T
TiggerS
Guest
Good post. Very astute and enlightened observation re the single state as vocation and the rest of the comments too - very astute, and a grasping of what “vocation” means.Everyone has been single at some time in their lives. Did everyone consider being single a vocation? I think it’s possible to consider it a vocation, or not, just as some people consider marriage a vocation or not. Ask our grandmothers is they considered marriage a vocation . . . I shudder to think of the look on my Polish Babcia’s face if I dared asked her that. She thought vocations were nuns and priests only.
When I was single, I considered it a vocation to a greater extent than did my peers. I was very involved in volunteer work and my friends and family would comment that I’m not going to find Mr. Right that way. My response was that I was trying to help people, not flirt.
I am grateful for all the time I spent on volunteer work while I was single because now I have neither the time nor the energy to do any of it. God used me best when I had youth and health to offer to Him. It was indeed a temporary vocation, and I consider it such.
One small comment. If a person feels a call to, and wants to respond by living the Gospel in married life, then to search for a potential partner by dating etc. is not necessarily flirting, while it could be. Possibly it is rather akin to feeling a call to and wanting to respond to The Gospel in religious life and searching for a suitable/compatible etc. religious order and community.catholic.org/prwire/headline.php?ID=1751 “Vocation, which comes from the Latin word vocare, to call, vox, voice, is God’s unique invitation to individuals to freely respond to the way of the Gospel.”
It would probably boil down to definition of “flirting” dictionary.reference.com/browse/flirting
"to court triflingly or act amorously without serious intentions; play at love; coquet. "
TS