Religiuos vocation is special gift.

30/06/2013 13:46
 
 
A religious vocation is a special grace that God gives to certain persons, calling them to a life of the evangelical counsels.
   There is more than passing value in stressing the fact that a religious vocation is a grace. It is, therefore, a gift and an opportunity that must be freely responded to if the grace is not to remain sterile and ineffective. We used to speak, and perhaps still do, of promoting religious vocations. Actually, we cannot promote vocations. Either God gives them or they don't exist. We can only discover what God has given and then foster a vocation that is presumably there.
   But how do you discover a true vocation? The expression "true vocation" is not casual. It is critically important in an age when so many
once-promising vocations seem to have been lost.
   What are some typical features of a true vocation to the religious life? I would emphasize especially three:
   (1) a strong faith in the Catholic Church and    her teaching, shown by a firm loyalty to the    Vicar of Christ;
   (2) a love of prayer, at least the capacity for    developing a desire for prayer; and
   (3) a readiness to give oneself to a life of   sacrifice in the footsteps of Jesus Christ.
   The practical question arises of how to recognize a true vocation to the religious life. The need for recognizing a vocation is so important
that everything else is secondary. I believe that if every prospective candidate were to make a private retreat, even for a few days, under a competent priest, it would help immensely. The retreat could be especially geared to a person who thinks that he or she has a vocation to the religious life. Then, during the retreat, in an atmosphere of silence and prayer, ask God to enlighten one's mind as to whether or not He is calling the person to a life of Christian perfection. This, in fact, is one of the original purposes of the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius: to discover and decide on one's state of life.
   The future of religious life is very promising, but the promise depends on certain premises, of which the first and most important is that God has given not just the initial call but the assurance of a lifetime of His supernatural grace to those who want to serve Him in the religious life.

 

 

—————

Back