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Pray for a Rich Harvest of Souls
by Bishop Victor Galeone
"Bishop,
I have a question. We hear a lot of talk these days about the priest
shortage in our country. I’d like to know what our diocese is doing
about vocations – especially to the priesthood."
At almost all of the town hall meetings conducted during my
pastoral visitations, I’ve had to respond to similar inquiries. My
response has invariably been the same. Vocations – whether to the
priesthood or the religious life – depend on four key factors: solid
family life, good role models, invitation and prayer. Let’s examine
each one.
With few exceptions the Lord extends the call to serve as a priest
or religious to those who have a solid family background. There are
exceptions, like St. Augustine and St. Paul, who both had conversion
experiences prior to their call to service. But normally vocations
are nourished in homes where parents deeply love each other and
their children. In such homes, family prayer is the norm, whether at
meals or the recitation of the rosary or scripture reading.
Prospective candidates to the priesthood and religious life respond
to good role models who exude joy. These role models exemplify in
their lives the fact that there is no high like the high of falling
in love with Jesus and sharing that love with others. Young people
today crave to be challenged. If there’s a happy priest or sister in
their parish with whom they can relate, they instinctively ask
themselves, “I wonder if I could be like Father Tom or Sister Jean.”
An invitation is the third component in fostering vocations. In the
Gospels Jesus always took the initiative in calling the disciples.
How important it is for a priest or sister or even a parishioner to
suggest to a younger member, “I’ve been noticing you lately. Have
you thought about serving the Lord as priest?” Or perhaps, “Do you
think the Lord might be calling you to be a sister? I think you’d
make a great one.”
The fourth and most important means of resolving the vocation
shortage is prayer. In fact, the only means Jesus ever identified
for securing vocations was just that – prayer! “The harvest is great
but the laborers are few. So pray that the Lord of the harvest will
send laborers out to his harvest.” (Lk 10:2) Let’s take the Lord at
his word. Let’s remember this intention every day in prayer, “Lord,
bless us with good priests, brothers and sisters to help bring the
harvest of souls into your Kingdom.”
In stark contrast to the Lord’s solution to the vocation shortage,
at times we adopt a radically different approach. I recall reading
about the vocation director of the Pallotine Fathers, who back in
the 60s placed an ad in Playboy magazine. It generated national
press coverage. Questioned about the ad, the vocation director
explained without apology: “Well, Jesus mixed in with publicans and
sinners, didn’t he? Besides, St. Paul, St. Augustine and even
Francis of Assisi are among our greatest saints – yet prior to their
conversion they were sinners.”
St. Ignatius of Loyola falls into the latter category. While
recovering from a leg wound received in battle, he passed the time
reading frivolous and suggestive novels. One day on finishing a
novel, he asked his attendant to fetch him another, only to be told
that all that was left were a life of Christ and some lives of the
saints. Disappointed, he began reading these. He felt inspired to
imitate Jesus and the saints, reasoning with himself: “What if I
could do what St. Francis or St. Dominic did?” Then worldly thoughts
from the risqué novels would return – which initially gave him great
pleasure, only to leave him later feeling weary and depressed. Not
so with the lives of the saints. He not only experienced great
pleasure when he thought about living the rigorous sort of life they
had lived; but even after he had stopped thinking about them, he
still felt great joy. He surrendered his heart to the Lord and
became the leader of a spiritual army, launching the
counter-reformation.
I close with three requests. For those discerning their call in
life, pray this prayer every day: “Lord, let me know what you want
me to do with my life.” For parents and grandparents, instead of an
iPod or video game, make that birthday gift for your son, daughter
or grandchild the life of one of the saints, like Blessed Miguel Pro
or St. Katherine Drexel. And for all of us, do not let a single day
go by that we don’t ask the Lord to send solid workers to help bring
in a rich harvest of souls. |