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2.2. Identity and Vocation Plan
The process of
vocational growth is inserted into the path
of maturation and integration of the person. The becoming “vocational”
proceeds apace with the formation of the personal and cultural identity; it is
interwoven with all the vicissitudes, difficulties and crises that this growth
involves. The vocation plan is developed in connection with self-definition and
the self-plan, and depends, often in adolescence, on the identification with
persons, communities, environments and life proposals which serve as reference
models to arrive at making a choice consistent with one’s life plan.
Identity and vocation plan, therefore, are two coordinates closely connected and interdependent
on each other. In this viewpoint, we
understand how it is that many vocation plans do not mature-- maybe they die
before being born--and also the reason for so much skepticism regarding the
very possibility of vocation identification on the part of the young. This explains the phenomenon of the so-called
weak consecration, that is, the
inability of lasting faithfulness to religious commitment. In fact, it is not
rare to meet persons in whom the vocation project is built on an “identity
vacuum”, and that is problematic for religious perseverance. 19
Moreover,
vocation is a dynamic and historical reality, which is inserted into the
development and growth process of a personality; it develops and solidifies
over time and in a human and relational context. God’s gratuitous and
mysterious call happens normally through mediations,
both individual and community-social, so that vocation remains subject to
different personal or socio-cultural conditioning and evolves in relationship
to the challenges or calls of the living environment, or the history or culture
in which the person lives. The way for reaching a fullness of vocation identity
always remains that of assuming in a mature way the possible difficulties or
conditionings of a changing society, without fear of facing change, trusting that the identity will consolidate
rather than be lost if one remains in an attitude of openness and constant
seeking.
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