Michael Ramsay, Archbishop of Canterbury in the 60s and 70s, expounds upon what it means to be a priest in modern times. From an Anglican perspective, he explores how the priesthood sits in a unique geographic space as a "gathering up of rolls which belong to the whole church." The priest, therefore, must display, enable and involve the whole of the church--teaching and preaching, reconciling differences, praying, and leading the eucharist.
If that's what a priest must do and what the priesthood is, who is a priest, as a person? A hymn of the Middle Ages answers "Quid es ergo? Nihil et omnia, O Sacerdos. / What are you then? Nothing and everything, O Priest." Ramsay agrees but gets a little more specific.
He speaks with great personal conviction about the unique sorrows and joys of life in ministry. How a priest's prayer must somehow carry the prayer of the church to God and God to the church. How important the person of Jesus in the life of a priest: a priest cannot simply teach the real presence in the Eucharist, but must teach and show whose real presence it is. How a priest cannot be a priest until their heart is broken, and how our sorrows are the door to Christ's sorrows. And Christ's sorrows are the door to all joy. How important that joy is. How wonderful it is to wonder at the sacraments and God's love, and how hard it is to hold on to that. He speaks of God's sovereignty, and what it's like, as a priest, to help foster a church and world that is not founded on our fears and our fretting, but on our faith.