Vocation Animation
16. One of the first fruits of a path of ongoing
formation is the daily ability to live one's vocation as a gift which is always
new and to be accepted with a grateful heart: a gift which calls for an ever
more responsible attitude, to be witnessed to with an ongoing conviction and
attractiveness so that others might feel called to God either in this
particular vocation or through other paths. The consecrated person is, by
nature, also a vocation animator: one who is called cannot not become a caller.
There is, therefore, a natural link between ongoing formation and vocation
animation.
Service to vocations is one of the
most demanding challenges which consecrated life must face today. On the one
hand, the globalization of culture and the complexity of social
relations make radical and lifelong choices difficult; on the other hand, the
world is living through a growing experience of moral and material sufferings
which undermine the very dignity of the human being and is silently calling for
persons who will powerfully announce a message of peace and hope, persons who
will bring the salvation of Christ. We are reminded of the words of Jesus: “The
harvest is great but the labourers are few. Pray the master of the harvest to
send labourers into his harvest” (Lk
10:2; Mt 9:37-38).
The first task of any vocational
pastoral program is always prayer. Especially in those places where few are
choosing to enter into consecrated life, a renewed faith in God who can raise
Children of Abraham even from stone (cf. Mt
3:9) and make sterile wombs fruitful if called upon in faith, is urgently
needed. All the faithful, and especially youth, should be involved in this
manifestation of faith in God who alone can call and send workers. The entire
local Church—bishops, priests, laity, consecrated persons—is called to assume
responsibility for vocations to this particular consecration.
The master plan of vocational promotion
to consecrated life is that which the Lord himself began when he said to the
apostles John and Andrew, “Come and see” (Jn 1:39). This encounter accompanied by
the sharing of life requires that consecrated persons deeply live their
consecration in order to become a visible sign of the joy which God gives to
those who listen to his call. For this reason, there is a need for communities
which are welcoming and able to share the ideal of their life with young
people, allowing themselves to be challenged by the demands of authenticity,
and willing to accept them.
The local Church is the privileged
place for this vocational announcement. Here all the ministries and charisms
express their complimentarity.52 Together they realize
communion in the one Spirit of Christ in the many ways that it is manifested.
The active presence of consecrated persons will help Christian communities to
become laboratories of faith,53
places of research, of reflection and of meeting, of communion and
apostolic service, in which all feel part of the building up of the Kingdom of God. In this way the characteristic climate of the church
as God's family, an environment which facilitates mutual knowledge, sharing and
the contagion of those very values which
are at the origin of the choice to give one's whole life to the cause of the
Kingdom, is created.
17. Care for vocations is a crucial task for the future
of consecrated life. The decrease in vocations particularly in the Western world
and their growth in Asia and Africa are drawing a new geography of the presence
of consecrated life in the Church and new cultural balances in the lives of
Institutes. This state of life which, through the profession of the evangelical
counsels gives a constant visibility to the characteristic features of Jesus in
the midst of the world,54 is today undergoing a particular
period of rethinking and of research with new methods in new cultures. This is
certainly a promising beginning for the development of unexplored expressions
of its multiple charismatic forms.
The transformations which are taking
place directly involve each Institute of Consecrated Life and Society of
Apostolic Life, calling them to give strong Gospel-based meaning to their presence
in the Church and their service to humanity. Vocational ministry requires the
development of new and deeper means of encounter; of offering a living witness
of the characteristics of the following of Christ and of holiness, of
presenting ways which strongly and clearly announce the freedom which springs
from a life of poverty whose only treasure is the kingdom of God, the depths of
love of a chaste existence which seeks only one heart, that of Christ, and the
strength for sanctification and renewal contained in an obedient life whose
only goal is to carry out the will of God for the salvation of the world.
Today vocation promotion is not
something which can be delegated in an exclusive way to some specialists
dedicated to the task, nor can it be separated from a true, specific youth
ministry which first and foremost communicates Christ's love for youth. Every
community and all the members of the Institute are called to take on the tasks
of contact with youth, of an evangelical teaching of the following of Christ
and of handing on the charism. Young people are searching for others who are able to propose styles of authentic evangelical life and ways of
arriving at the great spiritual values of human and Christian life. Consecrated
persons must rediscover the teaching art of bringing to the surface and freeing
the deep questions which are too often kept hidden in one's heart. This is
especially true when dealing with young people. As they accompany others on the
path of vocational discernment, consecrated persons will be forced to share the
source of their identity. Communicating one's own life experience always
entails remembering and revisiting that light which guided the person to his or
her own particular vocational choice.
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