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