The biggest obstacle to vocations to both there clerical state or the religious life is the laity itself. It’s sense of entitlement and its sense of its importance in the Church is over inflated to the point that it sets a very bad example for the young.
On Sunday I attended mass at a parish where I volunteer to do youth ministry. We normally receive the new postulants on Pentecost Sunday. The priest agreed to combine the mass with the reception ceremony. Sixteen men were received as postulants.
We had agreed with the pastor to do this together at the evening mass, which is the mass that the youth attend. The pastor thought it would be a great way to tie in the events of Pentecost in a way that is visibly meaningful to the young and promotes vocations to the brotherhood. This pastor is a secular priest. But he is very close to our community because six of our brothers taught him theology at the major seminary. So he loves religious brothers and is always promoting vocations to the brotherhood.
Everything was going fine. At the end of mass I was speaking to one of the youth who was asking about the postulancy. I said to the young man, “When you finish college, I hope to see you here entering our postulancy program.”
No sooner had I said that when a parishioner stepped right up into my face and snapped, “You brothers have a lot of nerve encouraging these young boys to waste their life and the Catholic people’s money being brothers, when we have such a great need for priests.” I was in awe.
When I recovered my voice I said, “I’m sorry, but I don’t make these calls. Christ calls those whom he wants to where ever he wants them.” She shot back at me, “Christ would never call someone to waste his time as a brother, when we need priests. Just look at all of you. You should be ashamed of yourself. How many years did you spend in school?”
I calmly responded that I had gone through the usual formation program for my community: four years of college, four years of theology and three years for a doctorate in theology. But that’s standard requirement for our brothers because of the type of ministry in which we engage, even though we only ordain enough men to celebrate the sacraments for our religious alone, not for the public sector. We do a great deal of work in moral issues and in care of souls, because of our work preaching and teaching the Gospel of Life and that’s why we require a very good theological education.
She said, “And you don’t think that’s wrong, wasting our money and not putting it to good use?” And she stormed away. I was confused. I was unsure whether to laugh or throw baseball at the back of her head. The boy who was asking the question, a 17-year old, looked at me and siad, “What’s her problem?” Three of the new postulants were standing next to me and one asked, “Do the brothers always get treated so well?” I laughed and said, “It only gets better my son.”
I had another man get very angry at me one time for impersonating a priest. I asked him how he came to that conclusion. He said, “Why do the brothers all call you Father when you’re not a priest?” I seriously thought that he was misunderstanding so I explained, "It’s a very ancient tradition in the Franciscan family to call the superior Father Guardian. But most brothers just say, Father, because it’s shorter, just like many women religiuos just say Mother instead of Mother Superior or Reverend Mother. He just looked at me and said, “It’s a shame to humiliate these men like this.” I was like, “What just happened?”
I shared this with the brothers, who were in shock that someone would speak to the superior of the religious house that way and in shock that someone would assume to believe that they felt humiliated in any way, because they must call their superior Father or Father Guardian. One young brother commented to me that he had always felt that the laity could not be understood. They prayed for vocations, but they seemed to feel that they had the power to decide what vocations and who has a vocation.
I believe that this young brother is very wise. These two events are excellent examples. Other religious men have had similar encounters where the laity have put road blocks up for the young and discouraged them. The worse part is that people do not realize what a grave sin it is to intervene between a call from Christ and the person being called. It’s a deliberate attempt to sabbotage what Christ has begun in the soul.
Those are just my experiences, for what they’re worth. So don’t take them to the bank. LOL
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF