Thank you ALL for your contributions. I have found this extremely helpful.
Firstly, my anxiety disorder is relatively mild, it’s been mostly cured with Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, though I still occasionally feel scrupulous or have panic attacks due to impatience. It’s more a general anxiety than a mental disorder. I’ve been to counsellors who have said I don’t strike them as mentally ill in any way.
Secondly, moonletters’ post made me understand why the religious life is considered ‘objectively’ higher than married life. Even though marriage is a sacrament, it is a commitment to an imperfect, finite being, as such, it comes to an end when that person’s life comes to an end, that’s the only reason it’s less ‘permanent’ than religious vows, there’s nothing ‘lower’ about it in any other way, I guess.
To Angel Bradford, you’re probably right that I’m not called to the Salesians. I’ve pretty much arrived at that conclusion before I got here, I am still going to visit the Franciscans of the Immaculate and the Conventual Franciscans at some point.
I’ve started to feel a greater peace about making vows lately. I honestly feel that I could live a good life either as a married or a religious person, but if God calls me to the religious life, I can’t say no.
Two final things I’d appreciate an opinion on:
- The role of ambition - the things I feel I have a talent and ability to achieve in the world are all in a role I would describe as worldly-academic, i.e. not primarily about philosophy and the Church, but primarily about applying my reason to political and social institutions, in a way that takes account of philosophy and Truth, but not in a way that is primarily about the Church. Should we choose a way of life that allows us to achieve our ambitions (i.e. if my ambition and talent was to be a good role-model for troubled kids, I’d totally see how the Salesians would be a good choice for me) or should we sacrifice our ambitions in the knowledge that God will always give us greater things to do (i.e. by giving up politics and social theory to enter the Conventuals, I trust that God will lead me to use the talents of my reason in Theology, the queen of the sciences). If I’m actually called to realise my ambition, then I’m probably called to a secular life, maybe in a Third Order.
I also know I’ve been given the gift of encouragement - of telling others what they need to hear to go on living the life they’ve been called to. More often than not, if I’m in silent prayer with others, I’ll settle on someone else in the congregation, and will pray asking God to hear his/her prayers, to pour out blessings on him/her, etc. That’s a gift I can use in any state of life, I guess, but it makes it hard to pray for my own intentions. That leaves me at the mercy of hearing what others have received in prayer about me, but never entirely trusting them.
- The role of pride - after what I’ve already said about others’ “failed vocations”, I know it would be very humbling for me to have to go back to my friends and say “I was arrogant to think I could pursue a vocation just to get it ‘out of my system’, in truth, I was never discerning at all, I always knew the answer was no.” I have seen the joy it gives to others, including a girl I was hoping to have a relationship with, to see me pursuing a ‘higher calling’, and I don’t want to let them down. I could enter the priesthood just to satisfy the many friends and others who have expressed joy that I’m considering it.
In a way, I’ve realised why I feel resentful, it’s because I entered the discernment process to ‘get it out of my system’ - I thought it was something every single Catholic man ought to do for a year or two before deciding to get married. It never occurred to me that God would actually call me to give myself at the end of it. Honestly, I thought I’d develop skills and devotion that would make me a better husband and father, and I have. The only problem is, now I feel like I’d be ungrateful to God if I took those skills and used them to win a faithful wife, instead of using them in the service of the whole Church through religious priesthood. Even so, I always have the feeling when I pray the office, that I’m rehearsing for a time when I’ll lead my family in prayer together - maybe that’s just pride, and a refusal to really pray, to really enter into relationship with God in the here and now.
I feel like I’ve been shoved into it: first I meet and make friends with people who are discerning vocations, then I adopt a persona that encourages them, then other people see that persona and encourage me to discern, then I think I ought to discern to keep them happy and because I don’t trust my own intuitions and refuse to follow my own loves and desires, knowing that some of my desires are selfish and sinful, then I find great freedom in single life, preparing for marriage, but the consequences of my previous persona have caught up with me, i.e. the order I wrote to before coming to this self-knowledge writes back to me, I take it as a sign of providence and go, then I pray with them, live with them, talk with them, all their talk presumes that I want to be called, so I play the part in the conversation that they want me to play, I pray as they suggest, I start to convince myself that maybe I am called, and the more I tell others, the more I feel they are expecting it of me, the harder it would be for me to refuse.
I know what will convince my friends to really stick at their own discernment is not my going into religious life so much as my being honest about what God wants, all the same, how do I distinguish what God wants, what other holy people want of me, and just what my own selfish will wants?
It occurred to me yesterday that I’m not really as joyless as I think I am. I trust God’s word more than I trust my own emotions, which are prone to anxiety and selfishness and depression. I have chosen to give my all to God, as I said in the original post, I won’t say no to religious life. The Lord loves a cheerful giver. I know that the Lord loves me. Therefore, I am a giver whom the Lord loves. Therefore I am cheerful. QED. If I entertain the thought that my emotions are more real than reason, logic and Holy Scripture, am I entertaining a doubt about my faith? How should I respond to this particular argument? If someone else had said it to me, I would have accused them of trying to brainwash me.
Finally, I just keep hearing those words of Our Lord to the rich young man “if you would be perfect” - I have heard it said that, while the priesthood is not for everyone, the religious life is for anyone who says ‘yes’ to that call to be perfect. And those other words of our Lord to his disciples on celibacy “let he who can accept it, accept it”. It’s not a question of what I want, or what ‘feels right’, if I can accept the religious life, I ought to accept it. Right?