Let Us Pray For Vocations
To consider
life as a vocation encourages interior freedom, stirring within the person a
desire for the future, as well as the rejection of a notion of existence that
is passive, boring, and banal. In this way, life takes on the value of a
"gift received which, by its nature, tends to become a good given"
(Document New Vocations for a New Europe, 1997, 16, b). Man shows
that he has been reborn in the Spirit (cf. John 3, 3-5) when
he learns to follow the way of the New Commandment: "that you love one
another as I have loved you" (John 15, 12). One could say
that, in a certain sense, love is the DNA of the children of God; it is the
"holy vocation" by which we have been called "in virtue of his
own purpose and the grace which he gave us in Christ Jesus ages ago, and now
has manifested through the appearance of our Saviour Christ Jesus" (2 Tim 1,
9-10).
At the root
of every vocational journey there is the Emmanuel, the God-with-us. He shows us
that we are not alone in fashioning our lives, because God walks with us, in
the midst of our ups-and-downs, and, if we want him to, he weaves with each of
us a marvellous tale of love, unique and irreproducible, and, at the same time,
in harmony with all humanity and the entire cosmos. To discover the presence of
God in our individual stories, not to feel orphans any longer, but rather to
know that we have a Father in whom we can trust completely - this is the great
turning-point that transforms our merely human outlook and leads man to
understand, as Gaudium et spes affirms, that he "cannot fully find himself except through
a sincere gift of himself" (n. 24).
…We need men and women who, by
their witness, "remind the baptized of the fundamental values of the
Gospel," and who foster "in the People of God an awareness of the need
to respond with holiness of life to the love of God poured into their hearts by
the Holy Spirit, by reflecting in their conduct the sacramental consecration
which is brought about by God's power in Baptism, Confirmation or Holy
Orders" (Vita consecrata, 33).
May the Holy Spirit stir up an abundant number of vocations to
special consecration, so that these, in their turn, can encourage the Christian
people to adhere ever more generously to the Gospel, and so that they can help
all people to understand more easily the meaning of existence as the
manifestation of the beauty and holiness of God.
-Blessed
John Paul II, Message for 2011 World Day of Prayer for Vocations
Let us join the Church in this intercession, on this World Day of Prayer for Vocations.
No comments:
Post a Comment