A recent course on spiritual formation in seminaries addressed issues
such as physical and affective maturity of priestly candidates, and the
importance and aims of spiritual direction.
ZENIT spoke with
Bishop José María Yanguas of Cuenca, Spain, who presented the topic of
affective fragility to participants in the Feb. 7-11 course, organized
by the by the Center for Priestly Formation and held at the Pontifical
University of Santa Croce. The week of study was titled "Personal
Spiritual Formation in the Seminary."
In this interview, Father
Yanguas speaks about the current challenge of affective immaturity that
can be seen in seminarians -- and also in many of the faithful -- how to
address this in spiritual direction, and virtues to emphasize for
Christian growth.
ZENIT: What should be the pillars of spiritual formation that should be given priority at present in seminaries?
Bishop
Yanguas: The purpose of this course is to prepare candidates to
continue the mission in the Church of Jesus Christ, Good Shepherd, being
collaborators of the bishops. Priests are, radically, Christians,
called to carry out a mission that requires previous "training,"
priestly ordination, particular configuration with Christ, Priest and
Shepherd. Hence, the first task of education in seminaries is to form
good Christians, that is, to educate in human and Christian virtues,
common to all disciples of Jesus.
ZENIT: And what are these virtues?
Bishop
Yanguas: A candidate to the priesthood should try to acquire virtues
such as sincerity and simplicity, with an instinctive rejection of a
double life, of everything that is false, not genuine, artificial; the
spirit of work, the sense of friendship, sincere and open, sacrificial
and generous, fundamental to live the priesthood within a presbytery and
in the heart of a community; the spirit of service, necessary for one
who is to give himself tirelessly to all; strength of spirit and
capacity to suffer, "endurance," we could say, not to give in faced to
difficulties and obstacles, to be able to work without expecting easy,
immediate success, and not to get depressed when faced with possible
failures.
Moreover, clearly the candidate to the priesthood must
have the necessary theological and moral, canonical, liturgical and
pastoral formation.
He must have a lively experience of the God
who reveals himself to us in Christ, which is cultivated in the vital
dialogue of personal prayer, public or private; a supernatural sense
that makes him judge everything in the light of God; affability and a
sense of paternity that will make him treat everyone with sincerity and
mature cordiality; supernatural optimism that will infuse in the
faithful joy and confidence; a sense of responsibility, creativity and
the spirit of leadership of one who is committed, in a thousand ways, to
serve the Word of God to his brethren, to bring them to the sources of
grace, which are the sacraments, to guide them on the paths of an
authentically Christian life. These are not the only "virtues" of
priestly formation that you ask me about, but they must not be lacking.
ZENIT: What must be the role of the spiritual director during the formation of seminarians?
Bishop
Yanguas: It is certainly an essential role. On one hand he is concerned
with the life and spiritual formation in the seminary, which takes
place through conversations, retreats, meditations, the reading of
books, among others.
On the other hand, the spiritual director is
the spiritual guide of the candidates. They open their souls to him,
making him share in their inner life, so that he is able to direct,
illumine, correct, open horizons, clarify doubts, propose goals, at
times encourage, at others moderate.
Hence, it is a work that touches
the most intimate and personal aspect of each one.
Therefore, it
is a task that requires extreme delicacy, so that the candidates feel
accepted, understood and appreciated. It calls for humility and the
sense of the Church so as not to form them in one's image and likeness.
It calls for respect for the peculiarities of each one in the certainty
that there are no two souls that are the same and that there are no
recipes of indiscriminate universal application, strength to be able to
correct when it is necessary, moral wisdom and knowledge of the
spiritual life, attention to what God might be asking from the different
candidates, care to facilitate their sincerity, prudence to lead them
on an inclined plane, and patience to support the rhythms of growth, at
times so different for each one.
ZENIT: And in regard to affective fragility, of which you spoke in the academic event at the University of Santa Croce?
Bishop
Yanguas: This matter is not something specific of priestly formation.
Fragility, immaturity, inconsistency of spirit is something present in
many of our young people and adolescents. It is manifested as a lack of
harmony between the intellectual, volitional and affective spheres of
the person, creating instability, frequent changes of the state of mind,
behavior guided by "desire," failure to fulfill acquired commitments,
disappointments after sudden enthusiasms, depressive states for no other
reason than small and inevitable failures, inability to keep going or
to resist faced to obstacles, difficulty in making real decisions.
Affectively
fragile persons need to be the center of attention, to be recognized
and esteemed. They easily confuse feeling and true love.
ZENIT: Is it just a question of feelings?
Bishop
Yanguas: Of course not. This is the inadequate integration of the
affective realm in the totality of the person, whereas personal
maturity, instead, is the fruit of the harmonious development of one's
human capacities. Affective immaturity is not just about the sphere of
feelings; it certainly implies intellectual and volitional immaturity.
If
the varied realm of feelings and affections, frequently confused,
prevails over intelligence and will, one falls necessarily into
sentimentalism, allowing the feelings to decide on truth or error and
making them the only motor of our acts. Reason loses the capacity of
discernment, and the will is weakened. Thus the person's life is in the
power of variable, changing feelings, often superficial. Being so, they
need to be directed rather by the intelligence and governed by the will.
If
sentimentalism invades the life of piety, the latter will run a very
grave risk as soon as the feelings, experiences and affections that
support it are lacking.
ZENIT: The spiritual director must try to
lead the candidate toward a mature affective life. What are the
characteristics of this?
Bishop Yanguas: A mature affective life
calls for a vision of man that responds to his truth without
reductionisms, dualisms or partial visions. It requires knowledge of the
true "ordo amoris" [order of love], of the scale of goods that merit
being loved. But it also calls for strength, willpower, the capacity to
be able to follow and live that ordo.
ZENIT: What are the factors that favor affective fragility?
Bishop
Yanguas: It is favored by an environment that denies absolute truths,
strong values, and models of conduct; a culture in which the distinction
between good and evil is uncertain, where the true is confused with the
useful or practical, in which "everything is the color of the glass
through which one looks." This makes authentic education or formation
impossible: There are no models; there is no precise idea of what it
means to be a person.
The difficulty becomes worse when the
efforts, commitments and sacrifices that all education demands do not
enjoy a good reputation because pleasure has become the end-goal of
existence. The spasmodic quest for pleasure puts us in the presence of
the animal man of which St. Paul speaks, incapable of understanding the
things of God, a slave of his passions.
ZENIT: Is this factor a challenge for the formation of seminarians?
Bishop
Yanguas: Indeed. That is why it is necessary to propose with renewed
vigor to candidates to the priesthood the model of Christ the Priest,
Good Shepherd, to motivate them with this image, so that in its light
the whole task of formation makes sense, forging their own personality.
The
"ordo amoris" will have to be shown with clarity, the order of the
goods that must be loved and realized. It will be indispensable to
strengthen, to harden the will of the candidates, to exercise them in
"patience," in the capacity to suffer for what one loves, which merits
our effort, commitment and sacrifice.
It would be appropriate to
put candidates in contact with true priestly figures who have embodied
and embody the priestly ideal of love and total self-giving to God, of
hope and optimism, of joyful passion for soul, and of a positive vision
of faith.