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Making Career & Lifework Choices
Part I: Discovering Your Personal
Vocation and Mission
by
Rick Sarkisian, Ph.D
The rich young man in Mark’s gospel (Mark 10:17-22)
asked Jesus, "What must I do to inherit eternal
life?" Pope John Paul II teaches that he was really
asking:
And today a young person might ask:
Jesus responds with a simple "Follow me." To follow
Christ means to discover our vocation (to be what
God wants us to be), and our mission or purpose in
life (to do what God wants us to do).
One of the most important decisions you will make
involves choosing a profession or career. The task
is often difficult and woven with uncertainty. There
are many occupational categories to consider, and
many wonderful avenues to explore.
Personal Vocation & Mission
Far more important than career choice, however, is
understanding that you are being called to a unique
and highly personal vocation and mission. VOCATION
is the Universal Call in baptism to live a holy life
(this gives life meaning and destiny), and the
Specific Choice of a state of life, such as
marriage, priesthood, or the consecrated life.
MISSION is the General Witness to others of Christ,
and our Lifework Choices, which denote specific use
of God-given abilities to bring glory to God in all
things (for instance, as student, parent, worker).
There should be a sense of exploration and adventure
in seeking the personal vocation and mission for
every baptized Catholic. I encourage you to
regularly pray for knowledge of God’s will, and for
an understanding of His plan, which over time
becomes more and more clear. Remember that you are
individually chosen by God for a specific vocation
and purpose in life, as it is written in Isaiah 43:1
"I have called you by name, you are mine."
Daily prayer – preferably in a quiet place – is one
of the best ways to discover this sense of purpose.
Pray daily, preferably in a quiet place. This is a
time to meet God and talk with Him about the day.
Even prayer time without words, just silence, is a
way to communicate with God and have an open line to
Him. Ask for awareness of God’s gifts, and how to
use these gifts in the home, school, and working
world.
Prayer for discernment of your state of life is
essential. If you are called to the vocation of
marriage, pray for your future spouse. If you’re
called to the priesthood or religious life, seek
guidance from the Holy Spirit about how best to
serve God (i.e. diocesan priest, religious order,
special ministry to the poor).
The people, signs, circumstances and opportunities
that surround us are also ways to understand God’s
will. Guidance from the Holy Spirit helps to sort
out God’s plan from other influences in life. Be
assured that even when wrong choices are made, our
Lord will never let us down, and He will be there to
turn mistakes into great goodness. As St. Paul
writes in his letter to the Philippians, "And I am
sure that he who began a good work in you will bring
it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ" (1:6).
God’s Call
Never forget that you are chosen according to God’s
purpose for a particular vocation and mission. You
are consecrated for this purpose to grow in holiness
and grace, following the sound of God’s voice. The
prophet Jeremiah tells us: "Before I formed you in
the womb, I knew you, and before you were born, I
consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the
nations" (Jeremiah 1:5).
Saying yes to God in response to His call is to be
what God wants us to be. It is not what the world
wants us to be. "Success" is not as important as
being faithful. Sometimes a call may be very gentle,
very subtle. Sometimes His call will be as obvious
as a billboard message, or honking horn. God’s call
may simply be a nudge in a general direction, or
more specifically to a clear, distinct plan of
action. Regardless of how the call takes place, God
is there to cooperate with our choices in a
beautiful, often surprising way–to reveal life-map
details on our journey to Heaven.
Pope John Paul II tells us that discovering the
Lord’s will in our lives always involves "…A
receptive listening to the Word of God and the
Church, fervent and constant prayer, recourse to a
wise and loving spiritual guide, and a faithful
discernment of the gifts and talents given by God,
as well as the diverse social and historical
situations in which one lives" (Christifideles Laici).
As
faithful Catholics, let us consider the many
opportunities that exist for developing a greater
awareness of personal vocation and mission in our
lives.
Our vocation and mission involves far more than the
limits of career choice. It makes up our lifework
and our very existence as human beings, as
one-of-a-kind, unrepeatable works of love in
partnership with God’s creative powers in service to
the Gospel
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