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DL82
Guest
I have heard various different advice about this. I thought I’d narrow it down to the options I’ve heard most often. Please let me know what you think.
Yes I agree. I think you should pursue first what you want, and then try to discern if it is what God wants of you. Maybe God wants you to learn something on the way to finding out your vocation?I vote on #2
The question seems to be what do you feel called to. Just by your postings it seems you are more inclined to marriage tho three short paragraphs is not a great indicator. Most in vocations work will tell you that whatever you choose God wants you to be happy. He uses our own talents and life experiences to shape us to His plan.Thanks for replies.
Seems like nobody thinks ‘marriage first’ and nobody thinks ‘do what you want least’.
I guess I’m in a position of having great respect for both the married and religious states, seeing what both of them can do. The question is, would I be of more help to the religious life as a married man and father to many children, raised in the faith, some of whom might become priests and religious, would I be of more help to the married life as a priest and religious preaching and praying for good holy marriages?
If I go on the basis of ‘what I want first’, I feel like I ought to look for a wife first. Time and youth seem more important to married life than to religious life, and I am aware, in the sense of the global and historical Church, that 27 is late to be thinking of marriage.
On the other hand, I wonder whether I’d ever really be comfortable as a married man until after I know for absolute certain that I’m not called to be a priest. I know I could always become a Deacon, but if I’m called to the priesthood, I need to know now. I also feel like I’d be a better husband if I first spent a year or two discerning religious life, but that takes me into my 30s, and I don’t know if I want to wait that long. There’s also the possibility that that discernment process takes me where I don’t want to go.
I appreciate your advice.
Prayers for you. Do you have a spiritual director? The call is often a whisper , a tug. Ask for the guidance of the Holy Spirit. The discernment process is a wonderful journey and not a “waste of time”. God will not take you where you don’t want to go. Don’t fight it. Don’t resist it because it’s like a boomerang if you ignore it - it happened to meThanks for replies.
Seems like nobody thinks ‘marriage first’ and nobody thinks ‘do what you want least’.
I guess I’m in a position of having great respect for both the married and religious states, seeing what both of them can do. The question is, would I be of more help to the religious life as a married man and father to many children, raised in the faith, some of whom might become priests and religious, would I be of more help to the married life as a priest and religious preaching and praying for good holy marriages?
If I go on the basis of ‘what I want first’, I feel like I ought to look for a wife first. Time and youth seem more important to married life than to religious life, and I am aware, in the sense of the global and historical Church, that 27 is late to be thinking of marriage.
On the other hand, I wonder whether I’d ever really be comfortable as a married man until after I know for absolute certain that I’m not called to be a priest. I know I could always become a Deacon, but if I’m called to the priesthood, I need to know now. I also feel like I’d be a better husband if I first spent a year or two discerning religious life, but that takes me into my 30s, and I don’t know if I want to wait that long. There’s also the possibility that that discernment process takes me where I don’t want to go.
I appreciate your advice.