MOSAIC Fall 2018 | Page 7

full stature in Christ, but it becomes clear to them that God is not calling them to become priests. Practically, how do men discern and how does the Church discern? A double discernment takes place in the seminary. The seminarian looks through his experi- ence of prayer, of service, of common life, of classes and of relationships to see if the Law of the Gift is being fulfilled in him and to see if Christ continues to call him. At the same time, the man’s family, his parish, his bishop, the seminary forma- tion team, the faculty, his classmates and many others are looking to see the signs that the man, as he grows to full stature in Christ, is becoming someone who can live out the graces of priestly ordination. Seminarians meet every month with their formators and twice a month with their spiritual directors to speak about their discernment. The formators and spiritual directors have seminary guide- lines which assist them in knowing wheth- er a man is ready to move on in his forma- tion to the next year. Those guidelines are based on a very practical and wise docu- ment produced by the United States bish- ops called the Program for Priestly Forma- tion. That document is based on directives from the Vatican, especially Pope St. John Paul II’s Pastores Dabo Vobis. Pope Francis directed the completion of a long-term project to renew priestly formation and that project led to a new Ratio Fundamen- talis, which gives fundamental directives for priestly formation in the future. The American bishops and their coworkers are now working on a new edition of the Pro- gram for Priestly Formation which will follow the directions given in the new Ratio. So, the entire Church is constantly dis- cerning what is needed to form priests. That discernment guides the man’s dis- cernment as well as the discernment of the seminary community, especially cen- tered in our rector and vice rector. Each year, the man’s progress is reviewed to see if he is ready to move on to the next year’s goals and objectives. Those goals and objectives make clear the expected growth that needs to occur in a man. At times, a man who still feels called to the priesthood will leave formation to pur- sue his maturation in Christ outside the seminary. When that maturation takes place, he may apply again for admittance to formation. DISCERNMENT IN THE CONTEXT OF SACRED HEART’S LIFE A very important moment in the for- mation of our process of discernment happened following the abuse scandal in 2002. Following the publication of so many articles about the failure of priests to live out their call to holiness as celi- bates, people asked the perennial call of God’s people when they are concerned about the Church: just what are they do- ing at the seminary? It is a tremendously valuable question which needs to be asked often, and which needs to be re- sponded to thoughtfully. Part of the concern several years ago was that several of our priest alumni had left the active ministry after ordination. A committee of lay and priest faculty was formed. After prayer and study, the com- mittee asked two questions: what could Sacred Heart have done better to help men discern their vocations? What could the seminary have done better to prepare men for the demands of parish life? The responses to the questions led to two convictions: 1) we needed to do more to help the men discern their vo- cation as a call from God; 2) we needed to do more to help the men grow in the strengths and habits (virtues) to live the sacrificial service of the priesthood with confidence. To help the men better discern their vocation from God, we implemented two changes: 1) a more consistent approach to celibacy formation and 2) the opportunity of making a thirty-day Ignatian retreat. The committee studied some fine programs of celibacy formation from other seminaries as well as our own program of formation. As a result, the seminary implemented an approach in which ten core components of priestly celibacy were identified. These components are studied, taught and dis- cussed in each of the three levels of forma- tion: College, Philosophy, and Theology. In addition, the content areas are taught and reflected upon in the different forums of seminary formation: the classroom, rec- tor’s conferences, Saturday Formation ses- sions, spiritual direction, and individual formation sessions. After the Desert Formation Program in First Theology, the men are given the opportunity to make the long Ignatian retreat at the Broomtree Retreat Center in South Dakota. During First Theology, the men meet with me to review a list of readiness indicators. Not everyone makes the retreat, but most of the men do, and it is wonderfully helpful in discern- ing God’s call. For some men, the con- firmation of their call comes in a single identifiable moment, which seems unde- niably true for them. For others, in the tranquility of the retreat, the man’s call is confirmed in a more gradual way. As a result, by this time in their formation, most men have their vocation confirmed, but to some, God makes clear that He is calling them to serve Him in a way other than the priesthood. The second change in our program was to help men be better prepared for the demands of priestly life. As one formator told me, “The men need to pray, but they also need to have the virtues to sustain their service.” So, with leadership provid- ed by the vice rector, Father (now Arch- bishop) Mike Byrnes, the seminary began a more systematic process of assisting the men in identifying the particular virtues or habits which they needed to develop. Sacred Heart’s work in this area has been recognized by the Seminary Formation Council (SFC) in Boynton Beach, Flori- da. Leaders from the seminary have been asked to present on virtues formation in the SFC’s certificate program for external seminary formators in Boynton Beach. Our cornerstone announces that God will give shepherds after His own heart. Part of becoming a shepherd for the Shepherd involves listening to Jesus’s call to follow him. That call leads to the further calls to discern the state of life in which we are to live the vocation to love, and the call to serve in the ordained priesthood. We are blessed to have hun- dreds of students come each year to Sa- cred Heart following the Shepherd and discerning his call. Msgr. Daniel Trapp is spiritual director and associate professor of systematic theology at Sacred Heart, and is pastor of St. Augustine and St. Monica Parish in Detroit, Michigan. shms.edu 5