The calling to religious life

  • Thread starter Thread starter CatholicZ09
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
C

CatholicZ09

Guest
When someone is called to be a priest, brother, nun, etc., does that mean that God thinks they are the right type of person to be in that position? Does God favor them that much to call them to be in a religious order?
 
Your question is wonderful and very well put. Before proceeding to answer your question, let’s take priests out of the equation. It seems that Br. David, O’Carm (ByzCath) and I spend a great deal of time on these fora explaining that the priesthood is not part of religious life. The priesthood is part of a sacrament; the Sacrament of Holy Orders is not religious life. It is a different calling. There are some men whom Christ calls to be both: religious and priests, but they are a minority. There are more secular priests than religious who are priests. If they are attached to a diocese, we call them diocesan priests. Men who are members of a religious order or religious congregation, but are not clerics (deacons, priests or bishops) we usually call brothers. But we have to be careful, because many religious communities call all their members, Brother, even if they are ordained. Their focus is on the religious life, not the ministerial priesthood. This focus is most common among Franciscans and Benedictines.

All that being said I believe that God created me. When he created me he gave me the necessary gifts to be a religious. It goes much further than God calling those who have the right personality. God created us for this life, just as he created some men and women with all the necessary gifts to be faithful spouses and loving parents.

But there is more. God gives us the gifts, but he does not manipulate us. He calls. Just as he calls men and women to faithful and fruitful marriages, he also calls those to whom he has given the gifts necessary for the consecrated life. But we must answer of our own free will. Otherwise, our part of it would not be a free gift of love. We are given the gift. The gift giver calls us. We respond freely and lovingly.

Why are there so few of us? That’s easy. First, God gives this gift to a few. I believe that he gives this gift to a small number, compared to the number of men and women who are Catholic, because the world must go on. Men and women must marry and reproduce.

Second, he gives this gift to a few, because the purpose of the consecrated life is to give witness of life in the Kingdom of Heaven. Religious begin to live, here on earth, as we will live in Heaven. We are signs of what is to come.

I want you to think about signs. Think about a Stop sign. How many do you need per city block? Now think about homes for families. How many do you need per city block? You see the point? You don’t need an overwhelming amount of signs to deliver a message. You just need the right amount of signs strategically placed. That’s what God does with religious. He calls just enough of us, like the number of Stop signs in a town. He places us in situations where we can perform our function. Just as you place Stop signs at corners where they are needed, God places religious men or women in situations where we are needed to remind people of life in the Kingdom of Heaven.

Third, there is one sad part in all of this. God has given more people the necessary gifts to be good religious and he has called them. But they are not responding.

I believe that the laity, especially parents, has an important apostolate here. Parents must teach their children about religious life and encourage them to consider becoming sisters or brothers as they think about their future. They should expose them to sisters and brothers as often as possible, the younger the child, the better.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Your question is wonderful and very well put. Before proceeding to answer your question, let’s take priests out of the equation. It seems that Br. David, O’Carm (ByzCath) and I spend a great deal of time on these fora explaining that the priesthood is not part of religious life. The priesthood is part of a sacrament; the Sacrament of Holy Orders is not religious life. It is a different calling. There are some men whom Christ calls to be both: religious and priests, but they are a minority. There are more secular priests than religious who are priests. If they are attached to a diocese, we call them diocesan priests. Men who are members of a religious order or religious congregation, but are not clerics (deacons, priests or bishops) we usually call brothers. But we have to be careful, because many religious communities call all their members, Brother, even if they are ordained. Their focus is on the religious life, not the ministerial priesthood. This focus is most common among Franciscans and Benedictines.

All that being said I believe that God created me. When he created me he gave me the necessary gifts to be a religious. It goes much further than God calling those who have the right personality. God created us for this life, just as he created some men and women with all the necessary gifts to be faithful spouses and loving parents.

But there is more. God gives us the gifts, but he does not manipulate us. He calls. Just as he calls men and women to faithful and fruitful marriages, he also calls those to whom he has given the gifts necessary for the consecrated life. But we must answer of our own free will. Otherwise, our part of it would not be a free gift of love. We are given the gift. The gift giver calls us. We respond freely and lovingly.

Why are there so few of us? That’s easy. First, God gives this gift to a few. I believe that he gives this gift to a small number, compared to the number of men and women who are Catholic, because the world must go on. Men and women must marry and reproduce.

Second, he gives this gift to a few, because the purpose of the consecrated life is to give witness of life in the Kingdom of Heaven. Religious begin to live, here on earth, as we will live in Heaven. We are signs of what is to come.

I want you to think about signs. Think about a Stop sign. How many do you need per city block? Now think about homes for families. How many do you need per city block? You see the point? You don’t need an overwhelming amount of signs to deliver a message. You just need the right amount of signs strategically placed. That’s what God does with religious. He calls just enough of us, like the number of Stop signs in a town. He places us in situations where we can perform our function. Just as you place Stop signs at corners where they are needed, God places religious men or women in situations where we are needed to remind people of life in the Kingdom of Heaven.

Third, there is one sad part in all of this. God has given more people the necessary gifts to be good religious and he has called them. But they are not responding.

I believe that the laity, especially parents, has an important apostolate here. Parents must teach their children about religious life and encourage them to consider becoming sisters or brothers as they think about their future. They should expose them to sisters and brothers as often as possible, the younger the child, the better.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
Thank you for this wonderful answer! God bless you! 🙂
 
I once heard that you don’t become a religious because you are holy, you become a religious to become holy. So I don’t think that God favors those He calls to religious life over those called to married or single life. All vocations are important to the Kingdom of God, and all vocations have the potential to help people grow in holiness.
 
I once heard that you don’t become a religious because you are holy, you become a religious to become holy. So I don’t think that God favors those He calls to religious life over those called to married or single life. All vocations are important to the Kingdom of God, and all vocations have the potential to help people grow in holiness.
The statement is true for everyone. This is what the Church calls “the universal call to holiness.” However, religious remain a select group, because God calls very few men and women to this way of life for ther reasons stated before.

There is a feeling among many lay Catholics that they are being cheated or dismissed because the Church has traditionally referred to religious life as the highest possible vocation and it still does refer to it that way. But this must be properly understood. To do so, one must understand the theology of religious life.

Between marriage, single life, priesthood and religious life, the religious life, all of the elements in religious life are found in the Kingdom of Heaven and all those holy elements of the religious life will not come to an end at the end of time, but will continue into eternity. That’s why the Church refers to it as the highest calling or vocation. The lowly sinful person is called to life in the Kingdom of Heaven, beginning on earth.

The married state comes to an end at the death of the partner. There is no priesthood in heaven, because there is no longer a need for anyone to offer the sacrifice, to bless or to absolve from sin. As to the single life, we know from scripture that in heaven men and women are not given in marriage. There is no single state, because there is no individual. In heaven we exist as one body attached to Christ.

Consecrated chastity begins on earth and continues in heaven. The religious does not depend on the relationship with a spouse and children as a means to serve and love God. He/she lives in direct communion with God without the mediating love of a spouse and children. Again, the religious begins to live on earth as we will all live in heaven, a life where God is the only lover and you are the beloved. It is the role of the religious to serve as a sign for the rest of the Church of this reality that is to come for everyone.

Through the vow of poverty the religious gives up the right to ownership not only of material things. The religious gives up ownership of his time, resources, skills and future. All of these are placed at God’s disposal to be used for the sanctification of the Church. Again, the religious is a sign that in the Kingdom we shall have no needs, because living in the presence of the Beatific Vision satisfies every possible need and desire of the soul.

Others cannot do this, because they have other obligations such as spouses, children, and older parents to care for. Married people, single people and secular priests have a moral obligation to care for their biological families. Religious have no biological family. Upon making perpetual vows, the ties between the religious and their biological family change. They are still loved very much and there is contact several times a year. But the religious now joins a new family, his brothers or sisters in community. These become his/her responsibility to care for in sickness and in old age. But he depends totally on God’s providence to provide, unlike the secular man or woman who has retained the rightful ownership to the resources that God has provided to care for his family. The religious does not have such ownership over any resources to care for his brothers and sisters in need. Again, the religious is a sign, like the lilies of the field to which Christ referred. He does not become anxious. He uses what he has to care for his brothers and the rest is up to God. God will provide either in this world or in the next.

Finally, we come to obedience. This is very unique to religious. Married, single and priests do not have this vow. The obedience practiced by married, single and priests has limits. It is an obedience to the will of God in all things. That is absolutely necessary if we are to achieve holiness. But God allows the married, single and priest to retain a degree of self-determination regarding his activities, his work, how he acts, who he befriends and chooses to relate to, where he lives, how he uses his time, when he goes out and comes home, etc. The religious has none of these freedoms. But he has a much greater freedom. By putting his or her life in the hands of the superior his only choice is to say “yes” when he is commanded or directed.

In this manner, the religious proclaims the life of the angels who know only one word in the presence of God, “Amen”. They have no free will. They gave it up. When we enter heaven, we will no longer have free will, but we will not need it. Therefore, it is liberating. The religious proclaims to the world that in heaven, we shall all be free of worries.

In closing, the religious life is an eschatological life. It gives man a glimpse of life in Heaven, while still on earth. When the Church talks about the height of the call to the consecrated life (religious life), this is the height to which she is referring. Those called are to live a way of life, on earth that anticipates life in heaven and proclaims to the world what it will be like. Just as we can see Christ in the Eucharist, we can see heaven in religious life, despite the weaknesses of the religious. It is the life that is eschatological. The religious remains human and sinful and has to work toward holiness.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
What if you thought God called you to religious life and you got married and had children instead. Can you still be happy in this life and achieve holiness?
 
What if you thought God called you to religious life and you got married and had children instead. Can you still be happy in this life and achieve holiness?
I gues that triggers a major question in my mind. If someone feels called to religious life, why would they get married? Did the idea of religious life come afterward? That can happen. Many people have become religious after having been married.

I was married and the father of three children. I became a widower and then entered religious life. The same is true about many other people.

If you got married and the marriage is valid, then that’s where God wants you to be. That’s your call at this moment. Maybe someday, God may call you to religious life or some other form of consecrated life. But right now, this is your calling, to be a spouse and a parent… If this were not your calling, then the marriage is invalid. One way to know this is to ask onself, “Did I want to get married?” If the answer is 'Yes." The marraige is valid. If the marriage is valid, you have your answer. This where you belong and if you are a good spouse and parent, you will be a saint.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top