Pope Francis ordains one of 10 new priests for the Diocese of Rome during an ordination Mass in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican May 7. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Priests should ease, not add to faithful’s burdens, pope says

923 0

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — A priest who does not willingly embrace Christ’s cross and who does not try to lighten the burdens of his people is not worthy of the name, Pope Francis told 10 men he was about to ordain.

“A priest who perhaps has studied a lot of theology and has one, two or three degrees, but has not learned to carry the cross of Christ is useless,” the pope said May 7. “He might be a good academic, a good professor, but not a priest.”

During Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica, Pope Francis ordained six priests for the Diocese of Rome and one each for the Brothers of Our Lady of Mercy, the Peru-based Family of Disciples, the Apostolic Prefecture of Azerbaijan and the Diocese of Nocera Inferiore-Sarno, Italy. The men were between the ages of 26 and 38.

Pope Francis used the prescribed homily for the ordination although, as usual, he added comments.

To the admonition that priests nourish their people with sound doctrine, Pope Francis added a request that they speak simply and clearly.

“Don’t give homilies that are too intellectual and elaborate,” he said. “Speak simply, speak to people’s hearts, and this preaching will be true nourishment.”

Pope Francis asked the new priests to be particularly merciful with penitents in the confessional. “Don’t lay on the shoulders of the faithful burdens that they cannot carry and that you couldn’t either. That is the reason Jesus rebuked the doctors of the law and called them hypocrites.”

“You were chosen by the Lord not to advance your career, but to carry out this service,” the pope told the men. “Please, don’t be ‘lords,'” but pastors who model their service on Jesus, the good shepherd.

Shortly after the Mass, before reciting the “Regina Coeli” prayer at noon, Pope Francis told visitors in St. Peter’s Square that Jesus expressed his authority in service, leading his flock “by giving his life and not asking others to sacrifice theirs.”

“One can trust such a leader, like the sheep listen to the voice of their shepherd, because they know that with him they will be led to good and abundant pastures,” the pope said.

Before giving his blessing to an estimated 25,000 people gathered in the square below, Pope Francis invited four of the newly ordained Rome priests to his window. They joined him in blessing the crowd below.

Related Post

Ronald J. Tabak, chair of the death penalty committee of the American Bar Association's Section of Civil Rights and Social Justice, listens as Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of Chicago talks about the death penalty Aug. 2 during a panel discussion in Chicago. Cardinal Cupich spoke about how Catholic teaching on the death penalty has developed. He stressed that putting people to death, even criminals who are certainly guilty of terrible acts, makes it seem that the God-given right to life is conditional. (CNS photo/Karen Callaway, Chicago Catholic)

Cardinal Cupich: Death penalty can’t ‘rebalance the scales of justice’

Posted by - August 11, 2018 0
CHICAGO (CNS) — Chicago Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, speaking during an Aug. 2 panel discussion, described how Catholic teaching on…
An elderly woman waits for treatment at a health clinic in the village of Akawini along the Pomeroon River in the interior of Guyana in 2015. Beginning Jan. 29, the Vatican will host a three-day conference on how the Catholic Church can fulfill its mission to care for, welcome and include the elderly in its life, rather than abandoning them like many societies do today. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)

Vatican conference highlights importance of elderly in the church

Posted by - February 2, 2020 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The Vatican will host a conference on how the Catholic Church can fulfill its mission to…
Migrants eat at a Catholic-run shelter in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, May 10, 2019. Being indifferent to or excluding migrants is a sign of a deteriorating morality that will soon spread and risk marginalizing everyone who fails to fit in, Pope Francis said. (CNS photo/Jose Luis Gonzalez, Reuters)

Exclusion of migrants is red flag of society in moral decline, pope says

Posted by - June 1, 2019 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Being indifferent to or excluding migrants is a sign of a deteriorating morality that will soon…