Being Called?

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mgobluegrl93

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I’m a high school junior (class of 2011) and I don’t know if I’m being called to the religious life or not!! How do I know?!? I haven’t ruled out the religious life by any means, but naturally I’m already looking at colleges and sort of planning my life…and that life doesn’t involve me being a nun. Although like I said, I’m not ruling out religious life.

And honestly, I’ve been Roman Catholic all my life, but I’ve never heard God’s voice, so will I hear God telling me “Abby, you need to be a nun” or something like that? haha okay so that was probably exaggerated a bit, but you get my point!

so basically…

how do I know if I’m being called or not?!?

HELP!
 
There’s no rush. Most, if not all, cogregations of sisters expect you to get a college degree so you don’t have to choose between the two.

Some suggestions to help you “hear”

– contact the vocations office in your diocese. They usually have retreats and other events designed to help young men and women investigate even a possible religious vocation

– go on a retreat. And I don’t mean a youth retreat or Life Teen. Nothing wrong with those but if you are looking to hear, you need some quiet. 😉

– visit some congregations. Talk to as many sisters as you can.

Best wishes in your discernment.

P.S. Love your user name!
 
I’m a high school junior (class of 2011) and I don’t know if I’m being called to the religious life or not!! How do I know?!? I haven’t ruled out the religious life by any means, but naturally I’m already looking at colleges and sort of planning my life…and that life doesn’t involve me being a nun. Although like I said, I’m not ruling out religious life.

And honestly, I’ve been Roman Catholic all my life, but I’ve never heard God’s voice, so will I hear God telling me “Abby, you need to be a nun” or something like that? haha okay so that was probably exaggerated a bit, but you get my point!

so basically…

how do I know if I’m being called or not?!?

HELP!
Is there something that makes you think that maybe you are being called?

Peace
James
 
Peace and Good !
After reading your very wise and sincere question I have to honestly say that the “child” in my heart rejoiced a little like when Mary and Elizabeth encountered in the gospel of Luke (Lk 1, 39-45) !

I am Australian Friar now living in the Religious Community of the “Little Friars and Sisters V.V. of Jesus and Mary” in Italy. I have attached a short film that partly replies your question over vocational discernment and in the same time expresses the Charisma of our poor and humble lifestyle as Friars and Nuns. We hope you enjoy it…

vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=61547007

I also recomend you to check out the website that our Groups of Prayer have opened for us:

www.poorfriars.net

On the first page, there are three choices. If you click on the lower central botton “Lord what do you want me to do ?”… you will find lots of interesting information in regards to vocational research and “How to hear Gods Call”.
Best wishes of Holiness and Beatific Immortality !
Friar Antonio
 
As the Sisters told me…“You’ll just know”!

God bless.
 
I’m a high school junior (class of 2011) and I don’t know if I’m being called to the religious life or not!! How do I know?!? I haven’t ruled out the religious life by any means, but naturally I’m already looking at colleges and sort of planning my life…and that life doesn’t involve me being a nun. Although like I said, I’m not ruling out religious life.

And honestly, I’ve been Roman Catholic all my life, but I’ve never heard God’s voice, so will I hear God telling me “Abby, you need to be a nun” or something like that? haha okay so that was probably exaggerated a bit, but you get my point!

so basically…

how do I know if I’m being called or not?!?

HELP!
Dear mgobluegrl93,
May the peace of Christ be with you as you follow Our Lord’s will in your life.

Below is an exert from religious-vocation.com, which you may find helpful in your discernment;

Discerning Religious Life
Saint Bernard of Clairvaux once estimated that about one out of three Catholics (~33%) have a vocation to the consecrated life. Yet today, less one in every twenty-thousand Catholics (~0.005%) are consecrated religious. These statistics, if even remotely accurate, help us to better understand the difficulty Catholics face today when discerning a religious vocation, that is; that many either do not hear the call of God, or hear but do not listen.
Code:
   **A Natural Desire for Marriage **
What then, is the reason for such a disparity? First, we may observe that, in terms of discernment, marriage has an immediate “advantage” over celibacy, in that it is in accord with man’s natural desires. All men and women have a deeply ingrained desire to be loved by another person and to raise a family. It is therefore easy for someone to mistakenly believe they have a vocation to marriage, when in fact they might not. This natural inclination is further exacerbated by the society in which we live, which obsesses on dating and relationships to near compulsion. The institution of marriage is often viewed as the natural next step in one’s life that everyone is expected to perform. In brief, discerning a religious vocation today is nothing less than difficult. It requires one to say “no” to what is natural, tangible, and before our eyes, and “yes” to a seemingly remote ideal (it should be no surprise why the Catholic Church prays for vocations with such frequency).
http://religious-vocation.com/images/img_capuchin1.jpg **
“The Heart is Deceitful”
The prophet Jeremiah tells us, “The heart is deceitful above all things. Who can know it?” (Jer 17:9). It is thus how one should approach discernment, that is; to place little emphasis on feelings, and greater emphasis on reason, in view of the counsel of Holy Mother Church. Therefore, if the Church considers the married state to be a good, and the consecrated life of celibacy to be a better good (see; A Higher Calling), right reason dictates that we ought to prefer the better good by default, unless/until God reveals otherwise. Saint Ignatius exhorts us in a similar manner; “If a person thinks of embracing a secular life, he should ask and desire more evident signs that God calls him to a secular life, than if there were question of embracing the evangelical counsels; for Our Lord Himself has evidently exhorted us to embrace His counsels.”
Discernment then might be considered a test of the will, that is to say to oneself; “I love Christ enough to sacrifice what I so deeply desire; marriage. I therefore submit myself to the direction of His Church. I do not trust in my feelings. But I choose the better way, until God reveals otherwise.” This is not, however, to mean that a vocation to the religious life should be forced. Rather, it is acknowledging our human predispositions and allowing the opportunity for the desires of one’s heart to grow, rather than shutting the door before it ever had a chance to open. Saint Paul counsels us in the same manner; *“Are you free of a wife? Then do not look for a wife. If you marry, however, you do not sin…but such people will experience affliction in their earthly life, and I would like to spare you that.” - 1 Cor 7 *
Code:
   **Marriage's Ultimate Fulfillment **
It is therefore necessary during one’s discernment to understand that religious life is not a “giving up” of marriage. Rather, it is an elevation of marriage, beyond this world, towards its ultimate fulfillment - it is to live, here on earth, a more intimate union with heavenly reality. Instead of marrying a man - a creature - religious marry Christ Himself, wed to the Church. Instead of raising children, religious priests adopt every soul as their spiritual child. Instead of devoting one’s life towards the salvation of immediate family, religious devote their lives to the salvation of the world, actualized through the rigors of daily prayer, work, and sacrifice. In this way, consecrated life is everything that marriage is, but elevated to a higher dignity and perfection. It redirects man’s natural desire for marriage towards a higher and more perfect end; towards the mystical marriage between Christ and His Church. It is thus that the Church considers the consecrated life an act of supererogation, that is; for those who want to become perfect *(Matt. 5:48, “be therefore perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect” ), *for it is first by becoming perfect, that one is able to sanctify others to the highest degree possible.
 
How do I Know for Sure?
One of the greatest signs of a vocation to the religious state can be summed up with just one question: Do I desire to become a Saint? The deep desire for holiness and union with God should be the driving force behind every potential vocation to the religious state, for this is precisely why the religious state exists; to generate Saints and sanctify souls. This is not to say that one cannot become a saint in the married state, however. Certainly, it is possible that a mother or father could be raised to the altar (St. Gianna Molla, for example). Yet one cannot ignore the fact that the vast majority of Saints throughout history have been, hands down, clergy and religious. Perhaps equally important to note is that one need not have absolute certainty of a calling to the religious life in order to have a genuine vocation. If there is but the smallest seed within a soul that causes the soul to consider the consecrated life, then this is enough reason to water and cultivate this seed, to see whether is takes root or not. “To know whether God will have a person become a religious it is not to be expected that God Himself should speak, or send an angel from heaven to signify His will. It is not necessary that ten or twelve confessors should examine whether the vocation is to be followed. But it is necessary to correspond with the first movement of the inspiration, and to cultivate it, and then not to grow weary if disgust or coldness should come on. If a person acts thus, God will not fail to make all succeed to His glory. Nor ought we to care much from what quarter the first movement comes. The Lord has many ways of calling His servants.”
- St. Francis De Sales
**Every Person has the Capacity to Become a Saint **
Realizing that discouragement is a tool of our common adversary, we must remind ourselves that all things done for the love of God will bear fruit in the end. A soul that enters religious life can be sure that God will provide the necessary graces to fulfill its call to the highest degrees of holiness, if the soul so wills (Matt. 19:29, “every one that hath left house, brothers, sisters, father, mother, wife, children, or lands for My sake, shall receive a hundred times as much”). Indeed, the Saints tell us that every person has the capacity to become a saint. According to Saint Faustina, becoming a saint–or, giving God the greatest possible glory that we are capable of–requires nothing other than a persistent good will to do so. http://religious-vocation.com/images/img_poorclare6.jpg “Let no soul, even the most miserable, fall prey to doubt; for, as long as one is alive, each one can become a great saint, so great is the power of God’s grace. It remains only for us not to oppose God’s actions.”
- Diary of Saint Faustina, p.134
“On a certain occasion, I saw a person about to commit a mortal sin. I asked the Lord to send me the greatest torments so that that soul could be saved. Then I suddenly felt a terrible pain of a crown of thorns on my head. It lasted for quite a long time, but that person remained in the Lord’s grace… O my Jesus, how very easy it is to become holy! All that is needed is a bit of good will. Jesus sees this little bit of good will in the soul, He hurries to give Himself to the soul, and nothing can stop Him, neither short comings or falls - absolutely nothing. Jesus is anxious to help that soul, and if it is faithful to this grace from God, it can very soon attain the highest holiness possible for a creature here on earth. God is very generous and does not deny His grace to anyone. Indeed He gives more than what we ask of Him.”
“O God, how easy it is to know Your will in the convent! We religious have God’s will set clearly before our eyes from morning till night, and in moments of uncertainty we have our superiors through whom God speaks. …] My life is not drab or monotonous, but it varied like a garden of fragrant flowers, so that I don’t know which flower to pick first, the lily of suffering, or the rose of love of neighbor, or the violet of humility”
- Diary, p. 138
 
I’m a high school junior (class of 2011) and I don’t know if I’m being called to the religious life or not!! How do I know?!? I haven’t ruled out the religious life by any means, but naturally I’m already looking at colleges and sort of planning my life…and that life doesn’t involve me being a nun. Although like I said, I’m not ruling out religious life.

And honestly, I’ve been Roman Catholic all my life, but I’ve never heard God’s voice, so will I hear God telling me “Abby, you need to be a nun” or something like that? haha okay so that was probably exaggerated a bit, but you get my point!

so basically…

how do I know if I’m being called or not?!?

HELP!
Hi!!!

Well, I’m a high school senior (class of '10 ahhhh!!!) and about a year ago i was in your same situation. I had this guy I was going to date but I thought that I might be called to religious life so I put off dating him. Then I asked God to tell me what he wanted me to do since I was rapidly approaching some crossroads in my life. I kept begging and begging him to tell me so I could get going with it. I told myself that no matter what it was, God’s plan for me is what’s best (obviously) so I would do it no matter how hard it was.

Then I found a spiritual director who told me just to go on with college and not to worry too much about it, but keep your mind open; God will tell you when he wants you to know. So i let it go and settled on going to college for a degree in theology, because I still had this burning desire to strengthen my relationship with God and learn more about him. I took a class on the New testament at the Franciscan catholic university near my house. The class was taught by a traditional Franciscan nun, and I really began to have a great love for scripture. Then, as if from no where, I felt this overwhelming love for Jesus and I desire to just give my whole life to him. I also recalled a couple of time when total strangers told me that I should be a nun and several signs that I received when I was younger and thinking of religious life.

I recently visited a community of Franciscan sisters in Mishawaka IN (I noticed that you are from Carmel and that’s why I say that) who actually ran the university i took the scripture class at and I loved them. But I was advised by several people to visit the Dominicans in Ann Arbor, MI so I;m going on their retreat in Feb. Right now my trouble in figuring out which order i’m called to, even though I feel very strongly called to the Franciscans.

Sorry, i know i have a lot to say. but I thought I’d share.

What people have told me the most is that you know once you no longer have any question about it and what you feel your heart telling you when you are in front of the Eucharist. Christ is right there and that is when you will be able to hear his voice the loudest, if you really want to listen. If you can see yourself never getting married, but dedicating your whole life to serving God and his people and actually being happy with Jesus as your Eternal Spouse, then you probably do have a strong vocation.

My best advice is to find a priest you really like and trust and ask him if he does spiritual direction. Talking to him about your worries and questions will help you to know.

Hope that helps!!
Prayers!:gopray2:
Jessica
 
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