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DL82
Guest
I’m meant to be going to the Salesians for 3 months in about 2 weeks time. I should be happy, they are a great group of guys, are involved in education (I’m writing my PhD in education policy at the moment), are a holy congregation doing obvious social good in London where I’ll be living.
At the same time, all I can feel about it is spiritual dryness. I feel a really strong desire just to be a dad, not for spiritual fatherhood you understand, but to have a wife and kids. I just feel like I have these talents that I’ve denied for so long, or tried to destroy for some unknown reason. I just feel like my talents point me toward being a good leader of the domestic church, a dad who could raise my kids in the way of wisdom, and in need for the constant accountability that comes with a wife. Religious life for me will require a lot of what the Benedictines call the breaking of the will - going hard against the grain of my natural dispositions and talents, but I guess it wouldn’t be a sign of God’s power if it wasn’t done in His strength alone, not according to nature. I know I destroyed my relationship with my fiancee 2 years ago because of unconscious worries that maybe I was being called to priesthood or religious life. At the same time, I just can’t imagine myself as an old man with grandkids, but nor can I imagine myself as an old man living in a retirement home for priests or a religious house, except the Carthusians, and even then I can only imagine myself going out of my mind with grief in the solitude of a Carthusian house.
Honestly, I feel called to the diaconate, but can’t cope with the thought of waiting until I’m an older married man to enter the permanent diaconate program, I want to be the best deacon I can be, and feel that that would best be achieved in religious life. If, after that, my religious superiors think I ought to become a priest, I’ll take their advice on obedience, but I’ve never felt a call to the priesthood.
The doubts are getting so bad that I’m even talking to girls, and thinking of asking them out on dates, even though that would split my discernment and completely shipwreck any objectivity toward the Salesian vocation. I know I ought to give myself to this 100%, but everything in me says that I’m just running away from the joy of married life. It’s a joy I’m willing to sacrifice, but I’ve only just begun to realise that it was even an option in the first place. I almost wish God had just kept me in ignorance of the possibility of a loving and joyful marriage so that I would go to the Salesians happy to have company instead of mourning for what I could have had (but in reality probably never would have). Then again, I guess it’s no sacrifice if you want it.
What I don’t understand is how priests and religious stay so happy. You would almost get the impression that most of them wanted to be priests and religious instead of seeing it as a sacrifice.
I guess I don’t have the advantage of a faithful Catholic upbringing - I wasn’t raised to find joy in sacrifice but in achievement and comfort. Maybe I’m just not ready for any kind of vocation yet.
Does anyone else even know what I’m talking about? I’d really appreciate your advice. How do you get through when there’s nothing but dryness and sadness in your vocation?
At the same time, all I can feel about it is spiritual dryness. I feel a really strong desire just to be a dad, not for spiritual fatherhood you understand, but to have a wife and kids. I just feel like I have these talents that I’ve denied for so long, or tried to destroy for some unknown reason. I just feel like my talents point me toward being a good leader of the domestic church, a dad who could raise my kids in the way of wisdom, and in need for the constant accountability that comes with a wife. Religious life for me will require a lot of what the Benedictines call the breaking of the will - going hard against the grain of my natural dispositions and talents, but I guess it wouldn’t be a sign of God’s power if it wasn’t done in His strength alone, not according to nature. I know I destroyed my relationship with my fiancee 2 years ago because of unconscious worries that maybe I was being called to priesthood or religious life. At the same time, I just can’t imagine myself as an old man with grandkids, but nor can I imagine myself as an old man living in a retirement home for priests or a religious house, except the Carthusians, and even then I can only imagine myself going out of my mind with grief in the solitude of a Carthusian house.
Honestly, I feel called to the diaconate, but can’t cope with the thought of waiting until I’m an older married man to enter the permanent diaconate program, I want to be the best deacon I can be, and feel that that would best be achieved in religious life. If, after that, my religious superiors think I ought to become a priest, I’ll take their advice on obedience, but I’ve never felt a call to the priesthood.
The doubts are getting so bad that I’m even talking to girls, and thinking of asking them out on dates, even though that would split my discernment and completely shipwreck any objectivity toward the Salesian vocation. I know I ought to give myself to this 100%, but everything in me says that I’m just running away from the joy of married life. It’s a joy I’m willing to sacrifice, but I’ve only just begun to realise that it was even an option in the first place. I almost wish God had just kept me in ignorance of the possibility of a loving and joyful marriage so that I would go to the Salesians happy to have company instead of mourning for what I could have had (but in reality probably never would have). Then again, I guess it’s no sacrifice if you want it.
What I don’t understand is how priests and religious stay so happy. You would almost get the impression that most of them wanted to be priests and religious instead of seeing it as a sacrifice.
I guess I don’t have the advantage of a faithful Catholic upbringing - I wasn’t raised to find joy in sacrifice but in achievement and comfort. Maybe I’m just not ready for any kind of vocation yet.
Does anyone else even know what I’m talking about? I’d really appreciate your advice. How do you get through when there’s nothing but dryness and sadness in your vocation?