Lawyer?

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BrooklynBoy200

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I’m not sure if this is a spirituality-type thread, but i’m guessing it is.

Now, i’ve wanted to be a priest for some time now, but lately i’ve been thinking of becoming a lawyer. I’ve still got 2 more years of high school, so i’m not in any rush about what i’m going to do for the rest of my life.

But i’m scared if i become a lawyer, which is a job that usually comes with a big paycheck, that i am going to become obsessed with money and material things and i’ll lose my faith.

Do you think there is any real concern behind my worries?
 
There is a place for both lawyers and priests in the world.

If you become a lawyer, you can execute God’s Justice. You can, for instance, take on large corporations that cheat people, or you can provide low-cost legal advice for the poor, or you can take on Roe v. Wade, or you can go into environmental law. You’ll not make the big bucks with this route, but you’ll be serving God and society in a good and moral way.

If I had gone into law, I would actually try and become a Judge. We need more Catholic Judges. (I’ve watched a few episodes of “Judging Amy” and thought,‘Wow, if she were a real person, she’d sure be making a difference in the world!’).

Now, if you seek to become a priest, you will have the job of administering God’s Sacraments. That is, instead of being an instrument of God’s Judgement, you’ll be an instrument of His Mercy.

The choice of being an instrument of His Justice or His Mercy is an either/or. One is not better or worse than the other. Being either an instrument of His Justice or His Mercy actually serves the same purpose: and that is being an instrument of God’s Will.

The choice is up to you.

We need both Catholic Priests and Catholic Lawyers and Judges.

You’ve got a bright future ahead of you. The choice depends on your aptitudes, your personality and how you feel about celibacy. It’s all up to you. Just take your time in making this decision, and pray about your vocation.

God Bless you and best wishes for your future!
 
There is nothing that says you can’t be both!🙂 We need good lawyers to defend the poor, defend the Church against attacks, like pro-life people being prosecuted under racketeering laws! I’m sure there are priests who are lawyers, and lawyers who became priests! 👍

Peace,
Linda
 
There is nothing that says you can’t be both!🙂 We need good lawyers to defend the poor, defend the Church against attacks, like pro-life people being prosecuted under racketeering laws! I’m sure there are priests who are lawyers, and lawyers who became priests! 👍

Peace,
Linda
Yup, absolutely; this is especially seen among the Jesuits.
 
The pastor of the parish up the road from me, a late vocation, was a lawyer first. He’s a great priest, a logical thinker, and able to advise people in many situations because of his legal training and experience.

Betsy
 
By the way, I want to be an attorney as well. Back in high school I mainly cared about the fact that I want to be rich and eventually outdo my dad’s salary so I admit money was a strong motivator. However, my opinions have changed and when they started to change as I was halfway though undergrad, I questioned whether I want to be an attorney anymore. However, as mentioned, there are several ways to be an attorney and do good for God. The other thing to think about is it is what you do with the money that counts. I’m going to start law school next year and I’m not too concened that I can’t be a good Catholic and an attorney one day.
 
You could look into the Christian Legal Society, all you present/future law students/lawyers.
 
I might not be qualified to address this, since I am not a priest. But I’ll give it a try.

The big thing is whether one feels called to the priesthood. As far back as I can remember, there was never a day when I thought I ought to be a priest. Even as a little boy, I knew I was called to have a wife and family, and at no time did that ever change. I have nothing negative to say about those who do have vocations. I think that is the greatest gift a man can have. But if you have thought at all that you do, you ought not to give it up lightly.

There is no way to compare the life of a priest and that of a lawyer. The priest is on one side of things. He has a single devotion to God and His people. There is a great clarity in that; a certitude, notwithstanding the doubts that might sometimes assail him. Lawyers, on the other hand (and I’m not condemning that life either) live in a world of unclarity, compromise and almost daily challenges to morality. It is precisely the lawyer’s function to be “half-committed” to his client. Never can a lawyer truly identify with his client or he is likely to lose his client’s cause. It is the lawyer’s function, as well, to “create reality”. Rarely does a lawyer really know the full reality of his client’s point of view, but it is his job to make that point of view the only one to which reality is attributed.

One of my favorite quotes (actually attributed to policemen, but equally applicable to lawyers) goes like this:
“the (lawyer) stands lightly in the present moment; at the same time both committed and detached; like a true Christian or a philosopher of old; who knows this world to be no home, but a wilderness.” A truly seasoned lawyer, who has “been through the wars” will admit the truth of that statement every time. A lawyer realizes, many times, that he has presented a “reality” that cannot truly be the reality. And yet, it is his job to present it; however little he might believe in it (unless he totally knows it’s false…which is another subject) And so, a lawyer ends up thinking of reality in a way different from others, and does think of the world as a wilderness, in which the human drama must, of necessity, be taken as a stage play.

A priest, on the other hand, is fully committed to a reality that is outside what the “client” thinks about it or wants to be true. I am sure priests witness things even worse than those lawyers routinely witness. Yet the priest is impelled to love the perpetrator; something lawyers cannot permit themselves to do, at least until after the “case” is over. The lawyer, remember, must remain both committed and detached. The priest may love a sinful person, but he is never required to present sinfulness as virtue. He never has to get his mind into a state of half-belief. I suspect most priests are far less cynical than are most lawyers.

That’s the best comparison I can draw, faulty though it surely is. Having said it, I repeat that I am not putting lawyers down, though it might seem so. I believe lawyers can be holy. But it is a different kind of holiness, and one that never quite seems so. Ultimately, a lawyer must learn to embrace his doubts. One of my favorite lines is the first line of Dante’s “Divine Comedy” : “In the middle of life’s road, I found myself in a dark wood, where the direct way was hidden from me…” A lawyer must learn to love the dark wood, and most good lawyers eventually do. A priest always knows the direct way.
 
Well, I’m a lawyer, and as many have pointed out, there are many ways to incorporate your Catholic faith into the practice of law. From my own experience and that of my many Catholic lawyer friends, being a faithful Catholic and a good lawyer are not mutually exclusive by any means.

I think the real issue here is whether God is calling you to be a priest. If He is, it’s a done deal. As I understand it, men don’t decide to be priests, God decides. Your job is to discern if He is indeed calling you. I hope He is calling you – we desperately need more priests, we don’t need more lawyers.
 
Well, there are Canon Lawyers, and probably a lot of them are priests.
 
The way my grades are looking now, i may not become either one of them now.
 
Yep. I know a lot of lawyers.

Be a priest.
Or you can be a lawyer and then a priest. 😃

Our old Monsignor was a lawyer. I think he became a priest after he had been in the business for a little while, but I’m not sure. Either way though, he made an excellent priest and role-model.
 
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