Cardinal You Heung-sik calls all priests 'friends of the Lord'
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
"Thank you for your daily fidelity, often silent and hidden. Thank you for your 'yes,' renewed each day, even amid hardships, loneliness, and misunderstandings. Thank you because, through your ministry, Christ continues to draw near to His people, to heal, to forgive, and to nourish them."
Cardinal Lazzaro You Heung-sik, Prefect of the Dicastery for Clergy, along with Dicastery's Secretary, Archbishop Carlo Roberto Maria Redaelli, expressed this appreciation in a letter sent to priests, deacons, and seminarians for Holy Thursday.
As the Church commemorates the institution of the Eucharist and the ministerial priesthood, Cardinal You said they wished "to reach all of you, in every part of the world, with a thought of profound gratitude, fraternal affection, and sincere encouragement."
Priests are friends of the Lord
He recalled that the Church contemplates the Lord Jesus, who, washed out of love the feet of the disciples and gives Himself in the breaking of bread, saying that "from this love, our vocation is born, and to this love we are continually called to conform our entire life."
Cardinal You thanked priests for their immense love and friendship with the Lord.
"The Holy Father Leo XIV, during the Holy Year of Hope," he recalled, "reminded us that 'the priest is a friend of the Lord, called to a personal and trusting relationship with Him, nourished by the Word, the celebration of the Sacraments, and daily prayer," and that friendship with Christ is the spiritual foundation of the ordained ministry.'"
With this in mind, the Cardinal reminded priests that being a priest is not merely a role to be performed, but a gift to be safeguarded with a grateful heart and filled with wonder.
He added that priests are not defined simply by what they do, as much as by "the infinite love with which Christ loves us."
Eucharist is the source and summit of our existence
In the letter, the Cardinal reflected on priestly sacrifice and service.
Sacrifice, in its deepest truth, he clarified, is not first of all renunciation but a gift. "It is," he said, "offering one’s life so that it may be wholly oriented to the love of God and of our brothers and sisters."
"We are called to live as men given over, consecrated, who find in the Eucharist the source and summit of our existence," he continued. "It is at the altar that we allow ourselves to be conformed to Christ, receiving the strength to accompany, to forgive, and to console."
Service, he explained, is the concrete form of this love.
The final recommendation Cardinal You offered priests is to not be discouraged by the difficulties of our time. "Even when the soil seems barren and the seed struggles to grow, the Lord continues to act," he reassured. "He has chosen us, He has consecrated us, and He never abandons us."
"Therefore," he said, "be priests with open hearts, capable of closeness, listening, and compassion; men of communion, credible signs of a synodal and missionary Church; joyful witnesses of the Gospel, even when this entails sacrifice."
Safeguard the joy of your calling
Cardinal You also thanked all permanent deacons, who, "through their generous and discreet service, make visible the charity of Christ the Servant."
The Cardinal Prefect insisted that the ministry of deacons is "precious and necessary for the life of the Church, today more than ever."
And finally, he turned to all seminarians preparing for the priesthood.
"Do not be afraid," the Cardinal encouraged, "to give your entire life to the Lord."
He urged all seminarians to safeguard the joy of their calling and allow themselves to be formed each day by His love, for the Church needs their authenticity, enthusiasm, and faith.
Finally, the Prefect and Secretary of the Dicastery for the Clergy concluded by entrusting all priests, deacons, and seminarians to the Blessed Mother, and wishing them a fruitful Holy Triduum in deep union with the Lord Jesus

No comments:
Post a Comment