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Dear Rev.
Know it all;
What is it like being a
priest?
Continued from last week…
Priests
used to have a sense of camaraderie, but priestly fraternity became
unfashionable with the rise of feminism. It was deemed too clerical. One used to
have a sense of family with the people whom he served, but now that a priest is
limited to six, or at most twelve years with a particular community, he never
sinks real roots. He becomes more a consultant than a shepherd, more a distant
cousin than a father. And at the age of seventy, just when you need people who
know you and care for you, you are expected to retire, and find someplace to
live, preferably a good distance from your parish, lest you cramp the new
pastor’s style and you have to figure out some way to make ends meet.
People
are endlessly fascinated with us. They love us and they hate us, but they never
really know us. We stand in the way of that perfect garden wedding, or we are
the saint who showed up just in time at Grandma’s death bed, and now we are
expected to show up just in time for every other crisis. I’ve gotten requests to
baptize the grandchildren of people to whom I haven’t spoken in years, I am not
making this up, because I baptized all the other children and it would look odd
in the picture on the mantle if it was a different priest doing the honors. I
get emergency calls from people I haven’t heard from in twenty years and who I
couldn’t pick out of a crowd of two. We are never just fellow sinners saved by
grace. We are what’s right with the Church, or we are what’s wrong with the
Church. It never occurs to people that we are just part of the Church. They,
too, are the Church. I cannot tell you the times that I have been dressed in
Mass vestments and someone runs up to tell me that there is no toilet paper in
the lady’s room, or they can’t get their car out of the parking lot. It does not
matter that the hymn has started and the cross bearer is halfway down the aisle.
The person who needs the toilet paper or has to get their car out before the dry
cleaner closes will forever judge the Church and the Gospel by the fact that you
didn’t care enough. Most people aren’t that goofy, but quite a few are. “Father
the sidewalk isn’t shoveled.” “ Someone is going to trip over that first step.”
‘It’s too hot in here.” “It’s too cold in here.” “How come you don’t have
someone answering the phone on Saturday nights after ten? What if somebody needs
a priest?” There are fewer and fewer of us and the demand is always greater.
In
addition to all this there is the current anti-clerical climate. We live in an
anti-clerical country. Thomas Jefferson, the great founder and author of the
Declaration of Independence thought that priests were the enemies of freedom. I
suspect that he agreed with Diderot who longed to see the last king hung with
the entrails of the last priest. The modern press in particular hates us, and
will try to embarrass us as long as it keeps selling news print and TV air
time. We are the enemies of what they see as their freedom and they will always
hate us for it. By our very existence we remind them that God has said of
certain things, “thou shalt not.....” Some people think of all priests as
depraved because of the sins of some, and they use our sins to excuse their own.
In the priesthood you will find yourself under constant scrutiny. The slightest
gesture or word can be misconstrued. They will examine your finances, your
friendships, your hobbies. I have actually had people go through my garbage and
try to see my private papers. I assume by “private papers,” they meant the stack
on my desk. I have no private papers. If I set something to paper I assume it
will become public knowledge.
Sometimes the people you try hardest to serve will give you the most heartache.
I served Spanish prayer groups for thirty of my thirty four years of priesthood
and, while the faithful were so good and kind to me, much of the leadership
despised me, especially when I questioned their financial practices. One even
accused me of taking a check I had never even seen. I believe it was made out
for twenty thousand dollars to the Cardinal by the University of Illinois. I
have no idea how I could have cashed such a check. I’m not that smart. He was
the treasurer of the group and was so anxious to be free of my oversight as the
Cardinal’s representative that he was willing to ruin my reputation. Over the
course of my life as a priest, I’ve had my house picketed and had petitions
signed against me. One group demanded my removal from the pastorate because I
dared to call God “Father and not “Mother” and I insisted they use the
traditional Catholic formula for baptisms!
I
remember sitting next to a fellow on a plane who was getting his doctorate in
gerontology, the study of human aging. He told me that the healthiest, longest
lived people in the country were monks and nuns. Parish priests, however, had a
much shorter life span. I was unimpressed. Many of the men I was ordained with
are now gone, and at sixty some of my dearest friends are broken in health, and
I need not mention the men who have left the priesthood or resigned in scandal.
I have only a few priest-friends left.
In some
ways, the bureaucratization of the business of religion is the hardest thing to
endure. There’s a lot of business involved in religion. I’ve built buildings
and run what is in effect a small company with sixty employees; teachers,
janitors, secretaries, cooks, accountants. I never had a moment’s training in
finance or personnel management in seminary. I remember the principal of the
school striding up the aisle of the church as I tried to read my breviary after
mass one morning. She hissed at me, “There is no heat in the school!!!” I looked
at her and said “In all my years of seminary, I never had a single course in
boiler maintenance.” I went downstairs, said a prayer to the Holy Spirit,
pressed a prominent red button, and the heat went on. His wonders are ever new!
In the
current atmosphere of business excellence, it is easy to forget that the Church
is not a business. It is a family. The ever increasing bureaucracy which most
people simply refer to as “downtown” comes to the office in the morning and goes
home at night. I sleep precisely five feet from my computer. They are trained in
business practices and know all the “rules and regs.” Sometimes they seem to
look at pastors as well meaning incompetents. I remember a meeting at which I
mentioned the tidal wave of mail that arrived daily on my desk from the
“downtown” offices, all of it of immediate and overwhelming importance, at least
to its authors. A diocesan financial official at the meeting sneered at me
saying, “Well it’s us folks “downtown” who are keeping your ***es out of jail.
(For “***” read a synonym for donkey. I am not making a word of this up.) There
are always new campaigns and strategies and five year plans. I remember an
African priest who was simply bewildered that there was never talk of God or
actual faith at most meetings he attended. The sadness of it is that he was the
only one who noticed.
Because
of the diminishing number of priests, it seems that offices “downtown” are
increasingly filled with non-clergy and ex-clergy and ex-religious. Just a few
weeks ago the Bureau of Sacred Praise, one of the many pastoral offices that
exist to help us do our jobs better, hired an ex-priest to give a seminar on how
to prepare adults for baptism. In the words of a colleague of mine, “If they
don’t care about the ordained priesthood, why should we?” He used a slightly
stronger expression than “care about.” This has happened a number of times. Some
of the functionaries of the head office are so firmly rooted in the glorious
sixties that they are still holding up the glorious theological lights of thirty
and forty years ago, though those lights have long ago given up on the
priesthood, and have never held what the Catholic church holds and teaches. It
is my hope that they don’t know how much it hurts those of us who remain in the
ministry that they hire those who left. I dread to think that they would
willingly cause such pain.
And
prayer, sweet, sweet prayer. To be alone for a little while with the Lord. Good
luck with that. The real work of the priest, as I mentioned, is Mass, Confession
and the Anointing. Add to this the duty to say the breviary, the collection of
Psalms, readings and prayers. A priest is required to pray for his flock. It is
among his most important tasks. This is part of the purpose of the breviary
which is also the backbone of the priest’s inner life. There is always a good
excuse not to pray. “I have five masses today,” “I’m on the road.” etc., etc.
These are legitimate excuses, but soon they give way to less noble excuses. “I’m
so tired I just couldn’t drag myself over to church.” You try to pray at regular
intervals as the breviary demands, but you go over to church and the liturgical
dance troupe is in the sanctuary practicing its high kicks and turns for the big
mass. Or the ladies society is decorating at the top of their voices. Or some
such. Prayer is the life of the priest and it seems there is a conspiracy to
keep father from prayer. I cannot count the times that I have just found my
place in the breviary and picked up my rosary when someone runs into church
hollering that the local hospital is on the phone, come quick. Can you possibly
say, “When I’m done with my breviary!” Many is the night I have finished my
Breviary at the side of my bed, barely conscious of the words I’m reading.
A
priest should prepare for Mass with prayer. There are prayers in the Mass book,
called the Sacramentary, that are recommended for the purpose. The sacristy
before Mass, however, is chaos. In addition to the customary requests for more
toilet paper, there are always people who want their dog blessed or who need a
quick exorcism or just want to mention that one of the altar boys has started a
fire while trying to light the candles or the dear people (who you really do
like and want to talk to) who just want to chat. If you tell them, “not right
now. I’m trying to pray and get ready for Mass,” well, you’re just not being
very friendly. “Whom does he think he is anyway? The priest over at St. Dismal
and Precipitous is much friendlier.” I remember the pastor of my youth,
Monsignor Sturmendrang. He had a look that could make people run the other way.
I just can’t seem to pull it off.
So, why
do this? Again the answer is the Mass. The sacrifice of the Mass. Always the
Mass. In the old Latin Mass, offered long before you were born, the priest took
off his maniple, a kind of wrist band, when he went to preach. The maniple
symbolizes the cords that bind the priest to Christ, and Christ to the Cross.
The priest, we were taught, was an “alter Christus”, an “other Christ.” When he
preached, that was his own, but when he offered Mass, he became Christ
crucified, his sufferings bound to Christ’s sufferings. Everyone suffers. I
don’t think that a priest necessarily suffers more or less than anyone else, but
his suffering is uniquely tied to the cross by means of the offering of Mass. I
suppose in a certain sense that the priest’s life is bound up with suffering in
a way that other vocations are not. The priest’s suffering becomes his gift to
the Lord, and from the Lord. It becomes a gift of love to the Lord’s People, the
Lord’s Bride. If you grow into what priesthood really is, your suffering becomes
entirely voluntary, and if you allow God’s Holy Spirit to do His job, your
suffering echoes in some small way that of truly great priests like Maximilian
Colby, or Padre Pio, or St. Jean Vianney, the Cure of Ars, or like that of Carol
Wotyla. It becomes the priesthood of Christ.
God
wants to make heroes out of self-centered schlubbs like me, and perhaps
you. The priesthood is a sacrificial life. Every real Catholic lives a
sacrificial life, but the priesthood is meant to be a symbol of sacrifice. Its
essence is sacrifice. I have known men who became priests because they wanted to
help people, a noble motive, certainly. I have known those who were nagged into
the priesthood by well meaning relatives and friends, or those who gave
priesthood a try just because they weren’t doing anything else at the time. I
have also known people who became priests because they thought it was an easy
life that came with a certain amount of status. They were the saddest fools of
all.
There
is a saying that the only people who make it in the priesthood are those who
believe in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, or those who have a
corner office at the chancery. This is a bit glib. I’ve met some very holy
people working at the chancery office, but the meaning still holds that if you
don’t fall absolutely in love with Jesus Christ present on the altar, then you
shouldn’t be a priest. Do you love Mass? Do you go to daily Mass when you can?
Do you go to quiet Masses in small chapels where there are only a few people
present, probably a couple of little old pious ladies, or do you just enjoy the
grand events and the magnificent liturgies? I would suggest this: as you
discern your calling to the priesthood, start to go to Mass, every day if
possible, stop at churches and make visits to the Lord in the Blessed Sacrament.
This will be your life if you become a priest. All the intimacy denied us as
parish priests is infinitely re-paid by the intimacy that we have with Him in
the Eucharist.
Happier
than I sound, I remain
the Rev.
Know it all. |