M
Monica4316
Guest
I was reading about St John Vianney and how he counselled some young people to marry, and others to enter religious life… one young lady came to him for advice, she really wanted to be a nun and had a strong attraction to religious life, yet her family wanted her to marry a young man who proposed to her, and she was a big help to the family business… St John Vianney told her she must marry, because this would give peace to her family and she would show her piety to the world. However another young woman, she also wanted to be a nun yet was afraid to leave her mother, who would be very upset… yet St John Vianney told her to enter the convent, and that her mother would get over it eventually. There was also a young man who wanted to be a religious but his father disagreed, but his father changed his mind during the same pilgrimage. St John Vianney could read souls and gave advice based on God’s will, not based on human wisdom…
I’m having a lot of trouble understanding… it seems that a person could have an attraction to the religious life, but that not be God’s will… my situation is similar to the girl in the first story, because sometimes I wonder, if God were to call me to a convent, how my parents would be taken care of when they’re older… it would also make them extremely upset and maybe even do harm, though I believe if it’s God’s will it wouldn’t do harm. Of course, I really don’t want there to be any harm… and I want to do what He wants. But - does all this mean that God’s will for me is definitely the same as that of the young woman in the first story?? I wondered, if I were to ask St John Vianney what to do, what would he tell me? A couple days ago I was very nervous about all this because to say the truth, I have a lot of difficulty with the idea of me having to marry. I really wanted to just belong to Christ. Yet I know I must do His will, I believe we must choose His will over ours even if it costs us everything we wanted, even if it costs us what we wanted to do for Him.
How do you understand those two stories? HOW do we discern what is God’s will? I don’t understand the discernment process… .because it seems someone could have an attraction to the religious life, but it not be God’s will for them. How come when I sometimes pray by the Blessed Sacrament, I want to be a nun again?
HOW do we know?
Does anyone have any advice on the discernment process and how to…not go wrong? 
I’m having a lot of trouble understanding… it seems that a person could have an attraction to the religious life, but that not be God’s will… my situation is similar to the girl in the first story, because sometimes I wonder, if God were to call me to a convent, how my parents would be taken care of when they’re older… it would also make them extremely upset and maybe even do harm, though I believe if it’s God’s will it wouldn’t do harm. Of course, I really don’t want there to be any harm… and I want to do what He wants. But - does all this mean that God’s will for me is definitely the same as that of the young woman in the first story?? I wondered, if I were to ask St John Vianney what to do, what would he tell me? A couple days ago I was very nervous about all this because to say the truth, I have a lot of difficulty with the idea of me having to marry. I really wanted to just belong to Christ. Yet I know I must do His will, I believe we must choose His will over ours even if it costs us everything we wanted, even if it costs us what we wanted to do for Him.
How do you understand those two stories? HOW do we discern what is God’s will? I don’t understand the discernment process… .because it seems someone could have an attraction to the religious life, but it not be God’s will for them. How come when I sometimes pray by the Blessed Sacrament, I want to be a nun again?
HOW do we know?