Here and Now with Francis 1/26/16 (seminary, priesthood, prayer, holiness, Paul, mission, forgiveness, unity)
From an address to seminarians and priests
However, a temptation appears on the way that must be rejected: that of “normality,” of a Pastor for whom a “normal” life is enough. Thus this priest begins to be contented with some attention received, he judges the ministry on the basis of his successes and he abandons himself to research of what pleases him, becoming tepid and without a real interest in others. Instead, for us “normality” is pastoral holiness, the gift of life. If a priest chooses to be only a normal person, he will be a mediocre priest or worse. [...] Entrusted to you during these years is the mission to train yourselves in this dialogue of life: knowledge of the various disciplines that you study is not an end in itself, but is concretized in the colloquy of prayer and in a real encounter with persons. It does no good to be formed “in watertight compartments”; prayer, education and pastoral care are bearer stones of one building. [...] In fact, evangelization, today, seems called to follow again the way of simplicity. Simplicity of life, which avoids every form of duplicity and worldliness, to which genuine communion with the Lord and with brothers suffices; simplicity of language: not preachers of complex doctrines, but heralds of Christ, dead and risen for us. [full text]
From a homily
That’s how the Apostle Paul sums up the significance of his conversion. Coming after his dramatic encounter with the Risen Christ on the road from Jerusalem to Damascus, it is not primarily a moral conversion but rather an transforming experience of the grace of Christ, and at the same time, a call to the new mission of announcing to everyone the Jesus that he previously persecuted by persecuting the disciples of Christ. [...] The vocation to be an Apostle is founded not on Paul’s human merits, which he considers to be ‘the least’ and ‘unworthy’, but rather on the infinite goodness of God who chose him and entrusted him with his ministry. [...] I invite all Catholic brothers and sisters to forgive if they, today or in the past, have been offended by other Christians. [full text]