Holiness of Life in the Clerical State
© Copyright 2007, T. Stanfill Benns
(None of what appears below — in whole or in part — may be used without
the express and written permission of the author.)
All emphasis in bold within quotes in the works on this site
has been added by the author unless noted otherwise
"The doctrine of faith God revealed…has been
entrusted as a divine deposit to the spouse of Christ to
be faithfully guarded and infallibly interpreted. Hence,
also, that understanding of Her sacred dogmas must be perpetually
retained which Holy Mother Church has once declared; and
there must never be recession from that meaning under the
specious name of a deeper understanding…Let it be
solely in its own genus, namely on the same dogma, with
the same sense and the same understanding."
The Vatican Council, DZ 1800 |
How few today possess any real understanding of the
arduous training it takes to become a Catholic priest. This area
of study has been neglected and misunderstood for decades. If we
wish to know exactly how and why Our Lady's warning at La Salette
concerning priests was fulfilled to the letter in the 1940-50s,
we need only read the many encyclicals and Instructions on the
priesthood written and approved by the Popes since her appearance
there. The Church unceasingly commanded the Ordinaries of those
dioceses that contained seminaries to diligently supervise the
formation of those studying to be priests and carefully screen
those who believed they had a vocation. The last instruction on
this head was issued in 1955, but already it was too late to save
the priesthood from ruin. In this Instruction, entitled "Thorough
Examination of Candidates For Orders Strongly Emphasized," B.
Cardinal Aloysius Masella notes that many of the disorders addressed
in strong words in this Instruction arose during World War II when "the
admonitions and precepts of the Instruction referred to above [issued
by Pope Pius XI in 1930 — see Investigation of the Character
of Candidates for Ordination] either have been completely blotted
out of memory or have not been adequately observed by all concerned.
The resultant effects [unfit and unworthy priests requesting release
from Holy Orders] have flowed here in abundance," (Canon
Law Digest, Vol. IV).
The priesthood must be restored only as
the Church intended and holy pastors provided to guide the faithful to Heaven
and gather
the lost sheep. Rather than relax the Church's previous stringent
requirements for holiness and perseverance in priestly duties
to achieve this goal, it is essential that in these evil times
the
Church be more vigilant than ever. St. Thomas Aquinas said it:
better a few truly holy priests than several who are indifferent
to acquiring a superior sanctity, even if this means raising
the standards in admitting men to the priesthood. Pope Pius XI
teaches
below that holiness in a priest is more important than knowledge.
God gives the Church the priests She needs and we must trust
Him in this matter. If we have any doubts about this, all we need
to
do is look at the damage done by Traditionalist "clergy" over
the past 40 years.
Much has been made of the studies required by seminaries
as necessary for ordination, and rightly so. But one qualification
overriding
all else is more necessary than all the rest, and this the
Popes have attested to for centuries. That qualification, which
must
already exist even before a man's interior call to the priesthood
is confirmed by his bishop, is holiness of life. As Can. 124
states: "Clerics
must lead an interior and exterior life holier than that of the
laity and give these the good example of virtue and good works." And
St. Thomas Aquinas writes: "By Holy Orders a man is deputed
to the most dignified ministry, to serve Christ in the Sacrament
of the Altar. For this a greater interior sanctity is required
than even the religious state demands…For the worthy exercise
of Holy Orders, ordinary goodness does not suffice; superior virtue
is required." Rev. Adolphe Tanquerey, whose ascetical and
dogmatic works were frequently used to train seminarians in this
country states: "The Councils and particularly that of Trent;
the Supreme Pontiffs and especially Pope Leo XIII and St. Pius
X so insist upon the necessity of holiness in the priest that to
deny our thesis is to stand in open contradiction to authorities
that cannot be gainsaid," (The Spiritual Life). Let us see
what the Popes have said on this subject.
Priests must possess a superior holiness
Pope St. Pius X taught at length on the nature and meaning
of this holiness during his reign. In the first year of his
pontificate,
he wrote: "How great must your solicitude be for the formation
of the clergy to sanctity!…When the time comes for the promotion
of candidates to Holy Orders, never forget the words of Paul to
Timothy: Do not impose hands hastily on anyone; ponder deeply on
the truth that, in the majority of cases, the faithful
will be such as those you admit into the priesthood. Take no count, therefore,
of personal considerations; consider only God, the Church and the
eternal welfare of souls, lest as the Apostle says you
should share in the sins of others," (E Supremi
Apostolatus, Oct. 4, 1903).
Five years later this same Pope instructed: "Prospective candidates
for the priesthood are not only to be trained in the arts and sciences,
but are especially to be developed in the deepest piety from their
early years…Men are nothing but the instruments
God uses for the salvation of souls; consequently they
must be suitable
to be used by God…Only one thing serves to unite man to God,
only one thing makes him acceptable and not an unworthy instrument
of the divine mercy, and that is holiness of life and habits. If
this holiness — the supereminent wisdom of Jesus Christ — is
lacking in a priest, everything is lacking in him. Because
without holiness, a vast store of the finest learning (which
We Ourselves
are trying so hard to cultivate in priests), also keenness
and efficiency in management, while they may occasionally
be of some
service to the Church or to individual souls, are much
more frequently the deplorable cause of harm to the Church
and to souls…Woe
to the priest who fails to live up to his office and disgraces
the name of God Whom he should serve by being holy! …Only
holiness will cause us to be that which our priestly vocation demands:…ministers
of God who mind only heavenly things and strive with all their
might to turn heavenward also the minds of others…Now more
than ever there simply must be in the priesthood more than ordinary
virtue; virtue that may be a model for others," (Haerent
Animo,
Aug. 4, 1908).
Quoting Pope Leo XIII, St. Pius X then
warns against the dangers of believing "that some of the Christian virtues are not opportune
in certain times…[This] could occur only to a mind
that had forgotten the words of the Apostle: 'For whom
He foreknew, He also
predestined to be made conformable to the image of His
Son,' (Rom. 8:29). The teacher and examplar of every form of holiness is Christ,
and to His model all those who wish to attain the regions of the
blessed must form themselves. Now He is not changed by the passing
ages but is 'Jesus Christ yesterday, today and the same forever,'
(Heb. 8:8). So to the men of every age these
words are directed, 'Learn of Me, for I am meek and humble
of heart,' (Matt. 11:29)...These
words of the Apostle are true for every age: 'They that
are Christ's have crucified their flesh with the vices
and concupiscences,'
(Gal. 5:24)." So let no one state, as the Traditionalists
are so fond of doing, that it is impossible for priests to live
up to this standard of holiness today, or that because of the present
crisis God does not expect them to strive for such holiness and
do all in their power to achieve it. God never proposes an end
unless He also provides the means, even if these means involve
great effort and sacrifice and even His direct intervention, as
St. Francis de Sales suggests. To believe otherwise is contrary
to Pope St. Pius X's teaching in his Oath Against Modernism, where
he states: "The doctrines of faith are
transmitted from the Apostles through the orthodox Fathers,
always
in the same sense
and interpretation, even to us; and so I reject the heretical
invention of the evolution of dogmas, passing from one
meaning to another,
different from that which the Church first had."
Other Popes also had this to say about the holiness
necessary to the priesthood:
" Learning without
virtue is a source of offence and danger rather than of real benefit.
It
is generally true that those who show
overweening pride because of the learning they have
acquired lose the faith and blindly rush headlong to a spiritual
death. Students,
therefore, must take every means to ensure that the
virtue of humility, which is necessary indeed for everyone
but particularly [is] to
be practiced by them, is part of their innermost being…The
learning which a man may acquire, however extensive it might be,
is nothing compared to the things of which he remains ignorant," (Unigenitus
Dei Filius, Pope Pius XI, March 19, 1924).
"
It would be a grave error fraught with many dangers should the
priest, carried away by false zeal, neglect his own sanctification…In
the first place he endangers his own eternal salvation…In
the second place he might lose, if not divine grace, certainly
that unction of the Holy Ghost which gives such a marvelous force
and efficacy to the external apostolate…Our
Lord…has
been pleased to elect to the priestly state men almost devoid of…learning…But
He did this that all might learn, if there be a choice,
to prize holiness more than learning; not to place
more trust in human than
divine means…[Piety] is necessary above all to the right
exercise of the priestly ministry. Without piety even the holiest
actions and the most sacred rites will be performed in a mechanical
and routine fashion; they will certainly be devoid of that unction
that gives them spirit and life." (Ad Catholici
Sacerdoti, Pope Pius XI, Dec., 1935)
" If, with so much solicitude,
We have, in the discharge of Our Apostolic office, recommended
solid intellectual training among the clergy,
it is easy to understand how much We have at heart
the spiritual and moral training of young clerics without which
even outstanding
knowledge can bring incalculable harm on account of
arrogant pride which easily enters the heart. Therefore Mother Church primarily
and anxiously wishes that in seminaries solid foundations be laid
for the holiness that the minister of God must develop and practice
all his life…We insist that clerical students be deeply convinced
of the necessity of striving to acquire those ornaments of the
soul which are the virtues and, after acquiring them, to preserve
them with the desire of increasing them…[However] there is
ready danger that the external exercises of piety may not be accompanied
by an interior movement of the soul, a thing which can become habitual
and even grow worse…outside the seminary…For seminarians
the interior life is the most efficacious means of acquiring the
priestly virtues, of overcoming difficulties and carrying out salutary
resolutions. Those who are responsible for the moral training of
seminarians must always aim at making them acquire all the virtues
the Church demands in priests," (Menti Nostrae,
Pope Pius XII, Sept. 23, 1950).
"
People spend a great deal of time in useless discussions of evil
and their remedies; often We have thought that one of the most
effective remedies would be many holy priests! For
history teaches that wherever a holy and zealous priest
has arisen and has lived,
in his footsteps as if by magic everything has seemed
to be rejuvenated, everything comes back to life," (Pope Pius XII
to the Spanish Pontifical College, March 22, 1956).
"
Although the humane and natural education of the religious clergy
is to be highly esteemed, still first place
in the program of formation must be given to supernatural
sanctification of the soul. If the
words of the Apostle 'For this is the will of God,
your sanctification,' (I Thess. 4:3) apply to all Christians, they bind all the more
one who has not only received the priesthood, but has made a public
profession of his resolve to pursue evangelical perfection; one
whose office has so constituted him an instrument for
the sanctification of others that the salvation of
souls and the spread of God's kingdom
depend in large measure upon his holiness," (Sedes
Sapientiae, Pope Pius XII, May 31, 1956).
" Give the very first place to the formation
of the interior spirit, without which all exterior action
is futile and must be looked
on with suspicion," (Pope Pius XII, A
Guide to the Lay Apostolate, 1954).
From the above it is very clear, then, that those
becoming seminarians must (a) already have achieved a superior
level of holiness;
(b) that this holiness is to be preferred even to the
necessary subjects
they must learn; (c) that it is then to be increased
and perfected in the seminary and perfected even further
following
ordination
(d) that it is to be further perfected in the exercise
of their priestly ministry. But how is the acquisition
of holiness
to
be measured? How can we in these times determine if
holiness has been
achieved?
The Church's method for achieving holiness
"
The watchful and experienced superior of a seminary, who knows
his students individually and studies the character and inclinations
of each of them, will not find it very difficult to discern which
of them has a true vocation to the priesthood…The man who
wants to be a priest for the noble motive of giving himself to
the service of God and the salvation of souls, and at the same
time possesses solid piety, proved chastity, and has or is trying
to acquire sufficient knowledge, as we have already explained,
that man is clearly called to the priestly state…Superiors
of seminaries…should, without any regard for human considerations
order those who are unsuitable or unworthy to leave the seminary…In
deciding these cases, the safer view should always
be followed," (Ad
Catholici Sacerdoti, Pope Pius XI, Dec., 1935).
"
Still another recommendation, we feel, is in place here: that in
undertaking and advancing in the spiritual life, you
do not trust too much to yourselves, but with docile simplicity seek and accept
the help of someone who, with wise moderation, can guide your soul,
point out to you the dangers, suggest suitable remedies, and in
every internal and external difficulty can guide you in the right
way towards an ever greater perfection, according
to the example of the saints and the teachings of
Christian asceticism. Without
these prudent guides for one's conscience, it is often very difficult
to be duly responsive to the impulses of the Holy Ghost and of
the grace of God," (Menti Nostrae, Pope Pius XII,
Sept. 23, 1950).
"
All who have charge in any way of religious must bear in mind that
education and formation of this kind must be imparted in an organized
and gradated manner, and that every appropriate
method should be utilized. This training should embrace the whole man under all
the aspects of his vocation, so that he may become truly and completely
a man perfect in Jesus Christ…Supernatural means…are
not only necessary to the attainment of a religious and clerical
perfection crowned with apostolic success; they are altogether
basic and of its essence…Nothing should
be slighted which will contribute in any way to the
perfection of body and mind,
cultivation of the natural virtues and the formation
of the integral human personality. Thus the supernatural training, whether for
the religious life or the priesthood, will be based on the solid
foundation of natural integrity and refined
personality, (Phil.
4:8). Surely men will find the way to Christ more easy and inviting
to the extent that they see in the person of the priest 'the
goodness and kindness of God Our Savior'…All this, We know from experience,
can only be provided by well chosen men, who are not only outstanding
in learning, prudence, understanding of characters,
wide experience of men and things and in other human qualities, but who are also
filled with the Holy Ghost and who will give the young men a shining
example of holiness and of all virtue; for it is well known that
in the whole manner of training they
are more influenced by virtue and right conduct than
by words." (Sedes Sapientiae,
Pope Pius XII, May 31, 1956).
It must be noted here that Sedes Sapientiae is not
just any papal constitution; Pope Pius XII included
in this
document
words clearly
indicating that every phrase of this constitution
is to be considered infallible, a most unusual occurrence.
This
gives
further evidence
of his knowledge that many abuses already had arisen,
the seminaries indeed had been infiltrated, and the
priesthood was in grave
danger of perversion.
Character formation in seminaries essential
Given this fact, we must pay close attention to the
words from this Constitution. In the spiritual
formation of
seminarians: "…every
appropriate method should be utilized… Nothing
should be slighted which will contribute in any
way to the perfection of
body and mind, cultivation of the natural virtues
and the formation of the integral human personality…[the development of] natural
integrity and refined personality." Directors of priests and
religious must possess an "understanding
of characters and a wide experience of men and
things." We literally
must take these words as Gospel. And yet we find that
the one most consistent
practice of the Church used to secure the correct formation
of seminarians (and the devout among the faithful)
has not only been
neglected, but omitted entirely, when Pope Pius XII
mandates that all appropriate methods should be used
and nothing should be slighted.
Isn't it obvious that a method used by spiritual directors
for nearly 2,000 years should be a time-honored method
preferred to
all others? But because this method was not duly investigated
and employed, much progress in the spiritual life and
much precious
time has been lost, not to mention the fact that many
graces have been wasted.
This method is called the study of the temperaments
and as Rev. R.J. Meyers teaches: "The masters of the spiritual life tell
us that the Examination of Conscience should be directed, in a
very special manner, towards the correction of those faults which
spring from a defect of character, and the acquisition of those
virtues which are best suited to form and build up character. The
reason which they give is that whatever is connected with a man's
character affects his inmost self and has, therefore, a direct
bearing on his whole life. Whence it follows that the study of
character is of paramount importance to every one, as well as for
his own sake, as for the sake of those who may be called upon to
guide in the way of God…The physical basis of a person's
character is his bodily temperament…A person's temperament
often stands not only for his manner of feeling, but of acting;
for his frame of mind and disposition of mind; in brief, for the
sum of his native endowments and tendencies…[Temperaments]
are very helpful to acquire a knowledge of one's natural disposition…Natural
temperament, with all its weaknesses and imperfections,
is a factor that we must necessarily take into
account, under pain of the gravest
mistakes and disappointments in the spiritual life," (Science
of the Saints, by Rev. R.J. Meyers, S.J.).
It is the elimination of these vices and the acquisition
of these virtues, consistently referred to as of
chief importance by the
Popes in regard to the formation of seminarians,
that is at
stake here. Nothing is more essential to the spiritual
education of
truly sound priests and the success of their ministry — or progress
in the spiritual life by the laity — than this
holy formation. All authors on the spiritual life agree
that the study of the four
temperaments, used consistently by the Church in the
course of spiritual direction since the early centuries,
is an invaluable
help to knowing oneself and attaining sanctity. Writers
on the temperaments also agree that almost without
exception, children
take their temperaments from those of their parents.
Below can be found the opinions of various writers
on the importance of studying
one's temperament.
"
One meets people who become nervously disturbed as soon as they
hear temperaments mentioned. They are usually oversensitive minds
that unconsciously become perturbed when their pet peculiarities
are attacked. Others gladly listen to and carry on amiable conversation
on the subject of temperament but they anxiously avoid any serious
examination of it, by remarking that it is impossible to ascertain
anything definite in this 'happy hunting ground' of speculation,
and that what knowledge there is, is of little consequence in 'practical'
life. Is not this merely an innate fear of self-knowledge, self-
control and self-denial — qualities hard to come by, but
sorely needed? The man who will not allow
his illusions of an imagined superiority to be
disturbed has no desire to get to know his temperament
and is indeed incapable of doing so. The difficult
study of temperament
takes for granted an earnest longing after self-perfection. The
man who is not striving to become a better man resists the truth
and keeps it out of his way…Many people mean well, but do
not know themselves; [they] commit excesses by giving way to their
temperament…The majority act instinctively and excuse themselves
by saying that it is their nature. They
overlook the duty they have to train themselves…The individuality of the person
in its best aspects must be preserved and fostered, while its failings
must be scoured away. This constitutes genuine asceticism and true
wisdom," (Nervousness, Temperament and
the Soul,
Rev. Joseph Massmann).
"
If we lack self-knowledge, it is morally impossible to perfect
ourselves. The reason is that we then entertain illusions about
our state, and according to our character or our unchanging moods,
we fall either into a presumptuous optimism that makes us believe
we are already perfect, or into discouragement that causes us to
exaggerate our faults. In either case the result is almost identical — inaction,
lack of sustained effort, carelessness. Besides, how can we correct
faults with which we are not acquainted or of which we have at
best but an imperfect knowledge? How undertake the cultivation
of virtues, of qualities of which we have but a vague and confused
notion? …To guide ourselves in this study we may examine
successively our natural and supernatural endowments…A brief
study on character will aid us in this study of self…(The
Spiritual Life, Rev. Adolphe Tanquerey).
Comment: As Rev. Hugo Doyle notes, general direction
can be used only in conjunction with personal direction
if
it is to
be effective.
Each temperament must strive to acquire different
virtues in different order and fight demons different
from
those of other
temperaments
or combinations of temperament. A generic approach
to direction ignores the human element and very
often causes
only confusion.
"
Personality is the pattern of an individual life and that includes
a person's abilities, (his acts regarded from the point of view
of their efficiency); dispositions, (…his motives); temperament
(traits such as emotion, persistence, impulsiveness) and character,
(the way in which his motives are integrated and the manner in
which he deals with conflicting demands). Character is a part of
personality but is not identical with personality; character and
temperament are not synonymous…Character is the sum total
of psychological dispositions, modified by education and will power,
while temperament is the sum total of those fundamental tendencies
which flow from the physiological constitution of an individual…Temperaments
provide keys to character study…Most persons are the product
of constitution, personality and environment…Through effort
and the grace of God we can all do much to perfect our temperaments
and develop a well-ordered character… A good spiritual director
should apply himself to a careful study of character if he hopes
to be an effective help to many souls…The prime duty of the
director is to know the soul, to teach it and to help it make effective
progress," (Guidance in Spiritual Direction,
Rev. Hugo Doyle). Tanquerey says of St. Alphonsus
that he
had so successfully moderated
his inherent character type that those who did
not know him in his early life could not believe
he had
ever been other than they
saw him. Rev. Hugo Doyle says the same of St. Ignatius
and St. Francis de Sales. Rudolph Allers, Ph.D
gives examples of cases
of undisciplined temperament that were changed
almost overnight.
"
God…wants to establish a personal relationship with each
and every one of us. And that relationship is nothing less than
a pact of eternal and perfect friendship between each human being
and Himself. It means spiritual marriage between Christ the Eternal
Word made flesh and every human being. Before that marriage can
take place, the soul must attain to the heights of sanctity. From
that truth you can deduce that you yourself, whoever you are and
no matter how lowly your station in life, you are called to strive
for and attain the highest sanctity of the saints. Our Lord offers
even now the pact of perfect and eternal friendship with Himself.
How foolish it would be, how shameful, to refuse the friendship
of the Lord, God Almighty," (Heroic Sanctity
and Insanity, Thomas Verner Moore, Carthusian).
"
One of the most reliable means of learning to know oneself is the
study of the temperaments. For if a man is fully cognizant of his
temperament, he can learn easily to direct and control himself.
If he is able to discern the temperament
of others, he can better understand and help them…It
may be difficult in many cases to decide upon the
temperament of any particular person; still
we should not permit ourselves to be discouraged
in the attempt to understand our own temperament
and that of those persons with
whom we come often into contact, for the advantages
of such insights are very great. To know the temperaments
of our fellow men helps
us to understand them better, treat them more correctly,
bear with them more patiently. These are evidently advantages for social
life which can hardly be appreciated enough…It is of the
greatest benefit…to recognize fully one's own temperament.
Only if one knows it can he judge correctly himself, his moods,
his peculiarities, his past life…If
one knows one's own temperament, he can work out
his own perfection with greater assurance, because
finally the whole effort toward self-perfection
consists in the
perfection of the good and in the combating of
the evil dispositions…Man
can and must cultivate and perfect the good elements of his temperament
and combat and eradicate the evil ones…All of man's inclinations
and peculiarities should be used for the service of the Lord and
contribute to His honor and to man's welfare. Persons
of various temperament who live together should
learn not to oppose but to
support and supplement one another," (Treatise
on the Four Temperaments by an unknown Catholic
author, circa 1950s).
In his Prophets of the Better Hope, Rev. William
Kerby emphasizes the necessity for priests to know
their
own temperaments.
Kerby writes: "The priest…should be a transformed man. The
strength in temperament that leads him toward fault should be subdued
by the certain restraints of grace. The weakness in temperament
which exposes him to fault and sin should be so overcome by grace
as to bring his average of spiritual strength up to priestly ideals.
Unless these results are accomplished by the action of grace in
the priest's life, he will yield more to nature than can be pardoned
and receive less grace than may be asked…The priest must
show forth in his life the transforming power of the spirit of
God. The laity show him reverence and obedience because they expect
this of him…Temperament in a priest aids or hinders his personal
sanctification and affects his ministry profoundly…Temperament
is either a help or an obstacle in the priestly
life. It is our duty to understand that and to
find in this
understanding help
in the work of our sanctification."
"
Self-knowledge is not the same as the knowledge of man in general…The
starting point of a candidate
for the priesthood is not merely human nature with
its common features
but human nature as it is
in himself, with all its particular aspects, excesses
and deficiencies, aptitudes and difficulties, qualities
and shortcomings. These cannot
be learned from books; they can be known only by deep reflection,
by frequent and thorough self-examination, by a constant attention
to one's actions, words and thoughts, in order to discover not
merely what they are in themselves, or how they appear outwardly,
but in order to reach their sources, their motives, and the general
tendencies form which they spring. This examination is to be directed
to good qualities, for they are talents received from God, a strict
account of which will be demanded by Him…Attention
must also be directed to defects; we must know
them in order to remedy and
correct them, as far as possible. They impede,
or stop completely our progress toward our end. They are weeds which, unless uprooted,
continue to grow and gradually smother the good seed…Likes
and dislikes, love and hatred, attraction and repugnance, fear,
anger, resentment, and a host of other feelings contribute for
a large part to mold man's character. They must not be allowed
to become the guides to activity, for of themselves they are blind.
They are to be controlled according to the dictates of reason and
faith," (Rev. C. A. Dubray, S.M., Toward
the Priesthood).
After advising readers not to neglect works of
zeal on the pretext that one is not advanced enough
spiritually,
Dom
Chautard has
some very sobering comments on what happens to
those who neglect the
development of the interior life. "No work takes deep root,
is really solid and lasting, unless the apostle has created the
interior life in souls. Now, he cannot do so unless he is well
nurtured on the interior life himself…It
is only the really interior man who has enough
life to produce
other centers of fruitful
life. Any lay workers can succeed in getting zealous
workers capable of propaganda and influence by
comradeship, brotherly spirit or
rivalry. Fanaticism or competition, sectarianism
or vainglory, interest or ambition are good enough
for
him as levers. But with
what other lever than that of intensive interior
life can we create apostles for our Lord, apostles
partaking
of His gentleness and
humility, of His disinterested kindness and His
exclusive zeal for the glory of His Father? As
long as a work
has not been able
to get such results, its existence is short-lived.
It is almost certain that it shall not survive
its founder."
"
Our own character is one of our heaviest crosses, one which cannot
be changed from day to day, or left at home when we are on a journey
or in public," (Rev. Mateo Crawley-Bovey).
While it is true that there can be no direction
without confession, and that the temperaments are
best evaluated
and applied
by experienced directors, there is no excuse for
not adapting this important
study to our own circumstances. This is especially
true for those who
pursue clerical office. Canon laws have been reconciled
and emergency provisions constructed to accommodate
the present
crisis. But
this important tool to achieving holiness has not
been so much
as seriously
considered, far less put into practice, when the
Popes teach that holiness is more important to
the cleric
even than doctrinal
knowledge.
In recent years even the Protestants have revived
interest in the four basic temperaments and used
them to their
benefit. And
if
those whose duty it is to sanctify the faithful
do not embrace this very science of the saints,
what
hope is
there that
their charges can ever benefit from their experience?
How can the
needs of various individuals, all with different
defects and in need
of specific virtues to counter these defects, ever
be satisfactorily met? It is much like a prince
who orders
his squire to
slay certain dragons and seek out certain noble
men, without ever
indicating
where these dragons and noble men are to be found
and how they are to be identified. Knowing the
temperaments is
not an infallible
tool for identifying every aspect of our personalities.
But it at least serves as a template to better
gain insight into
the
condition of our souls and the means to improve
that condition.
It will be said that restoring confession will
solve much of the problem. But without the knowledge
necessary
to
conduct spiritual direction and act as a competent
judge, won't more
harm be done
than good? Will the Sacraments be considered a
magic cure-all, much as Traditionalists perceive
them,
without a true appreciation
of the purpose for which they were instituted — an
increase of grace and means of spiritual progress
in the individual soul?
And how will seminarians be instructed in this
most important art of direction if so little is
known about
the use of the temperaments
to effect sanctification? If ascetical, mystical and
pastoral theology, also psychology all had been
studied and absorbed, the
evidence of the
application of this science of the temperaments
would be apparent, but
it is
not. That such a statement is not a rash judgment
and can be made with at least reasonable certitude
is evident
from
what
follows.
Being and acting
As the student of Thomism knows, there is a significant
gap between the state of being and that of putting
what one has
learned and
believes into action; between potential and actual.
Knowing and doing are two different things. Man
can know something
ever so
well but it takes grace and effort to catapult
the will from potential to actual. That is why
Christ
warned His
Apostles
not to judge
by appearances, but by fruits; why we say that
actions speak louder than words. Rev. Tanquerey
writes: "Psychology demonstrates
that an idea deeply impressed tends to elicit a corresponding act.
This is the more true when the thought is accompanied by the desire [for perfection], for the latter already constitutes an act of
the will which sets our faculties into motion…The more ardent
our desires, the more abundant the graces we receive." These
graces should affect our character, and render
us open and honest versus evasive and dishonest;
tactful rather
than tactless; kind
and compassionate in the affairs of others not
cold and disinterested; firm not lax; dignified
and refined
versus rude and uncultivated.
If no act proceeds from what is known or learned
concerning perfection, the results will be seen
in the development
of character. The idea
itself should be sufficient to result in the act.
If no act follows, not only has the seed for the
idea
of perfection fallen on rocky
ground, but also the accompanying desire to achieve
the virtues is lacking entirely. If an effort is
made but falls short, the
idea has taken root but the desire is weak and
has not produced sufficient grace either to complete
the
act or to achieve the desired
degree of holiness.
Rev. Leen says in his Progress Through Mental
Prayer: "Saintliness
is an art; it is always the product of adhesion to certain principles
and is the application of these principles to the conduct of life…Saint
Catherine of Siena in her Dialogue [says] more than once that sanctity
is the outcome of the actions and reactions that follow relations
with ones' fellow creatures. When these actions and reactions are
governed by the principle of divine charity and follow the lines
traced by Jesus Christ in His life, then sanctity is attained…A
Saint is a moral work of art, a finished product of personally
controlled and personally directed actions." Rev. Hugo Doyle,
in his Guidance in Spiritual Direction states that "Through
effort and the grace of God we can all do much
to perfect our temperaments and develop a well-ordered
character." As noted above, several
great saints attained sainthood by totally conquering their inherent
temperaments. In his Prophets of the Better
Hope, Rev. Kerby elaborates
upon those qualities required by the priest, especially in the
interaction necessary to parish life. Other authors have commented
on this as well. So if the faithful are not inspired and attracted
to sanctification by their pastor; if they are not ministered to
in a profitable manner; if tactlessness, rudeness or indifference
predominate; if egoism is plainly evident and tepidity obvious,
(tepidity being the failure to take venial sins seriously and a
refusal to correct small defects — called by Revs. Montoli
and Tobin "spiritual egoism"), then it
can be safely assumed that little progress has
been made
in the necessary self-knowledge.
Unless they bear fruit, then, theological studies
of themselves cannot bring about the reformation
and conversion
of mankind
without priests first setting the requisite example
necessary to inspire
others to follow. Rev. Tanquerey explains this
about the clergy as follows: Because the heart
of the priest "is intimately
united to that of Jesus, there is an emotion, a power of persuasion
that moves his hearers. Because by forgetting
himself he attracts the Holy Spirit, souls are moved by grace and either converted
or sanctified. A lukewarm priest, on the contrary, preaches but
with his lips and because he seeks self, beats the air and often
is but 'sounding brass or a tinkling
cymbal,' (I Cor. 13:1). The
priest cannot fulfill his duty of giving good example to the faithful
unless he concerns himself with his own spiritual progress…Witnesses
of his piety, of his kindness, of his poverty, and of his self-denial,
the faithful realize that he practices what
he preaches, that he
is a Saint; they venerate him and are drawn to follow in his footsteps…A
mediocre priest may be esteemed as an honest
man who works at his craft like any other, yet
his
ministry
will bear little or no fruit."
Inability to admit mistakes
Here we must especially note a trait that has
repeatedly been observed in the behavior of "Pope Michael." We note it only because
it is required by the Church for Ordination. In his work Priesthood:
Conferences on the Rite of Ordination, Rev. Aloysius Biskupek writes: "The
Church demands the absence of certain faults which are likely to
harm the sacred ministry and thus, by implication, the presence
of the opposite virtues. Canon 1371 enumerates certain classes
of candidates, who must be dismissed from the seminary, as not
possessing the character required of ministers of the altar. They
are: the irritable, the incorrigible, the rebellious and those
who have failed against faith and morals. Hence the good character
of the candidate implies that he has learned to control his anger,
that he accepts correction and amends faults
to which his attention has been called, that he is submissive to authority and amenable
to the guidance of obedience, that he is
a man of faith and a lover
of purity…To know one's faults
and not to correct them — for
this is implied in the term 'incorrigible' — indicates
either lack of will power or failure to grasp
the import of priestly responsibility.
In each of these cases the cause of God will suffer…The priest
must be a strong character. No other state makes such demands upon
will power and manly independence. Not only must he prove himself
superior to the weakness of his own nature, but he must be able
to endure the weaknesses of others in order to lead them to a higher
level of Christian perfection. The candidate who is incorrigible…is
too proud too correct his faults. He has been warned that…his
conduct is out of harmony with the ideals of the priestly life,
yet he did not change. To do so would have been an admission that
he was wrong; he would have had to submit to someone else's will.
This he could not bring himself to do…Incorrigibility may
be caused by an easy-going, light-minded temper…What will
be the end of one who has to handle the most sacred things every
day? The people, seeing the irreverence and carelessness of the
priest will be scandalized…Surely one who in all probability
will bring the curse of God upon himself is not the character wanted
for the priesthood." Concerning those who err in either faith
or morals, Biskupek states that they "are
to be dismissed summarily from the seminary. The reason is
obvious and needs no
further comment."
Here it must be noted that heresy is very much
a choice that is dependent on the will, not the
intellect.
As
Rev. Eric
MacKenzie says in his The Delict of Heresy, "The sin of heresy consists
in the direction given the intellect by the will…Each time
the intellect recurs to the matter of authoritative teaching, the
will intervenes…St. Thomas…has looked upon [the will]
as the source of all subsequent evil in intellectual beings that
have turned to evil." Certain temperaments
are more prone to obstinacy and illogical adherence
to
personal opinion than others.
These would seem to be at greater risk of falling
into heresy if their characters remain undisciplined.
Undisciplined
personalities
of this type, theologians agree, will do all
in their power to defend the indefensible and
impose
their will
on others, despite
the pain and loss this may cause. Conclusion
Clerics are bound to possess a holiness of life
that far exceeds that of the most devout among
their subjects.
This
holiness
must be perceivable even before they enter
the seminary. To say otherwise
is to contradict everything the Church has
taught on this head for centuries. This truth is easily
known
by the faithful
who
understand that priests are "other-Christs" whom they expect to
behave as such. And it must be said that we are not just talking
here only of the priesthood, but of an office the Church intended
to be occupied by the priest par excellence — the Roman Pontiff.
If a man is unfit to be a priest, he is automatically unfit for
the office of the papacy. As demonstrated elsewhere, Canons and
453 clearly state that any appointment or election of one other
than a priest (or at the very least a deacon, able to be immediately
ordained) to an office involving the care of souls is invalid.
Certainly the office of the papacy requires a level of holiness
and learning, also practical experience, superior to that even
of the above-average priest. This we find in Canon 232. While there
are exceptions to these canons for a layman elected Pope, Pope
Pius XII clarifies these exceptions in Six
ans se sont: A layman
elected pope can accept the office only if he is fit for ordination
and willing to be ordained." And that of
course applies to a situation where priests or
bishops
are available to ordain within
a reasonable time frame and the layman in question
has not denied the faith prior to his acceptance. |