10/9/09

Prayer for Priests in the Year for Priests


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Each Friday in this Year for Priests I'll post this prayer and invite you to remember all priests and especially those who have been, who are and who may one day be a part of your life.

Several prayers for the Year for Priests are available through the US Bishops site. As an exercise for myself to enter into the spirit of this year, I wrote the following. For whatever use you make of it on behalf of my brother priests and me, we are most grateful. (Links to other material on the Year for Priests can be found on the sidebar.)

A Prayer for Priests

Gracious God, loving Father,
font of every gift and good,
make of priests for us we pray:

men of faith, men of love,
humble servants of your Word,
prophets of your Spirit’s grace;

men of hope, men of peace,
strong defenders of the truth,
heralds of your holy gospel;

men of prayer, men of praise,
guardians of our sacred rites,
of the scriptures and tradition;

men of changelessness and change,
men who follow you each day,
when and where your Spirit leads;

men of tenderness and strength,
comfort for the sick and weary,
shepherds leading home the lost;

men of counsel, men of wisdom,
gentle guides for the confused,
lights along the darkened path;

men of mercy, patient men,
understanding and consoling
of the grieving and abused;

men of justice and compassion,
reconciling and forgiving,
men of healing in your name;

men of sacrifice and honor,
single minded in your service,
set apart to do your will;

men of holiness and joy,
men anointed by your grace,
men ordained to serve as Christ.

Make us one with them in faith
and in Christ your only Son
in whose holy name we pray.

Amen.

-ConcordPastor

5 comments:

  1. I love this prayer, and have shared it (with attribution) a couple of times on my own site. It helps me to reflect on the quality and character of the many good priests we have in our Church.

    May God bless you... all of you... and grant you His grace and peace.

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  2. Each week,I pray this prayer for all priests in general. There are many good and honorable men who come to mind when I read the prayer. I also pray for those priests who have forgotten what a humble servant leader is and their words, actions or choices have hurt and driven people away from the church. This week, I pray for Cardinal George and all bishops. I found this interview somewhat troubling:

    http://ncronline.org/news/people/cardinal-georges-plan-evangelize-america

    "Simply Catholic"...if he is saying to be simply catholic means the faithful should never question the bishops or any Church authority (pray, pay and obey), I'm afraid those days are long gone and Cardinal George is in for some disappointment. Seriously, what happen to the teachings of Vatican II? Who failed? Perhaps simply the bishops, not the progressives or the traditionalists.

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  3. What happened to the meaning of Vatican II is that many well-meaning but misguided people took the "spirit" of the council far beyond the letter of the documents and tried to create a new church overnight. Did you know, for example, that the council documents gave Gregorian chant pride of place as liturgical music -- and never mentioned guitars? That Latin remained the language of the church, that "Eucharistic Ministers" were only to be used in extraordinary circumstances, that altar girls were undreamed of by the council fathers? Pope Benedict is attempting to rectify the situation by restoring continuity to the liturgy, among other things.

    I believe Cardinal George is correct in looking not to label "progressive" or "traditional" but to look instead for a sound Catholic identity.

    Irish Gal

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  4. Anne: I found the same interview interesting, certainly enough for me to want to read the book when it comes out. (Rocco has another pre-publication piece on George's book at Whispers.) I don't believe the cardinal intends "simply Catholic" as "pay, pray and obey." I heartily welcome what seems to be his effort to call a truce on the in-house fighting and to focus on what binds us together. That's not calling for a recreation of the past or the dismantling of the best of what has happened since the Council but rather, I believe, for a sober evaluation of what has happened, what's the best, what's the worst and how to understand Catholic identity in the 21st century.

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  5. I just read an article that would indicate the bishops have some work to do among themselves to initiate a truce on the in-house fighting. In Michigan, Bishop Sample has asked retired Bishop Gumbelton to cancel a speaking engagement in his diocese. It doesn't seem like they got the memo to focus on what binds us together.

    For the details go to:
    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=4291

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and PRAY before you think!