I'm in the middle of ordination season.
Four services in six weeks has me thinking a lot about vocation and the places
God calls us to as people of faith. Yet I'm ever more aware that not
all of my brothers' and sisters' vocations are as celebrated by the Church as
mine is, and that makes me sad.
Humans, I think, are much the same. We have
gifts and callings as a species: to care for the rest of creation, to reflect
God's image, to love one another and to worship the Holy One. But God has also
created us to be remarkably unique, just as each green plant is different from
its neighbour. Some plants produce food, some shelter, some beauty; but we need
them all, and together they create a magnificent patchwork more beautiful than
any quilt.
I'm afraid that, as a Church, we haven't been too good at celebrating the diversity of these vocations among us. I am called to be a priest, and that is good; but you may likewise be called to be a biologist or a scholar or a stay-at-home mom and that is also good. It seems to me that some people are called to very specific places in life- such as a juvenile detention centre, say- while others are called to pursue their vocation in the midst of whatever circumstances they find themselves. Perhaps vocation is less about what we do and more about how we do it.
My sister has a vocation to nursing. Nurses are charged with loving and caring for some of God's most precious and vulnerable in a way that not many of us are. Still another kind vocation is experienced by retired people: praying for the Church, visiting the sick, loving and teaching the young, among other things.
Today I am sitting at a lakeside in Dallas,
Texas, watching the animals play along the shore, and I am struck by the unique
calling God has given to each one. A bald eagle soars overhead as a young squirrel
explores his newfound independence. Two ducks of different breeds wander
through shore debris and a a sandpiper tries to distract me from her babies.
Each of God's creatures is so good, so perfect at what God has created it to
be. The beetle doesn't desire to be a swan, and neither is the mockingbird
interested in being a sycamore tree. Each has a unique calling and place in
God's Texan creation and it is very good.
I'm afraid that, as a Church, we haven't been too good at celebrating the diversity of these vocations among us. I am called to be a priest, and that is good; but you may likewise be called to be a biologist or a scholar or a stay-at-home mom and that is also good. It seems to me that some people are called to very specific places in life- such as a juvenile detention centre, say- while others are called to pursue their vocation in the midst of whatever circumstances they find themselves. Perhaps vocation is less about what we do and more about how we do it.
I'm reminded of a family friend who is
undoubtedly called by God to his job as a CEO. There was a time when I would
have considered such a vocation to be a bit less honourable, a little less
Christian, than a career in “ministry.” But I was deeply wrong. As a CEO, a
Christian can influence policy and trade practices in a way which honour Christ
and his call to love others, to care for the poor, and to tend the earth. A
Christian CEO can make money to feed the hungry and to effect positive change
throughout the Church and across the globe.
My sister has a vocation to nursing. Nurses are charged with loving and caring for some of God's most precious and vulnerable in a way that not many of us are. Still another kind vocation is experienced by retired people: praying for the Church, visiting the sick, loving and teaching the young, among other things.
Each of our vocations is a deeply valuable
part of God's world and deserves to be treated as such. How might we develop a
way of discerning and affirming lay vocations as we have done for so long with
clerical ones? Perhaps we could begin with celebration. Some of the healthiest
and “home”iest communities I've read about or experienced are ones who know how
to celebrate. Let's celebrate one another's accomplishments and calls and
milestones. Let's learn to encourage one another in the new places God calls us
to.
Next, we will need to learn to pray for one
another. The discernment of a clerical vocation requires a great deal of prayer
and contemplation which should not be restricted to religious professionals! As
we learn to invite God into our plans for the future and the unfolding of our
careers and ministries, perhaps we will learn to see them more as service we're
called to rather than burdens required of us. I would like to learn to see all
of life this way: why does God have me in this place at this time? What am I
called to here? How can I honour Christ in the midst of this activity?
When I begin to see my life in this way, it
helps me think less in terms of the rat race and more in terms of gift. And
instead of pursuing wealth, prestige and comfort, I begin to find myself in
pursuit of love, of peace, and of holiness. Because just as God has given each
small bird and every green plant a purpose and goal for which it is perfectly
suited, so too has God called each one of us to a way of life in which we are
called to flourish, to bless others, and to bring glory to the Holy One.
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