Pope’s message for World Day of Prayer for Vocations

Pope’s message for World Day of Prayer for Vocations
World Youth Day pilgrims pose for a photo at a vocations festival in a Panama City park, in January 2019. Photo: CNS/Chaz Muth

VATICAN (CNS): “When we speak of ‘vocation,’ then, it is not just about choosing this or that way of life, devoting one’s life to a certain ministry or being attracted by the charism of a religious family, movement or ecclesial community,” Pope Francis wrote in his message for the 2022 World Day of Prayer for Vocations, which was marked on May 8.

“It is about making God’s dream come true, the great vision of fraternity that Jesus cherished when he prayed to the Father ‘that they may all be one’,” the pope wrote.

The message was dedicated to the theme, Called to build the human family, and it looked at the meaning of vocation within the context of a synodal Church—” a Church that listens to God and to the world.”

The pope wrote, “We know that the Church exists to evangelise, to go forth and to sow the seed of the gospel in history. This mission can only be carried out if all areas of pastoral activity work together and, even more importantly, involve all the Lord’s disciples.”

Pope Francis said, “We must beware of the mentality that would separate priests and laity, considering the former as protagonists and the latter as executors” and instead “together carry forward the Christian mission as the one people of God, laity and pastors.”

The pope wrote that all members of the Church are called: to be protagonists together in the Church’s mission as “an evangelising community”; to be guardians of one another and of creation; and to build a fraternal world.

When we speak of ‘vocation,’ then, it is not just about choosing this or that way of life, devoting one’s life to a certain ministry or being attracted by the charism of a religious family, movement or ecclesial community

“In a word, we are called to become a single family in the marvellous common home of creation, in the reconciled diversity of its elements,” the pope wrote.

Everything is rooted in welcoming and responding to God’s loving gaze, he wrote. “Our lives change when we welcome this gaze. Everything becomes a vocational dialogue between ourselves and the Lord, but also between ourselves and others.”

This dialogue allows each Christian to become “ever more who we are,” meaning, for those ordained in the priesthood, to become ever more “instruments of Christ’s grace and mercy,” for consecrated men and women to become ever more “the praise of God and the prophecy of a new humanity,” and for married couples “to be mutual gift and givers and teachers of life.”

Christians receive a vocation as individuals and “we are also called together” like “the tiles of a mosaic,” he wrote. “Each is lovely in itself, but only when they are put together do they form a picture.”

The pope wrote, “This is the mystery of the Church: a celebration of differences, a sign and instrument of all that humanity is called to be.” For that to happen, Pope Francis said, “the Church must become increasingly synodal: capable of walking together, united in harmonious diversity, where everyone can actively participate and where everyone has something to contribute.”

Therefore, with each vocation striving to make “God’s dream” of human fraternity come true, each vocation “contributes to a common objective: to celebrate among men and women that harmony of manifold gifts that can only be brought about by the Holy Spirit.”

The pope urged priests, consecrated men and women, and the lay faithful to “journey and work together in bearing witness to the truth that one great human family united in love is no utopian vision, but the very purpose for which God created us.”

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