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Why Prayer is a Vital Part of Your Vocation.pages

Date post: 19-Nov-2015
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Part of the vocational crisis we're experiencing in the Church is that Catholics don't understand what a vocation really is, don't identify their own vocation, and don't commit their vocation to prayer. Praying for your vocation isn't just for discernment. Once we enter our vocation, we should be praying about it every day.
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Empowering Your Vocation Through Prayer
Transcript
  • Empowering Your Vocation Through Prayer

  • Yes, You Have a Vocation!

    Most Catholics dont realize that their vocation is a call to love as Jesus loves. This is a topic well cover heavily in the Adventure of Faith course. The Second Vatican Council (in the document Lumen Gentium) reminded us of what has always been true. All of us are called to holiness, and that means that all of us have a vocation to love. Whether you are called to the priesthood, to religious life or to marriage and family life, you are called to grow in selIless love.

    Whats Prayer Got to Do With It?

    What does this have to do with prayer? Well, obviously our prayer for others is part of our love for them. When we pray for others we participate in the goodness that God wants for those we pray for. Thats one great way to love others.

  • Additionally, to love as Jesus loves is only possible through grace - and that is a grace supported by prayer. Lets just think about what our vocation calls us to. Agap is the Greek word for the love that Jesus calls us to in His new commandment to love one another as He has loved us. In Greek, the word Agap means the love of the gods. This means a love that is not attainable by human standards. How did Jesus show us Agap? By giving up His entire self for us on the Cross. Jesus didnt just give up His life. He sacriIiced his body, his human dignity, and even his divine rights. He poured it all out for us. The Resurrection showed us that as God He could do this - He could pour Himself out completely for us for all eternity and never exhaust Himself. After all, He is eternal. But what if we Iinite, mortal beings tried that? What if we poured ourselves out completely for others? Simply put, there would be nothing left. Were not eternal or inIinite. We would poof out of existence (to use a sophisticated theological phrase). Unless. Unless we could love with the inIinite, eternal love of God. So to love as Jesus loves is not just a nice sentiment. Its not a feel-good statement like now be nice to each other. Its a radical call for us to let God love others through us - to pour ourselves out for others and then to trust in the Resurrection. That kind of radical trust in God is only going to come through prayer.

    Deep Prayer and Radical Conversion Lead to Deep Love

    Finally, if we are going to love in this radical way through our vocation, we need to enter into the deep prayer of conversion. In his wonderful book Deep Conversion, Deep Prayer Father Thomas Dubay reminds us that deep prayer and deep conversion are both necessary - and that they are dependent on each other. We cannot love God with our whole heart, and we cannot love our neighbor as Jesus loved us if we do not get rid of the selIish tendencies in our hearts. Prayer and conversion are the only ways to do that. The sacramental grace that comes with Holy Matrimony and Holy Orders, and with the sacramental of religious vows, empowers us to love with the love of God. But like all grace, this love, which we know as the theological virtue of charity, calls us to puriIication, conversion and participation. This happens for us through acts of charity but also through prayer.

    Bottom Line: The purpose of your vocation is to help you become holy. Taking steps to exercise holiness will help you learn to love more completely. And a great way to commit yourself to growing in holiness is to establish habits that open your heart to what God wants to do in you through his grace. And an easy way to develop those habits is to use a proven behavioral template.

    http://mycatholicbooksandmedia.com/deep-conversion-deep-prayer.html

  • So I'd like to invite you to grab a set of behavioral templates that can help you grow in an important habit in each of Iive key areas of Catholic spirituality. You'll get an easy-to-follow diagram that leads you step-by-step through the formation of the habit. Click this link to go to www.fromtheabbey.com to Iind the templates. Just click on the icon for the template you want, Iill out the pop-up form, download the template and get started transforming your faith life! Brought to you by Jeffrey S. Arrowood at From the Abbey, dedicated to helping you rediscover the JOY of learning and living your faith so you can grow in intimacy with God.

    http://www.fromtheabbey.com


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