What they are missing is training in virtue, it’s a long forgotten word.
The first most important thing seminarians need to do is clean toilets, and clean them cheerfully.
12 hours heavy manual labor from well before sun up to sun down should be set in place. Paving, brick laying, lumberjacking. trench digging for reticulation, heading cabbages.
Cold, heat, thirst, massive discomfort and pain and suffering in all weathers.
Taking orders, hard work, getting along with and cooperating with others, builds character, cuts off the rough edges as well.
Apply some heat to test the metal. You very soon see where people are at. Does the metal take a correction or does it snap.
Proud dude. Crown him the King of Toilet duty, carry drinks and serve others. Make no job beneath him.
Lazy dude. Give him a hard job to do on his own, a job that has consequences for everyone else if he doesn’t come through. Put some responsibility on him.
Once seminarians are well acquainted with suffering, hard work and being dead tired, then acquaint them with sorrow and grief.
Send them out visiting the sick, the elderly and the dying. Send them out on the street to minister to the poor and afflicted.
They must be accustomed to the theology of reality first, the book learning will be so much more enhanced by it.
Let Jesus draw out the generosity of heart and virtues by instilling in them that all activity is done in and with Jesus first.
Work done with Jesus adorns you with virtues and merit, Jesus hangs it on you, His virtues.
Christianity is not merely an academic life, or God forbid a career.
This oil can not be bought from any shop or seminary, it is the extract of many hours, days and years spent faithfully praying, working and loving Jesus amidst sufferings, sorrows and grief. We become like Him, He transforms us.
This purification is of us, and Jesus is the gold, Jesus remains and shines out.
If we aren’t bringing Jesus, we aren’t bringing anything.
Don’t look for “ Leaders “ look for “ servants “, then make the best servant the leader.