Note: English version of this site still not finished yet, you are welcome if any body
can help us to translate from Indonesian to good English.
God bless you... !
A Vocation...
"Each
baptised person is called to be a disciple which is accompanied by a
responsibility to share in the church's mission."
A
vocation is God's unique invitation, addressed to individual persons in which a
free response is expected. This response is not a single act, but a life-long
process, a journey of faith. We do not "have" a vocation; we discover
how we "are" our vocation as we journey through life led by the
Spirit.
An individual discovers their
vocation at various stages of life and in relationship with others:
- when a
person is loved and appreciated by others,
- when
the person is attracted by the example of others,
- when
the person becomes aware of the needs of others,
- when
the person prays and meditates on the word of God.
As baptised Christians each of us
is called to assist others to discover their vocation as we have been assisted
on our faith journeys. Each of us is called to help make others aware of their
personal richness, talents and human value, opening their eyes to the variety
of lifestyles and then ministries within the Church.
We are to assist the young and the
not so young in their search for who it is God wants them to be; to walk with
them in faith, to pray with them, to guide them, to help them become aware of
God's loving presence in their personal history in order that they might
respond to the will/yearning of God in their own regard.
By whom am I called?
To whom must I ultimately submit my
life? Who is this One who invites me into a loving relationship and calls me to
be transformed in that love? What does this relationship mean for my life now
and in the future? Or, put more simply, who is God and what place does God have
in my life?
To what am I called?
What lifestyle and word best
facilitate my vocation? What concrete circumstances in life should I choose -
in so far as that it is reasonable and possible - to promote this loving
relationship? To what extent does my current lifestyle reflect an awareness of
vocation?
The Model
There are three levels of Vocation
Ministry in the model that is used widely in the church today. Some of us are
concerned with all three, others with one or two levels, depending upon our own
ministry at the moment, lifestyle and interest.
General Vocation Ministry -
fostering a sense of service to others and by our example providing models of
adult Christian behaviour. This is based upon the understanding that there is a
universal call to holiness by virtue of our Baptism and Confirmation and that
our role in the world and the church cannot be replaced.
Particular Vocation Ministry -
acknowledgment that we are all called to a particular style of loving as in
marriage, religious life, single life or priesthood. Our task here and more
especially the Catholic Vocations Centre, is to act as a resource, a clearing
house for anyone looking at any of these particular expressions of response to
the call of God. The Christian community in its entirety is responsible for the
awakening, the discerning and the fostering of various vocations to the
priesthood, the religious life and the active Christ-life for all age groups.
Specific Vocation Ministry - some
individuals are called to very specific and unique expressions of consecrated
and ordained life. It is normal for any congregation/diocese to make itself
known and to encourage vocations to the specific group.
"Scripture
narrates the history of salvation as a history of vocations, in which the
Lord's initiative and people's response have become intertwined. In fact every
vocation is born from the meeting of two freedoms: the divine and the human:
Every vocation is a personal and unique event, but also a community and
ecclesial event. No one is called to walk alone."
Pope John Paul II, World Day of Prayer for Vocations, 1997
A
vocation is an occupation, either professional or voluntary,
that is carried out more for its altruistic benefit than for income, which might
be regarded as a secondary aspect of the vocation, however beneficial.
Vocations can be seen as fulfilling a psychological
or spiritual
need for the worker, and the term can also be used to describe any occupation
for which a person is specifically gifted, and usually implies that the worker has a form of
"calling"
for the task. The word "vocation" comes from the Latin vocare,
meaning "to call."
The
idea of vocation is central to the Christian belief that God has created each
person with gifts and talents oriented toward specific purposes and a way of
life. Particularly in the Orthodox and Catholic
Churches, this idea of vocation is especially associated with a divine call
to service to the Church and humanity through particular vocational life
commitments such as marriage to a particular person, consecration as a
religious, ordination to priestly ministry in the Church and even a holy life
as a single person. In the broader sense, Christian vocation includes the use
of ones gifts in their profession, family life, church and civic commitments
for the sake of the greater common good.
The
idea of a vocation or "calling" has been pivotal within Protestantism.
Martin
Luther taught that each individual was expected to fulfill his
God-appointed task in everyday life. Although the Lutheran concept of the
calling emphasized vocation, there was no particular emphasis on labor beyond
what was required for one's daily bread. Calvinism
transformed the idea of the calling by emphasizing relentless, disciplined
labor. In the Institutes of the Christian
Religion (1536), Calvin defined the role of "The Christian in his
vocation." He noted that God has proscribed appointed duties to men and
styled such spheres of life vocations or callings. Calvinists distinguished two
callings: a general calling to serve God and a particular calling to engage in some employment by
which one's usefulness is determined.
The
Puritan
minister Cotton Mather, in A Christian at his Calling
(1701), described the obligations of the personal calling as, "some
special business, and some settled business, wherein a Christian should for the
most part spend the most of his time; so he may glorify God by doing good for
himself." Mather admonished that it wasn't lawful ordinarily to live
without some calling, "for men will fall into "horrible snares and
infinite sins." This idea has endured throughout the history of
Protestantism. Three centuries after John Calvin's death, Thomas
Carlyle (1843) would proclaim, "The latest Gospel in this
world is, 'know thy work and do it.'"
The
legacy of this religious ethic continues to exert its influence in an
increasingly secular
world. Modern occupations which are seen as vocations often include those where
a combination of skill and community help are implied, such as medical, care-giving,
and veterinary occupations. Occupations where rewards are seen more in
spiritual or other non-financial terms, such as religious
occupations, are also seen as vocations. Borderline occupations, where community
service and more personal reward are more evenly balanced, such as politics, may
often be regarded as vocations.
Many
forms of humanitarian campaigning, such as work for organisations such as Amnesty International and Greenpeace
can also be considered vocations, although the term tends to imply that the
activity is a full-time job rather than a part-time activity or hobby, which would be
called an avocation.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocation"
Pesan Sri Paus
Benedictus XVI untuk Hari Doa bagi Panggilan Sedunia ke-44:
29 April 2007 -
Minggu keempat Paskah
Tema: Panggilan untuk Pelayanan Gereja sebagai Komunio
Venerable Brothers
in the Episcopate,
Dear brothers and sisters!
The annual World Day of
Prayer for Vocations is an appropriate occasion for highlighting the importance
of vocations in the life and mission of the Church, as well as for intensifying
our prayer that they may increase in number and quality. For the coming
celebration, I would like to draw the attention of the whole people of God to
the following theme, which is more topical than ever: the vocation to the
service of the Church as communion.
Last year, in the
Wednesday general audiences, I began a new series of catechesis dedicated to
the relationship between Christ and the Church. I pointed out that the first
Christian community was built, in its original core, when some fishermen of Galilee, having met Jesus, let
themselves be conquered by his gaze and his voice, and accepted his pressing
invitation: "Follow me and I will make you become fishers of men!"
(Mk 1: 17; cf. Mt 4: 19). In fact, God has always chosen some individuals to
work with him in a more direct way, in order to accomplish his plan of
salvation. In the Old Testament, in the beginning, he called Abraham to form a
"great nation" (Gn 12: 2); afterwards, he called Moses to free Israel from the slavery of Egypt (cf. Ex 3: 10). Subsequently, he designated other persons,
especially the prophets, to defend and keep alive the covenant with his people.
In the New Testament, Jesus, the promised Messiah, invited each of the Apostles
to be with him (cf. Mk 3: 14)
and to share his mission. At the Last Supper, while entrusting them with the
duty of perpetuating the memorial of his death and resurrection until his
glorious return at the end of time, he offered for them to his Father this
heart-broken prayer: "I made known to them your name, and I will make it
known, that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in
them" (Jn 17: 26). The mission of the Church, therefore, is founded on an intimate
and faithful communion with God.
The Second Vatican
Council's Constitution Lumen gentium describes the Church as "a
people made one with the unity of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit"
(n. 4), in which is reflected the very mystery of God. This means that the love
of the Trinity is reflected in her. Moreover, thanks to the work of the Holy
Spirit, all the members of the Church form "one body and one spirit"
in Christ. This people, organically structured under the guidance of its
Pastors, lives the mystery of communion with God and with the brethren,
especially when it gathers for the Eucharist. The Eucharist is the source of
that ecclesial unity for which Jesus prayed on the eve of his passion:
"Father.that they also may be one in us, so that the world may believe
that you have sent me" (Jn 17: 21).
This intense communion favours the growth of generous vocations at the service
of the Church: the heart of the believer, filled with divine love, is moved to
dedicate itself wholly to the cause of the Kingdom. In order to foster vocations,
therefore, it is important that pastoral activity be attentive to the mystery
of the Church as communion; because whoever lives in an ecclesial community
that is harmonious, co-responsible and conscientious, certainly learns more
easily to discern the call of the Lord. The care of vocations, therefore, demands a constant
"education" for listening to the voice of God. This is what Eli did,
when he helped the young Samuel to understand what God was asking of him and to
put it immediately into action (cf. 1 Sam 3: 9). Now, docile and faithful
listening can only take place in a climate of intimate communion with God which
is realized principally in prayer. According to the explicit command of the
Lord, we must implore the gift of vocations, in the first place by praying
untiringly and together to the "Lord of the harvest". The invitation
is in the plural: "Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out
labourers into his harvest" (Mt 9: 38).
This invitation of the Lord corresponds well with the style of the "Our
Father" (Mt 6: 9), the prayer that he taught us and that constitutes a
"synthesis of the whole Gospel" according to the well-known
expression of Tertullian (cf. De Oratione, 1,6: CCL I, 258). In this
perspective, yet another expression of Jesus is instructive: "If two of
you agree on earth about anything they ask, it will be done for them by my
Father in heaven (Mt 18: 19). The Good Shepherd, therefore, invites us to pray
to the heavenly Father, to pray unitedly and insistently, that he may send
vocations for the service of the Church as communion.
Harvesting the pastoral
experience of past centuries, the Second Vatican Council highlighted the
importance of educating future priests to an authentic ecclesial communion. In
this regard, we read in Presbyterorum ordinis: "Exercising the
office of Christ, the shepherd and head, according to their share of his
authority, the priests, in the name of the Bishop, gather the family of God
together as a brotherhood enlivened by one spirit. Through Christ they lead
them in the Holy Spirit to God the Father" (n. 6). The post-synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Pastores dabo vobis echoes this statement of the
Council, when it underlines that the priest is "the servant of the Church
as communion because - in union with the Bishop and closely related to the
presbyterate - he builds up the unity of the Church community in harmony of
diverse vocations, charisms and services" (n. 16). It is indispensable
that, within the Christian people, every ministry and charism be directed to
full communion; and it is the duty of the Bishop and priests to promote this
communion in harmony with every other Church vocation and service. The
consecrated life, too, of its very nature, is at the service of this communion,
as highlighted by my venerable predecessor John Paul II in the post-synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Vita consecrata: "The consecrated life can
certainly be credited with having effectively helped to keep alive in the
Church the obligation of fraternity as a form of witness to the Trinity. By
constantly promoting fraternal love, also in the form of common life, the
consecrated life has shown that sharing in the Trinitarian communion can change
human relationships and create a new type of solidarity" (n. 41).
At the centre of every
Christian community is the Eucharist, the source and summit of the life of the
Church. Whoever places himself at the service of the Gospel, if he lives the
Eucharist, makes progress in love of God and neighbour and thus contributes to
building the Church as communion. We can affirm that the "Eucharistic
love" motivates and founds the vocational activity of the whole Church, because,
as I wrote in the Encyclical Deus caritas est, vocations to the
priesthood and to other ministries and services flourish within the people of
God wherever there are those in whom Christ can be seen through his Word, in
the sacraments and especially in the Eucharist. This is so because "in the
Church's Liturgy, in her prayer, in the living community of believers, we
experience the love of God, we perceive his presence and we thus learn to
recognize that presence in our daily lives. He loved us first and he continues
to do so; we too, then, can respond with love" (n. 17).
Lastly, we turn to
Mary, who supported the first community where "all these with one accord
devoted themselves to prayer" (Acts 1: 14), so that she may help the
Church in today's world to be an icon of the Trinity, an eloquent sign of
divine love for all people. May the Virgin, who promptly answered the call of
the Father saying, "Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord" (Lc 1:
38), intercede so that the Christian people will not lack servants of divine
joy: priests who, in communion with their Bishops, announce the Gospel
faithfully and celebrate the sacraments, take care of the people of God, and
are ready to evangelize all humanity. May she ensure, also in our times, an
increase in the number of consecrated persons, who go against the current,
living the evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity and obedience, and give
witness in a prophetic way to Christ and his liberating message of salvation.
Dear brothers and sisters whom the Lord calls to particular vocations in the
Church: I would like to entrust you in a special way to Mary, so that she, who
more than anyone else understood the meaning of the words of Jesus, "My
mother and my brethren are those who hear the word of God and do it" (Lk
8: 21), may teach you to listen to her divine Son. May she help you to say with
your lives: "Lo, I have come to do thy will, O God" (cf. Heb 10: 7).
With these wishes, I assure each one of you a special remembrance in prayer and
from my heart I bless you all.
From the Vatican, 10
February 2007.
Benedict XVI
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