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Download Emmaus Vocation Course, 2016-17 Discerning My Vocation
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Emmaus Vocation Course, 2016-17 Discerning My Vocation I. Introduction Aim: Apply the various aspects of discernment to vocational discernment II. What are we discerning? A. Evaluate: Discernment concerns —“How can I give God the most glory?” not “What will give God the most glory?” B. Vocational discernment is actually ascertaining to which vocation I am to be open. We discern a vocational direction. A vocation to marriage, religious life, consecrated virginity, and priesthood is ratified by others. III. Preparation A. Assess your relationship with God Is your life moving towards greater love of God or is there serious sin? Are you really open to the direction that God wants or do you just want Him to affirm your plan? Do you have a pattern of regular prayer and reflection on your life? Is this a time when the Lord seems present in prayer/life? Or a time of neither presence nor absence (a neutral time)? Or a time of persistent dryness? (If the last, St. Ignatius would counsel you to wait for another time when you aren’t in what he calls “spiritual desolation,” or the persistent feeling Lord is absent.) B. Self-knowledge1. Do you have the information that you need? 2. Have you had time to reflect on your strengths and weaknesses? The “shape” of your life? 3. Are you relatively free regarding the various options? Or are there impediments that would unduly influence you? (patterns of sin, hurts, fears, resistance??) 4. Is this a good time to discern? IV. St. Ignatius’ 3 Ways A. “Clarity beyond doubting” (Fr. Gallagher, Discerning the Will of God). God reveals a direction, often “out of the blue,” that leaves one without doubt about the option itself and that it was God leading. 1 Emmaus Vocation Course, 2016-17 E.g. Paul’s conversion B. “An attraction of the heart”—entails a process of discerning the various movements of the heart over time to discover God’s leading For the person who is growing in their relationship with the Lord (not in grave sin)— 1. Ask God to reveal His will, to guide your prayer 2. As you pray about the various options, what thoughts, emotions, leanings (interior movements) are associated with each option? Is there a clear pattern? 3. What option is associated with a peace/joy/energy in the Lord? Are these deeper (of the heart), (i.e. spiritual consolations), and enduring? C. According to our natural abilities—use this tool if God has not indicated His will through “clarity beyond doubting,” or the movements of the heart do not give adequate direction, or due to “neutral” prayer, God has not been doing much attracting of the heart. 1. Using reason, weigh the options— a. Steps--i. Ask for God’s guidance ii. List options iii. Identify pros and cons iv. Weigh out each pro/con according to a godly/not worldly perspective. Which carry more significance in your spiritual life. What are the reasons that carry the most weight in your being generous with God? Do any indicate more work is necessary? b. Evaluate the following pros and cons. Which carry the most weight? Which indicate more work? marriage— cons—afraid of commitment to one person; fear it would end in divorce like my parents. Have a lot of loans that I would drag into a relationship pros—I’ve always been comfortable around women; wouldn’t ever be lonely. Could see myself knowing the love of God better through the love that is shared in marriage. I’m selfish and marriage would challenge me to become less so c. priesthoodcons—dislike studies (and do poorly); fear what celibacy would 2 Emmaus Vocation Course, 2016-17 mean; seems like priests are lonely pros—preaching would drive me closer to God; I would love to say Mass and serve others through being a priest. Being up front and top decision-maker in a parish is attractive 2. Using the imagination—if still no clear indication from discerning the movements of the heart and weighing out the options a. Imagine yourself giving counsel to someone in your situation—what would you say? b. Imagine yourself on your deathbed--What would you have wanted to do? c. Imagine yourself at Judgment Day—What accounting would you want to give to the Lord? V. Seek confirmation in prayer and in life. Consider what needs to happen for moving ahead. VI. Common questions— A. “What if I make a mistake?” B. “What should I do if things aren’t panning out?” God has more invested in your life than you do! He is greater than your discernment. If He wants you some place He has ways to get you there. Therefore, discernment should be a process filled with confidence in his sure leading--peace and joy more than fearfulness and worry, and as Peter Kreeft would say—“more like a game than a war, more like writing love letters than taking final exams” (http://www.peterkreeft.com/topics/discernment.htm). 3