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What's this
Vocation Thing Anyway?
by Mary Lovee Klipp
Test your vocation know-how by taking
the quiz…
1. True or False: Only
priests, nuns and those chanting monk guys have vocations.
2. The definition of a vocation is:
a.
a specific ministry each of us is called to do by God-either as a
priest or religious, a married or a single person.
b.
a very long trip
c.
the calling by God to be a priest or religious
3. How do you know if a particular
vocation is right for you?
a.
just if you feel God is calling you to that ministry
b.
if you are a holy and devout person
c.
the desire and ability to do it and proper motivation
4. True or False: Every
Christian has a vocation of holiness.
5. Those called to the religious or
priestly life:
a.
are automatically zapped by God into saintly people
b.
know right away that religious life is what they want to do
c.
often must do a lot of thinking and praying before they discover their
vocation
6. True or False: Having a religious
vocation is better than being married or single.
Here's where it all comes down, here's
where it all ends, where the truth of your future is, look no farther
(ok, I'm going a little too far). Now tally up your score, then check
which category you fit in.
Answers:
1. False,
2. A ,
3. C,
4. True,
5. C,
6. False
1-2 VOCATION DEFICIENT
Vocations include more than just becoming a nun or priest. For more
information check out these Bible verses: Gen. 12:1-4; Ex. 3:1-10; 1
Sam3:1-18; Acts 9:15; Matt. 9:9; 1 Corinthians 12:4-5.
3-4 VOCATION GENIUS
Congrats!!! You've got a healthy knowledge of vocations. To fine-tune
the facts, check out the Bible references above.
5-6 VOCATION EXTRAORDINAIRE
You rock! You realize that each Christian has a vocation, whether to the
priestly, religious or lay life. Each is equally important and necessary
to the life of the Church. Good job!
What is God trying to tell me?
Dear Brother Augustine,
I read your story (in the March '97
issue of YOU! Magazine). I am thinking about entering the priesthood and
a lot of what you said and experienced kind of related to me.
I don't know any other young people
who are entering the religious life. I have a spiritual director, but I
still feel a bit too young. I suppose I won't really find a lot of guys
my age who would be considering the priesthood as a vocation. I'm only
19! How old were you when you entered the monastery?
You talked about the inner peace you
had while you were in the monastery. I can relate to that.
Last year, I attended a youth
evangelization camp, and ever since the camp, I've felt changed.A LOT!
Sometimes it overwhelms me. My life seems to be yearning for something
more than a woman or money can ever give. Right this moment, I feel all
I need is God and His love.
This desire to serve is so special
that sometimes I cry and beg God to call me now, no more tests! I also
realized that marriage and relationships can limit the way I want to
serve Him. I guess you can relate to this, too, since you had a
girlfriend prior to your entrance into the monastery. How did you deal
with that, especially promising to remain celibate? Even with my doubts,
being close to the Lord is all I want! And, I love those robes!
I've visited a monastery here in
British Columbia. It's very quiet there, but I love it. The peace just
penetrates through me. Right now, I feel becoming a priest or monk is
really for me. God bless! You're in my prayers!
--Teo Ugabar
Dear Teo,
Thanks for the letter! It's greatly
encouraging to hear that other "younger" folks are also
thinking about the religious life. No, you (and I) are not the only
ones. I was amazed at the response to the March '97 article. Many young
men and women seem to be on their way…
Sounds to me like you actually may
have a vocation to the contemplative life. I was struck by the number of
times you repeated the phrase "searching for God" which
happens to be a Benedictine motto. St. Benedict said, "Above all
other things, the monk must be a man who seeks God."
Not all monks are completely
cloistered. The ones near you sound a bit isolated (perhaps they are
Trappists or Cistercians) but we, for example, run a school and two
parishes.
I understand your enthusiasm and take
courage from it. Pray like crazy! You're right about the robes, too! The
robes - more properly called "the habit" - are pretty nice
fringe benefits. But, I think it has some practical value as well. I
almost never take mine off because I've noticed that I behave
differently when I'm not in it. I just don't have the strength to NOT
dress the part.
Concerning celibacy… I'm still
learning how to deal with it, I'm afraid. It involves a lot of pain (but
then, so does marriage.) Mother Teresa said, "Love, to be true,
must hurt." She's got a point. In the meantime, we pray… Keep up
the good fight. And please keep me in your prayers.
Peace,
Br. Augustine
A Voice From The Cloister
by Brother Augustine
The
mind cries out, explains, demonstrates, protests; but inside me a voice
rises and shouts, "Be quiet mind; let us hear the heart!" Nikos
Kazantazkis.
I was going to write a story about how I finally decided to become a
monk, but the more I thought about it, the more I began to realize that
I never really did decide. It was decided for me by God.
But my friends keep asking me,
"How did you ever decide to do this?" So last week, I went
looking through my old diaries to see if there were hints of a vocation
hidden in my thoughts. I was surprised by what I found.
GALVESTON, TEXAS
1990
March 20
What will I do with my life? I want to
BE something! I have all this energy. I've prayed to find my place, I've
searched for it, but I can't find what I'm looking for. I have this
feeling and I don't know what to do with it. Sometimes I try to channel
it into my studies, but as soon as I sit down with a book, I lose it.
ROME, ITALY
1992
April 28
Today I met some Benedictine monks. I
was very impressed. I remember this girl just stared at them as they
walked down the street. The policemen on their motorcycles looked
downright silly next to them. I still sometimes feel like I would like
to become a priest. I would love to belong to the Church in that way. I
would love to wear those robes! They say Vespers at 7:15. Perhaps I'll
go.
May 19 I just got a job in a
monastery! I can't believe it. It's such a quiet place. I must remember
to be quiet. That will be hard for me - a good thing, though... I think.
I wonder if I'll like it. This is such a foreign experience.
May 20 The monks keep asking me what
brought me here, well, I just don't know. Perhaps it was God... These
guys are cool, but I could never be a monk. And yet, living and praying
and talking with them makes me so happy.
May 21 The monks wear a long black
tunic with a hood and a piece of black cloth hanging down the front and
back. I still can't figure out how they go to the bathroom... I could
dig being a monk. I think I could dig being a priest too. It's just that
I like girls way too much. I mean it.
June 14
You know, I've changed a lot in the
last few years, but something has happened here in this monastery that
has changed me in a profound way. I'm not too sure what it is, but I
feel as if a seed has been planted. I am beginning to feel what some
people call "inner peace." The funny thing is that it hasn't
exactly made me happy. As I learn about myself, I am more aware of what
I don't know... the more peace I find within myself, the more I realize
the parts of me that are not peaceful.
Is the monastic life really for me?
SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI
1995
April 11
Is the monastic life really for me? I
have a girlfriend! Things get so complicated. I was at peace no more
than three weeks ago. Now what? Why, if I am to be a monk, would God
send me a woman I could care about?
A Benedictine! To spend my life in search of God! To wear the black
habit! To perform the Eucharist, hear confessions, preach sermons! To
vow my life into bonds that free my soul! To live each day in prayer,
close to the heart of our Savior, close to his holy presence in the
Blessed Sacrament!
Am I to be a priest? Please, God, be more specific in your directions.
April 16
I am still in love with my
girlfriend... but more confident that the monastery is my calling. As
much as I really do care for her, I still see the priesthood as the
answer to my question of what to do with the rest of this life.
April 27
I have such an awesome decision before
me. I have come extremely close to entering this monastery... but I just
can't make that final leap. If I knew it was what God wanted, I would
certainly trust Him to work things out. But I'm just not sure.
June 15
I'm sitting in my room wondering what
I just did with my life. I walked into the monastery this morning, found
the abbot, and asked him if I could join his community. I'm tired of
messing around. Very well. I'm leaving for the monastery. I'm taking a
risk. I'm going for it - all out!
Look, I want to do the right thing.
Christ will not abandon me if I seek him honestly. On second thought, I
like my life the way it is. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. I am really
happy - or at least I have been. But all of a sudden, I feel so sad. No,
I have chosen to begin. I have chosen to stop making circles of my life
and to begin the search.
There comes a point where you've got
to move from fun to joy. That's what I'm doing now. I'll miss my
girlfriend. I will miss dance clubs and parties, but there is a chance
that something infinitely bigger and more beautiful is waiting for me.
Now I have to empty my heart. Now I have to put my trust - all my trust
in Jesus Christ. If I seek him, he will not abandon me.
Am I strong enough for this? No. Is
He? Yes. He will not give me a burden I can't carry. The celibacy part
is going to be tough. Really tough. And obedience ain't gonna be no
piece of cake either.
"Will this be my home for the
rest of my life? Oh my God. I'm scared..."
June 19
My first night in the monastery. Will
this be my home for the rest of my life? Oh my God. I'm scared again.
I'm depressed. Can I be bound into this monotonous cycle of living?
PRAY-EAT-WORK-PRAY-EAT-WORK-PRAY-EAT-WORK.... I'm tired. And I want a
girlfriend.
June 28
I hope I have the strength to do this.
Lord, give me the strength.
June 29
Last night I had a dream. I don't
remember the details of it, but I know that in it, I met, or spoke with
St. Augustine and decided to name myself after him. When I woke up, I
pulled out his autobiography and read the following passage: "So my
two wills, one old, the other new, one carnal, the other spiritual, were
in conflict with one another, and their discord robbed my soul of all
concentration... I was split between them." This is exactly what
I've been going through. But St. Augustine gave up everything in the
end. Will I?
August 28
My first day in the habit. People call
me "Brother." The title feels strange. Like I don't deserve
it. The habit feels strange. Like I don't fit it. I don't know whether
or not I'll stay here more than a year, but I'll try. I am not so happy
as I am at peace. Does that make sense?
SAINT LOUIS,
MISSOURI
1996
January 7
Tomorrow I begin my novitiate. Does it
scare me? It does. But no matter what path I choose it will have pain.
Deep, agonizing pain. If I have a girlfriend, it might be jealousy, if I
have a wife, it might be boredom or fear for my children. If I am
celibate, it may be loneliness. Whichever path I choose, pain is an
inevitable consequence. Because I am human.
I can't spend my life running away from suffering. Even God felt pain.
Jesus felt pain and loneliness and rejection. Just like me. "He who
wishes to follow me must drink from the same cup as I." The cup of
loneliness. The cup of emptiness.
January 11
I've made it through the first three
days of novitiate. So far so good. Only 363 days to go (It's Leap
Year!). For once in my life, I have no say in what happens to me. I am
no longer in control. For one year, I will shut up, keep my head down,
and listen...
March 20
From the very last window at the back
of the cloister I, a new monk, hear the highway hum. Two hundred cars a
minute packed with busy people grind past at unimaginable speeds. Where
are they running, and from whom? What is so important to so many people
that they must get there so quickly? Beyond that line of trees is the
World of which the Wise Man warned me. I am tied to it forever, and yet
it is leaving me behind. In a monastery behind a row of trees.
May 29
MISOU
I dreamt about surfing last night.
Surfing and having a girlfriend. I can't figure out which I miss more.
Still, I suspect I'll stick around when my novitiate is up. I am
beginning to really love the silence.
July 4
Sometimes I pray that I am not called
to be a monk. At moments like this I ask, "Why me? Did I not have
enough pain in my life that I had to go and add celibacy to my list of
struggles? I'll tell you what: nothing short of God Himself will keep me
in this monastery. Fortunately, I think God Himself is keeping me in
this monastery. You can consider my presence here proof of His
existence. August 8 Lately, my doubts have grown more serious. I told
Mom and Dad I wasn't' going to stay. There are other things I would like
to do. Go off to L.A. Be a real writer.
August 15
Is ambition really such a bad thing?
Even after 14 months in a monastery, I still want so many worldly
things. My thoughts are all questions these days....
August 21
How many days have I wasted away in
sin? This monastery seems to have brought out the worst in me. But then,
that's sort of the point, isn't it? To flush out the demons so I can
meet them head-on.
August 24
I have been here over a year and I am
still not used to waking up at five a.m. I need something to end this
torturous indecision. Faith, perhaps. But since I obviously don't have
enough of that, I'll ask for a miracle instead.
August 26 Still no miracle.
August 28
The Feast of St. Augustine I had a
dream this morning while I was meditating. I dreamt that I was standing
in the middle of a small room I was surrounded by vicious, snarling
monsters - anthropomorphic and grotesque. They approached me on every
side, poised to devour me. But instead of defending myself, I lifted my
hands to heaven. And the monsters were whisked away. Weird.
September 8
Today, the novices had a talk with
Patrick Barry, the abbot of Ampleforth. He warned us against constantly
"looking over the wall." "The modern world is such a
world of options," he said, "that we find it almost impossible
to commit to anything. But doesn't it all boil down to trust? Isn't that
the most fundamental thing expected of us? Some day, you will think of
changing your mind, but will trust Him instead. Stick to the facts.
Forget your imaginings about the future. Picture yourself the blind man
before the Pharisees: 'All I know is that I was blind, and now I see.'
Stop arguing with God and trust Him."
Oktober 1
The Feast of St. Therese of Liseux
Over the last week, I have received three roses: a red rose, a white
rose, and today, a yellow rose. What can they mean? I have made my
decision. I will join the monastery.
Oktober 21
A beautiful day. The air is so cool
and clean. Our trees are starting to blush. It will be winter, then
Christmas, and then I will vow my life to God. I trust Him and I will
live for Him. I feel good, It's not the kind of good you feel when you
tell a funny joke. It's not the kind of good you feel on a first date.
It's not the kind of good you feel when you hit a home run, or catch a
clean wave, or ace a test. It's the kind of good that sort of wells up
slowly from within so that you hardly realize how good you're feeling.
Sort of like how Jeremiah found God not in a thunderstorm or earthquake,
but in a gentle breeze.
Oktober 29
We had a motivational speaker in our
church two nights ago. He asked, "Is there anyone here who is truly
happy? Is there anyone here who just cannot imagine being any happier?
Of course not." I was a little embarrassed because I had almost
raised my hand. I am truly happy. I can't imagine being any happier. As
far as I can tell, I am doing God's will. What more could I want? This
story is over. The end of my novitiate. The end of my beginning. As my
Latin prof used to say, "Now there's a story with a happy
middle."
Br.
Augustine is currently finishing his studies in Oxford, England!
For more info on the Benedictines
write to:
Saint Louis Abbey
500 South Mason Road
St. Louis, MO 63141
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