FAQs:
What does a priest do?
A priest engages in people's lives
at the most memorable times, both joyful and
sorrowful - in baptisms and weddings, funerals
and hospital visits. He celebrates the Eucharist
with his congregation and brings comfort and
meaning to modern day life in his homilies.
Most diocesan priests work in parishes but some
do specialized work such as campus ministry;
prison, health care, and military chaplaincy;
education; retreat and spiritual direction;
and diocesan administration. Whatever kind of
work he does, every priest tries to include
in his life enough study, prayer, physical exercise,
leisure and recreation. Together, this balance
in life brings a high degree of personal satisfaction.
Do priests get lonely?
Loneliness is a part of
every vocation, at one time or another. It is
part of the human condition. Married people
get lonely at times, even though their spouses
and children surround them. Priests are always
surrounded by people. This is one of the joys
of being a priest. We are involved with people
at the most profound moments of their lives:
birth, Baptism, Confirmation, First Communion,
Marriage, and death. We don't have enough time
to experience loneliness often! But when we
do experience loneliness, Jesus can fill that
void, as He does for people in every vocation.
Will I get paid?
Priests do not get paid
in the same sense that people in the business
world are paid. Because a priest does not have
a family and because he lives a simple life,
he does not need a lot of money. However, priests
do receive enough money to buy their necessities,
to buy and maintain an automobile, to take a
vacation, and to do normal recreational activities.
Also, priests are given free room and board
by the parish for which they work, so their
expenses are minimal.
Will I get time off and
what can I do with it?
We have approximately the
same amount of leisure time as most adults.
In this time, we are free to do whatever is
legal, moral, and reasonable for adults in our
situation. Some of the more common activities
are sports, movies, TV, reading, sharing with
friends, enjoying the outdoors.
Are priests ever attracted
to the opposite sex?
Yes, we are.
Nothing happens to us at the time of entering
the seminary that eliminates normal human needs,
feelings, or desires. As celibate men, we choose
to channel these feelings and express our love
for others in the wide range of means other
than those physical expressions restricted to
and proper to marriage. However, priests can
and do have chaste friendships with women.
Priestly formation programs discuss openly the
topics of celibacy and the needs that men seeking
to follow Christ as a celibate priest have.
This is an important part of our priestly formation
program. Experienced priests reviewing our formation
program have stated that Mundelein Seminary
prepares men in human and spiritual formation
for a healthy life of celibate love much better
than in years past.
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