PONTIFICAL WORK FOR ECCLESIASTICAL VOCATIONS
NEW VOCATIONS FOR A NEW EUROPE
(In Verbo tuo...)
Final Document of the Congress on Vocations to the Priesthood
and to Consecrated Life in Europe
Rome, 5-10 May 1997
*
By the Congregations: for Catholic Education, for the
Oriental Churches, for Institutes of Consecrated Life
and for Societies of Apostolic Life
INTRODUCTION
Let us give thanks to God 1. Blessed
be the Omnipotent God who has blessed the continent of Europe with every
spiritual blessing, in Christ and in His Holy Spirit (cf Eph1,
3). We give Him thanks for having called this continent, from the
beginnings of the Christian era, to be a centre for spreading the good
news of the faith, and to show forth in the world His universal
fatherhood. We give Him thanks because He has blessed this soil with the
blood of martyrs and the gift of innumerable vocations to the
priesthood, the diaconate and the consecrated life in its various forms,
from the monastic life to secular institutes. We give Him thanks because
His Holy Spirit continues, today, to call the sons and daughters of this
Church to proclaim the message of salvation in every part of the world,
and still others to witness to the truth of the Gospel that saves, in
married and professional life, in culture and politics, in art and
sport, in human and working relationships, each one according to the
gift and the mission received. We give Him thanks because He is the
voice that calls and gives the courage to respond, He is the pastor who
guides and supports everyday fidelity, He is the way, the truth and the
life for all those who are called to realise in themselves the Father's
plan. The European Congress on Vocations 2.
Gathered together in Rome, from 5 to 10 May 1997, for the Congress on
Vocations to the Priesthood and to Consecrated Life in Europe,(1) we
entrusted to the Lord of the harvest the work of the Congress itself,
and also the anxiety of the Church in Europe, at this difficult and
demanding time, together with our gratitude to God who is the source of
every consolation and author of every vocation. Gathered together
in Rome we have entrusted those whom God continues to call in our day to
Mary, who is the ideal image of the creature called by the Creator. To
Saints Peter and Paul and to all the saints and martyrs of this city and
every city and Church of Europe, of past and present, we now entrust
this document. May it express and communicate that richness which we
received during the days of the Roman assembly, just as the martyrs and
saints once witnessed to the love of the Eternal One. In effect,
the Congress was a moment of grace: the fraternal sharing, doctrinal
deepening, the encounter of different charisms, the exchange of various
experiences and difficulties present in the Churches of the East and the
West have enriched each and every one. They have confirmed in each
participant the will to continue to work with passion in the field of
vocations, notwithstanding the dearth of results in some of the Churches
of the old continent. The strength of hope
3. From the Working Document of the Congress to the Concluding
Propositions, from the Holy Father's Address to participants
to the Message to the Ecclesial Communities, from the
interventions during sessions to the discussions in study groups, from
the informal exchanges to the testimonies, there was a common thread
connecting all the acts and every moment of the meeting: hope. A
hope which is stronger than every fear and doubt, hope that has
sustained the faith of our brothers and sisters of the Churches of the
East during times in which it was hard and personally risky to believe
and to hope, and which now is rewarded by a renewed flowering of
vocations, as was witnessed to at the meeting, We are profoundly
grateful to these brothers and sisters, as we are to all those believers
who continue to testify that "hope is the secret of the Christian life
and the breath which is absolutely necessary for the Church's mission,
particularly vocations ministry... Therefore we must regenerate it in
priests, educators, Christian families, religious families, secular
institutes, in all those who must serve life with the new
generations".(2) We write to you children, adolescents and
young people... 4. Strengthened by this hope we address
ourselves to you, children, adolescents and young people, so that
in your choice of future you may welcome God's plan for you: you will be
happy and fulfilled only by being open to fulfilling the Creator's dream
for his creature. How we wish that this document could be like a letter
addressed to each one of you, in which you could sense, with the help of
your educators, the care which Mother Church has for each one of her
children, that particular care which a mother has for the youngest of
her children. A letter in which you might recognise your problems, the
questions that live in your young hearts and the answers that come from
He who is the eternally young friend of your souls, the only one who can
give you the truth! Know, dearest young people, that the Church
anxiously follows your progress and your choices. And how beautiful it
would be if this letter would rouse up in you some kind of response, so
that a dialogue may continue with the one who is guiding you...
...to you, parents and educators... 5. Filled with the
same hope we address you parents, called by God to collaborate
with His will in giving life, and you educators, teachers,
catechists and promoters, called by God to collaborate in different ways
in His plan of formation for life. We wish to tell you how much the
Church appreciates your vocation, and how much it relies on your
vocation to promote the vocations of your children and a real and proper
vocational culture. You parents are also the first natural
vocational educators, while you formators are not only instructors who
introduce people to the essential choices: you are also called to
generate life in these young people whom you will open up to the future.
Your fidelity to God's call is the precious and irreplaceable means by
which your children and pupils might discover their own personal
vocation, so that "they may have life, and have it abundantly" (Jn
10, 10). ...to you pastors and priests, and consecrated men
and women... 6. Still with hope in our hearts we turn to
you priests and consecrated men and women, in the religious life and in
secular institutes. You who have heard a particular call to follow the
Lord in a life totally dedicated to him, you are also called, in a
particular way, to give witness to the beauty of this sequela.
We know how difficult this proclamation is nowadays and how easy is the
temptation to discouragement when the effort seems useless. "Vocations
promotion, with respect to other ministries in the Christian community,
is the most difficult and most delicate".(3) However we wish also to
remember that there is nothing more stimulating than a witness to one's
own vocation, which is so passionate as to make it contagious. Nothing
is more logical or coherent than a vocation which generates other
vocations and makes them completely "fathers" and "mothers". In
particular, with this document, we wish to address not only those who
have an explicit role in vocations promotion, but also those of you who
are not directly involved in it, or those who maintain that they have no
responsibility in this area. We wish to remind these people that
only a concerted witness will lead to effective vocations promotion, and
that the so-called vocations crisis is above all related to the
reticence of some witnesses which weakens the message. In a Church
which is totally vocational, all are vocations promoters. Blessed
are you, then, if you can express with your lives that to serve God is
beautiful and fulfilling, and reveal that in Him, the Living one, is
hidden the identity of every living person (cf Col 3, 3).
...to the whole People of God in Europe 7. Finally, we
wish to be "Samaritans of hope" for those brothers and sisters with whom
we share the difficulties of the journey. We wish to address the same
message of hope to the whole People of God, on pilgrimage in this
ancient and blessed continent, in the Churches of the East and the West.
At one time the proclamation of the good news spread out from here,
thanks to the courage of many evangelisers who witnessed even with their
blood. And still today, we wish to believe, the Spirit of the Father is
calling. He sends throughout the world the children of this
generous continent where Christianity has its roots, but it too has need
of the New Evangelisation and new evangelisers. Now we too present
ourselves to the Lord, as the Apostles once did, conscious of our
poverty and the needs of this Church: "Master, we toiled all night and
took nothing" (Lk 5, 5). But above all we want to believe and
hope "on his word" that the Lord, like before, can also today fill the
boats of the apostles with a miraculous catch and transform every
believer into a fisher of men. From the Congress to life
8. The scope of this document, therefore, is that of sharing with all of
you the moment of grace which the Congress was. Without attempting to
make an accurate synthesis of it, nor of drawing up a systematic
treatise on vocation, fraternally we wish to place at the disposition of
the whole Church, in Europe and outside Europe, in its different
Christian denominations, the most significant fruits of the Congress.
The style will seek to express as far as possible our will to make
ourselves understood by all, because all, without distinction, are
called to realise their own vocation and promote that of their
neighbour. Above all, it will seek to marry theological
reflection and pastoral praxis, theory and pedagogical experience, in
order to provide a concrete and practical help to those working in
vocations promotion. We do not intend to say everything, not only
so as not to repeat what other documents have already said, and said
well, in this regard,(4) but also to remain open to the mystery, to that
mystery which envelops the life and call of every human being, to that
mystery which is also the path of vocational discernment and which will
only be completed at the moment of death. Either vocations ministry
is mystagogic, and therefore sets out again and again from the Mystery
(of God) in order to lead back to the mystery (of mankind), or it is
nothing. The divisions of the document
9. Concretely the present text follows the logic which guided the work
of the Congress: from the concrete realities of life to reflection, in
order to return again to concrete reality. The pastoral care of
vocations must be measured against everyday realities, precisely because
it is pastoral in function and at the service of life. As a result we
will begin with an attempt at surveying the situation, so as then to
analyse the topic of vocation from the theological point of view,
and so provide a foundation, an essential framework of reference for the
discussion to follow. At this point, the most applicative part
begins: firstly pastoral, or about great intervention strategies,
and then more pedagogical. This will be useful for identifying at
least some guidelines on the level of method and everyday praxis. And
perhaps it is exactly this aspect which is most lacking and most awaited
by pastoral workers. PART ONE
THE VOCATIONS SITUATION IN EUROPE TODAY
"The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few"
(Mt 9, 37)
This first part constitutes a scholarly look at Europe,
fully aware of its cultural complexity, in which an anthropological
model of "man without vocation" seems to be dominant. The new
evangelisation must proclaim again the strong sense of life as
"vocation" in its fundamental call to holiness, recreating a culture
favourable to different vocations and ready to promote a real increase
in quality in vocations ministry. "New vocations for a
new Europe" 10. The theme of the Congress ("New vocations
for a new Europe") goes directly to the heart of the problem: today in a
Europe which is new with respect to the past, vocations which are also
"new" are needed. It is necessary to justify the affirmation in order to
understand the meaning of this newness, and to grasp the relationship
with "traditional" methods of promoting vocations to the priesthood and
consecrated life. We will not content ourselves, therefore, with taking
a snapshot of the situation and listing data, but we shall seek to grasp
in what direction the newness might lead and the need for vocations
which will flow from that. At the same time we shall read the
present situation, beginning from the expression of Jesus about the
mission which awaited him: "The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers
are few" (Mt 9, 37). These words are still true and constitute a
precious key to the present day. In some way we shall find again in them
the just measure of our actions and the just proportion (or
disproportion) between a harvest which will always be greater and our
few strengths. Protected from every pessimistic interpretation of today,
as well as from every pretence at self-sufficiency for tomorrow.
New Europe 11. The Working Document has already
presented an outline of the European situation, regarding the problem of
vocations, which is strongly marked by elements of newness. Here we
shall summarise them, according to the analysis which the Congress
itself has made of them, seeking to grasp the most significant ones
which are destined, in the long run, to condition the mentality and
sensibilities of young people, and also therefore pastoral praxis and
vocational strategies. a) A Europe which is diversified and
complex Firstly, one fact is already taken for granted: at
the level of young people and their condition and the inevitable
vocational reflections, it is practically impossible to define the
European situation, in a univocal and static way. We are faced with a
diversified Europe, made so by various historical-political events
(see the difference between East and West), but also by the plurality of
traditions and cultures (Greco-Latin, Anglo-Saxon and Slav).
These are also its richness and make experiences and choices more
significant in different contexts. Accordingly, if in the countries of
the East the problem of how to conserve their newly refound freedom is
highlighted, in those of the West they are questioning themselves on how
to live an authentic freedom. Such difference is also confirmed
by the progress of vocations to the priesthood and consecrated life, not
only because of the marked difference between the vocational flowering
of Eastern Europe and the general crisis which pervades the West, but
because, within this crisis, there are also signs of a vocational
upturn, particularly in those Churches where constant post-Conciliar
work has traced a deep and effective furrow.(5) If therefore in
the East it is necessary to begin a truly organic pastoral programme at
the service of vocations promotion, from first contact to formation of
vocations, then in the West a different approach is necessary. There we
must examine the real theological content and the applicational
coherence of certain vocational projects, the concept of vocation which
is at the base of it, and the type of vocations which derive from it. At
the Congress the following question came up again and again: "Why do
certain theologies or pastoral practises not «produce» vocations, while
others do?"(6) Another aspect characterises the present
socio-cultural situation of Europe: the surplus of possibilities,
occasions, requests, in the face of the lack of focalisation, proposal,
planning. This is like an ulterior contrast that increases the
complexity of this historical season, with a negative impact at the
level of vocations. Like ancient Rome, modern Europe seems similar to a
pantheon or great temple in which all the "divinities" are present,
or in which every "value" has its place and its niche. Different
and contrasting "values" are represented and exist together, without any
precise gradation; completely dissimilar codes of reading and
evaluation, of orientation and behaviour. In such a context it is
difficult to have a unitary conception or vision of the world, and in
consequence, the ability even to plan one's life is weakened. In
fact, when a culture no longer defines the supreme possibilities of
meaning, or does not manage to converge around certain values as
particularly capable of giving meaning to life, but places everything on
the same level, every possibility of projectual choice falls and
everything becomes indifferent and flat. b) Young people and
Europe Young Europeans live in this culture which is
pluralist and ambivalent, "polytheist" and neutral. On the one hand,
they are passionately searching for authenticity, affection, personal
relationships, wider horizons, while on the other they are fundamentally
alone, "wounded" by well-being, deluded by ideologies, confused by
ethical disorientation. Even more: "from many parts of the world
of young people we note a clear sympathy for life understood as a value
which is absolute and sacred...",(7) but often and in many parts of
Europe such openness to life is betrayed by politics which does not
respect the very right to life, especially for the weakest. Politics
which risks making the "old continent" even older. And so, if on one
part, these young people are a substantial capital for modern Europe, on
which it invests considerably to build its future, on the other, young
people's expectations are not always welcomed in a coherent way by
adults or those responsible for civil society. Two aspects,
however, seem to us to be central for understanding the attitude of
young people nowadays: the claim of subjectivity and the
desire for freedom. These two requests are worthy of attention and
typically human. Often, however, in a weak and complex culture like
today's, they give rise — when they meet — to combinations which change
their meaning: subjectivity then becomes subjectivism, while
freedom degenerates into whim. In this context the
relationship which young Europeans have with the Church merits
particular attention. With courage and realism the Congress highlighted
in one of its concluding Propositions: "Often, young people do not see
in the Church the object of their search or the place where their
questions are answered and their expectations fulfilled. God is not the
problem, the Church is. The Church is aware of the difficulty of
communicating with young people, of the lack of real pastoral plans...,
of the theological-anthropological weakness of certain catechesis. On
the part of many young people the fear remains that an experience in the
Church limits their freedom",(8) while for many others the Church
remains, or is becoming, the most authoritative point of reference.
c) "Man without vocation" This game of contrasts is
reflected inevitably at the level of future planning, which is seen — on
the part of young people — at a second glance, as limited to their own
horizons, as strictly personal (self-realisation). This logic
reduces the future to a choice of profession, to economic organisation,
or to sentimental-emotional satisfaction, within horizons which,
effectively, reduce the desire for freedom and the subject's
possibilities to limited projects, with the illusion of being free.
These are chosen with no reference to the mystery or the transcendent,
and perhaps, too, with little responsibility in relation to life, one's
own and that of others, of life received as a gift to be generated in
others. This is, in other words, a sensitivity and a mentality which
risks producing a type of antivocational culture. As if to say
that in a Europe which is culturally complex and deprived of fixed
points of reference, similar to a great pantheon, the prevalent
anthropological model seems to be the "man without vocation".
A possible description of this: "A pluralistic and complex culture tends
to produce young people possessing an incomplete and weak identity with
consequent chronic indecision in the face of vocational choices. In
addition, many young people do not possess the 'elementary grammar' of
existence, they are nomads: they move around without stopping either at
the geographical, affective, cultural, or religious level; they are
"trying out"! In the midst of such a great quantity and diversity of
information, but with so little formation, they appear lost, with few
points of reference. Accordingly they are afraid of their future, they
experience anxiety in the face of definitive commitments and they
question themselves about their being. If on the one hand they are
looking for autonomy and independence at all costs, on the other, as a
refuge, they tend to be very dependent on the socio-cultural context,
and to seek immediate gratification of the senses: on what 'I like', on
what 'makes me feel good' in an emotional world which is made to
measure".(9) It is a great sadness to meet young people, even
intelligent and talented, who have no will to live, to believe in
something, to work towards great ends, to hope in a world which can
become better even thanks to their own efforts. They feel themselves
superfluous to the game or drama of life, as if they have resigned
in the face of it, been wounded along the broken paths which have been
reduced to the minimum level of tension in life. Without vocation, but
also without a future, or with a future which, at the most, will be a
photocopy of the present. d) The vocation of Europe
Nevertheless, this Europe of many souls and a weakened culture (which
nevertheless exerts a strong influence) possesses unsuspected energies,
it is as lively as ever and is called to play an important role on the
world stage. Never before has the old continent shown forth so
strongly the call to unity, even although it still displays the
wounds of recent, sometimes violent, conflicts. A unity which is yet to
be built up, even although certain walls have fallen, and which must be
extended to the whole of Europe and to all those who seek hospitality
and welcome there. A unity which can not only be of a political or
economic nature, but also, and firstly, a spiritual and moral unity. A
unity which yet must overcome ancient grudges and old suspicions, and
which could find once again, in its ancient Christian roots, a motive
for convergence and a guarantee of understanding. A unity which, in
particular, will touch the present generation of young people to make it
stronger and more complete, from the East to the West, the North to the
South, defending it from every contrary temptation of isolation and
reliance and concern only for one's own interests, and proposing it to
the whole world as an example of harmonious living together in the midst
of diversity. Will these young people be capable of assuming such
responsibility? If it is true that the young person of today runs
the risk of being disorientated and finding himself without a precise
point of reference, the "new Europe" which is being born could become a
goal and provide an adequate stimulus to young people who, in reality,
"are searching for freedom and truth, spirituality, authenticity, their
own personal originality and transparency, who together desire
friendship and reciprocity", who are seeking "companionship" and want
"to build a new society, founded on values such as peace, justice,
respect for the environment, attention to diversity, solidarity,
voluntary work and the equal dignity of woman".(10) In the final
analysis, the most recent research describes the young people of Europe
as wounded, but not in desperation; influenced by ethical relativism,
but also wishing to live a "good life"; aware of their need of
salvation, even without knowing where to look for it. Their most
serious problem is probably the ethically neutral society in which they
happen to live, but their resources are not exhausted. Especially in a
time of transition towards new goals, such as our own. This can be seen
from the many young people inspired by a sincere search for spirituality
and courageously committed to social involvement, trusting in themselves
and in others, spreading hope and optimism. We believe that these
young people, notwithstanding the contradictions and the "weight" of a
certain cultural environment, could build this new Europe. Their own
vocation is alluded to in the vocation of their mother-land.
New evangelisation 12. All of this opens up new
directions and requires that a new impulse be given to the very process
of evangelisation of the old and the new Europe. For some time now the
Church and the present Pope have been asking for a profound renewal of
the contents and method of proclaiming the Gospel, "in order to make the
Church of the twentieth century ever more able to proclaim the Gospel to
the people of the twentieth century".(11) And, as we have been reminded
by the Congress, "there is no need to be afraid of being in a period of
passing from one shore to the other".(12) a) The "ever" and
the "new" This is a question of joining together the "ever"
and the "new" of the Gospel, to offer it to the new questions and
conditions of the man and woman of today. It is urgent therefore to
propose again the heart or the centre of the kerygma as "eternally good
news", rich with life and meaning for the young person living in Europe,
as the proclamation which can respond to his expectations and enlighten
his search. Tension and challenge especially concentrate around
these points. On this depends the image of man which is to be realised
and the great decisions of life, of the future of the person and of
humanity; of the meaning of freedom, of the relationship between
subjectivity and objectivity, of the mystery of life and death, of
loving and suffering, of work and pleasure. It is necessary to
clarify the relation between praxis and truth, between personal
historical moment and universal definitive future or between good
received and good given, between awareness of gift and choice of life.
We know that it is precisely around these points that there arises even
a certain crisis of meaning, from which derives an antivocational
culture and an image of man without vocation. Therefore it is
from here that the path of the new evangelisation must begin, in order
to evangelise life and the meaning of life, the demand for freedom and
subjectivity, the sense of being for the world and of being in
relationship with others. From this a vocational culture and a
model of man open to the call can emerge. So that the good news of the
Lord's resurrection will not be lacking in a Europe which is profoundly
redesigning itself; the same Lord in whose blood scattered peoples are
reunited and those far away become close, breaking down "the dividing
wall of hostility" (Eph 2, 14). We can we even say that
vocation is the very heart of the new evangelisation on the threshold of
the third millennium. It is the call of God to man for a new season
of truth and liberty, and for an ethical re-foundation of European
culture and society. b) New holiness In this
process of inculturating the good news, the Word of God becomes man's
companion and encounters him along the way to reveal to him the Father's
plan as a condition for his happiness. And it is exactly the Word taken
from the letter of Paul to the Christians of the Church of Ephesus,
which also today leads us, the People of God in Europe, to discover what
is perhaps not visible at first sight, but which is also event, is gift,
is new life: "So then you are no longer strangers and sojourners, but
you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of
God" (Eph 2,19). This is not, clearly, a new word, but it
is a word which makes us look again in a new way at the reality of the
Church in the old continent, which is anything but an "old church". She
is a community of believers called to the "youthfulness of holiness", to
the universal call to holiness, strongly underlined by the
Council(13) and reiterated afterwards, in various circumstances, by the
Magisterium. Now, it is time that that call be made again with
strength and reach every believer, so that each one "may have power to
comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height
and depth" (Eph 3, 18) of the mystery of grace entrusted to their
own life. It is already time for that call to inspire new models
of holiness, because Europe above all needs that particular holiness
that the present moment requires, original therefore, and in some way,
without precedent. People who are capable of "building
bridges" are needed in order to join together ever more the Churches
and the peoples of Europe and to reconcile souls. "Fathers"
and "mothers" who are open to life and to the gift of life are
needed; husbands and wives who witness to and celebrate the
beauty of human love blessed by God; people capable of cultural
dialogue and of "cultural charity", for the transmission of the
Christian message by means of the languages of our society;
professionals and simple people who are capable of imprinting on
their civil life and on their working relationships and friendships the
transparency of the truth and the intensity of Christian charity;
women who can rediscover in the Christian faith the possibility of
living fully their feminine genius; priests with a big heart,
like that of the Good Shepherd; permanent deacons who proclaim
the Word and the freedom of service to the poorest; consecrated
apostles with the ability to immerse themselves in the world and in
history with a contemplative's heart, and mystics so familiar
with the mystery of God as to know how to celebrate the experience of
the divine and show God present in the events of life. Europe
needs new confessors: of the faith and of the beauty of
believing; witnesses who would be credible believers,
courageous even to the shedding of blood; virgins who would be so
not only for themselves, but who could point out to all that virginity
which is in the heart of each one and which leads immediately to the
Eternal, the source of all love. Our continent is eager not only
for holy people, but for holy communities, so enamoured of the
Church and the world as to know how to present to the world itself a
free, open and dynamic Church, which is present in the modern day
history of Europe, close to the agonies of the people, welcoming towards
all, promoting of justice, caring for the poor, not preoccupied by her
smaller numbers nor with placing limits on her action, not frightened by
the climate of social de-Christianisation (real but perhaps not so
radical and general) nor by the (often only apparent) scarcity of
results. This will be the new holiness which can re-evangelise
Europe and build a new Europe! New vocations
13. And so a new discussion is introduced on vocation and vocations, on
culture and vocations promotion. The Congress took into consideration a
certain sensitivity which is already widely diffused with regard to
these topics, at the same time, however, proposing "an appropriate
?leap' for opening up new horizons in our Churches".(14) a)
Vocation and vocations Just as holiness is for all the
baptised in Christ, so there exists a specific vocation for every living
person; and just as the first is rooted in Baptism, so is the second
connected to the simple fact of existing. The vocation is the
providential thought of the Creator for each creature, it is his
idea-plan, like a dream found in God's heart, because the creature is
found in his heart. God the Father wants this to be different and
specific for each living person. The human being, in fact, is
"called" to life, and how he comes to life, carries and finds in itself
the image of He who called him. Vocation is the divine invitation
to self-realisation according to this image, and is
unique-singular-unrepeatable precisely because this image is
inexhaustible. Every creature expresses and is called to express a
particular aspect of the thought of God. There he finds his name and his
identity; he affirms and ensures his freedom and originality.
Therefore if every human being has his own vocation right from the
moment of his birth, there exist in the Church and in the world various
vocations which, while on a theological level express the divine image
impressed on man, at the pastoral-ecclesial level they respond to the
various needs of the new evangelisation, enriching ecclesial interplay
and communion: "The particular Church is like a garden in flower, with a
great variety of gifts and charisms, movements and ministries. Hence the
importance of the witness of communion among them, abandoning every
spirit of «competition»".(15) Indeed, it was stated explicitly at
the Congress that, "there is need of openness to new charisms and
ministries, perhaps different from the usual. The evaluation and the
place of the laity is a sign of the times which has yet to be fully
discovered. It is revealing itself as ever more fruitful".(16) b)
Culture of vocation These elements are progressively
penetrating the conscience of believers, but not yet enough to create a
true and proper vocational culture,(17) capable of going beyond
the confines of the believing community. Accordingly, the Holy Father,
in his Address to the participants in the Congress wished that
the constant and patient attention of the Christian community to the
mystery of the divine call would promote a "new vocational culture
in young people and families".(18) This is a component of the new
evangelisation. It is the culture of life and openness to life, of the
meaning of life, but also of death. In particular it makes
reference to values which are perhaps a little forgotten by certain
emerging mentalities ("culture of death", according to some), such as
gratitude, openness to the mystery, sense of the incompleteness of the
individual and, at the same time, of his openness to the transcendent,
readiness to allow oneself to be called by another (or by Another) and
be questioned by life, faith in oneself and in others, freedom to be
touched by the gift received, by affection, by understanding, by
forgiveness, discovering that what is received is always undeserved and
exceeds one's just measure, and is the source of responsibility for
life. The ability to dream and think big is also part of this
vocational culture, that wonder that allows the appreciation of beauty
and the choosing of it for its intrinsic worth, so that it might make
life beautiful and true, that altruism which is not only an emergency
solidarity, but which is born of the discovery of the dignity of every
brother and sister. In opposition to the culture of distraction,
which risks losing sight of and annulling the serious questions in the
pulping of words, there is a culture which can once more find courage
and zest for the big questions, those related to one's future: in
fact, the big questions also make small answers big. However, it is
the small and everyday responses which provoke the big decisions, such
as the decision on faith; or which create culture, such as the decision
about vocation. In any case the vocational culture, insofar as it
is a complex of values, must more and more cross over from the ecclesial
consciousness to the civil, from the awareness of the individual or the
believing community to the universal conviction that it is impossible to
build any future, for Europe of the year two thousand, on a model of man
without vocation. In fact the Pope continues: "The discomfort that
reveals, through the world of young people, even in the new generations,
pressing questions on the meaning of life, is confirmation of the fact
that nothing and no-one can smother in man the demand for meaning
and the desire for truth. For many this is the field in which the
vocational search is placed".(19) It is precisely this demand and
this desire which give birth to an authentic culture of vocations; and
if the demand and desire are in the heart of every person, even in those
who deny it, then this culture could become a type of common ground
where the believing conscience meets the lay conscience and confronts
itself with it. With generosity and transparency it will give to the lay
conscience that wisdom it has received from on high. In this way,
such a new culture will become the right and proper terrain of the new
evangelisation, where a new model of man can be born and allow new
holiness and new vocations for Europe of the year two thousand to
flourish. In fact, the shortage of specific vocations — vocations in the
plural — is above all an absence of the vocational consciousness of life
— vocation in the singular —, or rather the absence of a culture of
vocation. This culture, today, is probably becoming the primary
objective of pastoral work for vocations(20) or, perhaps, of pastoral
work in general. What kind of pastoral programme, indeed, would not
cultivate the freedom of feeling oneself called by God, or give birth to
newness of life? c) Pastoral care of vocations: the "leap in
quality" There is another element that connects pre-Congress
reflection with analysis during the Congress: the awareness that
pastoral work for vocations is faced with the need for a radical change,
for "an appropriate ?leap'", according to the Working Document,(21)
or of "a leap in quality", as the Holy Father has recommended in his
Message at the end of the Congress.(22) Yet again we find ourselves
faced with a clear convergence to be understood in its authentic
significance, in this analysis of the situation which we are proposing.
This is not only an invitation to react to feelings of tiredness or of a
lack of confidence because of the few results; nor do we intend, with
these words, to provoke the simple renewal of certain methods or to
recover energy and enthusiasm, but we want to indicate, in substance,
that vocations promotion in Europe has reached a critical point, a
decisive moment. There has been a history, moving along the years, like
natural seasons, and which now must necessarily proceed towards the
"adult" and mature state of vocations promotion. Therefore this
is neither about undervaluing the sense of this movement, nor of blaming
anyone for what was not done in the past; rather, our feeling and that
of the whole Church is of appropriate recognition for those brothers and
sisters who, in conditions of notable difficulty, have generously helped
so many boys and girls and young people to search for and find their
vocation. In any case, this is about understanding once more the
direction which God, the Lord of history, is giving to our history and
also to the rich history of vocations in Europe at today's decisive
crossroad. — If vocations promotion arose as an emergency related
to a situation of crisis or shortage of vocations, today it can no
longer see itself in the same precarious or negative way, but — on the
contrary — appears as a stable and coherent expression of the
motherhood of the Church, open to the unstoppable plan of God, which
always generates life within her; — if at one time
vocations promotion referred only or mainly to certain vocations, now it
must tend ever more towards the promotion of all vocations,
because in the Lord's Church, either we grow together or no-one grows;
— if at its beginnings vocations promotion sought to limit its field of
intervention to certain categories of people ("ours", those closest to
the Church's circle or those who seem to show immediately a certain
interest, the best and most worthy, those who have already made an
option for the faith, and so on), now the need is ever more apparent for
courageously extending to all, at least in theory, the vocational
proclamation and proposal, in the name of that God who has no preference
among people, who chooses sinners from a sinful people, who makes of
Amos, who was not a son of a prophet but only a gatherer of sycamores, a
prophet, and calls Levi and goes to the house of Zacchaeus, and can
raise up sons of Abraham even from the rocks (cf Mt 3, 9);
— if before vocations work rose up, in great part, from fear (of
extinction or of numbering less) and from pretence at maintaining
determined levels of presence or activities, now fear, which is always a
pessimistic counsellor, gives way to Christian hope, which is
born of faith and is projected towards newness and the future of God;
— if a certain vocations promotion is, or was, continually uncertain or
timid, as if to seem almost inferior with respect to an antivocational
culture, today true vocations promotion can be carried out only by those
who are convinced that in every person, no-one excluded, there is
an original gift of God which waits to be discovered; — if at one
time the objective seemed to be recruitment, and the methodology was
propaganda, often with compulsory inroads into the individual's freedom
or with episodes of "competition", now it must be made ever clearer that
the purpose is the service of giving to the person, so that he
might be able to discern God's plan for his life for the edification of
the Church, and in this recognise and realise his own truth;(23)
— if at a time not so long ago certain people deluded themselves by
seeking to resolve the vocations crisis by debatable methods, for
example by "importing vocations" from other places (often uprooting them
from their environment), today no-one should delude himself about
resolving the vocations crisis by going around it, because the Lord
continues to call in every Church in every place; — and
so, in the same way, the "vocations scapegoat", a willing and often
solitary improviser, must continue to move from promotion made up of
periodic initiatives and episodes towards a vocational education which
is inspired by a tested method of accompaniment, to be able to
give appropriate assistance to the one searching; — in
consequence, the same vocations promoter must become more and more an
educator in faith and formator of vocations, and vocations promotion
should become more a concerted effort(24) of the whole religious
or parish community, of the whole institute or diocese, of every priest
or consecrated person or believer, and for all vocations in every phase
of life; — and now, finally, the decisive movement should be made
from the "pathology of tiredness"(25) and resignation, which justifies
itself by blaming the present generation of young people for the
vocations crisis, to the courage to ask oneself the right questions in
order to understand any eventual mistakes, so as to arrive at a new
creative and fervent thrust of witness. d) Little flock and
great mission(26) The coherence with which we proceed along
this line will more and more help to rediscover the dignity of pastoral
work for vocations and its natural position of centrality and synthesis
in the pastoral environment. Here, too, we come from experiences
and conceptions which, in the past, ran the risk of marginalising
pastoral work for vocations in some way, considering it as less
important. At times it presented an unsuccessful face of the modern
Church or it was judged to be a sector of pastoral work which was less
well founded theologically with respect to others, a recent product of a
critical and contingent situation. Vocations promotion continues
perhaps to live in a situation of inferiority, which on the one hand can
be harmful to its image and indirectly to the efficacy of its work, but
on the other can also become a favourable context for identifying new
pastoral directions and experiencing them with creativity and freedom —
freedom also to make mistakes. Above all, this situation can
remind us of that other "inferiority" or poverty of which Jesus speaks
observing the crowds who followed him: "The harvest is great, but the
labourers are few" (Mt 9, 37). Faced with the harvest of the
Kingdom of God, faced with the harvest of the new Europe and the new
evangelisation, the "labourers" are, and will always be few, "small
flock and great mission", so that it will be even clearer that a
vocation is the initiative of God, a gift of the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. PART TWO
THEOLOGY OF VOCATION
"There are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit..."
(1 Cor 12, 4)
The basic purpose of this theological part is to try and
grasp the meaning of human life in relation to God the Trinitarian
communion. The mystery of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit underlies the
full existence of mankind, as a call to love in the giving of self and
in holiness; as gift in the Church for the world. Every anthropology cut
off from God is illusory. This is about understanding the
structural elements of the Christian vocation, its essential
architecture which, evidently, must be theological. This reality,
already the object of much analysis even by the Magisterium, is rich
with a spiritual, biblical-theological tradition which has formed not
only generations of calls, but also a spirituality of the call.
The question about meaning for life 14. At the school of
the Word of God the Christian community welcomes the highest answer to
the question of meaning which rises up, more or less clearly, in the
heart of each person. This response does not come from human reason,
even if it is always dramatically provoked by the problem of being and
one's destiny, but from God. It is He who gives the key to clarifying
and resolving the big questions which make man a questioning subject:
"Why are we in the world? What is life? What is there beyond the mystery
of death?" It should not be forgotten, however, that in the
culture of distraction, in which the young people of today find
themselves, fundamental questions run the risk of being stifled or
removed. The meaning of life, today, rather than being sought out, is
being imposed: either from what is lived in the immediate or from what
satisfies our needs, the conscience becomes ever more obtuse and the
truest questions remain elusive.(27) Therefore the task of
pastoral theology and spiritual accompaniment is to help young people to
question their lives so that, in the decisive dialogue with God, they
can formulate the same question as Mary of Nazareth: "How is this
possible?" (Lk 1, 34). The Trinitarian icon
15. In listening to the Word, with wonder, we discover that the most
comprehensive and fitting biblical-theological category for explaining
the mystery of life, in the light of Christ, is that of "vocation".(28)
"Christ the new Adam, in the very revelation of the mystery of the
Father and of his love, fully reveals man to himself and brings to light
his most high calling".(29) Therefore the biblical figure of the
community of Corinth presents the gifts of the Spirit, in the Church, as
subordinate to the recognition of Jesus as the Lord. Truly Christology
is at the basis of every anthropology and ecclesiology. Christ is the
project of man. Only after the believer has recognised that Jesus is
Lord "under the action of the Holy Spirit" (1 Cor 12, 3) can he
welcome the statutes of the new community of believers: "Now there are
varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties of
service, but the same Lord; and there are varieties of working, but it
is the same God who inspires them all in every one" (1 Cor 12,
4-6). The Pauline image clearly highlights three fundamental
aspects of vocational gifts in the Church; these three aspects are
strictly connected with their origin in the bosom of the Trinitarian
communion and with specific reference to the individual Persons.
In the light of the Spirit the gifts are an expression of His infinite
gratuitousness. He himself is charism (Acts 2, 38), the
source of every gift and expression of the irrepressible divine
creativity. In the light of Christ vocational gifts are "ministries",
which express the different types of service which the Son has lived
even to the gift of his life. In fact "he came not to be served, and to
give his life..." (Mt 20, 28). Jesus is therefore the model for
every ministry. In the light of the Father the gifts are "operations",
because from Him, the source of life, every being receives its own
specific dynamism. Therefore the Church, as an icon, reflects the
mystery of God the Father, of God the Son and of God the Holy Spirit;
and each vocation carries in itself the traits characteristic of the
three Persons of the Trinitarian communion. The divine Persons are the
source and model of every call. Indeed, the Trinity, in itself, is a
mysterious interconnection of calls and responses. Only there, within
that uninterrupted dialogue, can each living person find not only his
roots but also his destiny and his future, what he is called to be and
to become, in truth and freedom, in the reality of his history.
In fact these gifts, in the ecclesiological statutes of 1 Corinthians,
have a concrete, historical destination: "To each is given the
manifestation of the Spirit for the common good" (1 Cor 12, 7).
There is a higher good which regularly supplants the personal gift: to
build up in unity the Body of Christ; to make visible his presence in
history "so that the world may believe" (Jn 17, 21).
Accordingly the ecclesial community, on the one hand, is seized by the
mystery of God and is a visible icon of it, and on the other, it is
totally involved with the history of mankind in the world, in a state of
exodus, towards "the new heaven". The Church, and every vocation
in it, express an identical dynamism: to be called for a mission.
The Father calls to life 16. The existence of each one is
the fruit of the creative love of the Father, of his efficacious wish,
of his generative Word. The creative act of the Father has the
dynamics of an appeal, of a call to life. Each person comes to life
because he is loved, thought and willed by a good Will who preferred him
to non-existence, loved him before ever he was, knew him before forming
him in his mother's womb, consecrated him before he saw the light (cf
Jer 1, 5; Is 49, 1.5; Gal 1, 15). Vocation,
then, is that which explains in depth the mystery of an individual's
life, and is itself a mystery, of absolute predilection and
gratuitousness. a) "...in his image" In the
"creative call" a person appears suddenly in all the richness of his
dignity as the subject called to relationship with God, to stand before
Him, with others, in the world, with a face which reflects the same
divine features: "Let us make man in our own image and likeness" (Gen
1, 26). This triple relation belongs to the original design, because the
Father "chose us in him — in Christ — before the foundation of the
world, that we should be holy and blameless before him" (Eph 1,
4). Recognising the Father means that we exist in his way, having
been created in his image (Wisdom 2, 23). In this, therefore, the
fundamental vocation of man is contained: the vocation to life and to a
life immediately conceived in the likeness of the divine life. If the
Father is the eternal spring, total gratuitousness, the eternal source
of existence and love, the individual is called, in the small and
limited measure of his existence, to be like Him; and therefore "to give
life", to assume the life of another. The creative act of the
Father, then, is that which provokes the awareness that life is a
consigning to freedom of the individual person, who is called to give a
response which is personal and original, responsible and grateful.
b) Love, the full meaning of life In this perspective of
the call to life one thing is to be excluded: that people might consider
existence to be something obvious, necessary, casual. Perhaps it
is not easy, in today's culture, to experience wonder before the gift of
life.(30) While it is more difficult to understand the meaning of
a life given, which will benefit others, a more mature conscience is
needed, some kind of spiritual formation, in order to understand that
the life of each one, in every case and before any choice whatsoever, is
love received, and that in this love is already hidden a subsequent
vocational project. The simple fact of being should fill all of
us with wonder and great thanksgiving towards Him who, in total freedom,
created us from nothing by speaking our name. And then the
perception that life is a gift should not only give rise to a thankful
attitude, but should slowly suggest the first big response to the
fundamental question of meaning: life is the masterpiece of the
creative love of God and is in itself a call to love. A gift
received which, by its nature, tends to become a good given. c)
Love, the vocation of every person Love is the full meaning
of life. God has so loved man as to give him his very life and to make
him capable of living and loving in the divine manner. In this excess of
love, the original love, man finds his radical vocation, which is a
"holy vocation" (2 Tim 1, 9), and discovers his own unique
identity, which immediately makes him similar to God, "in the image of
the Holy One" who called him (1 Pet 1, 15). "Creating the human
race in his own image and continually keeping it in being, — says John
Paul II — God inscribed in the humanity of man and woman the vocation,
and thus the capacity and responsibility, of love and communion. Love is
therefore the fundamental and innate vocation of every human being".(31)
d) The Father who educates Thanks to the love that created
him no-one can feel "superfluous", because he is called to respond
according to a plan that God considers appropriate for him. Then
each person will be happy and fully realised, standing at his post,
welcoming the divine educational proposal, with all the fear and
trembling that a similar claim raises up in a heart of flesh. God the
creator who gives life, is also the Father who "educates", who
draws out of nothing what does not yet exist to bring it into being; he
draws forth from the heart of man what He himself has placed there, so
that he may be fully himself and what God has called him to be, in His
way. Hence the nostalgia for the infinite which God has placed
within each one as a divine seal. e) The call of Baptism
This call to life and to the divine life is celebrated in Baptism. In
this sacrament the Father tenderly reaches down to the creature, the son
or daughter of the love of a man and woman, in order to bless the fruit
of that love and make him or her fully his child. From that moment the
creature is called to the holiness of the children of God. Nothing and
no-one can ever extinguish this vocation. With the grace of
Baptism, God the Father intervenes to illustrate that He, and only He,
is the author of the plan of salvation, within which every human being
finds his personal role. His act is always precedent, anterior, it does
not await man's initiative, it does not depend on his merits, nor is it
based on his abilities or dispositions. The Father knows, designs,
inserts the instinct, places a seal, calls even "before the creation of
the world" (Eph 1,4). And then He gives strength, He walks beside, He
gives support, He is Father and Mother always... In this way the
Christian life acquires the significance of a responsorial experience:
it becomes a responsible reply in the building up of a filial
relationship with the Father and a fraternal relationship with the great
family of the children of God. The Christian is called, by means of
love, to encourage the process of similarity with the Father which is
called the theological life. Accordingly, fidelity to one's
Baptism urges one to ask ever more precise questions about one's life
and oneself; above all in order to encourage oneself to live life not
only based on human aptitudes, which are also gifts of God, but based on
His will; not according to worldly perspectives, so often of little
matter, but according to the wishes and plans of God. Fidelity to
one's Baptism, then, means looking above, as children, in order to
discern His will for one's own life and future. The Son
calls us to follow Him 17. "Lord show us the Father, and
we shall be satisfied" (Jn 14, 9). This is Philip's
request of the Lord on the eve of His passion. It is the yearning for
God, present in the heart of every person: to know his own roots, to
know God. Man is not infinite, he is immersed in the finite; but his
desire turns towards the infinite. And the disciples are
surprised by Jesus' response: "Have I been with you so long, and yet you
do not know me, Philip? He who has seen me has seen the Father" (Jn 14,
9). a) Sent by the Father to call mankind The
Father has created us in the Son, "who reflects the glory of God and
bears the very stamp of his nature" (Heb 1, 3), predestining us
to be conformed to His image (cf Rom 8, 29). The Word is the
perfect image of the Father. In Him is the Father made visible, the
Logos through whom "he has spoken to us" (Heb 1, 2). His whole
being is in "being sent", to bring God, as Father, close to men and
women, to reveal His face and His name to them (Jn 17, 6).
If man is called to be a son of God, therefore no-one better than the
Incarnate Word can "speak" to him about God and portray the image of a
son. Hence, the Son of God, coming to this earth, has called us to
follow Him, to share His life, His word, His death and resurrection;
even His sentiments. The Son, the one sent by God, is made man
in order to call mankind: the one sent by the Father is the
caller of mankind. Therefore there does not exist a passage
of the Gospel, or a meeting, or a dialogue, that does not have a
vocational significance, that does not express, directly or indirectly,
a call of Jesus. It is as if His human engagements, provoked by the most
diverse circumstances, were for Him an opportunity for confronting the
person with the strategic question: "What will I do with my life?",
"What is my path?". b) The greatest love: to give one's life
To what does Jesus call us? To follow Him so as to be and act like Him.
More particularly, to live the same relationships that He has with the
Father and with all people: to welcome life as a gift from the hands of
the Father in order to "lose" and pour out again this gift on those to
whom the Father has entrusted it.(32) There is a unifying trait
in the identity of Jesus which constitutes the full meaning of love:
mission. It expresses its oblational nature which attains its
supreme epiphany on the cross: "Greater love has no man than this, that
a man lay down his life for his friends" (Jn 15, 13).
Therefore every disciple is called to repeat and relive the sentiments
of the Son, which are synthesised in love, the decisive motivation of
every call. But, above all, every disciple is called to make visible the
mission of Jesus, is called for the mission: "As the Father has
sent me, even so I send you" (Jn 20, 21). The structure of every
vocation, indeed its maturity, lies in continuing Jesus in the world so
as, like Him, to make of one's life a gift. The sending-mission is in
fact the instruction of the eve of Easter (Jn 20, 21) and is the
last word before ascending to the Father (Mt 28, 16-20).
c) Jesus, the formator Every person called is a sign
of Jesus: in some way His heart and hands continue to embrace the little
ones, to cure the sick, to reconcile sinners and to allow Himself to be
nailed to the cross for love of all. Being for others, with the heart of
Christ, is the mature face of every vocation. Therefore it is the Lord
Jesus who is the formator of those who call, the only one who can
mould in them His same sentiments. Every disciple, responding to
His call and allowing himself to be formed by Him, expresses the truest
traits of his own choice. Accordingly "the recognition of Him as Lord of
life and history, brings with it the self-recognition of the disciple
(...) The act of faith necessarily brings together ?Christological
recognition' and ?anthropological self awareness'".(33) Hence the
pedagogy of the Christian vocational experience evoked by the Word of
God: "And He (Jesus) appointed twelve, to be with Him, and to be sent
out to preach" (Mk 3, 14). In order to be lived in its fullness,
as gift and mission, the Christian life needs strong motivations and,
particularly, profound communion with the Lord; in listening, in
dialogue, in prayer, in the interiorisation of sentiments, in allowing
oneself every day to be formed by Him and especially in the ardent
desire to communicate to the world the life of the Father. d)
The Eucharist: the instruction for the mission In all of the
catecheses of the early Christian community the centrality of the
Paschal Mystery is clear: to proclaim Christ who died and rose again. In
the mystery of the bread broken and the blood poured out for the life of
the world the believing community contemplates the supreme epiphany of
love, the giving of the life of the Son of God. Therefore in the
celebration of the Eucharist, the "summit and source"(34) of the
Christian life, the greatest revelation of the mission of Jesus Christ
in the world is celebrated; but at the same time is celebrated the
identity of the ecclesial community brought together in order to be
sent, called for the mission. In the community celebrating the
Paschal Mystery every Christian takes part and enters into the style of
the gift of Jesus, like Him, becoming bread broken to be offered to the
Father for the life of the world. In this way the Eucharist
becomes the source of every Christian vocation; at the Eucharist every
believer is called to conform himself to the risen Christ totally
offered and given. He becomes an icon of every vocational response; as
in Jesus, in every life and in every vocation, there is a difficult
fidelity to be lived even to the extent of the cross. He who
participates in the Eucharist welcomes the invitation-call of Jesus to
"do this in memory" of Him, in the sacrament and in life, to live
"remembering", in the truth and liberty of daily choices, the memorial
of the cross, to fill one's existence with gratitude and gratuity, to
break one's own body and to pour out one's own blood. Like the Son.
In the end the Eucharist generates the witness, prepares the mission:
"Go in peace". We move from the encounter with Christ in the sign of the
Bread to the encounter with Christ in every person. The believer's
commitment is not exhausted in going into, but in coming out of the
temple. The response to the call encounters the history of the mission.
Fidelity to one's own vocation springs from the source of the Eucharist
and is measured in the Eucharist of life. The Spirit calls
to witness 18. Every believer, enlightened by the
knowledge of the faith, is called to know and recognise Jesus as Lord;
and in Him to recognise himself. But that is the fruit not only of a
human desire or the good will of mankind. Even after having lived a
prolonged experience with the Lord, the disciples continue to need God.
Indeed, on the eve of the Passion, they experience a certain anxiety (Jn
14, 1) and are afraid of being alone; and Jesus encourages them with a
promise that had never before been heard: "I will not leave you orphans"
(Jn 14, 18). Those who were first to be called in the Gospel will
not be left alone: Jesus assures them of the enduring company of the
Spirit. a) Consoler and friend, guide and memory
"He is the 'Consoler', the Spirit of bounty, whom the Father will send
in the name of the Son, the gift of the risen Lord",(35) "so that he may
remain with you always" (Jn 14, 16). In this way the
Spirit becomes the friend of every disciple, to make them countercurrent
witnesses to the most confusing event in the world: the death and
resurrection of Christ. In fact, he is a "memory" of Jesus and his Word:
"He will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I
have said to you" (Jn 14, 26); indeed "he will guide you into all
the truth" (Jn 16, 13). The enduring newness of the Spirit
consists in guiding towards a progressive and profound understanding of
the truth, the truth that is not an abstract notion, but God's plan in
the life of every disciple. It is the transformation of the Word into
life, and life according to the Word. b) Vocational promoter
and accompanier In this way the Spirit becomes the great
promoter of every vocation, He who accompanies the journey in
order to reach the goal, the interior icon that, with infinite
imagination, moulds the face of each one in the likeness of Jesus.
His presence is always close to every man and woman, in order to lead
all to the discernment of their own identity as believers and as people
who have been called, to mould and model this identity exactly according
to the model of divine love. As the patient artisan of our souls and the
"perfect consoler", the Spirit sanctifier seeks to reproduce this
"divine imprint" in each one. Above all the Spirit enables those
called to bear "witness": "He will bear witness to me, and you also are
my witnesses" (Jn 15, 26-27). This way of being of each one
called is the convincing word, the very content of the mission.
Witnessing does not consist only in suggesting the words of the
proclamation as in the Gospel of Matthew (Mt 10, 20); rather in
keeping Jesus in your heart and proclaiming Him as the life of the
world. c) Holiness, the vocation of all And so the
demand for a leap in quality for pastoral ministry today becomes a
question that without doubt commits us to listening to the Spirit:
because He is the one who proclaims "the things that are to come" (Jn
16, 13), who gives a new spiritual intelligence for understanding
history and the life that flows from the death and resurrection of the
Lord, in whose victory is the future of every person. Therefore
it is legitimate to ask: where is the Holy Spirit's call for our time?
Where must we adjust our directions in our vocations programmes? But the
response will come only if we welcome the great call to conversion,
addressed to the ecclesial community and to everyone in it, as a real
path of asceticism and interior rebirth, so that each one may recover
fidelity to his own vocation. There is a primacy of life in
the Spirit, which is at the base of every vocations programme. It
requires us to overcome a widespread pragmatism and a sterile
exteriority that leads one to forget the theological life of faith, hope
and charity. Attentive listening to the Spirit is the new breath of
every pastoral action in the ecclesial community. The primacy of
the spiritual life is the premise for responding to the nostalgia for
holiness, which, as we have already said, is also current in this
era of the Church in Europe. Holiness is the universal vocation of every
man,(36) it is the main road onto which converge all the little paths
that are particular vocations. Therefore the great appointment of the
Spirit for this period of post-conciliar history is the holiness of
those called. d) Vocations at the service of the vocation of
the Church However, proceeding effectively towards this goal
signifies adhering to the mysterious action of the Spirit in certain
precise directions, which prepare and constitute the secret of a real
vitality for the Church of the year two thousand. Firstly the
eternal, central role of communion, which is reflected in the
icon of the ecclesial community, visible in the plurality of gifts and
ministries,(37) is suitable to the Holy Spirit. In fact it is
precisely in the Spirit that each Christian discovers his absolute
originality, the uniqueness of his call and, at the same time, his
natural and indelible tendency towards unity. It is in the Spirit that
vocations in the Church are so many and, at the same time, are one
single vocation, to unity of love and witness. It is also the action of
the Spirit that makes possible the plurality of vocations in the unity
of the ecclesial structure: vocations in the Church are necessary in
their variety in order to realise the vocation of the Church, and the
vocation of the Church — in its turn — is that of making possible and
practicable vocations of and in the Church. All of the different
vocations, therefore, are directed towards bearing witness to love,
towards the proclamation of Christ, the only saviour of the world.
This is the originality of the Christian vocation: to integrate the
fulfilment of the person with the realisation of the community; this
means — yet again — to make the logic of love prevail over the logic of
private interests, the logic of sharing over the logic of a narcissistic
selfishness with regard to one's talents (cf 1 Cor, 12-14).
Holiness, therefore, becomes the true epiphany of the Holy Spirit in
history. If each person of the Trinitarian Communion has his face, and
if it is true that the faces of the Father and the Son are familiar
enough because Jesus, in becoming man like us, has revealed the face of
the Father, then the saints become the most expressive icon of the
mystery of the Spirit. In this way also everyone who faithfully believes
in the Gospel bears and reveals the face of the Holy Spirit in his own
particular vocation and in the universal call to holiness. e)
The "yes" to the Spirit in Confirmation The sacrament of
Confirmation is the moment that expresses in the clearest and most aware
manner the gift of and the meeting with the Holy Spirit. The one
to be confirmed, in the face of God and His gift of love ("Be sealed
with the gift of the Holy Spirit"),(38) but also before his own
conscience and the ecclesial community, answers "amen". It is important
to recover at the formational and catechetical level the rich meaning of
this "amen".(39) Above all it means "yes" to the Holy Spirit and,
with him, to Jesus. This is why the celebration of the sacrament of
Confirmation provides for the renewal of baptismal promises and asks the
one to be confirmed to renounce sin and the works of evil, which are
always ready to disfigure the Christian image; and above all the
commitment to live the Gospel of Jesus and, particularly, the great
precept of love. This is about confirming and renewing the vocational
fidelity to one's identity as a child of God. The "amen" is a
"yes" also to the Church. In Confirmation the young person declares
himself ready to undertake the mission of Jesus continued in the
community. Committing himself in two directions, so as to make his
"amen" more concrete: to witness and to mission. The one
who has been confirmed knows that faith is a talent to be used; it is a
message to be transmitted to others through one's life, through
the coherent witness of one's whole being; and through the word,
with the missionary courage of spreading the good news. And
finally the "amen" expresses docility to the Holy Spirit in reflecting
and deciding on one's future according to God's plan. Not only
according to one's own aspirations and abilities; not only in the spaces
which the world allows; but above all in harmony with the plan, always
hidden and unforseeable, that God has for each one. From
the Trinity to the Church in the World 19. Every
Christian vocation is "particular" because it questions the freedom of
every person and generates a most personal response in an original and
unrepeatable history. Therefore each person, in his own vocational
experience, finds an event that cannot be reduced to a general schema;
the history of every person is a little story, but is always a unique
part of a greater story. In the relationship between these two histories
the human being plays out his liberty. a) In the Church and in
the world, for the Church and for the world Every vocation is
born in a precise place, in a concrete and limited context, but it does
not turn in on itself, it does not tend towards private perfection or
the psychological or spiritual self-realisation of the one called,
rather it flowers in the Church, in that Church that journeys
through the world towards the Kingdom, towards the realisation of a
history that is great because it is the history of salvation. The
ecclesial community itself has a profoundly vocational structure: it is
called for the mission; it is a sign of Christ, the missionary of the
Father. It says in Lumen Gentium: "the Church, in Christ, is in
the nature of a sacrament — a sign and instrument, that is, of communion
with God and of unity among all men".(40) On the one hand, the
Church is a sign that reflects the mystery of God; it is an icon that
goes back to the Trinitarian communion in the sign of the visible
communion, and to the mystery of Christ in the dynamism of the universal
mission. On the other hand, the Church is immersed in human time and
lives in history in a state of exodus, is in mission to the service of
the Kingdom to transform humanity into the community of the children of
God. Therefore history asks the ecclesial community to listen to
people's expectations, to read those signs of the times that make up the
code and language of the Holy Spirit, to enter into critical and
fruitful dialogue with the modern world, sincerely welcoming traditions
and cultures to reveal in them the plan of the Kingdom and plant there
the seed of the Gospel. In this way the small great story of each
vocation intersects with the history of the Church in the world. Just as
it is born in the Church and the world, so every call is at the service
of the Church and the world. b) The Church, community and
communion of vocations In the Church, the community of gifts
for the one mission, is realised the movement from the condition of
believer inserted into Christ through Baptism to his "particular"
vocation as a response to the specific gift of the Spirit. In this
community every vocation is "particular" and is specified in a life
project; there are no generic vocations. In its particular nature
every vocation is, at the same time, "necessary" and "relative".
"Necessary" because Christ lives and makes himself visible in His body
that is the Church and in the disciple who is an essential part of it.
"Relative" because no vocation can exhaust the witnessing sign of the
mystery of Christ, but expresses only an aspect of it. Only all of the
gifts together can reveal the whole body of the Lord. In the building
every stone needs the other (1 Pet 2, 5); in the body every
member needs the other in order to allow the entire organism to grow and
for the common good (1 Cor 12, 7). This requires that the
life of each one is planned around God who is its only source and
provides everything needed for the good of all; it demands that life be
rediscovered as truly significant only if open to following Jesus.
However it is also important that there be an ecclesial community which
will help each person called to discover his own vocation. The climate
of faith, prayer, communion in love, spiritual maturity, courage in
proclaiming, of intensity in the spiritual life all contribute to making
the believing community into terrain that is appropriate not only for
the flowering of particular vocations, but also for the creation of a
vocational culture and a readiness in individuals to receive their
personal call. When a young person recognises the call and decides in
his heart the holy journey for realising it, there is normally a
community there that has created the premises for this openness and
obedience.(41) So, we note that: the vocational fidelity of a
believing community is the first and fundamental condition for the
flowering of a vocation in the individual believer, especially in the
youngest. c) Sign, ministry, mission
Accordingly, every vocation, as a stable and definitive choice of life,
opens up in three directions: in relation to Christ every call is a "sign";
in relation to the Church it is a "ministry"; in relation to the
world it is "mission" and witness to the Kingdom. If "the
Church, in Christ, is in the nature of a sacrament", then every vocation
reveals the profound dynamic of the Trinitarian communion, the action of
the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, as the event that makes those called be
in Christ as new creatures modelled on Him. Every vocation
then is a sign, is a particular way of revealing the face of the
Lord Jesus. "The love of Christ urges us on" (2 Cor 5, 14). In
this way Jesus becomes the moving force and the decisive model of every
response to God's appeals. In relation to the Church every
vocation is ministry, rooted in the pure gratuity of the gift.
The call of God is a gift for the community, for the common good, in the
dynamism of many ministerial services. This is possible in docility to
the Spirit who makes the Church a "community of gifts"(42) and generates
love in the heart of the Christian, not only as an ethic of love but
also as profound structure of the person, called and enabled to live in
relation with others, in an attitude of service, according to the
freedom of the Spirit. In the end, every vocation, in relation to
the world, is mission. It is life lived to the full because it is
lived for others, like Jesus did, and therefore it is life-giving: "life
generates life".(43) Hence the intrinsic participation of every vocation
in the apostolate and mission of the Church is a seed of the Kingdom.
Vocation and mission constitute two faces of the same prism. They define
the gift and contribution of each person to God's plan, in the image and
likeness of Jesus. d) The Church, mother of vocations
The Church is the mother of vocations because she gives birth to them,
with the power of the Spirit, she protects them, nurtures them and
sustains them. She is mother, particularly, because she exercises a
precious mediating and pedagogical function. "The Church,
called by God, established in the world as a community of those called,
is in her turn an instrument of God's call. The Church is a living call,
through the Father's will, through the merits of the Lord Jesus, through
the strength of the Holy Spirit (...) The community, which is aware of
being called, is aware that at the same time it must continually
call".(44) By means of this call, in its various forms, and at the same
time as it, there also runs the appeal that comes from God. The
Church exercises this mediating function when she helps and stimulates
each believer to be aware of the gift received and of the responsibility
that the gift brings with it. She also exercises it when she acts
as the authoritative interpreter of the explicit vocational appeal and
herself calls, presenting her needs for the mission and the demands of
the People of God, and inviting them to respond generously. She
also exercises it when she asks the Father for the gift of the Spirit
who raises up an assent in the hearts of those called, and when she
welcomes them and recognises in them the same call, explicitly giving
and entrusting with faith and trepidation a concrete and always
difficult mission among men and women. We can add, finally, that
the Church manifests her motherhood when, in addition to calling and
recognising the suitability of those called, she also provides them with
an appropriate initial and ongoing formation and ensures that they are
accompanied along the path of an ever more faithful and radical
response. Certainly the Church's motherhood can not be exhausted in the
moment of the initial appeal. Neither can that community of believers be
called mother that simply "waits", entrusting totally to the divine
action the responsibility of calling, as if she were afraid of making
the appeal; or that takes for granted that children and young people, in
particular, will know how to welcome immediately the vocational appeal;
or that does not offer considered pathways for the proposal of a
vocation and the welcoming of it. The vocational crisis of
those called is also a crisis, today, of those calling. At times
they are reticent and lacking in courage. If no-one calls, how can
anyone respond? The ecumenical dimension 20.
Europe today needs new saints and new vocations, believers capable of
"building bridges" that shall help to unite the Churches. This is a
typical aspect of newness, a sign of the times of the pastoral care of
vocations at the end of the millennium. In a continent marked by a
profound desire for unity, the Churches must be first to give the
example of fraternity that is stronger than any division and is to be
built up again and again. "Pastoral care of vocations in Europe, today,
must have an ecumenical dimension. All vocations, present in every
Church of Europe, are committed, together, to taking up the great
challenge of evangelisation on the threshold of the third millennium,
and giving a witness of communion and faith in Jesus Christ, the one
saviour of the world".(45) In this spirit of ecclesial unity, the
sharing of the goods that the Spirit of God has sown everywhere and
reciprocal help between the Churches shall be promoted and encouraged.
The Catholic Churches of the East 21. The Catholic
Churches of the West must pay greater attention to the spiritual and
formation programmes of the Oriental Catholic Churches; this can only be
of benefit to vocations ministry in all the Churches. Of singular
importance in the formation of vocations for the Oriental Churches is
the Sacred Liturgy. It is there that the proclamation and adoration of
the Mystery of salvation is made and where communion is born and
fraternity among believers is built up, to the point where it becomes
the true formator of the Christian life, the most complete synthesis of
its various aspects. In the Liturgy the joyful confession of belonging
to the tradition of the Oriental Churches is joined to full communion
with the Church of Rome. It is impossible to promote vocations to
the priesthood and to the monastic life if there is no return to the
sources of one's own original tradition, in harmony with the Holy
Fathers and their profound sense of the Church. This far-reaching
process requires time, patience, respect for the sensibilities of the
faithful, but also determination. Therefore the Bishops,
religious Superiors and pastoral workers of the European Oriental
Churches are requested to be aware of the urgency of the situation for
all of their Churches, recuperating and maintaining their respective
liturgical patrimonies, which contribute in an irreplaceable way to the
birth and development of theology and catechesis. This, following the
example of the mystagogical method of the Fathers, opens people to the
experience of the call and the spiritual life, and brings to maturity a
sure and strong ecumenical spirit.(46) Within the various
ecclesial experiences, and by means of studies that present the
historical, theological, juridical and spiritual patrimony of the
Churches to which they belong, Oriental young people can find
educational environments appropriate for helping them bring to maturity
the universal sense of their dedication to Christ and the Church.
It is the Bishops' responsibility to promote, to approach
sympathetically and accompany with fatherly care those young people who,
individually or in groups, ask to dedicate themselves to the monastic
life, highly valuing the charism of the monastic communities, which are
rich with formators and spiritual guides. The ordained
minister and vocations in the reciprocity of communion
22. "In many particular Churches, vocations ministry still needs to
clarify the relationship between ordained ministry, vocations of special
consecration and all other vocations. A unitary vocations ministry is
based upon the vocational nature of the Church and of every human life
as call and response. This is at the base of the Church's commitment to
all vocations and particularly for vocations of special
consecration".(47) a) The ordained minister Within
this general sensibility, a particular pastoral attention would seem to
be needed, today, for the ordained ministry, which represents the
first specific way of proclaiming the Gospel. It "represents in
different times and places the permanent guarantee of the sacramental
presence of Christ, the Redeemer",(48) and expresses precisely the
Church's direct dependence on Christ, who continues to send His Spirit
to her so that she may not remain closed in on herself, in her cenacle,
but may travel the paths of the world proclaiming the Good News.
This vocational organisation is expressed in three grades: episcopal
(to which is related the guarantee of the apostolic succession),
presbyteral (which is the "sacramental representation of Jesus
Christ... the Shepherd")(49) and diaconal (the sacramental sign
of Christ the servant).(50) To Bishops is entrusted the ministry of
calling those who aspire to Holy Orders, so that they might become their
collaborators in the apostolic office. The ordained ministry
makes the Church to be, above all in the celebration of the Eucharist,
"the source and summit"(51) of the Christian life and of the community
called to remember the Risen one. Every other vocation is born in the
Church and is part of its life. Accordingly the ordained ministry enjoys
a service of communion in the community and, because of this, has the
compulsory duty of promoting every vocation. Hence the
pastoral translation: the ordained ministry for all vocations and all
vocations for the ordained ministry in a reciprocity of communion. The
Bishop, therefore, with his presbyterate, is called to discern and
cultivate all the gifts of the Spirit. But in a particular way the care
of the seminary must become a preoccupation of the whole diocesan Church
in order to guarantee the formation of future priests and the
establishment of Eucharistic communities as the full expression of the
Christian experience. b) Attention to all vocations
The discernment and care of the Christian communities is extended to all
vocations, whether to those already traditional in the Church or to the
new gifts of the Spirit: religious consecration in the monastic life and
apostolic life, the lay vocation, the charism of secular institutes, the
societies of apostolic life, the vocation to marriage, the various lay
forms of association related to religious institutes, missionary
vocations, new forms of consecrated life. These different gifts
of the Spirit are present in different ways in the Churches of Europe;
but all of these Churches, in every case, are called to give a witness
of welcome and care to every vocation. A Church is alive to the extent
to which its expression of the different vocations is rich and varied.
In a time like our own, then, in need of prophecy, it is wise to
encourage those vocations that are a particular sign of what we will be
although it has not yet been revealed to us (cf 1 Jn 3, 2), such
as the vocations of special consecration; but it is also wise and
necessary to encourage the prophetic aspects typical of every Christian
vocation, including the lay vocation, so that the Church, in the
sight of the world, may be an ever clearer sign of the things to come,
of the Kingdom which is "already but not yet". Mary, mother
and model of every vocation 23. There is a creature in
whom the dialogue between the liberty of God and the liberty of man
takes place in a perfect way, so that the two liberties can interact,
fully realising the vocational project; a creature given to us so that,
in her, we can contemplate a perfect vocational plan, that should be
implemented in each one of us. She is Mary, the image that has
emerged from God's dream about the creature! In fact she is a creature
like us, a small fragment into whom God has managed to pour all of his
divine love; a hope given to us so that, seeing her, we too may welcome
the Word, so that it may be fulfilled in us. Mary is the woman in
whom the Most Holy Trinity can fully manifest its elective liberty.
As Saint Bernard says, commenting on the Angel Gabriel's message at the
Annunciation: "This is not a Virgin found at the last minute, or by
chance, but chosen since before time began; the Most High predestined
her and prepared her".(52) This is echoed by Saint Augustine: "Before
the Word was born of the Virgin, He had already predestined her as His
mother".(53) Mary is the image of the divine choice of every
creature, a choice which was made from eternity, and was totally free,
mysterious and loving. A choice that regularly goes beyond what the
creature can imagine for himself: which asks him for the impossible and
demands only one thing, the courage to trust. The Virgin Mary is
also the model of human liberty in responding to this choice. She
is the sign of what God can do when he finds a creature free to welcome
His proposal. Free to say "yes", free to walk the pilgrimage of faith,
which will be also be the pilgrimage of her vocation as a woman called
to be the Mother of the Saviour and Mother of the Church. This long
journey will be completed at the foot of the cross, through an even more
mysterious and sorrowful "yes" that will render her fully mother; and
then again in the Cenacle, where, today, she continues, with the Spirit,
to generate the Church and every vocation. Mary, finally, is the
perfectly realised image of woman, the perfect synthesis of the
feminine genius and the fantasy of the Spirit, who in her finds and
chooses His spouse, the virgin mother of God and man, daughter of the
Most High and mother of all the living. In her every woman finds her
vocation, as virgin, as bride, as mother! PART THREE
THE PASTORAL CARE OF VOCATIONS
"...Each one heard them speaking in his own language"
(Acts 2, 6)
The concrete guidelines for the pastoral care of
vocations do not come only from a correct theology of vocation, but by
means of certain operational principles, in which the vocational
perspective is the soul and the unifying criterion of all pastoral work.
Then the faith journeys and the concrete places are indicated where the
vocational proposal must become the daily commitment of every pastor and
educator. In part one the analysis of the situation provided
us with the framework of the present day vocational reality in Europe;
part two proposed a theological reflection on the meaning and the
mystery of vocation, coming from the reality of the Trinity to
understanding its meaning in the life of the Church. It is
precisely this second aspect that we now wish to deepen, especially from
the point of view of its pastoral application. In the
audience granted to participants in the Congress, John Paul II affirmed:
"Changed historical and cultural conditions demand that the pastoral
care of vocations be perceived as one of the primary objectives of
the whole Christian Community".(54) The icon of the
early Church 24. Historical situations change, but the
point of reference in the life of the believer and the believing
community remains the same, that point of reference that is represented
by the Word of God, especially where it recounts the events of the early
Church. These events of the early Church and their way of living them
constitute for us the exemplum, the model for being Church. This
is true also in regard to the pastoral care of vocations. We shall
examine only some essential and particularly exemplary elements, as they
are proposed to us in the Acts of the Apostles, at the time when
the early Church was numerically very poor and weak. The pastoral care
of vocations is the same age as the Church; it arose at the same time as
the Church, in that poverty unexpectedly inhabited by the Spirit.
At the dawn of this singular history, that is the history of all of us,
there is the promise of the Holy Spirit, made by Jesus before He
ascended to the Father. "It is not for you to know times or seasons
which the Father has fixed by his own authority. But you shall receive
power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my
witnesses in Jerusalem and Samaria and to the end of the earth" (Acts
1, 7-8). The Apostles gather together in the cenacle "and with one
accord devoted themselves to prayer...with Mary, the mother of
Jesus" (1, 14), and immediately they act to fill the post left vacant by
Judas with another chosen from among those who had been with Jesus from
the beginning: so that "he might become with us a witness to His
resurrection" (1, 22). And the promise is fulfilled: the Holy Spirit
descends with riotous effect and fills the house and the lives of those
who before had been timid and fearful, with a rumble, a wind, a fire...
"And they began to speak in other tongues...and each one heard them
speaking in his own language" (2, 4.6). And "Peter standing...,
lifted up his voice and addressed them" about the history of salvation
(2, 14), an address that cuts those that hear it "to the heart" and
provokes the decisive question about life: "what shall we do?" (2, 37).
At this point the Book of the Acts describes the life of the early
community, which was marked by some essential elements, such as their
diligence in listening to the teachings of the Apostles, brotherly
union, the breaking of bread, prayer, sharing of material goods; but at
the same time the feelings and goods of the Spirit (cf 2, 42-48).
In the meantime, Peter and the Apostles continue to work wonders in the
name of Jesus and to proclaim the kerygma of salvation, regularly
risking their lives, but always supported by the community, within which
the believers form "one heart and soul" (4, 32). In it, as well, needs
begin to grow and diversify, and so deacons are instituted to meet these
needs of the community, even the material needs, especially of the
weakest (cf 6, 1-7). Such strong and courageous witness can only
provoke the ire of the authorities, leading to the first martyr,
Stephen; this underlines that the cause of the Gospel requires the whole
person, even his life (cf 6, 8-7,70). Saul, the persecutor of
Christians, also assents to the sentence condemning Stephen; this is the
same man who, shortly, will be chosen by God to proclaim to the pagans
the mystery hidden for centuries and now revealed. And the story
continues, ever more as a sacred history: the story of God who chooses
and calls men to salvation, even in unforeseen ways, and the story of
individuals who allow themselves to be called and chosen by God.
These notes are enough for us to recognise in the early community the
basic lines of pastoral work in a totally vocational Church: on the
level of methods and contents, of general principles, of the programmes
to be followed and the specific strategies to realise it.
Theological aspects of the pastoral care of vocations 25.
But what theology underpins, inspires and motivates vocations ministry
as such? The response is important in our context, because it is
a mediating element between the theology of vocation and a pastoral
praxis coherent with it, which is born from that theology and returns to
it. On this discussion, in effect, the Congress expressed the need for
reflection and study, with the intention of discovering the motives
which intimately link people and communities to vocational action and in
order to highlight a better relation between theology of vocation,
theology of vocations ministry and pedagogical-pastoral praxis.
"The pastoral care of vocations springs from the mystery of the Church
and places itself at her service".(55) The theological foundation of the
pastoral care of vocations, therefore, "can only arise from an
assessment of the mystery of the Church as a mysterium vocationis".(56)
John Paul II clearly recalls, in this regard, that "concern for
vocations is a connatural and essential dimension of the Church's
pastoral work", i.e. to her life and mission.(57) Therefore, in a
certain sense, vocation defines the deepest being of the Church, even
before her work. In the very name, "Ecclesia", is indicated her
vocational make-up, because she is truly an assembly of those called.(58)
Justly, then, does the Instrumentum laboris of the Congress note
that "a unitary vocations ministry is based upon the vocational nature
of the Church".(59) Consequently, by its very nature, pastoral
work for vocations is an activity ordained to the proclamation of Christ
and to the evangelisation of believers in Christ. This then is the
response to our question: precisely that the theology of pastoral
work for vocations is rooted exactly in the Church's call to communicate
the faith. That relates to the universal Church, but it is
attributed in a special way to every Christian community,(60) especially
in the present historical moment of the old continent. "For this sublime
mission of bringing to flower a new era of evangelisation in Europe,
evangelisers who have been prepared in a particular way are needed".(61)
In this regard it is appropriate to recall some points of reference,
drawn from the present papal magisterium, so that they may become points
of departure for pastoral praxis in the particular Churches. a)
Once the vocational dimension of the Church has been highlighted, it can
be understood how pastoral work for vocations is not an accessory or
secondary element, with the purpose simply of recruiting pastoral
workers, nor an isolated or partial moment, determined by an emergency
situation in the Church, so much as an activity related to the very
being of the Church and therefore also intimately inserted into
the general pastoral programme of every Church.(62) b) Every
Christian vocation comes from God, but always arrives at the Church and
passes through her mediation. The Church ("ecclesia"), who by her
in-built constitution is vocation, at the same time generates
and educates vocations.(63) "Consequently, the pastoral work of
promoting vocations has as its active agents, as its protagonists, the
ecclesial community as such, in its various expressions: from the
universal Church to the particular Church and, by analogy, from the
particular Church to each of its parishes and to every part of the
People of God".(64) c) Every member of the Church, excluding
no-one, has the grace and the responsibility of caring for vocations.
It is a duty that enters into the vital dynamism of the Church and into
its process of development. Only on the basis of this conviction can
pastoral work for vocations manifest its truly ecclesial aspect and
develop a plan of action in accordance with this, making use also of
specific agencies and appropriate instruments of communion and
corresponsibility.(65) d) The particular Church discovers her own
existential and earthly dimension in the vocation of all of her members
to communion, to witness, to mission, to the service of God and the
brothers and sisters... Therefore she will respect and promote the
variety of charisms and ministries, i.e. the different vocations,
all manifestations of the one Spirit. e) The hinge of the whole
programme of vocations promotion is the prayer demanded by the
Saviour (Mt 9, 38). This extends not only to individuals but
to the whole ecclesial community.(66) "We must pray unceasingly to the
Lord of the harvest, that he will send workers to his Church in order to
meet the needs of the new evangelisation".(67) However it is
useful to remember that authentic vocational prayer merits this name and
becomes effective only when it creates consistency of life, principally,
in the one praying, and associates itself in the rest of the believing
community with explicit proclamation and appropriate catechesis, in
order to encourage in those called to the priesthood and religious life,
as to whatever other Christian vocation, that free, willing and generous
response, which carries into effect the grace of vocation.(68)
General principles of pastoral work for vocations 26. It
has been highlighted from different parts that we need to give a clear
vocational stamp to pastoral work. To attain this programmatic objective
we shall delineate certain theoretical-practical principles, which we
deduce from pastoral theology and, in particular, from the "points of
reference" connected to it. We shall concentrate these principles around
some thematic affirmations. a) Pastoral work for vocations is
the original perspective of general pastoral work The
Instrumentum laboris of the Congress explicitly affirms this: "All
pastoral work, and especially that with young people, is intrinsically
vocational";(69) in other words, to speak of vocation means speaking of
the constitutive and essential dimension of ordinary pastoral work,
because pastoral work, from its beginnings and by its very nature, is
orientated towards vocational discernment. This is a service offered to
every person, so that they might discover the way towards the
realisation of a life project as God wants it, according to the needs of
the Church and the world of today.(70) This was already said at
the Latin American Congress on vocations in 1994. However, the
perspective is being enlarged: vocation is not only the existential
project, but rather all the individual calls of God are, evidently
always related in a fundamental life plan, spread over the whole of
one's existence. Authentic pastoral work makes the creature vigilant,
attentive to the many calls of the Lord, ready to hear His voice and
respond to it. It is precisely fidelity to this type of daily
call that makes the young person, today, capable of recognising and
welcoming "the call" of his life, and makes the adult of tomorrow not
only capable of being faithful to it, but of discovering again and again
its freshness and beauty. In fact, every vocation is "daily", is the
response every morning to an appeal made anew every day.
Therefore pastoral work shall be permeated by vocational attention, to
awaken it in every creature; it will begin with the explicit intention
of placing the believer before the proposal of God; it will be used to
provoke in the subject the assumption of responsibility in the order of
the gift received or the Word of God that has been heard; in fact it
will seek to lead the believer to commit himself before God.(71)
b) Pastoral work for vocations is the vocation of pastoral work today
In this sense it can really be said that we must "vocationalise" the
whole of pastoral work, or do it in such a way that every expression
of pastoral work might express in a clear and unequivocal way a project
or a gift of God to the person, and stimulate in the same person a
desire to respond and become personally involved. Either Christian
pastoral work leads to this confrontation with God, with all that this
implies in terms of tension, of dispute, at times of flight or refusal,
but also of peace and joy related to the welcoming of the gift, or it
does not merit the name. Today this manifests itself in a very
particular way, to the point of being able to affirm that pastoral work
for vocations is the vocation of pastoral work: it is perhaps its
principal objective, as a challenge for the faith of the Churches of
Europe. Vocation is the serious case of present day pastoral work.
And then, if pastoral work in general is "called" and directed towards
this challenge, it must probably be more courageous and frank, more
explicit in going to the centre and heart of the message-proposal, more
directed towards the person and not only to the group, more made up of
concrete involvement and not of vague calls to an abstract faith which
is far from life. Perhaps it should also be a pastoral work that
is more pro-vocative than consoling; capable, in any case, of
transmitting the dramatic sense of the life of man, called to do
something that no-one else can do in his place. In the passage we
have quoted, this vocational attention and tension is evident: in the
choice of Matthias, in Peter's courageous address to the crowd, in the
way in which the Christian message is proclaimed and received ("to the
heart"). Above all it appears clear in its ability to change the
lives of those who adhere to it, as can be seen from the conversions and
the type of life of the community of Acts. c) Pastoral work
for vocations is gradual and convergent We have already
implicitly seen that, in the lives of individuals, there exist various
types of call: to life primarily, and then to love; to responsibility to
the gift, then to faith; to following Jesus; to the particular witness
of one's own faith; to being father or mother, and to a particular
service for the Church or society. They promote vocations, those
who acknowledge, firstly, that rich complex of human and Christian
values and meanings from which flows the vocational sense of life and of
every living person. They open their very lives to numerous vocational
possibilities, later converging towards the definitive personal choice.
In other words, for a correct pastoral work for vocations, it is
necessary to respect a certain graduality, and to begin from
fundamental and universal values (the extraordinary good of life) and
from the truths which are such for all (life is a good received which,
by its nature, tends to become a good given), in order to move then to a
progressive specification of the call, becoming more personal and
concrete, believing and revealed. On the more properly
pedagogical level it is first important to form people to the meaning of
life and to gratitude for it so as to then transmit that
fundamental attitude of responsibility in the face of existence,
which, by its very nature, demands from each one a subsequent,
freely-given response. Hence we move to the transcendence of God,
Creator and Father. Only at this point is a radical and
convincing proposal possible (such as the Christian vocation should
always be), such as dedication to God in the priestly or consecrated
life. d) Pastoral work for vocations is generic and specific
Pastoral work for vocations, in short, necessarily begins from a wide
conception of vocation (and consequently from an appeal directed to
all), so as then to restrict and narrow down to the specific call of
each one. In this sense pastoral work for vocations is first generic
and then specific, in an order which it does not seem reasonable to
change and which, generally, advises against any immediate proposal of a
particular vocation, without an appropriate catechesis. On the
other hand, always on the basis of this order, pastoral work for
vocations does not limit itself to stressing in a generic way the
meaning of existence, but aims towards a personal involvement in a
precise choice. There is no separation, nor less still a contrast
between an appeal that underlines values common and basic to existence
and an appeal to serve the Lord "in the measure of the grace received".
The vocations promoter, every teacher in the faith, must not be afraid
of proposing courageous choices and total giving, even if these are
difficult and not in conformity to the mentality of the century.
Therefore, if every educator is a vocations promoter, every vocations
promoter is an educator, and an educator of every vocation, all the
while respecting their specific charism. In fact every call is related
to the other, and presupposes and solicits it, while all of them
together go back to the same source and to the same objective, which is
the history of salvation. But each one in its own particular way.
The authentic vocational educator not only points out the differences
between one call and another, respecting the varying tendencies in each
individual called, but allows people to see and actively recalls those
"supreme possibilities", radical and dedicated, that are open to the
vocation of each person and inherent in it. Educating in depth of
the values of life, for example, means proposing (and learning to
propose) a path that naturally flows into the following of Christ
and that can lead to the choice of path typical of an apostle, of the
priest or religious, of the monk who abandons the world, of the lay
person consecrated in the world. On the other hand proposing this
qualified following as the objective of one's life, by its very nature,
demands a preparatory attention and formation about the elementary
values of life, the faith, gratitude-gratuity, about the imitation of
Christ required of every Christian. This produces a vocational
strategy that is better founded theologically and also more effective on
the pedagogical level. There are those who fear that widening the idea
of vocation will be harmful to the specific promotion of vocations to
the priesthood and the consecrated life; the reality is exactly the
opposite. A gradual approach to vocational proclamation, in fact,
allows one to move from the objective to the subjective, and from the
generic to the specific, without anticipating or rushing the proposals,
but making them converge among themselves and towards the
proposal which is decisive for the person, to be indicated at the right
time and to be gauged with prudence, according to a rhythm which will
take account of the subject in his or her situation. Harmonious
and progressive order makes the proposal, which is decisive for the
person, much more provoking and accessible. In concrete, the more the
young person is prepared to be able to move naturally from gratitude for
the gift received to the gratuity of the good given, then the more it
will be possible to propose to him or her the total gift of self to God
as the natural, and for some, inevitable outcome. e) Pastoral
work for vocations is universal and permanent There is a
double universality: in reference to the persons to whom it is
directed, and in reference to the time of life in which it is
made. Firstly, pastoral work for vocations knows no boundaries.
As has already been said above, it is not directed only at certain
privileged people, or those who have already made an option for the
faith, nor only to those from whom we can expect a positive response. It
is addressed to all, precisely because it is founded on the
elementary values of existence. It is not pastoral work for an élite,
but for the people; it is not a prize for the most deserving, but a
grace and gift of God for each person, because every living person is
called by God. Nor can it be understood as something that only some
could understand or be interested in for their lives, because,
inevitably, every human being wants to know himself and the meaning of
life and his own place in history. In addition, this proposal is
not made only once in life ("take it or leave it") or withdrawn once it
has been refused. Instead it must be a continual request, made in
different ways and with creative understanding, that does not give up at
initial signs of disinterest, which often is only apparent or defensive.
The idea should also be corrected that pastoral work for vocations is
exclusively for young people, because in every time of life the Lord's
invitation to follow Him is heard, and it is only at the point of death
that a vocation can be said to have been fully realised. Indeed, death
is the call "par excellence", in the same way as there is a call in old
age, in the passage from one time of life to another, in situations of
crisis. There is a youthfulness of spirit that lasts through
time, in the extent to which the individual feels himself continually
called, and seeks again and again in every period of life a different
task to fulfil, a specific way of being, of serving and of loving, a
newness of life and mission to be carried out.(72) In this sense,
pastoral work for vocations is related to the ongoing formation of
the person, and is itself ongoing. "The whole of one's life and
every life is a response".(73) In Acts, Peter and the Apostles
make no differences between people. They speak to everyone, young and
old, Hebrews and foreigners: Parthians, Medes and Elamites represent the
great mass without difference or exclusion to which the proclamation and
pro-vocation is addressed, with the art of speaking to each one "in his
own language", according to their needs, problems, expectations,
defences, time or stage in life. This is the miracle of
Pentecost, the extraordinary gift of the Spirit. But the Spirit is with
us always... f) Pastoral work for vocations is personal and
communitarian This may seem like a contradiction, but in
reality this principle explains the somewhat ambivalent nature of
pastoral work for vocations which — when it is authentic — is capable of
comprising the two polarities of subject and community. From the
vocations promoter's point of view, nowadays, there is an urgent need to
move from a pastoral vocations programme run by one person to a pastoral
programme more and more conceived as a community action, of the
whole community in its different expressions: groups, movements,
parishes, dioceses, religious and secular institutes... The
Church is called more and more, today, to be wholly vocational.
Within the Church "every evangelist must be aware of becoming a
vocational 'lamp', capable of provoking a religious experience which
could bring children, adolescents, young people and adults into personal
contact with Christ. In this meeting specific vocations are
revealed".(74) In the same way the subject of pastoral
work for vocations is the whole Church. If it is the whole
ecclesial community that calls, then it is the whole ecclesial community
that is called, without any exception. In some way the point of
departure and the point of arrival are identical, within the different
ministries that make up the ecclesial fabric. But the principle is
important; it is the reflection of that mysterious identification
between the one calling and the one called within the Trinity. In
this sense pastoral work for vocations is communitarian. And,
always in this sense, it is fine that, on the day of Pentecost, all the
Apostles addressed themselves to the crowd and then Peter speaks in the
name of the Twelve. Also when choosing between Matthias and Stephen and
then Barnabas and Saul, the whole community takes part in the
discernment by prayer, fasting, imposition of hands. At the same
time, however, it is the individual who must interpret the
vocational proposal, and the believer, on the strength of his faith, who
must in some way assume the vocation of the other. Therefore the
ministry of vocational calling belongs not only to priests or
consecrated men or women, but to every believer, to parents, to
catechists, to those involved in education. If it is true that
the appeal is addressed to everyone, it is also true that the same
appeal is to be personalised, directed to a precise person, to
his conscience, in the context of a totally personal relationship.
There is a moment within the vocational dynamic when the proposal goes
from person to person and has need of that particular climate that only
the individual relationship can guarantee. It is true, then, that Peter
and Stephen speak to the crowd; but later Saul needs Ananias in order to
discern what God wants from him (9, 13-17), as the eunuch needs Philip
(8, 26-39). g) Pastoral work for vocations and the
unitary-synthetic perspective of pastoral work The point of
departure is also the point of arrival. Insofar as it is, pastoral work
for vocations is the unifying category of pastoral work in
general, as the natural destination of every effort, the meeting place
of the various dimensions, almost a sort of element for verifying
authentic pastoral work. We repeat: if pastoral work does not
"pierce the heart" and place the listener clearly before the strategic
question ("what shall I do?"), it is not Christian pastoral work, rather
an innocuous working hypothesis. Consequently pastoral work for
vocations is, and must be, related to all the other dimensions, for
example to the family and cultural, liturgical and sacramental, to
catechesis and the journey of faith in the catechumenate; to the various
groups for Christian education and formation (not only with children and
young people, but also with parents, engaged couples, sick people and
the elderly...) and the different movements (from the pro-life movement
to the various initiatives regarding social solidarity).(75)
Above all pastoral work for vocations is the unifying perspective of
pastoral work with young people. It should not be forgotten that
the time of growth is strongly projectual and pastoral work with young
people cannot exclude the vocational dimension; rather, it must assume
it, because proposing Jesus Christ means proposing a precise life
project. Hence a fertile pastoral collaboration, also in the
distinction of the two environments: either because pastoral work with
young people embraces other aspects beyond the vocational; or because
pastoral work for vocations is not directed only at young people, rather
it covers a wider spectrum with specific aspects. In addition we
can think how important a vocational-family pastoral programme
could be; one that would progressively educate parents to be the first
vocations promoters-educators; or how valuable would be a vocations
programme among the sick, that does not simply invite them to
offer their sufferings for priestly vocations, but helps them to live
their illness, in all its mystery, as a personal vocation; that the
sick-believer has the "duty" to live for and in the Church and the
"right" to be helped to live in the Church. This connection will
facilitate pastoral dynamism because in fact it is connatural with it:
vocations, like charisms, search each other out, they illuminate each
other, they are complementary to each other. And on the other hand they
become incomprehensible when isolated; you are not doing the Church's
pastoral work if you are enclosed in your own specialised area.
Naturally the discussion works in two ways: pastoral work in general
must flow into vocations promotion in order to encourage the vocational
option; but pastoral work for vocations, in its turn, must remain open
to the other dimensions, seeking outlets in those directions. It
is the terminus that synthesises the different pastoral interventions
and allows them to bear fruit in the life of the individual believer. In
concrete, more attention needs to be paid to pastoral work for
vocations, but in exchange, it will provide a specific dimension
destined to making the pastoral initiative in each sector true and
authentic. Vocation is the beating heart of the whole of pastoral
work!(76) Vocational pastoral itineraries
27. The biblical icon around which we have articulated our reflection
allows us to make a further advance, moving from theoretical principles
to the identification of some vocational pastoral programmes.
These are communitarian journeys of faith, corresponding to precise
ecclesial functions and to classical dimensions of the believing being,
during the course of which faith matures and becomes ever more manifest
or the vocation of the individual is progressively confirmed, at the
service of the ecclesial community. The Church's reflection and
tradition show that, normally, vocational discernment happens in the
course of precise communitarian journeys: liturgy and prayer, ecclesial
communion, the service of charity, the experience of receiving the love
of God and offering it in witness. Thanks to these, in the community
described in Acts, "the number of the disciples multiplied greatly in
Jerusalem" (Acts 6, 7). Today, pastoral work must also
follow these paths in order to promote and accompany the vocational
journey of each believer. A personal and communitarian experience,
systematic and committed in these directions, could and should help the
individual believer to discover the vocational call. And this
would render pastoral work truly vocational. a) The liturgy
and prayer The liturgy signifies and indicates, at one and
the same time, the expression, origin and nourishment of every vocation
and ministry in the Church. In liturgical celebrations we recall God's
action through Christ in the Spirit to which all vital dynamics of the
Christian can be traced. In the liturgy, culminating in the Eucharist,
the vocation-mission of the Church and of every believer is expressed in
all its fullness. From the liturgy there comes a vocational
appeal for those who participate.(77) Every celebration is a vocational
event. In the mystery celebrated, the believer must recognise his own
personal vocation, he must hear the voice of the Father who, in the Son,
by the power of the Spirit, calls him, in his turn, to give himself for
the salvation of the world. Prayer, too, becomes a way for
vocational discernment, not only because Jesus himself invited us to
pray to the Lord of the harvest, but because it is only in listening to
God that the believer can discover the project that God himself has
planned: in the contemplation of the mystery, the believer discovers his
own identity, "hid with Christ in God" (Col 3, 3). And in
addition, only prayer can activate those attitudes of trust and
abandonment that are essential for speaking one's own "yes" and
overcoming fear and uncertainty. Every vocation is born from
in-vocation. But also the personal experience of prayer, as
dialogue with God, belongs to this dimension: even if "celebrated" in
the privacy of one's own "cell", it is relationship with the Father from
whom derives every vocation. This dimension is most evident in the
experience of the early Church, whose members were assiduous in "the
breaking of bread and the prayers" (Acts 2, 42). Every decision,
in this community, is preceded by prayer; every choice, especially
regarding the mission, takes place in a liturgical context (Acts
6, 1-7; 13, 1-5). It is the praying logic that the community
learned from Jesus who was faced with the crowds who were "harassed and
helpless, like sheep without a shepherd...and said to his disciples,
'The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; pray therefore the
Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into His Harvest'" (Mt
9, 36-38; Lk 10, 2). In recent years the Christian
communities of Europe have developed many initiatives of prayer for
vocations and these were widely reported during the Congress. Prayer in
diocesan and parish communities, in many cases also "unceasing", day and
night, is one of the most travelled ways of creating new awareness and a
new vocational culture favourable to the priesthood and consecrated
life. The Gospel icon of the "Lord of the harvest" leads to the
heart of pastoral work for vocations: prayer. Prayer that knows how to
"look" with evangelical wisdom on the world and on every person in the
reality of the need for life and salvation. Prayer that expresses the
charity and "compassion" (Mt 9, 36) of Christ towards men and
women who, also today, appear like "sheep without a shepherd" (Mt
9, 36). Prayer that expresses faith in the strong voice of the Father,
who alone can call and send to work in His vineyard. Prayer that
expresses living hope in God, who will never allow His Church to lack
the "labourers" (Mt 9, 38) necessary to fulfil his mission.
In the Congress, the experiences of using lectio divina in
vocations promotion, stirred up much interest. In some dioceses "schools
of prayer" or "schools of the Word" are widespread. They are inspired by
the now classical principle contained in Dei Verbum, that "all
the Christian faithful...learn the surpassing knowledge of Jesus Christ
by frequent reading of the divine Scriptures", accompanied by
prayer.(78) When this knowledge becomes wisdom which is
habitually nourished, the eyes and the ears of the believer are opened
to recognise the Word that calls without ceasing. Then the heart and the
mind are able to welcome it and live it without fear. b)
Ecclesial communion The first vital function that flows from
the liturgy is the manifestation of the communion lived within the
Church, as the people gathered together in Christ by means of His cross,
as the community in which every division has been overcome in the Spirit
of God who is the Spirit of unity (Eph 2, 11-22; Gal 3,
26-28; Jn 17, 9-26). The Church offers itself as the human
space of fraternity in which every believer can and must experience that
union among men and women and with God which is a gift from on high. The
Acts of the Apostles is a splendid example of this dimension of the
Church: there we find described a community of believers profoundly
marked by fraternal union, by the sharing of material and spiritual
goods, by kindness and sentiments (Acts 2, 42-48), to the point
of being of "one heart and soul" (Acts 4, 32). If every
vocation in the Church is a gift to be lived for others, as a
service of charity in freedom, then it is also a gift to be lived
with others. Therefore it is discovered only living in fraternity.
Ecclesial fraternity is not only a behavioural virtue, but also a
vocational pathway. Only by living it, can it be chosen as a fundamental
component of a vocational project, or only by tasting it, is it possible
to be open to a vocation that in any case will always be a vocation to
fraternity.(79) On the contrary, there can be no vocational attraction
for someone who does not experience fraternity and closes himself to
others or interprets his vocation only as private and personal
perfection. Vocation is relation; it is the manifestation of the
person whom God created as open to relationship; and even the case of a
vocation to intimacy with God in the cloister implies a capacity for
openness and sharing that can be acquired only in the experience of real
fraternity. "The overcoming of an individualistic vision of ministry and
consecration of life in individual Christian communities is a decisive
historical contribution".(80) Vocation is dialogue, it is to feel
oneself called by Another and to have the courage to respond to Him. How
can this capacity for dialogue be brought to maturity in those who have
not learned, in everyday life and relationships, to allow themselves to
be called, to respond, to recognise the "I" in you? How can someone be
called by the Father who does not seek to respond to his brother?
Sharing with the brothers and sisters and the community of believers
then becomes the way, along which one learns to help others participate
in their own projects, and for welcoming God's plan for himself. This
will, always and everywhere, be a project of fraternity. An
experience of sharing around the Word, reported by some European
Churches, is constituted by bible groups, or groups of believers
who gather together periodically in their homes to rediscover the
Christian message and share their respective experiences and the gifts
of interpretation of the Word itself. For young people these
centres receive a vocational connotation in listening to the Word that
calls, in catechesis and in prayer lived in a more personal and
involved, and free and creative way. The bible group or place where
people listen to the Word thus becomes a stimulus to ecclesial
corresponsibility, because here it is possible to discover different
ways of serving the community and developing specific vocations.
Another positive experience of vocations promotion in the particular
Churches and the various institutes of consecrated life is the
community of welcome, which puts into practice the invitation of
Jesus to "come and see". The Holy Father has defined this as the "golden
rule of pastoral work for vocations".(81) In these communities or
vocations centres, thanks to a very specific and immediate experience,
young people can travel a gradual path of discernment. They are
accompanied, then, so that at the right moment, they may be able not
only to identify God's plan for them, but to decide to choose it as
their very identity. c) Service of charity This is
one of the most typical functions of the ecclesial community. It
consists in living the experience of freedom in Christ, at that supreme
point which is constituted by service. "Whoever would be great among you
must be your servant" (Mt 20, 26), and "if anyone would be first,
he must be last of all and servant of all" (Mk 9, 35). In the
early Church it seems that this lesson was very quickly learned, given
that service appears as one of the structural components of it, to the
point that deacons are instituted precisely for "service at tables".
Precisely because the believer lives, by grace, the experience of
liberty in Christ, he is called to be a witness to liberty and an agent
of liberation for men and women. That liberation that is realised not
with violence and dominion, but with pardon and love, with the gift of
self and service, following the example of Christ the servant. This is
the service of charity, whose ways of expression are limitless.
This is perhaps the outstanding way, in a vocations programme, for
discerning one's own vocation, because the experience of service,
especially where it is well prepared, guided and reaches to its truest
meaning, is an experience of great humanity, which leads one to know
better oneself and the altruistic dignity as well as the beauty of
dedicating oneself to others. The authentic servant in the Church
is the one who has learned to savour as a privilege the opportunity of
washing the feet of the poorest brothers and sisters, the one who has
won the freedom of losing his own time for the necessities of others.
The experience of service is an experience of great freedom in Christ.
Whoever serves his brother or sister, inevitably meets God and enters
into a particular union with Him. It will not be difficult for him to
discover God's will for him and, especially, to feel himself attracted
to fulfilling it. And it will be, in any case, a vocation of service for
the Church and the world. This is how it has been for many
vocations during these last decades. Post-conciliar vocations promotion
has progressively moved from "pastoral work of propaganda" to "pastoral
work of service", in particular for the poorest and most needy.
Many young people have truly rediscovered God and themselves, the
purpose of life and true happiness, by giving time and attention to
their brothers and sisters, to the point of deciding to dedicate to them
not only a part of their life, but their whole existence. The Christian
vocation is, in fact, existence for others. d)
Witness-proclamation of the Gospel This is the proclamation
of God's nearness to men and women throughout salvation history,
especially in Christ, and therefore also of the Father's heart of mercy
for them, so that they might have life in abundance. This proclamation
is at the origin of the journey of faith of every believer. The faith,
in fact, is a gift received from God and witnessed to by the example of
the believing community and so many brothers and sisters within it, as
well as by means of catechetical instruction on the truths of the
Gospel. But the faith is to be handed on, and in time every
testimony becomes an active gift: the gift received becomes the gift
given by means of personal witness and proclamation.
Witnessing to the faith involves the whole person and can be done only
with the totality of one's existence and humanity, with the whole heart,
the whole mind, the whole strength, until the final, even bloody, gift
of one's life. This growth of meanings of the term is
interesting, a growth which basically we find in the biblical passage
that is guiding us: see the testimony-catechesis of Peter and the
Apostles on the day of Pentecost and, later, the courageous catechesis
of Stephen culminating in his martyrdom (Acts 6, 8; 7, 60), and
that of the Apostles who rejoiced "that they were counted worthy to
suffer dishonour for the name" (Acts 5, 41). But it is
more interesting yet to discover how this evangelical
testimony-proclamation might become a specific vocational programme.
The conscience, thankful for having received the gift of the faith, must
change itself regularly into a desire and a will to hand on to others
what has been received, either through the example of their own life or
through the ministry of catechesis. This, then, is destined to
illuminate the many different situations of life, teaching each one to
live his own Christian vocation in the world.(82) And if the catechist
is above all a witness, the vocational dimension will be even more
evident.(83) The Congress reaffirmed the importance of catechesis
in a vocational perspective and indicated in the celebration of the
sacrament of Confirmation an extraordinary vocational itinerary
for preadolescents and adolescents. The time of Confirmation could be
precisely the "time of vocation", an appropriate time, on the
theologocal and pedagogical level for discovering the gift received,
realising it and giving witness to it. Catechesis must develop
the ability to recognise and manifest the gift of the Spirit.(84)
The direct encounter of believers who live their vocation with fidelity
and courage, of credible witnesses who offer concrete experiences of
successful vocations, can be decisive for helping those to be confirmed
to discover and welcome the call of God. A vocation, in any case,
always finds its origins in the awareness of a gift, and from an
awareness that is so grateful that it finds it totally logical to place
its own experience at the service of others, in order to help their
growth in the faith. Whoever witnesses to the faith with
attention and generosity will speedily accept God's plan for himself, in
order to dedicate all his energies to its realisation. From
pastoral programmes to the personal call 28. In
synthesis, we can say that, in the dimensions of liturgy, ecclesial
communion, service of charity and witness to the Gospel, the existential
condition of every believer is condensed. This is his dignity and his
fundamental vocation, but it is also the condition that allows each one
to discover his own particular identity. Therefore every believer
must live the communal event of the liturgy, of fraternal communion,
charitable service and the proclamation of the Gospel, because only
through this overall experience can he identify his particular
way of living these same dimensions of Christian being. Consequently,
these ecclesial itineraries are to be valued since they represent the
main route of pastoral work for vocations, thanks to which the mystery
of each one's vocation can be uncovered. These are already classical
itineraries, that pertain to the very life of each community that wishes
to call itself Christian and, at the same time, reveal its strengths or
weaknesses. Precisely because of this they not only represent an
obligatory path, but above all they provide a guarantee to the
authenticity of the search and discernment. These four dimensions
and functions, in fact, from one side provoke a total involvement of the
subject, and from the other they lead him to the threshold of a very
personal experience, a demanding confrontation, an appeal that is
impossible to ignore, a decision to be taken, that can not be put off
for ever. Therefore pastoral work for vocations must expressly help
people to try to find their bearings by means of a profoundly and
totally ecclesial experience, that leads every believer to "the
discovery and assumption of his own responsibility in the Church".(85)
Vocations which are not born from this experience and insertion in the
communitarian action of the Church are at risk of being spoiled at
root and are of dubious authenticity. Obviously these
dimensions will all be present, harmoniously co-ordinated for an
experience that can be decisive only if it is all-encompassing.
Often, in effect, there are young people who spontaneously favour one or
other of these functions (either they are only involved in voluntary
work, or perhaps too much attracted by the liturgical dimension, or they
are great theoreticians, a little bit idealistic). It will be important
then that the vocational educator encourage the sense of a commitment
that will not correspond to the tastes of the young person, but to an
objective measure of the experience of faith, which can not, by
definition, be smothered. Only respect for this objective measure
can allow one's own subjective measure to be introduced.
Objectivity, in this sense, precedes subjectivity, and the young person
must learn to give it precedence, if he truly wants to discover himself
and what he is called to be. Or rather, he must first realise what is
requested of all, if he wants to be himself. Not only this, but
what is objective, based on a norm and tradition aiming at a precise
objective that transcends subjectivity, has a notable strength of
attraction and vocational gravity. Naturally the objective experience
must also become subjective, or be recognised by the individual as his
own. Always however in order to move from a source or a truth that is
not determined by the subject and that avails itself of the rich
tradition of the Christian faith. Concretely, "pastoral work for
vocations possesses the fundamental steps for a journey of faith".(86)
And this too highlights the gradual and convergent nature of pastoral
work for vocations. From programmes to the Christian
communities a) The parish community The
European Congress has proposed one objective, among others: to bring
pastoral work for vocations into the life of Christian parish
communities, where people live and where young people in particular are
involved to a greater or lesser extent in an experience of faith.
This entails bringing pastoral work for vocations out of its circle of
experts in order to reach the peripheral areas of the particular Church.
But at the same time it is already urgent that we overcome the
experiential phase, presently taking place in many Churches of Europe,
to move towards real pastoral programmes, inserted into the fabric of
the Christian communities, and prizing what is already vocationally
fruitful. Particular attention should be paid to the
liturgical year, which is a permanent school of the faith, in which
every believer, helped by the Holy Spirit, is called to grow in the
likeness of Jesus. From Advent, the time of hope, to Pentecost and
ordinary time, the recurring cycle of the liturgical year celebrates and
proposes a model of man called to measure himself against the mystery of
Jesus, the "first-born among many brethren" (Rom 8, 29).
The anthropology that the liturgical year helps to explore is an
authentically vocational design, that invites every Christian to respond
ever more to the call, for a precise and personal mission in history.
Hence the attention to the daily programmes in which every Christian
community is involved. Pastoral wisdom requests particularly of pastors,
the guides of the Christian communities, a precise care and an attentive
discernment in order to make the liturgical signs, the lived out
experiences of the faith, speak; because it is from the presence of
Christ in everyday life, that the vocational appeals of the Spirit come.
It should not be forgotten that the pastor, above all the priest,
responsible for a Christian community, is the "direct cultivator" of all
vocations. In truth the full vocational ownership of the parish
community is not everywhere recognised; while it is precisely "the
diocesan and parish Pastoral Councils in relationship with the national
vocations centres...which are the competent organs in all of the
communities and in all sectors of ordinary pastoral work".(87)
Therefore we should encourage the initiative of those parishes that have
established groups responsible for vocations promotion and various
activities for resolving "a vital problem which lies at the very heart
of the Church"(88) (prayer groups, vocations days and weeks, catechesis
and witness and whatever else can contribute to maintaining an interest
in vocations).(89) b) Special places of life-vocation
In this sensitive and urgent move from vocations work based on
experiences to one based on formation paths it is necessary to hear not
only the vocational appeals coming from the everyday life of the
Christian community, but it is wise to highlight the significance of the
special places which illustrate life as vocation and the
pedagogical places of the faith. A Church is alive if, with the
gifts of the Spirit, it knows how to identify and evaluate these places.
The special places which illustrate the vocational nature of
existence in a particular Church are monastic communities, witnesses to
the praying face of the ecclesial community; apostolic religious
communities and secular institutes. In a cultural context
strongly focused on more immediate things, affected by the cold wind of
individualism, praying and apostolic communities open us up to the true
dimensions of an authentically Christian life, especially for these
recent generations which are clearly more attentive to signs than words.
A particular sign of the vocational nature of life and the community is
the diocesan or interdiocesan seminary. It fulfils a special role
within our Churches. On the one hand it is a strong sign, because
it constitutes a promise for the future. The young men who come there,
the sons of this generation, will be the priests of tomorrow. In
addition: the seminary is a concrete reminder of the vocational nature
of life and the necessity of the ordained ministry for the existence of
the Christian community. On the other hand it is a weak sign:
because it requires a constant attention on the part of the particular
Church; it needs serious pastoral work for vocations in order to begin
each year with new candidates. And also the need to support it
economically can be a pedagogical tool for educating the people to pray
for all vocations. c) Pedagogical places of the faith
In addition to these special places which illustrate our vocational
nature, pedagogical places of vocations promotion are also
valuable; these are groups, movements, associations, and school its elf.
Beyond these different sociological configurations, especially at the
level of young people, it is necessary to appreciate their pedagogical
value as places in which people can be wisely helped to reach a true
maturity of faith. This can be effectively pursued if three
dimensions of the Christian experience are not ignored: the vocation of
each one, communion with the Church and mission with the Church.
d) The person of the formator Another pastoral pedagogical
need is being highlighted with particular insistence at this time: the
formation of educators. In fact, practically everywhere,
people recognise the weakness and problems of the pedagogical places of
the faith, which are being hard tested by the culture of individualism,
by spontaneous joining together, or by crises in institutions.
Yet, conversely, there is emerging, especially among young people, the
need for challenge, dialogue, points of reference. The signs of this are
many. There is need for masters of the spiritual life, of significant
figures, capable of evoking the mystery of God and disposed to listening
in order to help people to enter into a serious dialogue with the Lord.
Strong spiritual personalities are not only people particularly endowed
with charisma, rather they are the result of a formation that is
particularly attentive to the absolute primacy of the Spirit. In
caring for the educational figures of our communities, two elements
should be acknowledged: on the one hand it is a case of making explicit
and attentive the vocational educational conscience of all those already
called to work in the community with children and young people (priests,
religious and laity). On the other hand the educational
ministry of the woman is to be properly encouraged and formed, so
that, especially in regard to young women, she may be a figure of
reference and a wise guide. In fact women are widely present in the
Christian communities and the intuitive capacity of the "feminine
genius" and the vast experience of women in the educational field
(family, school, groups, community) are being recognised. The
contribution of women is to be held especially valuable, if not to say
decisive, in regard to the world of young women, which is not the same
as that of young men, because they need a more attentive and specific
reflection, particularly in the area of vocations. Perhaps this
too is part of the change characterising pastoral work for vocations.
While in the past female vocations also arose from spiritual fathers,
authentic guides of individuals and communities, today "female"
vocations also need references to female figures, personal and
communitarian, capable of concretely proposing models as well of life as
values. e) Organisations involved in pastoral work for
vocations In order to offer itself as a unitary and synthetic
perspective on general pastoral work, pastoral work for vocations must
first of all express within itself a synthesis and communion of charisms
and ministries. For some time now the Church has highlighted the
need for this co-ordination(90) which, thank God, has already borne much
fruit; parish organisations, diocesan and national vocations centres
have already been functioning for some years now with considerable
advantage. However this is not the case everywhere. The Congress
just celebrated, in certain cases, has lamented the absence or the
scarcity of these structures in some European nations,(91) and has voted
that, as soon as possible, they should be properly instituted or
appropriately planned. From even more places it has been observed
that, while national centres seem to guarantee a notable support of
constructive stimuli for pastoral work for vocations, diocesan centres
do not appear to be everywhere animated by the same will to work and
collaborate truly in favour of the vocations of all. There is a certain
general project of unified pastoral work which still has not become the
practice of the local Church, and seems in some way to get stuck in the
movement from general proposals to actual implementation in the reality
of the diocese or the parish. Here, in fact, individualistic, less
ecclesial perspectives and practices have not totally disappeared.(92)
Regarding diocesan and national centres, rather than repeat here what
has already been well said about their function, it seems necessary to
remember that it is not simply a question of practical organisation, as
much as one of coherence with a new spirit that must permeate pastoral
work for vocations in the Church and, particularly, in the Churches of
Europe. The crisis of vocations is also a crisis of communion in working
to increase vocations. Vocations will not arise where an authentically
ecclesial spirit is not lived. In addition to recommending a
renewal of commitment in this field and a closer collaboration between
national centres, diocesan centres and parish organisations, the
Congress and the present Document hope that these organisations might
take more to heart two questions: the promotion of an authentic
vocational culture in civil and ecclesial society, especially the civil,
and the formation of vocations educators-formators, the true and proper
central and strategic element of present day pastoral work for
vocations.(93) In addition, the Congress asks that serious
consideration be given to establishing, for Europe, an organisation or
supranational centre for pastoral work for vocations, as a concrete
sign and expression of communion and sharing, of co-ordination and
exchange of experiences and persons between the individual national
Churches,(94) while safeguarding the peculiarities of each one.
PART FOUR
PEDAGOGY OF VOCATIONS
"Did not our hearts burn within us...?" (Lk 24,
32)
This pedagogical section is developed within the Gospel,
following the example of the extraordinary vocational promoter-educator,
Jesus, and in view of a vocations promotion marked by precise
evangelical pedagogical attitudes: to sow, to accompany, to educate, to
form, to discern. We have arrived at the last section which,
in the logic of the document, should represent the
methodological-applicational part. In fact we began with the analysis of
the concrete situation, to then define the theological elements
supporting the subject of vocation, and then return to the concrete life
of our believing communities to outline the sense and the direction of
pastoral work for vocations. It remains now to look at the
pedagogical aspect of pastoral work for vocations.
Vocational crisis and educational crisis 30. Often in our
Churches the objectives and even the basic strategy are clear, but the
necessary steps for awakening an openness to vocation in our young
people remain somewhat undefined; and this because today, more than
before, the educational system is weak, both within and outwith the
Church: that system which, together with the definition of the objective
to be attained, must also provide the pedagogical paths leading there.
With its usual realism, the Instrumentum laboris also says this:
"In fact, we note the weakness of many pedagogical bodies (groups,
communities, oratories, schools and, above all, families)".(95) The
vocations crisis is certainly also a crisis of pedagogy and of
educational programmes. We will seek then, always beginning from
the Word of God, to highlight precisely this convergence between goal
and method, in the conviction that a good theology can normally be
translated into practice, become a pedagogy, can outline routes, with
the sincere desire to provide the various pastoral workers with an aid,
an instrument useful to all. The Gospel of vocation
31. Every encounter or dialogue in the Gospel has a vocational
significance: when Jesus walks the roads of Galilee He is always sent by
the Father to call man to salvation and reveal to him the Father's plan.
The Good News, the Gospel, is precisely this: the Father has called man
through the Son in the Spirit, He has called him not only to life, but
to redemption, and not only to a redemption merited by others, but to a
redemption that involves him first of all in person, making him
responsible for the salvation of others. In this salvation,
active and passive, received and shared, is contained the sense of every
vocation; is contained the very sense of the Church, as a community of
believers, saints and sinners, all "called" to participate in the same
gift and responsibility. This is the Gospel of vocation.
Pedagogy of vocation 32. Within this Gospel we search for
a corresponding pedagogy, which is that of Jesus, the authentic
pedagogy of vocation. This is the pedagogy that every vocations
promoter or evangeliser must know how to implement, in order to lead the
young person to recognise the Lord who calls, and to respond to Him.
If the point of reference of vocational pedagogy is the mystery of
Christ, the Son of God made man, there are many significant aspects and
dimensions in his "vocational" activity. Above all, Jesus is
presented to us in the Gospels much more as formator than as
promoter, precisely because He always works in strictest union with the
Father, who sows the seed of the Word and educates (leads
out from nothing), and with the Spirit who accompanies along the
path of sanctification. These aspects open up particular
perspectives to those who are involved in pastoral work for vocations
and are therefore themselves called to be not only vocations promoters,
but, even before this, to be sowers of the good seed of vocation,
and then accompaniers along the path that leads the heart to
"burn", educators in the faith and in listening to the God who
calls, formators of human and Christian attitudes of responding
to God's appeal;(96) and who are called, finally, to discern the
presence of the gift that comes from on high. These are the five
central characteristics of vocations ministry or the five
dimensions of the mystery of the call that, from God, arrives at
the individual through the mediation of a brother or sister, or
community. To sow 33. "A sower went out to
sow. And as he sowed, some seeds fell along the path, and the birds came
and devoured them. Other seeds fell on rocky ground, where they had not
much soil, and immediately they sprang up, since they had no depth of
soil, but when the sun rose they were scorched; and since they had no
root they withered away. Other seeds fell upon thorns, and the thorns
grew up and choked them. Other seeds fell on good soil and brought forth
grain, some a hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty" (Mt 13, 3-8).
This passage indicates, in some way, the first step along a pedagogical
path, the first attitude of the one would place himself as mediator
between the God who calls and the one who is called, and is inspired by
God's action. God the Father is the sower; the Church and the world are
the ground wherein He continues to sow His seed in abundance, with
absolute liberty and without any kind of exclusion, a liberty that
respects that of the ground where the seed falls. a) Two
liberties in dialogue The parable of the sower shows that the
Christian vocation is a dialogue between God and the human person. The
principle interlocutor is God, who calls whom He wills, when He wills
and how He wills "in virtue of his own purpose and grace" (2 Tim
1, 9); who calls everyone to salvation, without allowing Himself to be
limited by the dispositions of the recipient. But the liberty of God
meets the liberty of man in a mysterious and fascinating dialogue, made
up of words and silence, of messages and actions, of looks and gestures,
a liberty that is perfect — God's — and one that is imperfect — man's.
Vocation, therefore, is totally the action of God, but in a real way it
is also the action of individual people: the work and penetration of God
into the heart of human liberty, but also the effort and struggle of men
and women to be free to welcome the gift. Whoever accompanies a
brother or sister on the path of vocational discernment enters into the
mystery of liberty, and knows that he will be able to help only if he
respects that mystery. Even if, apparently, that must mean a small
result. Like the sower in the Gospel. b) The courage to sow
everywhere It is precisely this respect for both liberties
that signifies above all the courage to sow the good seed of the Gospel,
of the Lord's death and resurrection, of faith and, finally, of
following (sequela). This is the necessary condition; no pastoral work
for vocations can be done if there is not this courage. We have to sow
everywhere, in the heart of everyone, without preference or
exception. If every human being is a creature of God, he is also the
bearer of a gift, of a particular vocation which is waiting to be
recognised. Often in the Church we lament the shortage of
vocational responses and we do not recognise that, just as often, the
proposal is made within a limited circle of people, and probably
immediately withdrawn after a first refusal. It is worthwhile here
recalling the words of Paul VI: "Let nobody be ignorant, through our
fault, of what he or she should know in order to alter his or her life
in a different and better direction".(97) And yet how many young people
have never received any Christian proposal regarding their life and
future! It is excellent to observe the sower of the parable in
the abundant gesture of his hand that sows "everywhere"; it is moving to
recognise in this icon the heart of God the Father. It is the image of
God that sows in the heart of every living person a plan of
salvation; or if we wish, it is the image of the "waste" of God's
generosity, that is poured out on all because He wants to save all and
call them to Himself. It is this same image of the Father that is
evident in the action of Jesus, who calls sinners to Himself, chooses to
build His Church with people who appear to be inappropriate for this
mission, knows no barriers and makes no difference between people.
It is in reflecting this image that the vocational worker, in turn,
proclaims, proposes, arouses, with identical generosity; and it is
precisely the certainty of the seed placed by the Father in the heart of
every creature, that gives the strength to go everywhere and sow the
good seed of vocations, of not remaining within the usual limits but of
confronting new environments, in order to attempt different approaches
and address ourselves to every person. c) Sowing at the right
time To scatter the good seed of vocation at the most
promising moment is part of the wisdom of the sower. This does not mean
hurrying the times of choice or pretending that a pre-adolescent has the
same maturity to make decisions as has a young person; rather it means
understanding and respecting the vocational sense of the human life.
Every season of life has a vocational significance, beginning from
the moment when the child opens himself to life and needs to understand
its meaning, and tries to question himself on his role in it. Not asking
the question at the right time could prevent the sprouting of the seed:
"pastoral experience shows that the first manifestation of a vocation
arises, in the majority of cases, in childhood and adolescence.
Therefore it seems important to recover or propose formulas that could
encourage, support and accompany this first vocational
manifestation".(98) Without, however, being limited to this. Every
person has his own rhythms and time for maturing. The important thing is
that he have a good sower at his side. d) The smallest of all
the seeds For reasons already known to us the job of a
"vocational sower" is certainly not a simple one nowadays: there is,
properly speaking, no vocational culture; the prevalent anthropological
model seems to be that of the "man without vocation"; the social context
is ethically neutral and without hope or projectual models. All these
elements seem to come together to weaken the vocational proposition and
allow us, perhaps, to apply to it what Jesus said regarding the Kingdom
of God (cf Mt 13, 31ff.): the seed of a vocation is like a
mustard seed that, when it is sown, or when it is proposed or indicated
as being present, is the smallest of all the seeds; it does not often
stir up any immediate agreement; rather it is negated or denied; and,
suffocated by other expectations and projects, it is not taken
seriously; or it is regarded with suspicion and diffidence, as if it
were a seed of unhappiness. And then the young person refuses,
declares himself not to be interested, has already planned his future
(or others have planned it for him); or perhaps he is pleased about it
and interested, but he is not so sure, and then it is too difficult and
he is afraid... There is nothing strange or absurd in this
fearful and negative reaction; the Lord has already said this. The seed
of vocation is the smallest of all the seeds, it is weak and does not
force itself, precisely because it is the expression of the liberty of
God who intends to respect to the utmost the liberty of each individual.
And so the one guiding the person's journey also needs liberty: a
liberty of heart that allows one to keep going in the face of an initial
refusal or disinterest. Jesus says, still in the parable of the
mustard seed, that "when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs" (Mt
13, 32); therefore it is a seed with its own strength, even if it is not
immediately evident and disruptive and, in addition, needs much care in
order to mature. There is a sort of elementary secret that is part of
common wisdom: in order to guarantee some kind of harvest in the right
season, we have to take care of everything, from the ground to the seed;
to pay attention to everything, from what encourages growth to what
impedes it. Even against the unfathomable bad weather of the seasons. In
the field of vocations something similar happens. The sowing is only the
first step, that must be followed by other generous care so that the two
liberties may enter into the mystery of the vocational dialogue.
To accompany 34. "That very day two of them were going to
a village named Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem, and talking
with each other about all these things that had happened. While they
were talking and discussing together, Jesus himself drew near and went
with them. But their eyes were kept from recognising him" (Lk 24,
13-16). In order to describe the pedagogical expressions of
accompanying, educating and forming, we are choosing the story of the
two disciples on the road to Emmaus. It is a significant passage,
because, in addition to the wisdom of its content and the pedagogical
method followed by Jesus, it seems to us that, in the two disciples, it
is possible to see the image of so many young people today, a little
saddened and betrayed, who seem to have lost the desire to look for
their vocation. The first step in this journey is being
present: the sower, or the one who has awakened in the young person
the awareness of the seed sown in his heart now becomes accompanier.
In the theological part of the present reflection the ministry of
accompaniment was indicated as typical of the Spirit; in fact it is the
Spirit of the Father and the Son who remains beside the person to remind
him of the Word of the Master; it is also the Spirit who dwells in the
person to stir up in him the awareness of being a child of the Father.
The Spirit therefore is the model to which the older brother or sister
must aspire who accompanies a younger brother or sister in the search.
a) Vocational itinerary Having defined the pastoral
vocational itinerary, we can now ask: what is a vocational itinerary on
the pedagogical level? The pedagogical vocational
itinerary is a journey towards maturity in the faith, like a
pilgrimage towards the adult state of a believing being, called
to decide about himself and his life in freedom and responsibility,
according to the truth of the mysterious project willed by God
for him. This journey proceeds in stages in the company of a
bigger brother or sister in the faith and in discipleship, who
knows the road, the voice and the steps of God, who helps to recognise
the Lord who calls and to discern the way to travel towards God and
respond to Him. A vocational itinerary, then, is above all a
journey with Him, the Lord of life, that "Jesus in person", as Saint
Luke notes with precision, who comes down to man's path, makes the same
journey and enters into history. But the eyes of flesh often cannot
recognise Him; and then human progress remains solitary and the
discourse useless, while the search risks perpetuating itself in an
interminable and at times narcissistic procession of experiences, even
vocational, without any final decision. Perhaps the first task of the
vocational accompanier is that of indicating the presence of Another,
or of admitting the relative nature of his closeness or his
accompaniment, in order to mediate that presence, or an itinerary
towards the discovery of the God who calls and comes close to every
person. Like the two men of Emmaus, or like Samuel during the
night, our young people often do not have eyes to see or ears to hear He
who walks beside them and, with insistence and delicacy at the same
time, speaks their name. The brother or sister who accompanies is the
sign of that insistence and delicacy; his task is to help them to
recognise the source of the mysterious voice; not to speak of himself,
but to proclaim Another who is also present; in the same way as did John
the Baptist. The ministry of vocational accompaniment is a humble
ministry, of that calm and intelligent humility which is born from
freedom in the Spirit, and expresses itself "with the courage of
listening to love and of dialogue". Thanks to this liberty, the voice of
He who calls rings out with greater clarity and strength. And the young
person finds himself before God, he discovers with surprise that it is
the Eternal One who walks beside him in time, and calls him to a
definitive choice! b) Wells of living water "Jesus,
wearied as he was with his journey, sat down beside the well" (Jn
4, 6); this is the beginning of what we can consider an unedited
vocational conversation: Jesus' meeting with the Samaritan woman. The
woman, in fact, by means of this encounter, maps out an itinerary
towards the discovery of herself and the Messiah, immediately becoming,
in some way, His proclaimer. Jesus' sovereign liberty in seeking
His messengers everywhere and in everyone also shines out from
this passage; but He who is man's way to the Father also takes excellent
care to meet the person in her everyday life, or where her expectations
are most evident and intense. And how much we can deduce from the
symbolic image of the "well". In ancient Jewish society, wells were the
source of life, a basic condition for survival of a people always short
of water; and it is precisely around this symbol, water for and
of life, that Jesus constructs His approach to the woman with finest
pedagogy. To accompany a young person means knowing how to
identify the "wells" of today; all of those places and moments, those
provocations and expectations, where, sooner or later, all young people
must pass with their empty jars, with their unspoken questions, with
their obstinate, often only apparent, self-sufficiency, with their
deep-seated desire for authenticity and the future. Pastoral work
for vocations cannot follow a policy of wait and see but should be
active on the part of the one seeking and should not give up until it
has found, and found at the right place or well where the young person
will plan his life and future. The vocational accompanier must be
"intelligent", from this point of view, one who does not necessarily
impose his own questions, but begins from those, of whatever type, of
the young person; or he is capable — if necessary — of "stirring up and
uncovering the vocational question that dwells in the heart of every
young person, but waits to be discovered by real vocational
formators".(99) c) Sharing and con-vocation To
accompany someone's vocation means, above all, to share: one's
faith, one's experience of God, the difficulties of the search, to the
point of also sharing one's vocation: not in order to impose it,
obviously, but to profess the beauty of a life lived according to God's
project. The manner of communicating typical of vocational
accompaniment is not didactic or exhortational, and neither is it
friendly, on one side, nor is it that of the spiritual director on the
other (understood as someone who imparts a precise direction to the life
of another), but it is in the manner of the confessio fidei.
One involved in vocational accompaniment gives witness to his own
choice, or rather, his own being chosen by God, he recounts — not
necessarily with words — his own vocational journey and the continual
discovery of his own identity in the vocational charism, and therefore
recounts also or allows to be understood the difficulties, the newness,
the risk, the surprise, the beauty. This gives rise to a
vocational catechesis that is person to person, heart to heart, rich in
humanity and originality, in passion and ability to convince, a wise and
experiential vocations promotion. A little like the experience of Jesus'
first disciples who "came and saw where he was staying; and they stayed
with him that day" (Jn 1, 39); and this was obviously a deeply
touching experience if John, after many years, could remember that "it
was about the tenth hour". Vocations promotion is done only
through direct contact, because the heart is full and the
experience of its beauty continues to charm. Young people are very
interested in the witness of life of people who are already on a
spiritual journey. Priests and religious must have the courage to offer
concrete signs in their spiritual journey. Hence it is important to
spend time with young people, to walk on their level, where they find
themselves, to listen to them and answer the questions that arise in the
encounter". (100) Precisely because of this, the one who
accompanies a vocation is also enthusiastic about his own vocation and
the possibility of transmitting it to others; he is not only a convinced
witness but a content witness, and therefore convincing and credible.
Only in this way can the message reach the spiritual totality of the
person, heart-mind-will, proposing something that is
true-beautiful-good. This is the sense of con-vocation:
no-one can pass close to someone proclaiming such "good news" and not be
touched, "totally" called, at every level of his personality, and
continually called, by God, certainly; but also by so many people,
ideals, new situations, different provocations, human mediations of the
divine call. And so the vocational sign could be better
perceived. To educate 35. "And he said to
them, 'What is this conversation which you are holding with each other
as you walk?' And they stood still, looking sad. Then one of them, named
Cleopas, answered him, 'Are you the only visitor to Jerusalem who does
not know the things that have happened there in these days?' And he said
to them, 'What things?' And they said to him, "Concerning Jesus of
Nazareth, who was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all
the people...' And he said to them, 'O foolish men, and slow of heart to
believe all that the prophets have spoken! Was it not necessary that the
Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory?' And
beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them in all
the scriptures the things concerning himself. So they drew near to the
village to which they were going. He appeared to be going further, but
they constrained him, saying, 'Stay with us, for it is toward evening
and the day is now far spent'. So he went in to stay with them" (Lk
24, 17-29). After the sowing, on the journey of accompaniment, it
is a question of educating the young person. Educating in the
etymological sense of the word, as a drawing out (e-ducere) from
him his truth, what he has in his heart, even what he does not know,
especially about himself: weaknesses and aspirations, to encourage the
freedom of the vocational response. a) Educating to knowledge
of self Jesus draws near to the two and asks them what they
are talking about. He knows, but he wants them both to open themselves
to him and, by verbalising their sadness and deluded hopes, help them to
be aware of their problem and the real reason for their anxiety. In this
way they are practically obliged to review their recent history,
bringing to light the true reason for their sadness. "We had
hoped..."; the story appears to be going in a different direction from
what they had expected. In reality they had had all the significant
experiences in their contact with Jesus, "mighty in deed and word"; but
it is as if this faith journey had been unexpectedly interrupted in the
face of the incomprehensible event of the passion and death of He who
should have liberated Israel. "We had hoped, but..."; how can we
not recognise in this unfinished story the plight of so many young
people who seem interested in vocational dialogue, allow themselves to
be provoked and show a good predisposition, but then stop when they have
to make a choice? Jesus makes the two admit the discrepancy between
their hopes and God's plan as it is concretised in Jesus; between their
way of understanding the Messiah and his death on the cross, between
their so very human expectations and interests and the sense of a
salvation that comes from on high. In the same way it is
important and decisive to help young people to uncover the basic
misunderstanding: the all too worldly and me-centred interpretation of
life, which makes the vocational choice difficult or practically
impossible, or makes the demands of the call seem excessive, as if God's
plan were inimical to the person's need for happiness. How many
young people have not welcomed the call not because they are ungenerous
or indifferent, but simply because they are not helped to know
themselves, to discover the ambivalent and pagan roots of certain
mental and affective plans; and because they are not helped to free
themselves from their fears and defence mechanisms, conscious and
unconscious, in facing up to their vocation. How many vocations have
been cut short because of this educational emptiness. Above all,
educating means bringing out the reality of the I, just as it is, if we
then want to bring it to what it should be: sincerity is a fundamental
necessity for attaining the truth, but in every case an external help is
needed in order to see well the interior. The one who educates about
vocation, then, must know the depths of the human heart in order to
accompany the young person in the building up of the real I. b)
Educating to the mystery And here is the paradox. When the
young person is led to the depths of himself, and can also see his own
weaknesses and fears, he has the sensation of understanding better the
reason for some of his attitudes and reactions and, at the same time,
understands more and more the reality of mystery as the key to life
and his own person. The young person must accept that he
does not know, that he cannot know completely. His life is
not totally in his own hands, because life is a mystery and, on
the other hand, the mystery is life; or rather, the mystery is
that part of the I that has not yet been discovered, not yet lived and
which waits to be deciphered and realised; mystery is that personal
reality that must still grow, rich in life and in existential
possibilities still intact, it is the germinative part of the I.
And then accepting the mystery is a sign of intelligence, of interior
liberty, of desire for the future and newness, of refusing a conception
of life that is repetitive and passive, boring and banal. This is why we
said at the beginning that pastoral work for vocations must be
mystagogic and, therefore, begin from the mystery of God to lead to the
mystery of man. The loss of the sense of mystery is one of the
greatest causes of the vocations crisis. At the same time the
category of mystery is becoming a propaedeutic category of the faith. It
is possible, and in certain cases natural, that at this point the young
person feels growing within him, like a need for revelation, the
desire that the Author of life Himself reveals the meaning of and the
place that he has to occupy in it. Who else, except the Father, can
carry out this uncovering? Moreover, it is not important that the
young person immediately discover (or that the guide immediately
perceives) the path he has to follow: what is important is that he
discovers and decides in every case to locate outside of himself,
in God the Father, the search for the foundation of his existence. An
authentic vocations programme always and everywhere leads to the
discovery of the fatherhood and motherhood of God! c)
Educating to read life In the Gospel Jesus invites the two
men on the road to Emmaus in some way to go back to life, to those
events that caused their sadness, by means of a wise method of reading:
capable not only of reconstructing the events around a central meaning,
but of deciphering, in the mysterious fabric of human existence, the
outline of a divine plan. This method could be called
genetic-historical because it searches out and finds in one's own
biography the steps and traces of God's passage, and therefore also His
voice that calls. This method:
— is at the same time deductive and inductive, or
historical-biblical: it begins, at the same time, from revealed
truth and historical reality, and thus encourages the uninterrupted
dialogue between subjective lived events (the facts recited by the two
disciples) and reference to the Word ("And beginning with Moses and all
the prophets, he interpreted to them in all the scriptures the things
concerning himself", Lk 24, 27); — indicates in the
normative nature of the Word and in the centrality of the Paschal
Mystery of Christ who died and rose a precise point of
interpretation for existential events, without rejecting any event,
especially the most difficult and the saddest ("Was it not necessary
that the Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory?",
Lk 24, 26). In this way the reading of life becomes a highly
spiritual operation, not only psychological, because it leads us to
recognise in it the illuminating and mysterious presence of God and His
Word. (101) And, within this mystery, it allows the seed of a vocation
to be discerned little by little; the seed that the Father-sower sowed
in the furrows of life. That seed, even though small, now begins to be
visible and grow. d) Educating to in-vocation If
the reading of life is a spiritual operation, it necessarily leads the
person not only to recognise his need of revelation, but to celebrate
it, with prayer of invocation. Educating means e-voking
the truth of the I. This evocation arises precisely from the praying
invocation, from a prayer that is more prayer of trust than of request,
prayer as surprise and gratitude; but also as struggle and tension, as
an "excavation" of one's own ambitions in order to welcome expectations,
questions, desires from the Other: from the Father who, in the Son, can
speak to the one who is searching for the way to follow. But then
prayer becomes the place of vocational discernment, of education
for listening to the God who calls, because every vocation finds
its origins in patient and trustful prayer of invocation; sustained not
under pretence of an immediate response, but by the certainty or hope
that invocation must be welcomed, and, will in time, lead the one
invoking to the discovery of his vocation. In the Emmaus story
all of this is revealed with an essential expression, perhaps the most
beautiful prayer ever prayed by the human heart: "Stay with us, for it
is toward evening and the day is now far spent" (Lk 24, 29). It
is the supplication of one who knows that without the Lord darkness
descends on life, without His Word there is the obscurity of
misunderstanding or of confusion of identity; life appears to be without
sense and vocation. It is the invocation of one who, perhaps, has not
yet discovered his path, but perceives that standing with Him, he will
find himself again, because only He has the "words of eternal life" (Jn
6, 67-68). This type of in-voking prayer does not come
spontaneously, but needs a long apprenticeship; and one does not learn
it by oneself, but with the help of one who has learned to listen to the
silences of God. Not anyone can teach this prayer, but only one who is
faithful to his vocation. And then, if prayer is the natural path
of vocational searching, today as yesterday and before, we need
vocational educators who pray, who teach to pray, who educate to
invocation. To form 36. "When he was at
table with them, he took the bread and blessed, and broke it, and gave
it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognised him; and he
vanished out of their sight. They said to each other, 'Did not our
hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened
to us the scriptures?'" (Lk 24, 30-32). Formation is in
some way the culmination of the pedagogical process, because it is the
moment in which the young person is proposed with a form, a way
of being, in which he himself recognises his identity, his
vocation, his norm. The Son is the image of the Father, the
formator of men and women, because He represents the image according to
which the Father has created them. Therefore He invites those whom He
calls to have His same sentiments and to share His life, to have His
"form". He is, at the same time, both formator and form. The
vocational formator is such insofar as he is the mediator of this divine
action, and places himself beside the young person to help him
"recognise" in it his call, and to allow himself to be formed by it.
a) Recognition of Jesus The decisive moment in the Emmaus
story is undoubtedly when Jesus takes the bread, breaks it and gives it
to them: "And their eyes were opened and they recognised him". There is
here a series of "recognitions" related to each other. First of
all the two recognise Jesus, they discover the true identity of
the traveller who has joined them, precisely because only He could make
this gesture, as the two well knew. In the vocational perspective
this highlights the importance of making strong gestures, unequivocal
signs, high proposals, projects of total commitment. (102) The
young person needs to be stimulated by lofty ideals, considering
something which goes beyond him and is beyond his capacities, because of
which it is worthwhile giving one's life. Psychological analysis also
reminds us of this: to ask of a young person something that is less than
his possibilities, means offending his dignity and impeding his full
self-realisation; in a more positive way, the young person should be
asked for the best he can give so that he may become and be himself.
And if Jesus is recognised "in the breaking of the bread", the
Eucharistic dimension must underlie every vocational programme: as the
typical "place" of vocational encouragement, as the mystery that speaks
the general sense of human existence, as the final objective of every
pastoral work for vocations that would be Christian. b)
Recognition of the truth of life At this point in an
authentic process of formation for the choice of vocation there comes a
second "recognition": the recognition-discovery, within the
Eucharistic sign, of the meaning of life. If the Eucharist is the
sacrifice of Christ who saves humanity, and if this sacrifice is His
body broken and blood outpoured for the salvation of humanity, then the
life of the believer, too, is called to model itself on the same
correlation of meanings: life, too, is a good received that tends, by
its very nature, to become a good given, like the life of the Word.
This is the truth of life, of every life. On the level of
vocations, the consequences are clear. If there is a gift at the
beginning of a person's existence, that constitutes him in being, then
life has its path marked out: if it is a gift, it will be fully
itself only if it is realised in the perspective of self-giving; it will
be happy on condition that it respects its own nature. It can make
whatever choice it wishes, but always in the logic of the gift,
otherwise it will become a being in contradiction with itself, a
"monstrous" reality; it will be free to decide its specific orientation,
but it will not be free to reflect on itself outwith the logic of the
gift. The whole of pastoral work for vocations is constructed
on this elementary catechesis of the meaning of life. If this
anthropological truth is accepted, then we can make any vocational
proposal. Then even the vocation to the ordained ministry or to
religious or secular consecration, with its weight of mystery and
mortification, becomes the full realisation of the human and of the gift
which every person has and is in the depths of himself.
c) Vocation as thankfulness If it is in the Eucharistic
gesture that the two on the road to Emmaus "recognise" the Lord, and
every believer the meaning of life, then vocation is born of "thankfulness".
It is born of the fertile soil of gratitude, because vocation is a
response, not an initiative of the individual: it is to be chosen,
not to choose. It is precisely to this interior attitude of
gratitude that the reading of one's past life should lead. The discovery
of having received, in an unmerited and generous way, must "force" the
young person psychologically to consider the offering of self, in the
vocational option, as an inevitable consequence, as a certainly free
act, because it is determined by love; but in a certain sense also
compulsory, because in the face of the love received from God he
feels that he can do no less than give himself. It is beautiful and
totally logical that it be so; in itself, it is nothing extraordinary.
Pastoral work for vocations is aimed at preparing this logic of
thankfulness-gratitude; it is much healthier and more convincing, on
the human level, and more theologically founded than the so-called
"logic of the hero", of the one who has not sufficiently matured the
awareness of having received and feels himself to be the author of the
gift and the choice. This logic has taken very little of the sensitivity
of modern young people, because it subverts the truth of life as a gift
received that tends naturally to become a good given. It
is the Gospel wisdom of "You received without pay, give without pay" (Mt
10, 8) (103) addressed by Jesus to the disciples-proclaimers of His
word, which speaks the truth about every human being: no-one
could not recognise himself in it. It is from this truth that
life derives the form that it is then called to assume, or it is
from this unique figure of the faith that are then born the different
vocational configurations of the same faith. It becomes
possible, then, even to request somewhat strong and radical choices,
such as a call to special consecration, to the priesthood and
consecrated life. Therefore God's proposal, because of how difficult and
excellent it may seem (and is in reality), also becomes an unexpected
promotion of authentic human aspirations and guarantees the greatest
happiness. The happiness, full of thanksgiving, that Mary sings in the
"Magnificat". d) Recognition of Jesus and self-recognition of
the disciple The eyes of the disciples of Emmaus are opened
at the Eucharistic gesture of Jesus. It is in the face of this
gesture that Cleopas and his companion perceive also the meaning of
their journey, as a journey not only towards the recognition of Jesus,
but also towards their own recognition: "Did not our hearts burn
within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the
scriptures?" (Lk 24, 32). There is not simply a commotion
within the pilgrims who listen to the explanation of the Master, but the
sensation that His life, His Eucharist, His death and resurrection, His
mystery will always be more than their own life, eucharist, death,
mystery. In the heart that burns there is the discovery of
vocation and the history of every vocation. Always related to an
experience of God, in whom the person also discovers himself and his own
identity. Forming for the vocational choice means showing more
and more the connection between experience of God and discovery of self,
between theophany and self-identity. The affirmation of the
Instrumentum laboris is very true: "the recognition of Him as Lord
of life and history, brings with it the self-recognition of the
disciple". (104) And when the act of faith manages to connect the
"Christological recognition" with the "anthropological
self-recognition", then the seed of the vocation is already mature,
indeed, it is flourishing. To discern 37.
"And they rose that same hour and returned to Jerusalem; and they found
the eleven gathered together and those who were with them, who said:
'The Lord has risen indeed, and has appeared to Simon!' Then they told
what had happened on the road, and how he was known to them in the
breaking of the bread" (Lk 24, 33-35). So that the journey
to Emmaus might become a vocational itinerary a conclusive passage is
needed after the series of "recognitions" and "self-recognitions": the
effective choice of the young person, to which corresponds, on the
part of the one who has accompanied him along the vocational path, the
process of discernment. A discernment that will certainly not
finish during the time of vocational orientation, but must continue
until a definitive decision is reached, "for the whole of one's life".
(105) a) The effective choice of the one called
Decision making ability In the Gospel passage that has guided
our reflection the choice is well expressed at verse 33: "And they rose
at that same hour..." The indication about the time ("at that
same hour") clearly explains the determination of the two, provoked by
the word and person of Jesus, by the meeting with Him, and courageously
put into action by a choice that is a break with what they were or did
before, and indicates newness of life. It is precisely this
decision that is often lacking in young people today. For this
reason, with a view to "helping young people to overcome indecision in
the face of definite commitments, it would seem useful to prepare them
progressively for assuming personal responsibilities, (...), to entrust
them with tasks appropriate to their abilities and age, (...), to
encourage a gradual education in the small, daily choices regarding
values (gratuitousness, constancy, moderation, honesty...)". (106)
On the other hand, it should be remembered that very often these and
other fears and indecision signal weakness not only of the psychological
make-up of the person, but also of the spiritual experience and,
particularly, of the experience of vocation as a choice that comes from
God. When this certainty is lacking the subject inevitably trusts
in himself and his own resources; and when he has realised their
precarious nature it is no wonder that he allows himself to be overcome
by the fear of making a definitive decision. The inability to
make decisions is not necessarily characteristic of the present
generation of young people: it is often the consequence of vocational
accompaniment that has not sufficiently underlined the primacy of God in
the choice, or that has not prepared people to allow themselves to be
chosen by Him. (107) "Return home" The choice of
vocation indicates newness of life, but in reality it is also the sign
of a recovery of one's own identity, almost a "return home", to the
roots of the I. In the Emmaus story it is symbolised by the expression:
"and (they) returned to Jerusalem". It is very important, in the
preparation for the choice of vocation, to reaffirm the idea that it
represents the condition necessary for being oneself and realising
oneself according to that singular project that can only give happiness.
Too many young people still think the opposite about the Christian
vocation, they look at it with diffidence and fear that it cannot make
them happy; but they then end up being unhappy like the sad young man of
the Gospel (cf Mk 10, 22). How many times have the
attitudes of adults, parents included, contributed to creating a
negative image of a vocation, especially to the priesthood and to the
consecrated life, even creating obstacles to its realisation and
discouraging those who feel themselves called to it! (108)
However this problem will not be resolved with a banal propaganda
against it, which would emphasise the positive, satisfying aspects of a
vocation, but most of all by underlining the idea that a vocation is
God's reflection on the creature, it is the name He gives to the person.
Discovering and responding to one's vocation as a believer means finding
that rock on which one's name is written (cf Apoc 2, 17-18), or
returning to the springs of the I. Personal witness
At Jerusalem the two "found the eleven gathered together and those who
were with them, who said: 'The Lord has risen indeed, and has appeared
to Simon!' Then they told what had happened on the road, and how he was
known to them in the breaking of the bread" (Lk 24, 33-35).
The most significant element of this passage, in relation to the
vocational choice, is the witness of the two, a particular witness,
because it comes in a community context and has a precise vocational
meaning. In fact when the two arrive the assembly is proclaiming
its faith with a formula ("The Lord has risen indeed, and has appeared
to Simon") which we know to be among the most ancient testimonies to
objective faith. Cleopas and his companion add, in some way, their own
subjective experience, which confirms what the community was
proclaiming, and confirms too their own believing and vocational
journey. It is as if that testimony were the first fruit of the
vocation discovered and re-found, which immediately, as is the nature of
a Christian vocation, is put to the service of the ecclesial community.
Accordingly we recall what has already been said regarding the
relationship between objective ecclesial itineraries and subjective
personal itineraries, in a relationship of synergy and complementarity:
the witness of the individual helps the faith of the Church to grow, the
faith and the witness of the Church supports and encourages the
vocational choice of the individual. b) Discernment by the
guide In the post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis John Paul II affirms that: "Knowledge of the nature and
mission of the ministerial priesthood is an essential presupposition,
and at the same time the surest guide and incentive towards the
development of pastoral activities in the Church for fostering and
discerning vocations to the priesthood and training those called to the
ordained ministry". (109) The same could be said, by analogy,
when dealing with the discernment of any vocation to the consecrated
life. An essential presupposition for discerning these vocations is,
first and foremost, to be aware of the nature and mission of that state
of life in the Church. (110) This presupposition comes directly
from the certainty that it is God who calls, and therefore from the
search for those signals that indicate the presence of the divine call.
There now follow some criteria for discernment, distinguishable in four
areas. Openness to the mystery If being closed to
the mystery, a characteristic of certain modern mind-sets, inhibits any
vocational openness, then its opposite, openness to the mystery,
is not only a positive condition for the discovery of one's own
vocation, but also indicates a healthy vocational option. a)
Authentic subjective vocational certainty makes space for the mystery
and the sensation that one's decision, even if firm, must remain open to
a continual investigation of the mystery itself. Certainty which
is not authentic, on the other hand, is not only weak and incapable of
encouraging a decision, but is even the opposite, i.e. the pretence of
having already understood everything, of having exhausted the depths of
the personal mystery, a pretence that can only create inflexibility and
a certainty that is often betrayed by later life. b) The
typically vocational attitude is the expression of the virtue of
prudence, more than ostentatious personal ability. Precisely for
this reason the sureness of this reading of one's own future is that of
hope and entrusting which arise from having faith in Another, in
whom one can trust; it is not deduced from the guarantee of one's own
abilities perceived as responding to the demands of the role chosen.
c) Another good vocational indication are the capacities for
welcoming and integrating those opposed polarities which constitute
the natural dialectic of the I and human life. For example, a young
person possesses this capacity who is sufficiently aware of his positive
and negative aspects, of his ideals and contradictions, of the healthy
part and the less healthy part of his own vocational project, and who
does not presume nor despair in the face of his negative aspects.
d) The young person is well familiar with the mystery of life as the
place for perceiving a presence and an appeal who discovers the signs of
his call by God not only in extraordinary events, but in his history;
in the events that he has learned to read as a believer, in his
questions, anxieties and aspirations. e) Also in this
category of openness to the mystery there is another fundamental
characteristic of the authentic call: that of gratitude. A
vocation is born of the fertile soil of gratitude; and is interpreted
with a slant of generosity and radicality, precisely because it is born
of the awareness of the love received. Identity in the
vocation The second order of criteria rotate around the
concept of "identity". In fact the vocational option indicates and
implies precisely the definition of one's own identity; it is the choice
and realisation of the ideal I, rather than the actual I, and must bring
the person to have a substantially positive and stable sense of his own
I. a) The first condition is that the person shows himself
capable of cutting himself off from the logic of identification at the
corporeal level (= the body as the source of positive identity) and
the psychological level (= one's own abilities as the only and
pre-eminent guarantee of self-regard), and discover instead the radical
positivity related in a stable way to being, received as a gift from God
(this is the ontological level), rather than to the precarious
position of having or appearing. The Christian vocation is what brings
this positivity to fulfilment, realising to the greatest extent the
possibilities of the subject, but according to a project which regularly
surpasses him, because it is thought out by God. b)
"Vocation" fundamentally means "call": therefore there is an external
subject, an objective appeal, and an interior openness to letting
oneself be called and recognising oneself in a model that the one called
did not create. c) The fundamental criterion about the
motivation or the modality of the vocational choice is that of
totality (or the law of totality); that is that the decision be an
expression of a total involvement of the psychological functions
(heart-mind-will), and be a decision that is at the same time
mental-ethical-emotional. d) More particularly, there is
vocational maturity when the vocation is lived and interpreted as
a gift, but also as a demanding call: to be lived for others, not only
for one's own perfection, and with others, in the Church, mother of all
vocations, in a specific "sequela Christi". A vocational
project rich in believing memory The third area on which the
one discerning a vocation should concentrate attention is that related
to the quality of the relationship between past and present, between
memory and project. a) Above all it is important that the
young person be substantially reconciled with his past: with the
inevitable negative aspects, of whatever kind, that are part of it, and
also with the positive, that he should be able to recognise with
gratitude; reconciled also with the significant figures of his past,
with their richness and weakness. b) Next, attention
should be given to the type of memory that the young person has
of his history, such as the interpretation he gives to his own life: as
a grace or a lament? Does he consciously or unconsciously feel that life
owes him, and therefore is still waiting to receive, or is he open to
giving? The young person's attitude to more or less serious
traumas from his past is particularly significant. Planning to
consecrate oneself to God means in every case re-taking possession
of the life that you plan to give, in all its aspects; to try to
integrate the less positive aspects, recognising them with
realism and assuming a responsible attitude, and not simply feeling
sorry for oneself in their regard. The "responsible" young person is the
one who is dedicated to assuming an active and creative attitude
when faced with a negative event, or who seeks to benefit in an
intelligent way from a personal negative experience. Much
attention should be paid to vocations that are born of sufferings,
delusions, or various incidents that are not yet well integrated. In
this case a more attentive discernment is necessary, even making use of
specialists so as not to lay impossible burdens on weak shoulders.
Vocational docibilitas The last phase of the vocational
itinerary is that of decision. In reference to this phase the criteria
of vocational maturity would seem to be the following. a)
The fundamental requirement is the person's level of docibilitas,
or rather the interior freedom to let himself be guided by a bigger
brother or sister; in particular in the strategic phases of
re-elaboration and re-appropriation of one's own past, especially the
most problematic, and the subsequent liberty to learn and to know how to
change. b) The requirement of docibilitas is basically the
requirement of being young, not so much as a biographical
quality, as more a global existential attitude. It is important that
whoever asks to enter seminary or the consecrated life be truly "young",
with the virtues and vulnerabilities typical of that time of life, with
the will to do and the desire to give his utmost, able to socialise and
appreciate the beauty of life, conscious of his own defects and his own
potential, aware of the gift of having been chosen. c) An
area particularly worthy of attention, today more than ever, is the
affective-sexual area. (111) It is important that the young person
shows himself able to acquire the two certainties that make the person
affectively free: the certainty that comes from the experience of
having already been loved and the always experiential certainty of
knowing how to love. In concrete, the young person must show that
human equilibrium that allows him to know how to stand on his own two
feet, he must possess that security and autonomy that will facilitate
his social interaction and cordial friendship, and that sense of
responsibility that lets him live the same social interaction as an
adult, free to give and receive. d) Regarding
inconsistencies in the affective-sexual area, a prudent discernment
must take account of the centrality of this area in the general
evolution of the young person and in present day culture (or
subculture). It is not strange, nor is it rare that the young person
exhibit certain weaknesses in this area. Under what conditions
can we prudently welcome the vocational request of young people with
this kind of problem? The condition is that there also be present these
three requirements: 1° that the young person be conscious of the
root of his problem, which often is not sexual in origin. 2°
The second condition is that the young person feel his weakness as
something extraneous to his own personality, something that he does not
want and that jars with his ideal, and against which he will struggle
with his whole being. 3° It is also important to verify whether
the subject is able to control these weaknesses, with a view to
overcoming them, either so that in fact it happens less and less, or so
that these inclinations will less and less disturb his life (also his
psychological state) and allow him to carry out his normal duties
without creating excessive tension nor unduly occupying his attention.
(112) These three criteria must all be present to permit a positive
discernment. e) Finally, vocational maturity is decided by an
essential element that truly makes sense of all: the act of faith.
The authentic vocational option is to all effects the expression of
believing adhesion, and the more genuine it is, the more it is part of
and conclusion to a journey of formation towards maturity of faith. The
act of faith, within a logic that makes space for the mystery, is
precisely that central point that holds together the sometimes opposed
polarities of life, continuously drawn between the certainty of the call
and the consciousness of one's own unsuitability, between the sensation
of losing oneself and finding oneself, between the greatness of the
aspirations and the weight of one's own limitations, between grace and
nature, between the God who calls and the individual who responds. The
young person who has truly been called must show the solidity of the act
of belief while at the same time maintaining these polarities.
CONCLUSION
Towards the Jubilee 38. This document
is addressed to the Churches of Europe at time in which the People of
God is preparing to celebrate a time of grace and mercy, of conversion
and renewal in the Jubilee of the year two thousand. The Congress on
vocations, too, is part of this journey of preparation and in some way
contributes to guiding it in two directions. The first is an
invitation to conversion. The vocations crisis that we have seen
and are still living must encourage us to reflect also on our own
responsibility, as believers and people called to spread the gift of
faith and to encourage in every brother and sister an openness to the
call. All of us, in different ways, must admit to not having
fully responded to this call, of having made the Church less faithful to
the task of mediating the voice of the Father who calls us to follow the
Son in the Spirit; the Church of our families and work places, of our
parishes and dioceses, of our religious congregations and secular
institutes. We shall come through the vocations crisis only if this
process of conversion is sincere and gives fruits of newness of life.
The second direction that this document would like to contribute to the
Church's pilgrimage towards the Jubilee is an invitation to hope.
An invitation that emerges from the whole of the Congress and that we
wish now to stress with all our strength of faith. Perhaps there is no
other area of the Church's life more needing to open itself to hope than
pastoral work for vocations, especially where the crisis is most
strongly felt. Therefore we reaffirm, at the conclusion of this
reflection, our certainty that the Lord of the harvest will not allow
His Church to lack workers for His harvest. Indeed, if hope is founded
not on our predictions and calculations, which have often been betrayed
by history, but "on your Word", then we can and will believe in a
renewed flowering of vocations for the Churches of Europe. This
document seeks to be a hymn to the optimism of faith filled with hope,
in order to reawaken it in children, adolescents and young people, in
parents and those involved in education, in pastors and priests, in
consecrated men and women, in all those who serve life with the new
generations, in all the People of God in Europe. Let us
pray the Lord of the Harvest 39. Our document, that
opened with thanksgiving to the Lord God, can not close without a prayer
to the Most Holy Trinity, the source and destiny of every vocation.
"God the Father, source of love, who from all eternity calls to
life and gives it in abundance, look upon this continent of Europe. Call
her again, as You once called her; above all make her aware of Your
call, of her Christian roots, of the responsibility which derives from
this. Make her aware of her vocation to promote a culture of life,
respect for the existence of every man in all its forms and in every
instant, unity between peoples, welcoming the stranger and promoting
civil and democratic forms of social life, so that Europe may be ever
more united in peace and brotherhood. Eternal Word, You
who from all eternity welcome the love of the Father and respond to His
call, open the hearts and minds of the young people of this continent so
that they may learn to let themselves be loved by the One who conceived
them in the image of His Son and, letting themselves be loved, may they
have the courage to realise this image, which is Yours. Make them strong
and generous, able to take a risk on Your Word, free to fly up high,
enchanted by the beauty of following You. Raise up among them people to
proclaim Your Gospel: priests, deacons, consecrated men and women,
religious and laity, missionaries, monks and nuns, who with their lives
know, in their turn, how to call and propose the following of Christ the
Saviour. Holy Spirit, love always young of God, voice of
the Eternal one who never ceases to resonate and call, free the old
continent from every spirit of sufficiency, from the culture of the "man
without a vocation", from that fear that hinders us from taking risks
and renders life flat and without taste, from that minimalism that
creates tolerance of mediocrity and kills any interior slant and the
authentic spirit of youth in the Church. Help our young people to
rediscover the full meaning of following Jesus as the call to be fully
themselves, fully and forever young, each according to a project planned
particularly for him, unique-singular-unrepeatable. In a Europe that
risks becoming ever older grant us the gift of new vocations that can
bear witness to the "youthfulness" of God and the Church, universal and
local, from East to West, and can promote projects of new sanctity, for
the birth of a new Europe. Holy Virgin, young daughter of
Israel, whom the Father has chosen as the bride of the Spirit in order
to generate His Son on earth, generate in the young people of Europe
your same daring courage; that same courage that one day set you free to
believe in a project greater than yourself, free to hope that God would
have realised it. To you who are the mother of the Eternal Priest we
entrust those young people called to the priesthood; to you who
are the first consecrated by the Father we entrust those young people
who choose to belong totally to the Lord, the only treasure and totally
loved good, in the religious and consecrated life; to you who
lived, like no other creature, the solitude of the fullest intimacy with
the Lord Jesus we entrust those who leave the world to dedicate their
whole life to prayer in the monastic life; to you, who generated
the early Church and assisted it with maternal love, we entrust all
the vocations of this Church, that they may proclaim, today as then,
to all the peoples, that Jesus Christ is Lord, in the Holy Spirit, to
the Glory of God the Father! AMEN." Rome, 6 January 1998, the
Epiphany of the Lord.
Pio Card. Laghi President
José Saraiva Martins Titular Archbishop of Tuburnica
Vice-President
(1) 253 delegates from 37 European nations took part in the
Congress; they represented the different categories of vocation (laity,
consecrated, priests, bishops), and included also some representatives
from the sister churches (Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican). (2)
Pontifical Work for Ecclesiastical Vocations, Pastoral Care of
Vocations in the Particular Churches of Europe. Working Document
of the Congress on Vocations to the Priesthood and Consecrated life in
Europe, Rome 1996, n.88. Henceforth this text will be cited as IL
(Instrumentum Laboris). (3) Ibidem, 15. (4) See,
among others, Developments of Pastoral Care for Vocations in the
Local Churches, Experiences of the Past and Programmes for the Future,
The Conclusive Document of the II International Congress of Bishops and
Others with Responsibilities for Ecclesiastical Vocations (by the
Congregations for the Oriental Churches, for Religious and Secular
Institutes, for the Evangelization of Peoples, for Catholic Education),
Rome 10-16 May 1981; Pontifical Work for Ecclesiastical Vocations,
Developments of the Pastoral Ministry of Vocations in the Particular
Churches (by the Congregations for Catholic Education and for
Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life), Rome
1992; Final Declaration of the First Latin American Continental Congress
on Vocations, Itaicì 1994 (published in "Seminarium" 34 $[1994$
(5) Cf IL, 18. (6) Cf Concluding Propositions of the
European Congress on Vocations to the Priesthood and Consecrated Life,
8. Henceforward this document will be cited as Propositions.
(7) IL, 32. (8) Propositions, 7. (9)
Propositions, 3. (10) Propositions, 4. (11)
Paul VI, Evangelii nuntiandi, 2. See also, on this topic, John
Paul II, Christifideles laici, 33-34, and Redemptoris missio,
33-34. (12) Propositions, 19. (13) Lumen gentium,
32; 39-42 (chap. V). (14) IL, 6. (15)
Propositions, 16. (16) Propositions, 19. (17)
The "vocational culture" was the topic of the Message of the Holy
Father for the XXX World Day of Prayer for Vocations, celebrated on
2V1993 (cf "L'Osservatore Romano" 18XII1992; cf also Congregation for
Catholic Education, Pontifical Work for Ecclesiastical Vocations,
Messaggi Pontifici per la Giornata mondiale di preghiera per le
vocazioni, Rome 1994, pp.241-245). (18) John Paul II,
Address to Participants in the Congress on Vocations in Europe, in
"L'Osservatore Romano", 11V1997, 4. (19) Ibidem.
(20) Cf Propositions, 12. (21) IL, 6. (22)
Address of the Holy Father, in "L'Osservatore Romano", 11V1997, n.
107. (23) Cf Propositions, 20. (24) Cf John Paul
II, Vita consecrata, 64. (25) IL, 85. (26)
An analagous expression was already used in the Conclusive Document
of the Second International Congress of Bishops and Others with
Responsibilities for Ecclesiastical Vocations, cf Developments,
3. From now on this document will be cited with the initials DC
(concluding document). (27) Propositions, 3. (28)
Paul VI, Populorum progressio, 15. (29) Gaudium et spes,
22. (30) In this regard, one of the final texts of the Congress
expressed it thus: "In the European context it is important to highlight
the first moment of vocation: birth. The welcome given to life
illustrates belief in that God who ?sees' and ?calls' from the mother's
womb" (Propositions, 34). (31) John Paul II, Familiaris
consortio, 11. (32) Therefore, as we are reminded by the
Congress, "only in living contact with Jesus Christ the Saviour can
young people develop the capacity for communion, bring to maturity their
personality and make a decision for Him" (Propositions, 13).
(33) IL, 55. (34) Sacrosanctum concilium, 10.
(35) Cf Veritatis Splendor, 23-24. (36) Cf Lumen
gentium, chap. V. (37) Cf Propositions, 16.
(38) Rite of Confirmation. (39) Cf Propositions, 35.
(40) Lumen gentium, 1. (41) Cf Propositions, 21.
(42) The Epiclesis. (43) DC, 18. (44) DC,
13. (45) Propositions, 28. (46) This is part of the
linsistent teaching of John Paul II in the Encyclical Letters
Slavorum Apostoli (1985) and Ut unum sint (1995) and in the
Apostolic Exhortation Orientale lumen (1995). (47) IL,
58. (48) John Paul II, Christifideles laici, 55.
(49) John Paul II, Pastores dabo vobis, 15. (50) "In the
specific pastoral care of vocations a place should be given to the
vocation of the permanent deacon. Permanent deacons are already a valued
presence in various parishes and it would be minimalistic not to include
them as new vocations of the new Europe" (Propositions, 18).
(51) Sacrosanctum Concilium, 10. (52) "In laudibus
Virginis Matris", Homilia II, 4: Sancti Bernardi opera, IV,
Romae, Editiones Cistercenses, 1966, p. 23. (53) "In Iohannis
Evangelium Tractatus VIII, 9: CCL 36, p. 87. (54) Address
of John Paul II to the participants in the Congress on the topic: "New
vocations for a new Europe" in "L'Osservatore Romano", 11 May 1997, n.
107. (55) DC, 5. (56) The expression is in the
Apostolic Exhortation of John Paul, Pastores dabo vobis, n. 34.
In the same document the basic motives that intimately connect pastoral
work for vocations with the Church are well laid out. (57)
Ibidem. (58) Ibidem. (59) IL, 58.
(60) The expression "Christian community" is, in itself, a
generic expression that indicates a particular or local Church, or even
a parish. It is equivalent to a group of Chrisitans living in a place
and representing the Church in a real way, when it gathers together to
pray and serve, to bear witness to the love and presence of Christ among
them. The expression "ecclesial community", on the other hand,
has a more considered meaning, because it highlights the presence of the
elements that constitute the Church, beginning with the centrality of
the Eucharistic mystery; properly it is applied to dioceses and parishes
that are Eucharistic ecclesial communities thanks to the presence of the
ordained minister; the others are so by extension of meaning. Cf in this
regard DC, 13-16. (61) John Paul II, Discourse to the
VI Symposium of European Episcopal Conferences, 11.10.1985.
(62) Pastores dabo vobis, 34. (63) Ibidem, 35.
(64) Ibidem, 41. (65) Cf Ibidem, 41. (66)
Ibidem, 38. (67) Vita consecrata, 64. (68)
Ibidem. (69) IL, 59. (70) Cf Declaration,
26. (71) Cf Propositions, 25. (72) Cf Vita
consecrata, n. 70. (73) Propositions, 4. (74)
Propositions, 13. (75) Cf Propositions, 10.
(76) Cf Propositions, 10. (77) "The liturgy by its very
nature is an appeal. It is the privileged place where the whole People
of God finds itself gathered in a visible way and where the mystery of
faith is realised" (Propositions, 13). (78) Dei Verbum,
25. (79) "The first place of witness is the life of a Church that
rediscovers ?communion' and where the parishes and associated bodies are
lived as a communion of communities" (Propositions, 14).
(80) Propositions, 21. (81) Vita consecrata, 64.
(82) Cf Lumen gentium 12; 35; 40-42. (83) Cf Catechesi
tradendae, 186. (84) Propositions, 35, where Bishops
are again reminded of the great opportunity offered by the celebration
of Confirmation for "calling" the young people receiving the sacrament.
(85) Propositions, 10. (86) Propositions, 11.
(87) Propositions, 10. (88) Pastores dabo vobis,
41. (89) Cf the wise suggestions in this regard in the
Conclusive Document of the Second International Congress of 1981,
DC, 40. (90) Cf Optatam totius, 2; DC, 57-59;
cf also Developments in pastoral care, 89-91. (91) Cf
Propositions, 10. (92) It was observed at the Congress: "At
times a certain strain in the relationship between the local Church and
religious life was reported. It is important to overcome a functional
view of religious life itself, even if already we can see signs of a new
orientation after the Synod on the consecrated life. The same is true
for secular institutes" (Propositions, 16). (93) "In a
religious and cultural situation which is rapidly changing, the initial
formation of promoters becomes essential: catechists, pastors, deacons,
consecrated men and women, bishops, as does their ongoing formation" (Propositions,
17). (94) Cf Propositions, 29 where, speaking of this
European centre for vocations, it expresses the desire that, as a
gesture of charityand exchange of gifts, it "provide a «bank» of people
qualified to collaborate in the formation of formators". There is also a
request for the establishment of such an organisation in the
Instrumentum laboris, 93 and 90h. In Latin America for some years
now there has been such a positive experience. In Bogotà (Colombia), at
the Consejo Episcopal Latino Americano (CELAM), there is the
Departimento de Vocaciones y Ministerios (DEVYM). This organisation
was also the point of reference for the preparation and celebration of
the First Continental Congress for Latin America, held at Itaici (Sao
Paulo of Brazil) from 23 to 27 May 1994. (95) IL, 86.
(96) 3 Cf Propositions, 9. (97) Paul VI, Look at Christ
and at the Church, Message for the XV World Day of Prayer for
Vocations (16IV1978), in "L'Osservatore Romano" (English edition) of
13IV1978. (98) Propositions, 15. (99)
Propositions, 9. (100) Propositions, 22. In addition:
"the growth of interest in the Gospel and in a life radically dedicated
to it in consecration, depends to a great extent on the personal witness
of priests and religious who are happy with their lot. The majority of
candidates for the consecrated life and priesthood tell that they
attribute their own vocation to an encounter with a priest or
consecrated man or woman" (ibidem, 11). (101)
Propositions, 12. (102) Porposition 23 states: "It is
important to underline that young people are open to challenges and
strong propositions (that are 'superior to the mean', that offer
something 'more'!). (103) That returns in the form of a
provocation in the words of Paul to the Corinthians: "What have you that
you did not receive?" (1 Cor 4, 7). (104) IL, 55.
(105) Propositions, 27. (106) Propositions, 25.
(107) Cf Propositions, 25. (108) Cf Propositions,
14. (109) Pastores dabo vobis, 11. (110) Cf Jurado,
Il discernimento, 262. Cf also L.R. Moran, "Orientaciones
doctrinales para una pastoral eclesial de las vocaciones", in
Seminarium, 4 (1991), 697-725. (111) We are speaking here of
a basic affective-sexual maturity, as the condition necessary for
admission to religious vows and the ordained ministry, according to the
two ways of the Catholic Churches of Europe, to the celibate ministry
(Western Church) and to the married ministry (Oriental Churches). It is
important that, from the pastoral work for vocations to formation
proper, the pedagogical programmes be coherent and well thought out, so
that the preparation for the ordained ministry might be appropriate in
each case, especially on the level of affective well-being, and the
exercise of the same ministry could then attain its objective of
proclaiming the love of God as the beginning and end of human love.
(112) See in this sense the recommendation of Potissimum Institutioni,
about homosexuality, to reject not those who have such tendencies but
rather "those who cannot manage to control such tendencies" (39), even
if this "controlling" is understood — we maintain — in the full sense,
not only as an effort of the will, but rather as a progressive freedom
in relation to these very tendencies, in the heart and in the mind, in
the will and in desires.
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