
A diocesan priest may also work full-time with the patients and staff of a hospital or with students in a high school or college as chaplain or teacher. He may be asked to work with inmates and staff in a jail or prison. Some priests are released from service in the Archdiocese in order to be chaplains to our men and women in the armed forces.
Basic to the ministry of any priest is preaching the Word of God, celebrating the sacraments and being available to God’s people. It’s a busy, rewarding life that demands stamina and spiritual maturity.
A diocesan priest belongs to the body of priests (called the presbyterate) of a local diocese, which is a particular territory within a state or country. The Archdiocese of Denver comprises the northern third of Colorado from Kansas and Nebraska across to Utah–including most of the Denver metro area. The Archdiocese of Denver includes inner-city parishes, suburban parishes and parishes in the smaller communities of the mountains, eastern plains and western slope. A diocesan priest normally serves within the boundaries of his diocese under the authority of his bishop.
A diocesan priest does not make the solemn vows that religious priests (and religious brothers and sisters) make but he does make promises that are discussed in subsequent questions. Perhaps the most striking difference between him and a religious order priest is that the diocesan priest lives a life more like that of his people: he buys his own clothes and car, he pays taxes, he may own personal property. That is why a diocesan priest is sometimes called a secular priest (from the Latin saeculum, a word that means roughly “this world of time and space in which we live”).
Surprisingly, a diocesan priest must often fight for the time for personal prayer. He is often called upon to lead others in public prayer, especially the Mass and the other sacraments of the Church. These are genuine times of prayer for him as well as them — but like every Christian, the priest needs some time each day to spend alone with the Lord. His busy ministry sometimes makes this very difficult but it is something he must strive to keep fresh in his life, lest he lose sight of the One who called him to be a priest in the first place and the One who alone can sustain him.
Because they want to serve God within the Church, diocesan priests make a formal promise of obedience to their bishop. Their personal integrity is on the line in this promise. It binds them to do what needs to be done, as seen through the eyes of the bishop who is responsible for the entire diocese; they renounce the exaggerated freedom to do always and everywhere what they like or want to do.
On the other hand, diocesan priests can testify that there is great freedom to be creative in the priesthood. Bishops rely on priests along with the laity to suggest necessary pastoral initiatives. A bishop also tries to match his priests with the work that needs to be done. Ordinarily, a priests ends up doing work for which he is well enough suited. The bottom line, however, is service, not pleasing oneself.
But why is celibacy asked of Catholic priests while it is not asked of Protestant ministers and Jewish rabbis? While celibacy was not always asked of priests and, even today, exceptions have been made for ordained ministers who convert to the Catholic faith and wish to be ordained priests, the Church has seen the wisdom of choosing her priests from among those men who believe the Lord has also given them the capacity to live a chaste celibate life.
Jesus himself lived a celibate life — and a priest, unlike a minister or rabbi, represents Jesus in a unique way in his very person. Celibacy for the sake of God’s Kingdom (rather than because one is simply not attracted to marriage or in fact looks down on it) shows the priest’s total dedication to serving God and God’s people, just as Jesus’ celibacy spoke of his total dedication to doing the will of His Father. Celibacy tells the Catholic people that their priest is available to them to a degree other religious leaders cannot be because of their legitimate family responsibilities.
There are additional reasons for asking a celibate commitment of a priest. In a world caught up in what it can see, hear and touch, the priest’s celibacy witnesses to the priority of God and the spiritual life even in the midst of the wonderful creation God has given us to live in. In a Western world preoccupied by sex, the priest’s celibacy says it is possible, with God’s help, to see sexuality in perspective and to find joy and have satisfying friendships without going to bed with a person.
In no way does celibacy do away with a priest’s sexuality. But God’s grace is sufficient for him. Celibacy is not easy to live at times, any more than obedience is. A solid prayer life, healthy lifestyle, good friends and prudent judgment about persons and situations are all necessary to live a celibate life well. The remarkable thing is not that some priests at times have problems with celibacy but that so many live it so well. “With God all things are possible” (Mark 10:27).
Just as importantly, diocesan priests are asked to make an annual retreat alone or with fellow priests to experience, in the calm and quiet of the retreat atmosphere, the loving touch of their Lord. These times of retreat are blessed times of spiritual renewal for the priest, just as they are for other believers.
The reason why neither Jesus, his Apostles nor any Catholic bishops in succession to the Apostles have ordained women as priests is because of the nature of the priesthood. Priests represent the person of Jesus in his headship of the Church. Because through their priestly ordination they become personally identified with Jesus, whose body was essential to the true humanity he assumed in the Incarnation, priests can do for the good of His people what only Jesus could do: change bread and wine into His Body and Blood and absolve people from their sins. Essential to this representational character of the priesthood is the gender of the priest. Unlike racial and ethnic factors, culture and social background – all of which have a fluidity, all of which could be radically different with enough time – gender is an unalterable biological feature of the human landscape. “He made them male and female” (Genesis 1:27). Gender is the clearest distinction among human beings at the level of their human nature and the only one that is absolutely necessary to their existence through multiple generations. It is for good reason that the first question the parents of a newborn child often hear is, “Is it a boy or a girl?” Gender, then, is not peripheral but central to each person’s identity.
More than that, a sound human instinct recognizes that when one person is representing another person, not representing a group (as in the U.S. Congress) or acting only in an ambassadorial capacity, that representational role is strengthened by having the gender of the representative be the same as the one represented. That is why, in an advance over ancient times and even those of Shakespeare, women today play the roles of women in plays, movies and on TV while men play the roles of men. We sense that it is more fitting for a man to represent a male character and a woman to represent a female character, even though men could say the female characters’ lines and vice versa. A Catholic priest, it should be noted, does more than simply represent Jesus in a play or movie: he actually does what Jesus did when celebrating the sacraments of the Eucharist and Penance. It is all the more fitting, then, that in his body with its visible, audible and tangible gender characteristics, the priest bear resemblance in this fundamental way to the Jesus he represents to the Church. As we say about other things, “it helps to look the part.” All the more so when a man must actually be the part.
The Church’s understanding about the priesthood is not easy for some people to accept. Sometimes the Church begins with an instinctual grasp of a truth that only later it can more fully explain. We have all had the experience of recognizing someone whose name we cannot remember but whom we are sure we have met. Later we remember the person’s name and details about his or her life. Our initial recognition was right but it needed to be fleshed out more. Perhaps the Church’s teaching on whom may be ordained is like that. But the key lies in the priest’s personal representation of Christ, not simply in the functions he performs.
It is unfortunate that so often, in the heat of debate, the special roles that God gives women in his Church are lost sight of. Women are still being called along with men to marry and raise children for eternal life. Women are still being called to embrace vowed religious life in religious communities. Other women are being called to the consecrated life in the world and not as part of religious communities. Women in great numbers work professionally for the Church and in even greater numbers, give freely of their time and energies to myriad of Church activities. The Church could not do without them. Today’s women are challenged to respond wholeheartedly to the Gospel of Jesus and bring Him to the world, just as women have done in the past. That is most certainly still in God’s plan for them and that will never change.
<strong>Residency</strong>. A man should have lived in or near the Archdiocese for at least one year before applying for the priesthood here. Foreign-born men are welcome to apply — Denver is a very cosmopolitan diocese and many of our priests and current seminarians were born in other countries — but they should have lived for at least three years in the United States, one of those years in the Denver area. This is to give them time to pass through the initial phase of adapting to a new country and culture and, often, a new language.
Age. A young man may apply for the seminary for this Archdiocese after completing high school. The upper age limit is normally fifty years because of the length of time required for seminary training and the reality that illnesses often increase and energy decreases with age. The older a man is, the more rooted he should be in the Archdiocese. Candidates in their late twenties and thirties are common.
Education. A high school diploma or G.E.D. is required to enter college seminary. Ordinarily a college degree is required to enter theology.
Health. Good physical and mental health are required and must be certified by health care professionals because of the life-long demands of the priesthood for physical stamina and emotional stability.
Some men begin their preparations for the priesthood after already obtaining a college degree (and even graduate or professional degrees). Usually they need a substantial amount of philosophy and preliminary level theology before moving on to graduate level theology. Therefore, they enter a one-year or more often two-year program called Pre-theology. Once prepared in this way they enter the usual four-year theologate. They spend a total of five or six years in the seminary.
There are a few seminaries in the United States that have special four-year programs for older candidates. The Archdiocese of Denver uses such programs when a man’s age and background indicate them.
Along with formal training in philosophy and theology, the spiritual life and practical skills for priesthood, seminarians normally spend some summers as pastoral interns in a parish and sometimes this is extended for an entire year where it would be useful. Seminarians also participate in special summer programs to deepen their spiritual life or their appreciation of the Spanish language and Hispanic culture.
Since the priesthood is not just a career but a whole way of life and service, priestly formation takes in the entire person: spiritual, intellectual, human and pastoral. The specific needs of each candidate are continually evaluated and every effort is made to give him the assistance he needs. The candidate must also “take the reins” of his own priestly formation, rather than being a passive subject.