Pope to seminarians: ‘Meet Jesus
on the road’
Pope Francis meets with the seminarians from Agrigento.(Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis reflects on the seminary experience, comparing
it to the Gospel account of the disciples walking with Jesus on the road to
Emmaus in which Jesus listens, helps them discern, and sends them on mission.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
Pope Francis met with seminarians from
the Sicilian Archdiocese of Agrigento on Saturday in the Hall
of the Consistory in the Vatican. In his prepared remarks which were given to
the seminarians, Pope Francis said that just as it did for the Synod of Bishops
on Young People the icon of Jesus walking with the disciples to Emmaus is also
an icon of the seminary experience. He then explained the key points of this
icon: journey, listening, discernment and mission.
Listening
We meet the Risen Lord “on the road”, the Pope said. At the
same time, Jesus “is the way, that is, the reality through which each one of us
is called to live”, he said. Therefore, Jesus walks with us, listens to us, and
“welcomes our human condition”. He spurs the disciples to reveal what was going
on inside – “their hopes and their delusions”. This, the Pope said, is what the
seminary experience is: “first there is a dialogue with the Lord made up of
mutual listening: He listens to me and I listen to Him”. Later, this dynamic
will be of great service in pastoral ministry when priests are called to do
what Jesus and the Church do: “listen to the cry of humanity, which is often a
silent groan, repressed and suffocated at times”.
Discernment
Accompaniment is necessary for the discernment process the
seminary offers. Pope Francis said that “many problems that become apparent in
the life of a priest are due to the lack of discernment during the seminary
years”. The same is true of marriage, he said. This discernment must be carried
out as Jesus did with the two on their way to Emmaus. “Jesus did not pretend”,
nor was he evasive with them; he did not tip-toe around the problem. Rather, he
called them “ ‘foolish and ‘slow of heart’ because they did not believe the
prophets”. Jesus then opened their minds, and then their eyes. The Holy Spirit
is the master artist of discernment, Pope Francis said.
Mission
The two disciples then “return to Jerusalem together”. There
they “unite themselves to the apostolic community who, by the power of the
Spirit, becomes thoroughly missionary”. The emphasis on the community is
important, Pope Francis emphasized. He ended by encouraging the seminarians to
embrace this vision so that the Church be a witness of collegiality and
communion.
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