Many observers believe that the influence of Pope John Paul II's I Will Give Them Shepherds remedied many of the faults of earlier seminary programs. From my perspective, John Paul II's greatest contribution in the apostolic exhortation was to add a fourth dimension to the already established spiritual, academic, and pastoral dimension. The Holy Father wisely added human formation, saying it is the necessary foundation for all other priestly formation. He states that a priest's personality should be a bridge rather than an obstacle to others in meeting Christ.
Psychosexual development and affective maturity thus become central to seminary formation.
Of special importance is the capacity to relate to others. This is truly fundamental for a person who is called to be responsible for a community and to be a "man of communion." This demands that the priest not be arrogant, or quarrelsome, but affable, hospitable, sincere in his words and heart, prudent and discreet, generous and ready to serve, capable of opening himself to clear and brotherly relationships and of encouraging the same in others, and quick to understand, forgive and console... (43)
When I shared my desire to write a blog named "Church in Hospice" about a Church in crisis, Bo chided me for being "depressing" and not writing something more positive that will give people hope. This is where Fr. Bo strikes me as most schizophrenic or conflicted.
Unfortunately, I know other priests like Fr. Bo. Laity's trust will not be misplaced if he (and other priests in his quandary) maturely choose celibacy or leave the priesthood in order to satisfy their affective needs. Then we will have a Church worthy of trust.
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