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HeWillProvide
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Did you have a call to the religious life and you chose a different way of life? What happened? Do you wish you had gone the religious life route?
It’s not likely, but it’s also not impossible. A 75-year-old man in Michigan was ordained last year. If it’s God’s will, anything is possible if we cooperate.I met a man not long ago who said he had received a call to the priesthood, but he didn’t follow it up. He regrets it now that he is too old to apply. Still, he serves in his church and is doing ok. My answer to him was: “how do you know you had a call? Maybe you did what God wanted you to do.” This may be so, but he still has deep regrets over it. He says he still feels the call even though he is well beyond the age of acceptance at 73. I cannot see how he is still being called at that age, unless the call is a part of our nature; of who we are.![]()
this is the opposite of what I was told. I was told that wanting to do something is a sign of God’s call. But, as you said, your desire remained and you are now living private vows, so the desire did have some origin in God.Everything I had read about vocation indicated that WANTING this was an indication that the call was not genuine. The impression was that the only “real” vocation was one that went completely against your own wishes and will.
Thanks for the link. I am not sure that this man’ health is up to it (heart trouble and diabetes), however, besides he was told years ago that he was too old by his bishop. It is interesting that I was told that I was too old at 35 to be considering priesthood. I wonder how many of a similar age have been discouraged in that way?It’s not likely, but it’s also not impossible. A 75-year-old man in Michigan was ordained last year. If it’s God’s will, anything is possible if we cooperate.
Too bad it took me a hundred years to figure that out!this is the opposite of what I was told. I was told that wanting to do something is a sign of God’s call. But, as you said, your desire remained and you are now living private vows, so the desire did have some origin in God.
I don’t know how old you are now or whether you life circumstances permit but 35 is now considered “young”. Go for it if you are able.Thanks for the link. I am not sure that this man’ health is up to it (heart trouble and diabetes), however, besides he was told years ago that he was too old by his bishop. It is interesting that I was told that I was too old at 35 to be considering priesthood. I wonder how many of a similar age have been discouraged in that way?
Thanks for the encouragment. I went for discernment for priesthood and was told I didn’t have a vocation. Interestingly, it was discerned that I didn’t have a deep desire for it but was responding to a sense that this was what I ***ought ***to do. To be honest, I have struggled discerning what it is I do want to do, other than God’s will in general. I am now looking into religious life and the signs are positive.I don’t know how old you are now or whether you life circumstances permit but 35 is now considered “young”. Go for it if you are able.
I don’t know how old you are now or whether you life circumstances permit but 35 is now considered “young”. Go for it if you are able.
Have you heard of Father John Corapi?I put myself in a position where sex, drugs and rock n’ roll became the “plan for the day” with the idea in the back of my mind that “I would live right later”.
I am struggling mightily now to live right, now that it is later.
Had I been more dilligent in my youth, I may very well have completed seminary and gone on to ordination… Or may not have… Only God knows.
I would encourage anyone even THINKING about a vocation to go to confession weekly, and do one’s best to go to Mass at least once during the week above and beyond Sundays and Holy Days.
Amen.I have to agree and, if anyone reading this think he might possibly have a vocation, go to the seminary. That is where you will find out and either grow in that vocation or find out that it isn’t for you.
In my younger days I had always thought I’d be priest. Then I went to college and almost went, but never did. Finally I found a great woman and got married. I love my wife very, very much…but I often get a feeling of intense sorrow. At that point I find a way to do penance for ignoring the call.
Trust me…there is nothing that this earth can do to you, nothing on this earth that is worth the feeling of sorrow of ignoring a vocation. It won’t hurt you to at least give it a shot.
I bolded the most telling phrase in your post. Indeed: many people are just unable to live where they ARE. As one who could not pursue a vocation in Religious life, I DO wistfully think about the road not taken and wonder about ‘what might have been,’ yet I am fully committed to my husband, my family, my mission as a Christian – and I am happy in my life.What an intriguing thread.
You just forced me to think again about those girls who were my sisters during the first years of formation. A few of them left: they have their families now, as far as I know. One or two cannot find the sense of life, just like they did not found it in the convent. I had the infrequent occasions to meet some of them – I belong to the American Province now and most of them live back in Poland. But many are just grateful to God for the time they could spend in the convent. They learn a lot about themselves and their relation to God, to others. They use this knowledge now in their everyday life. From time to time they feel sorry. But they are not sad. They made their choice. One of them told me that after few years she thinks now that her vocation was temporary – she needed that time in our Congregation to grow to other things that God prepared for her.
Those who still cannot find their point are the constant theme of my reflection…What was wrong? Should they stay? Try harder? I don’t know…But I am thankful that I am here, that I was never tested to the point of leaving, never discern again. I pray for those who are gone.