
Ecclesiasticus I: Introducing Eastern Orthodoxy

Ecclesiasticus II: Orthodox Icons, Saints, Feasts and Prayer
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The current shortage of priests
has resulted in the recruiting of candidates. Since the parish priest
has a unique role in such efforts, this seems an appropriate time and
place to remind you of a few things.
First, a vocation to the Holy
Priesthood is something you cannot produce. Despite intuitions and wishes
you cannot impose a vocation where God has not seen fit to grant
it. It degrades Divine Providence and the Priesthood to suppose
that Ordination can be added as a sort of 'nice touch' to God's Will and
plans. Our vocation is to Sainthood - and only occasionally and derivatively
to the Priesthood. Though you may be so perfectly suited to Holy Orders
that it is impossible for you to really separate sanctity and the Priesthood,
this is not true of every man. "No", "Not now" or
"I must pray about it" are perfectly acceptable answers which
you must have humility to accept graciously. The holy ascetic, Schema-monk
John the Fingerless (a disciple of Blessed Paisius Velichkovsky*) was
so threatened by the prospect of Ordination and the loss of his true podvig
that he cut off a finger - and so became canonically ineligible.
Second, though you cannot produce
a vocation to Priesthood, your attitude and actions inevitably effect
how others view it. This effect will be positive or negative and may (perhaps
decisively) influence a man whom God is calling to the Priesthood. Here,
as is so often the case, actions are more important than words - and noble
attempts more significant than conspicuous successes. If you resent your
congregation and their expectations, if you are always preoccupied with
matters of finance and attendance, and if you neglect the Church (the
People of God) - then your real attitude is all too apparent. Despite
rationalizations, you are telling us: "This is a thankless job which
most do not appreciate (What a yardstick!) and, if I cannot do what I
was Ordained to do (A Satanic suggestion), I must give my time and energy
to peripheral matters". Who would be attracted by such sentiments,
and who would be inspired by such a pitiful plight - a masochist? On the
other hand, if God has granted you the Grace to recognize the Holy Priesthood
as the most important thing in your life; if you are joyful in it and
do not hide that joy; if your personal spiritual life and development
is enhanced by the Priesthood - then you are already recruiting future
priests in the most direct and realistic way. If one of your parishioners
offers himself as a candidate for the Holy Priesthood, and his friends
cannot imagine why, he should be able to reply: "If you knew Father
(N), you would understand."
Third, the Priesthood is given
to a man for his own salvation. Perhaps a man has asked, "Should
I be a priest?" - and your gut feeling is that he should not. How
you elect to handle the situation falls within the realm of pastoral theology
and lies beyond the scope of this article: but responsible counsel cannot
be given hastily, cannot be determined by your personal feelings, and
must be constructive. "I must pray about it" is, again, not
only an acceptable reply but, perhaps, the only one that is ever really
appropriate. Remember that your responsibility is not only to future
congregations to whom he may minister, but to the man before you. God's
winnowing process will continue should you answer in the affirmative,
and great causes and commitments have more than once made great Saints.
Finally, I would remind you
that the Church recognizes but one Priest: Jesus Christ. It is He who
ministers invisibly through you (hence the pious custom of standing slightly
to one side of the Holy Table). If some priests like to be looked at,
and others like to be looked to, the worthy priest seeks not to
be seen at all. His unyielding attempts to cooperate with Grace and rid
himself of all obstructions to its workings render him transparent. And
those who look in his direction do not find him - but Christ. So the worthy
priest is one through whom Christ can show us Himself and prepare us to
recognize His voice. Then should He ask: "Who can We send and who
will go for Us?" men will respond: "Here am I, send me."
*Paisius Velichkovsky: Abbot
of the Ascension Monastery of Niamets and the Sekoul Monastery of St.
John the Forerunner in Moldavia - he translated the Philokalia
and the book of St. Isaac the Syrian into Slavonic.
From "Saint
Tikhon's Alumni Newsletter" - Spring 1982 issue.
From Word
Magazine
Publication of the Antiochian Orthodox
Christian Archdiocese of North America
June 1982
p. 8
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