spirituality, we can now surmise the responses of our Catholic Schools to the Church’s challenges of the New Evangelization.
According to the Apostolic Letter Porta Fidei of Pope Benedict XVI for the Indiction of the Year of Faith, the primary aim of the Year of Faith is two-fold: to deepen our faith so as to be able to greatly propagate it. The task of deepening our faith could be accomplished by going back to the three important sources of our Catholic faith, namely: the Sacred Scriptures, the Sixteen Documents of Vatican II and the Cate­chism of the Catholic Church. Understandably, the primary task of this school year for our parochial schools is to integrate these sources in our curriculum.

1.      Eucharistic
Attendance to the Holy sacrifice of the mass remains as the most basic responsibility of a Catholic. The question is, how many of our students or better still, how many among our teachers and employees attend the Holy Mass every Sunday?
We need to inculcate the importance of the holy mass among our teach­ers, students and their families and make them more participative in our Sunday litur­gies so that they will deepen their faith and friendship with Christ. We need to continually make the Eucharistic celebration truly the source and summit of Christian life and the centre of every member of our school community.

2.     Pastoral
Our Christian faith is a combination of contemplation and action. This is clearly manifested in Christ’s parable of the vine and the branches (John 15:1-8). In this Year of Faith, the pastoral component of diocesan spirituality teaches us that our Christian life must be also be concerned with integral human devel­opment, actions on behalf of social justice and participation in the transfor­mation of the world.
In view of this, our diocesan and parochial schools must be the venue where the Gospel values of truth, justice and love are formed to all the members of our institution--administration, faculty, employees, alumni, students and their parents. The motto of MAPSA, “that Christ be formed” is a very appropriate reason for this. We need to form our students to be persons of truth and integrity, to be just and fair to all those whom they deal with, and above all, persons of love who has a heart and sincere concern for the needy. We need to make the pastoral ministry of the church active and alive in all the members of our institution so that our graduates will become persons of morality, integrity and social responsibility, who possess genuine concern for their society and the environment.

3.     Marian
The Blessed Virgin Mary, according to Lumen Gentium is our Mother and Model (LG 8). In this day and age, she remains to be the prime exemplar of all Catholics, in terms of faith, chastity, and obedience to the will of God. In our days when obedience to elders among our young people and adherence to authority among adults is hard to come by, the portrait of Mary is an enduring example of obedience. Her fiat to the mission given her by the Father at a very tender age of fourteen is the best example to our young people to rediscover the importance of obedience to elders.
As I always say, if we do not train our young people to be obedient to their elders, we are breeding people who will be disobedi­ent to the will of God and thereby become people of immorality; and disobedient to the laws of our land, and thereby becoming law-breakers and criminals. In this postmodern age when free­dom is given prime importance, we maintain that the value of obedi­ence is of enduring importance. That is why our devotion to our Blessed Mother based on the Marian character of diocesan spirituality is a most powerful tool to form our diocesan and parochial school students to imitate Mary in her words, “Ecce ancilla Domini, fiat mihi secundum verbum tuum” (Lk 1:26).


Conclusion
The task and challenge forwarded by our Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI in this Year of Faith is indeed gargantuan. The mission to deepen and propagate our faith remains the biggest challenge to us Christians in general and educators in particular. But I believe something can be done, only if we put our hearts into it. Nemo dat quod non habet. We cannot give what we do not have. Only if we share the vision of our Holy Father and passionately put them into action can we reap the grace of this Year of Faith. Otherwise, this Year of Faith will come and go without real­izing its purpose and goal.
 May this Year Faith truly become a year of grace, an opportune time for our Catholic Schools to deepen our faith in Christ Our Lord Jesus and make our institution true its mission of becoming an instrument of the local church towards the New Evange­lization, in the propagation of our Catholic faith among our people.


Rev. Msgr. Arnel F. Lagarejos, SThD
President-Cainta Catholic College
20 November 2012


NOTES



1 Dr. Kees Waaijman, O.Carm., “Spirituality: Essence and Methods” in Lecture Series in Spirituality: The Essence of Spirituality and the Relationship of Christian Spirituality with the Spirituality of the other Great Asian Religions and Elements of Filipino Spirituality (Quezon City: Institute of Spiritual­ity in Asia, 2003), 30.
[ii] Ibid., 36.
[iii] Dr. Michael Plattig, O.Carm., “Therese of Lisieux: The Story of a Soul of Liberation” in Lecture Series in Spirituality (Quezon City: Institute of Spirituality in Asia, 2003), 12.
[iv] Blog, Sponsa Christi ...a young consecrated virgin reflects on her vocation, http://www.sponsa-christi.blogspot.com/2008/06/diocesan-spirituality.

[v] Timothy M. Dolan, “The Spirituality of a Diocesan Priest” in Priests for the Third Millennium (Indiana: Our Sunday Visitor Publishing, Inc., 2009).

[vi] Vatican II, Lumen Gentium, 21 Nov. 1965, AAS 57 (1965): 5-75, n. 39. The English translation entitled “Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,” A. Flannery, Vatican II, 350-426.
[vii] Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Sacramentum Caritatis of the Holy Father
Benedict XVI on the Eucharist as the Source and Summit of the Church’s Life and Mission.
[viii] Catechism of the Catholic Church (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1994).
[ix] No. 38: AAS 95 (2003), 458.
[x] Sacramentum Caritatis 15.
[xi] Timothy M. Dolan, “The Spirituality of a Diocesan Priest.”
[xii] Blog, Sponsa Christi, http://sponsa-christi.blogspot.com/2008/diocesan-spirituality.
[xiii] Tidbits, The Spirituality of the Diocesan Priests, Blogspot of Most Rev. Leonardo Medroso, D.D., http://medroso.blogspot.com.
[xiv] Acts and Decrees of the Second Plenary Council of the Philippines (Manila: Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, 1992).
[xv] Marvin L. Kier Mich, The Challenge and Spirituality of Catholic Social Teaching (Quezon City: Claretian Publications, 2012), 17.
[xvi] Arnel F. Lagarejos, The Church of the Poor: A New Perspective on the Church, the State and the Poor (March 1998), 184.
[xvii] 1971 Synod of Bishops, De Iustitia in Mundo, 30 Nov. 1971, AAS 63 (1971): 923-42. The English translation entitled “Justice in the World” is taken from Vatican II, 2:423.
[xviii] John Paul II, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis, On the Forma­tion of Priests in the Circumstances of the Present Day, 25 March 1992, 82.
[xix] Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2004), 25.
[xx] Congregation for the Clergy, The Priest and the Third Christian Millennium: Teacher of the Word, Minister of The Sacraments and Leader of The Community, 1999.

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