This article by Francis Phillips in The Catholic Herald is worth a read as are the accompanying comments and the main thrust of it is quoted below.
The only other place I have seen this idea stated is in a scholarly  treatise by Fr Jerome Bertram CO, entitled “Vita Communis” and published  by Gracewing. In it the author describes the life of a typical parish  priest in Britain today: overworked, isolated, struggling with the  paperwork, often juggling a hospital chaplaincy as well as trying to run  several Mass centres.
 Fr Bertram writes, “It would be impossible to  think of any model of diocesan priestly life that could be worse than  the one we have at present.” He thinks that in this country most  parishes are too small to be viable, given the amount of administration  required – and that priests are not called to be hermits.
Fr  Bertram’s suggestion, which the Pope seems to gesture towards in his  reply above, is that seven or eight priests of a particular area might  live together in “association” – not a “college” but more than a deanery  – and thus parishes could support them more easily. He cites Vatican II  for encouragement of this form of a common life, “to deliver priests  from the dangers that often arise from loneliness.”
There is no need to cite the obvious dangers arising from isolation; this and its consequent loneliness are quite bad enough in themselves. Even Pope Benedict – who might be described as a kind of ‘prisoner in the Vatican’ – fondly describes his own little “community” within its walls: he, his two secretaries and the four nuns who look after them, share meals, watch DVDs together and join in the celebration of Mass and each other’s birthdays. I am sure this small community helps to make the burdens of his office more endurable and less lonely.
 Parish priests, no  less than the Holy Father, need fellowship, mutual support, the company  of their fellows – in short, communities. I have known several cases of  priests cracking under the strain of their lives. These were good and  conscientious men, struggling to live their vocation. They did not  abandon it; they were simply crushed by all the demands made on them.
Fr  Bertram, himself an Oratorian and thus living in fraternity with fellow  members of the Oxford Oratory, believes that if a more satisfactory  model of priestly life could be developed it would mean increased  congregations and “the long steady decline [in vocations] since 1964  could at last be reversed.”
Good idea or not ?
 Whaddya think ?
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