
In his homily Benedict XVI underlined first and foremost the profound unity between the priest and the Good Shepherd, “the Son of man who wanted to share the human condition in order to gift them new life and guide them to salvation”, defined as “good” (kalos), a sign of definitive beauty and goodness “since messianic times”. One’s relationship with Christ “is a deep and personal relationship; knowledge of the heart of he who loves and is loved; of he who is faithful and in turn has faith; knowledge of love because of which the Shepherd invites his to follow him”. This relationship is also “a source of constant consolation and indestructible hope”. Because “Christ never abandons us” and “no obstacle can ever impede his universal plan of salvation”.

“The Sacrament of Holy Orders which you are about to receive – continued the Pontiff as he turned to the candidates – will make you participants in Christ’s mission; you will be called to sow the seeds of his Word, the seeds which contain the Kingdom of God, to dispense divine mercy and feed the faithful at the banquet of his Body and his Blood. In order to worthy ministers you must continually feed yourselves of the Eucharist, source and summit of Christian life. Stay close to the altar, your daily school of holiness, to renew the sacrifice of the Cross, renew your own discovery of the richness of the Divine Master’s love, which today has called you to an even more intimate friendship with Him. If you listen to him carefully, if you follow him faithfully, you will learn to translate your lives and your pastoral mission into his love and passion for the salvation of souls. Each one of you my dear Ordinates, with God’s help will become a good shepherd, ready to give, if necessary, even your lives for Him”.


Commenting then on the theme of the world day of prayer for vocations (“Vocations at the service of Church communion”), the pope underlined that a growth in vocations depends strongly on prayer, formation and the attention

The last thoughts of the homily went to the Ordinands: “Jesus says to you today – said the pope


2 comments:
"...a suggestive ceremony..."
I don't get it. Suggestive of what? I don't find anything in his remarks other than what I would expect an ordaining bishop to say. All good advice of course, but nothing about how your ordination makes you a partaker in the hermeneutic of continuity, partakers in the rich continuum of the church's ongoing and ever deepening development...anything that would suggest to me a forthcoming motu proprio or even an effective program of rebalancing the liturgical landscape of the church. Did someone see something I didn't?
Hebdomadary
"...a suggestive ceremony"
The suggestive nature was presumabley the "profound unity between the priest and the Good Shepherd", not everything in life is about the moto proprio, the continuity is between Christ and the priest today!
But, I forgot to attribute this article to "Asian News", I though I had removed most of the more hyperbolic adjectives and adverbs
Post a Comment