Being a Priest Today. Rosalind Brown
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The Croatian theologian Miroslav Volf, talks about ‘catholic personality, community and cultural identity’ in his various writings on human reconciliation. We will make some explicit use of these ideas later. It is also possible to talk of evangelical personality. An evangelical personality is permeated with the grace of the gospel. It is a personality whose identity is based on and flows from the unimaginably abundant love of God, the ultimate affirmation of worth and value. This is the personality priests are called to model as they live with God and as they act for God by ministering to others in the love of God. It is a love dedicated to the formation of an evangelical community – a community of people open to the ‘extraordinary power’ (2 Corinthians 4:7) of God’s love, a community willing to act in the power of God’s love through their ministry to each other, and a community willing to make known God’s great love for the world to all the peoples of the earth. It is a love that is seeking to create an evangelical cultural identity. Constrained by the love of Christ, evangelical personalities and evangelical communities are committed to the transformation of the culture of their localities and lands by ministering the love of God to the world. In the face of the enormity of the task, we do well to remember that God still sees the suffering of all that he has made, and yearns for the work of his hands to be set free from the tyrannies that hold humanity captive. And God still calls people to announce to Pharaoh that he has come to bring his people to ‘a good and broad land, a land flowing with milk and honey’ (Exodus 3:8), a land where the dynamics of grace have caused people to realize that only God is to be worshipped and that the idols of our self-sufficiency have bound us in slavery for too long.
As well as the experience of the ‘power of love’, John Chrysostom also looked for wisdom in the ways of God in those to be ordained. Wisdom is one of the marks of the evangelical personality of priests. We are to be skilled in speaking of and living by the hidden ways of God made known in Christ. We are to tell of the God who uses bread and wine, water and oil for eternal purposes. We are to preach of the God whose divinity is not denied but defined by the self-surrender to the conditions of humanity. We are to proclaim a God whose power is demonstrated in the helplessness of a crucifixion. We are to celebrate the God who chooses to create and who suffers the self-imposed limitations that come with freely sharing life with others. We are living proof that God has chosen ‘what is weak in the world to shame the strong’ (1 Corinthians 1:27).
Before we move on to other themes, there is one critical postscript to add. Although we are saved by grace through faith and not by our own goodness or strength, a change does occur in us as we are slowly, faltering step by faltering step, transformed into the likeness of Christ. The same applies in priestly ministry. Although it is always a ministry of faith in the grace of God, God is doing a work in and through us. We are in the worst position to judge the ways that the life and exercise of ministry is changing us into an authentic sign of the priestly people of Christ. But most of us will have known faithful ‘stewards of God’s mysteries’ whose lives have been permeated with the light and beauty of God and can agree with the second verse of George Herbert’s poem ‘The Windows’, the first verse of which began the chapter.
But when thou dost anneal in glass thy story,
Making thy life to shine within
The holy Preacher’s; then the light and glory
More rev’rend grows, and more doth win:
Which else shows wat’rish, bleak and thin.
Beloved disciples
In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptised by John in the Jordan. And just as he was coming out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him. And a voice came from heaven, ‘You are my Son, the beloved; and with you I am well pleased’. And the Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness. (Mark 1:8–12)
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