Other
Powerful Tools for Discernment
ON
VOCATIONS IN GENERAL
A
vocation is all about love. A vocation is a life of love
in a concrete, particular form because love is always concrete
and particular. A vocation begins with His love for you. In
that love for you He is calling you to a particular form of
life. This love involves first His total gift of Himself to
you, and then in response your total gift of yourself to Him.
After all He tells us in the Gospel according to St. John, “You
did not choose me, but I chose you” (Jn. 15:16). His choice
for you is what makes a vocation different from an “occupation”
or a “career”. You can choose an occupation or a
career for yourself, but a vocation (from the Latin verb vocare,
“to call”) is HIS choice for you and which He invites
you to undertake for love of Him. Often we are taught to ask,
“What do I want to be when I grow up?” or “What
life will I choose?” The better way to think is, “What
does Jesus want for me?”, “What life will bring
Jesus the greatest glory?” and ultimately to say, “I
want what Jesus wants.”
A vocation is the concrete life He has chosen for you, and
for which has specifically created you. He is God and therefore
knows which life that will be the best way to bring about your
salvation, your happiness, and His greatest glory. His call
will completely fulfill you as a man and a father. A vocation
means to be sent by Jesus on a mission to help Him bring His
salvation to the world, and so will call for much love, heroism
and sacrifice on your part. He loves you and has chosen you.
His love gives you the ability to love Him in return. The key
to discovering your vocation is first to allow Jesus to show
His tender love to you. This love will make you capable of loving
Him in return.
As you can see, it is vital that you find your vocation. Your
fulfillment, your happiness, and ultimately your salvation can
depend on your acceptance of the mission that Jesus has chosen
for you. Moreover, other people’s salvation will depend
on you giving your full “Yes” to Jesus in your vocation.
Presented below are the basic steps of vocational discernment.
These steps, however, are not steps that are taken and finished.
We are always engaging these steps at deeper levels, even after
saying “Yes” to our vocation. Sometimes these steps
are going on at the same time, and there is always more work
we can do at each step.
STEP
1:
KNOW THAT HE HAS CREATED
YOU
FOR A SPECIFIC MISSION IN THIS WORLD.
The Mission of My Life by Cardinal Newman
The
Lord has loved you into being, and since the moment of
your conception He has had a plan for your life. He has created
you totally unique. There is no one else in the world quite
like you, and he wanted you to be here in this world. You are
not an add-on, an extra, an afterthought, or luggage in this
world. You are essential, indispensable and important. Jesus
Christ has created you and you alone for some specific mission,
and wants to reveal it to you.
Jesus loves you so much that He invites you to help him save
the world. Of course He alone is the Savior, but He opens up
His life to us that we too may share in his mission of salvation.
He is calling you. He is calling you to help him in his salvation
of the world. This is what we mean by vocation. So the first
step in discerning your vocation is to understand that God has
created you out of love and in His love invites you to share
in his work of saving the world.
Go ahead and “click” to the profound words about
this step from the Venerable John Henry Cardinal Newman.
STEP
2:
ACCEPT HIS LOVE AND HIS CHOICE
FOR YOU.
The
second step in discerning the vocation is to open yourself
to the Lord’s love. He told His apostles and now He is
saying to you: “It was not you who chose me, but I who
chose you.”
In order to hear His call we have to receive his love. He
asks you to accept His love in spite your past mistakes, your
weaknesses, your ignorance, your confusion…in spite of
everything. He wants to overflow you heart with His love. Your
task is to be open to receive. Without God’s grace nothing
good happens in this world, and so we need to receive His grace.
His grace enables us to respond say “Yes” to his
call.
Let Him free you so that you can say “Yes” to His
choice for your life. His choice for you is far better than
any choice you can come up with yourself. After all, He made
you. He knows you better than you know yourself. He wants to
make you happy and fulfilled, and knows that only by doing His
will can we be free, happy, fulfilled and at peace. As the great
poet Dante wrote, “In his will is our peace.” This
is often the step that is most challenging to even the faithful
Christian. To say “Yes” to God without conditions
is to put our lives radically at his disposal. When we say,
“Not my will but your will be done,” we are handing
over to Him our plans, our ideas, our goals, our very selves.
This can be frightening, but it is only in His Will that we
will find peace in this life and in the world to come.
His Presence in the Most Blessed Sacrament is a primary way
in which we encounter and accept His love and then give ourselves
in return. In every Mass, He invites us to unite ourselves to
Him in His Sacrifice on Calvary. In the Liturgy of the Word,
He cuts us upon with His Word from Holy Scripture which is “sharper
than any two edged sword”, so that He can pour is very
self into us. In the Liturgy of the Eucharist we see the Word
become Flesh before our very eyes, and then receive Him into
our flesh in Holy Communion. In every Mass, we join our Blessed
Lord in His act of sacrificing Himself for the salvation of
the world, and receive from the altar His very Body and Blood.
The Mass is the primary place where this giving and acceptance
of His love happens. To find your vocation, going to Mass faithfully
and often is extremely important.
STEP
3:
MAKE YOURSELF AVAILABLE TO
LISTEN TO THE LORD.
If a vocation is a “calling”
from God, then we must attune ourselves to His Voice so that
we can hear His call.
PRAYER
Prayer is how we primarily listen to the Lord’s
Voice. Oftentimes we know we should pray, but don’t know
how or how to even get started. Please “click” on
the link to the page which will show you how to start a regular
prayer life. If you don’t know how to pray, don’t
worry. The Lord longs to be with you in prayer and will help
you. He has already helped us through His Church by showing
us the primary ingredients to a life of prayer. The first is
liturgical prayer. Liturgical prayer is the public prayer of
the Church, the greatest expression of which is Holy Mass. All
of the Sacraments, like Confession, are liturgical prayer. Other
examples of liturgical prayer are the Liturgy of the Hours,
sometimes called the “Divine Office” and Eucharistic
Adoration. We also need to develop habits of personal prayer,
especially meditation (e.g. lectio divina). Prayer which honors
Our Blessed Lady is indispensable for finding your vocation.
The Church and the saints for centuries have strongly recommended
the prayer of the Rosary.
Attuning ourselves to the Voice of the Lord also means becoming
aware of the obstacles to hearing His Voice. Sin and noise are
the two major obstacles which get in the way of hearing His
Voice.
SIN
Sin is perhaps the most obvious obstacle because sin means turning
away from Him. Thus sin can never be seen as just the breaking
of rules. Sin harms and can even destroy our relationship with
the God who created us, hung on the Cross for us, and who is
calling us to our mission. In discernment, sin is like mud that
gets in our spiritual eyes and ears making us blind and deaf
to the Lord.
To answer God’s call in life we must be free and being
free to say “Yes” entails being freed from our sins.
We are not born free nor can we become free on our own. Only
Jesus can free us. Freedom from sins is accomplished primarily
through the Sacrament of Confession. You will never know your
vocation and be able to respond generously and freely to God
without receiving the Sacrament of Confession regularly. It
is strongly recommended that during discernment you should go
to confession at least every two weeks and never less often
than once a month. Not only does this great Sacrament forgive
sin but it also pours sanctifying grace into your soul. This
sanctifying grace is Jesus’ own divine life. Being saturated
with sanctifying grace will go a long way in discovering your
vocation.
A very good exercise during discernment is a General Confession.
Making a General Confession can greatly aid the acceptance of
forgiveness and allowing Jesus to help us put the past to rest.
This practice is especially recommended by one of the Church’s
greatest spiritual directors, St. Francis de Sales, and is entirely
distinct from “general absolution”. A General Confession
is a spiritual exercise in which one goes through his entire
life and confesses every sin he can remember. The purpose is
not to re-forgive those sins or beat oneself up about them.
(Once a sin is forgiven it is always forgiven.) Rather the exercise
helps one to let go of the past and to trust Jesus even more
deeply. It usually takes about an hour and so it is advisable
to set up an appointment with one’s confessor in advance.
After we have allowed Him to free us from mortal or serious
sins, then we have the ongoing work of dealing with venial sins
and our attachments to sin. Attachments to sin are those desires
to sin even if we don’t follow through on the evil act.
It’s wishing you could get away with it. St. Francis de
Sales likens attachment to sin as the Israelites in the desert
who sometimes longed for the life of Egypt (especially the melons
and “flesh pots”, that is, decent food) even though
it was the place of their slavery. Those attachments, even if
they don’t spawn sin, keep us back spiritually. Those
things though seemingly small, keep us from being totally attached
to Jesus and His beautiful will.
NOISE
Noise is another obvious obstacle. We live in a world of noise.
Often when we come to discern we are already immersed in noise:
habits of watching a lot of television, idle conversations with
others, video or computer games, listening to music all the
time, etc. Rarely do we have silence (exterior or interior)
in our day. In fact when we are silent we can start to get fidgety
or even begin to freak out. St. Ignatius of Loyola, the spiritual
master of discernment, said “It’s true that the
voice of God, having once fully penetrated the heart, becomes
strong as the tempest and loud as the thunder, but before reaching
the heart it is as weak as a light breath which scarcely agitates
the air. It shrinks from noise, and is silent amid agitation.”
Therefore, if you want to know your vocation, begin to develop
habits of silence. The first way to develop silence is to limit
our time on television, video and computer games, the Internet,
and using music as incessant background noise. I think a good
rule of thumb is that one should not spend more than two hours
a day total on those activities. The only way to do this is
TURN IT OFF. Those things are not evil in themselves, but without
using them with the virtue of moderation, they create spiritual
static in our hearts and dull our spiritual sensitivity. The
second way to develop silence is to develop habits of quiet
prayer, reading (especially the works of our spiritual tradition),
and just thinking and pondering.
STEP
4:
COOPERATE WITH HIM IN CLEARING
AWAY
OBSTACLES TO FREE YOU TO SAY "YES".
Step three dealt with beginning to attune ourselves to His Voice.
But even after we know of His love and choice for us, and have
begun to attune ourselves to His Voice, we may soon realize that
we are not completely free to give ourselves to Him. Perhaps there
are things inside us that make us hesitate or even pull away from
His call. So as we consider His love and choice for us, we must
also consider, “Am I free to say ‘Yes’ to Him?”
What keeps us from giving our entire selves over in love to Him?
PAST
HURTS
Past hurts can be complicated and complicating in the discernment
process. Sometimes our sins are not the problem, but the sins
of someone else who has hurt us. Past hurts can impair our ability
to trust, and saying “Yes” to Jesus requires a lot
of trust. These past hurts can take the form of some sort of
abuse, the neglect or absence of a father or mother, rejection
by a girlfriend, etc. It can be a rough a brutal world out there.
Past hurts not only hurt our ability to trust, but they can
also interfere with one’s ability to receive love and
to give love in return. Past hurts have a way of creating an
environment of anger and fear in one’s life. Past hurts
can be difficult to forgive, and any lack of forgiveness prevents
us from giving ourselves over completely to Jesus. We may find
forgiveness difficult because we haven’t yet dealt with
the just anger we have about it. The good news is that Jesus
is conqueror of sin and death, and longs to heal anyone who
has been hurt so that they can receive His love and give love
in return. It doesn’t matter what has happened, Jesus
declares loudly to us in Revelation: “Behold, I make all
things new” (Rev. 21:5).
Practically a few things can be done. First, have confidence
in Jesus who comes to free you and make things new in your life.
I would suggest finding a priest you can trust and open up the
pain to him. Just talking through it privately with someone
trustworthy can bring an enormous amount of healing, and he
can pray with you and offer counsel. I often suggest that the
person make a list of people with whom he has “unfinished
business” and then write a letter to that person, which
of course they won’t send. The letter will contain what
that person did and the bad impact it had on his life. This
exercise helps to get the hurt and the anger out so that Jesus’
love and forgiveness can be poured in, thereby making the heart
more liberated to forgive and to say “Yes” to Jesus.
Sharing such letters with that trustworthy priest can bring
even more healing.
FEAR
Fear inhibits our complete gift of self to Jesus in love. The
fear I’m talking about is not the awe and wonder of holy
fear, but rather a crippling fear. Crippling fear is never from
God, but rather from the devil, and we are asked to resist it
and allow Jesus to cast it out of us. A person cannot discern
in fear. The fears can be varied and many: “I hear Him
knocking at the door of my heart, and I’m scared to say
‘Yes’ to Him.” “I’m afraid to
move away from home and my family.” “Will I be happy
as a priest?” “I’ve done too many terrible
things to be a priest.” “My parents want grandchildren
and they won’t have any if I become a priest.” “What
will be left of me if I give myself totally over to Him?”
“My friends think I’m crazy for thinking about it.”
Jesus says over and over again, “Be not afraid!”
Our late Holy Father, John Paul the Great echoed this line frequently,
and Pope Benedict has continued it, because it is so needed.
We live in a world of fear. St. John tells us, “There
is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear” (1Jn.
4:18). Jesus casts out fear; He can put fears to rest. He can
do this when together with Him we face them with courage and
bring them to prayer. I would suggest sitting before the Blessed
Sacrament and simply list the fears on a piece of paper. Then
go over that list with Him in prayer and ask Him conquer them
in you. I would also suggest discussing these fears with a confessor,
spiritual director or sister.
Dealing with sin, past hurts and fear will free us and purify
our love for Him so that His voice can begin to resonate deep
within our hearts. It will help to clear stuff away to that
we can begin to see our radiant, risen Lord Jesus with our vocation
in His hands. When we hear His voice and fill our eyes with
His presence before us, we will be in a position to say, “Yes,
Lord Jesus. I say ‘Yes’. Be it done unto me according
to Your will. Yes Lord, send me.”
STEP
5:
GIVE YOURSELF ENTIRELY TO
CHRIST IN LOVE—
BE HOLY!
The next step than is to respond
to that love with all that we are. We seek to give
ourselves entirely to Jesus. Receiving His love and striving
to get ourselves back to Him in love is called a “personal
relationship” with Jesus. In order to understand the meaning
of your life and what you are supposed to do with your life
requires a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. Another
way of putting it is to ask yourself, “Do I know Jesus,
or do I only know about Him?” It is in this relationship
with Him as Lord as Redeemer and as His intimate friend where
we can hear his call to us. Many have found that reading My
Other Self and I Believe in Love (see “Reading”
page) really helped them to understand and develop that personal
relationship.
Loving Jesus means to strive after holiness. Holiness is our
first vocation which was given to us at Baptism. Holiness means
to live the life of God here and now. Within this call to holiness
emerges the more specific call of the state of life in the Church:
priesthood, religious/consecrated life, or marriage. The life
of holiness involves prayer (contemplating God) and virtue (living
God’s life) and asceticism (opening up oneself to God’s
life).
SACRAMENTS
The Sacraments give us sanctifying grace. This is God’s
own power and life at work within us. The Sacraments communicate
God’s own life to our souls. In discernment we focus especially
on the Sacraments we can receive more than once: Confession
and Holy Communion. It is vitally important during discernment
that one receives Holy Communion as often as possible. Daily
communion is ideal. Confession, as mentioned above, is essential
and needs to be more than once a month. It can be especially
helpful to go to confession to the same priest so that he gets
to know your soul and can offer more specific advice.
For more on the Sacraments see the other pages on the Blessed
Sacrament and the Sacrament of Confession on this website.
PRAYER
Prayer is our vital, daily and intimate contact with the Lord.
It entails the lifting of our hearts and minds to Him who is
with us throughout the day. Prayer is more about listening than
speaking to Him, but it involves both. A man must be praying
if he wants to know his vocation. An entire page on this website
is devoted to developing a habit and daily routine of prayer.
Only committed, daily prayer which includes Mass, Confession,
the Rosary and Scriptural meditation leads to one’s vocation.
Much can be learned about prayer in the Catechism, and please
feel free to look at the other prayer hints on this website.
Examples of prayer are Eucharistic Adoration, Lectio divina
with Holy Scripture, the Rosary, the Chaplet of Divine Mercy,
etc. But the most important thing about prayer is to JUST DO
IT.
A personal relationship is built upon personal prayer. Therefore
you must make time in your day to be with Him exclusively and
not just when it is convenient. We make time for friends and
important people, and there was no one else who is a better
friend or more important person in your life Jesus Christ. So
these other links on this page will explain further how to develop
a routine of prayer on how important the sacraments are and
living the virtues live in a moral life.
VIRTUE
Virtue is a habit of doing good. It comes from the Latin word
vir meaning “man” and is also used to convey “manliness”
or “power”. Virtue is a habit, that is, a virtue
is not something we do now and again, but it is something that
we do regularly, even without thinking about it. Part of the
life of virtue is that we strive to live according to His commandments,
and to develop habits that will help us keep His commandments.
Jesus said, “If you love me, keep my commandments.”
You can find out more on Sacraments, Prayer and Virtue by clicking
on the link in the “VSP Weapons System” page and
following the links to the Catechism and Catholic Encyclopedia.
Please look at the link to “Men of the Beatitudes”
and “Pure Love” for developing virtue and growing
in Christian manhood.
ASCETICISM
(“MAKING SACRIFICES”)
Asceticism helps to open up our human nature to receive the
Lord’s life. Asceticism also sharpens our spiritual senses.
To love means to give yourself and giving ourselves in love
involves sacrifice. When two people love each other they do
things for each other and make sacrifices for one another. Sacrifices
are not made just for the sake of “giving up” things,
but are gifts given out of love. In its most basic sense asceticism
means to thwart one’s own will in order to embrace the
Lord’s will. Asceticism means curbing our earthly desires
(pleasure, things, my own way, etc.) in order to open up our
spiritual desires (prayer, good works, etc.). The most important
sacrifice to offer the Lord is the sacrifice of one’s
will of doing good when we don't feel like doing good. This
type of sacrifice can take the form of doing one’s chores
around the house with a smile, taking on an extra chore, or
helping a brother with his homework. The sacrifice can mean
letting a brother or sister have his or her way or allowing
him or her to play with or use one of your possessions.
Every time we resist temptation and avoid sin we are practicing
asceticism. Resisting temptation can be quite painful, yet offering
that suffering to the Lord with love is very pleasing to Him.
Always remember, the more hidden the asceticism is, the more
effective it is. A good way to begin practicing asceticism is
unplugging from all the noise mentioned above and limiting one’s
time with TV or computer games. It is important to remember
that asceticism is not an end in itself. Asceticism is only
good insofar as it opens us up to love and leads us to be more
loving to Jesus and our neighbor. It’s also important
to remember that we don’t do ascetical works to earn Jesus’
love or grace, we do it to accept more deeply His love and grace
that He already offers. Asceticism will help to sharpen our
sensitivity to Him and His Voice.
STEP
6:
BEGIN TO DISTINGUISH THE
"FOUR VOICES" OF DISCERNMENT.
In the process of discernment we
can become aware of four voices, and learning to distinguish
them from one another helps tremendously in discernment. The
four voices are the Lord’s, our own, the world’s,
and the devil’s. By attuning ourselves to the Lord’s
we can begin to tell these other voices from each other, which
is why steps 1-5 are important. Those steps attune us to the
Voice of the Lord. It is not always easy to tell these voices
apart from one another, therefore discernment requires time,
patience, struggle and perseverance. Confusion, frustration
and sometimes even outright rebellion can be part of the discernment
process. Nevertheless Jesus tells us, “Be not afraid.
I am here.” His love can conquer everything, and if we
open ourselves to the power of His grace, we will come to find
our vocation. Jesus’ desire to tell us is infinitely greater
than our desire to know. We only need confidence in Him.
THE
VOICE OF THE LORD
The Lord’s Voice is that which is communicating His constant
and unfailing love to us. We hear His Voice in His Divine Revelation,
both in Holy Scripture and in Holy Tradition, and in the Magisterium
of His Church. We hear His Voice urging us to do good in our
actions, to trust in Him, to sacrifice out of love. Discouragement
and confusion are never the voice of Jesus even when we sin.
His voice always communicates confidence and hope in Him. His
Voice is always saying, “I love you no matter what.”
His Voice is also challenging because He is always calling us
to a deeper conversion to Him.
With regard to your vocation, you can be sure that He is calling
you, as a man, to the vocation of the priesthood, consecrated
life (religious life or consecrated virginity in the world)
or marriage. His Voice is never deceptive, nor does He play
games. Therefore, you can be confident that to whichever vocation
He calls you, He will also give you the graces to accomplish
it and the desire to do it. Sometimes we are tempted to think
that Jesus will call us to a life that we do not want or cannot
accomplish. This is not the Voice of Jesus. Within His call
lies all the graces and desires to live that vocation.
THE
VOICE OF ONESELF
Our own voice is expressed in the deep down desires of our heart.
Part of growing up is becoming aware of who we are and what
are the deep desires of our heart. Hopefully as a young man
you have a desire to be heroic, a desire to change the world,
a desire to love and serve the Lord Jesus with all that you
are. However, it is not always so easy. Sometimes our deepest
desires are in conflict. Our own sinfulness, that part of ourselves
that is still under the dominion of Satan can clamor loudly.
Sometimes our voice is in conflict with the Voice of the Lord.
Sometimes the conflict can lie in choosing between two good
things: “I want to be a priest, and I want to be married.”
Our voice always stands in need of more conversion.
Your truest self are those desires which have been placed there
by Jesus and are in harmony with the desires that Jesus has
for you. One way to become attune to your own voice is to become
aware of what you think about when your mind is free. When you
have a moment to yourself, what do you think about? Is there
something that comes to mind often or even constantly? That
is a beginning indication of your own voice. After becoming
aware of what you think about during the day, ask Jesus and
yourself, “Why do I think about those things? What is
the motivation behind those things?”
THE
VOICE OF THE WORLD
The voice of the world is a voice that is under the dominion
of the devil, and thus could be considered an extension of the
voice of Satan. The voice of the world calls us to put our trust
in the things of this world: prestige, money, fame, relationships,
to be a famous rock star, to become important, to get a big
house, expensive car, money-making career. It is the voice we
hear in advertising, on TV shows, and in much of the music on
the radio. The “noise” that is mentioned above is
part of the voice of the world. This voice tempts us to forget
about Heaven, our salvation and the Lord’s call in our
life. It tries to drown out the Voice of Jesus and His love.
THE
VOICE OF THE DEVIL
The voice of the devil is that voice that is always trying to
lead us away from Jesus and to remain slave to him. His voice
always tells us to doubt the Lord’s goodness and not to
trust in Him. It is the voice that says that “I know more
than He does.” It is the voice that tells us to say “No”
to Jesus. The most obvious example of the voice of the devil
is the temptation to sin, but he can be very cunning, and as
St. Paul says can appear as an angel of light. If the devil
cannot get us to listen to sin, he then will try to get us to
choose something good, but which is not the good that Jesus
wants for us. In other words, the devil’s voice can try
to make us choose a lesser good over the greater good that Jesus
has for us. Always remember that the devil is a liar and a murderer
and can be very cunning. In the discernment process it can be
confusing to figure out whose voice is whose. Sometimes there
is so much confusion in the heart because we have not yet been
able to distinguish the Lord’s voice from one’s
own or the devil’s.
Great progress is made in finding your vocation when you can
begin to distinguish these four voices with regard to the vocational
choice. By turning away from and ruling out the voices of the
world and the devil, greater clarity and less confusion are
gained. One is ready to make the free choice of the specific
vocation when the Voice of the Lord sounds the one vocation
and your own voice echoes the same vocation.
I would say that for the most part, we cannot distinguish these
voices very well without the help of a spiritual director. You
may find that a regular confessor (going to the same priest
every time you make your confession) can also help you distinguish
the voices. A spiritual director is one (usually a priest) who
is familiar with the spiritual life and who also leads a life
of conversion and prayer in his vocation. By finding a spiritual
director and meeting regularly with him, you can go a long way
in recognizing and distinguishing the four voices so that you
can choose whatever the Lord’s Voice is saying to you.
By following these steps, you will be able to go a long way
in finding your vocation. The important thing is to keep at
it and not give up on any of the steps, and to have patience
with the process. Keep giving it over to the Lord and it will
happen. I also suggest that you begin to pray one “Hail
Mary” each day to Our Lady asking her to help you discover
and say “Yes” to your vocation. It’s a small
prayer, but I’ve found it to be very powerful.
You can learn more about vocational discernment from the series
of talks by Father Brett Brannen, who at one time was the vocation
director for the Diocese of Savannah, Georgia. He says many
helpful things.
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