Pope Francis: ‘the Church needs
vocations’
Pope Francis greets participants at a congress for the Pastoral Care of Vocation in Europe (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis tells participants at a Congress for the
Pastoral Care of Vocations in Europe not to be afraid to take up the challenge
of continuing to proclaim the vocation to consecrated life and to ordained
ministry.
By Linda Bordoni
Noting that the Congress for the Pastoral Care of
Vocations in Europe is intended to help implement the Synod of Bishops
devoted to young people, Pope Francis urged those present to
continue to proclaim the vocation to consecrated life and to ordained ministry.
The Church – he said - needs this!
In prepared
remarks, he focused on three approaches that, he said, are particularly
close to his heart: holiness, which, he said, is a calling that
gives meaning to one’s entire life journey; communion, the
fertile soil for vocations in the Church, and vocation itself,
a keyword to be preserved and “conjugated” with others – ‘happiness’, ‘freedom’
and ‘together’ – and finally ‘declined’ as special consecration”.
Holiness
Focussing on ‘holiness’, the Pope reminded those present
never to forget that vocation is a life-long journey. He
pointed out it has to do with the years of youth in terms of the overall
direction we choose to take in response to God’s invitation, but it also has to
do with the years of adulthood in terms of its fruitfulness and our discernment
of how best to do good.
He reminded participants that our lives are meant to bear
fruit in charity, and this entails the call to holiness that the Lord addresses
to everyone, each in his or her own way.
Communion
As for ‘communion’, the Pope said pastoral care has to be
synodal and should involve a “journeying together.”
He said it’s about living ever more fully our filiation and
fraternity, fostering mutual respect, valuing the richness of each individual
and believing that the Risen Lord can also work wonders through the pain and
frailty that are part of everyone’s life.
The Church’s communion, he continued, will give rise to new
vocations, and lamented the fact that sometimes in communities, families and
presbyterates, worldly mentalities cause division and separation.
“That is part of today’s culture, and the tormented
political history of Europe can serve as a warning and an incentive,” he said.
Only by acknowledging ourselves truly as communities that
are open, alive and inclusive, he said, will we be prepared to face the
future.
Vocation
Reflecting on the word “vocation,” the Pope said it is not
outdated. He said he knows of some communities that have decided to stop using
the word “vocation” in their work with the young, because they think that young
people get scared by it and may be reluctant to join in their activities.
But this, he said, “is a strategy doomed to failure.”
“What we need are men and women, laity and consecrated
people who are passionate, set afire by their encounter with God, redeemed in
their humanity, and capable of proclaiming in their lives the happiness born of
their vocation,” he said.
As promised in his premise, the Pope went on to elaborate on
the concepts of ‘happiness’, ‘freedom’ and ‘together’.
He described happiness as a burning issue in a world in
which people content themselves with fleeting joys and said that true happiness
remains because it is Jesus himself, whose friendship always endures”.
He explored the word freedom, which he said is deeply
connected to freedom from forms of dependence or domination, and has much to do
with vocations and decisions that must coincide with what God wants of us.
As for ‘together’, the Pope said no one can make a life
decision alone: “vocation is always for, and with, others”.
He said the Lord never calls us “simply as individuals, but
always within a community, to share his loving plan, which is plural from the
outset because he himself is plural, a Trinity of love. It revives our
awareness that, in the Church, nothing is accomplished alone”.
A forest that quietly grows
Pope Francis concluded recalling the precious contribution
of all those communities of consecrated life that form a great network of
charitable works and of mission; of monastic life, in which the roots of Europe
are planted and that continues to attract many vocations; of parishes, working
on the ground and filled with evangelical potential for our time; of the
commitment of countless priests, deacons, consecrated men and women, and
bishops devote themselves with integrity and dedication to the service of the
young. Their efforts, he said, are “like a great forest that quietly
grows”.
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