Thursday, December 22, 2022

POPE FRANCIS ON HOW TO PROMOTE VOCATIONS

Promoting vocations "is the soul of all evangelization and all of the Church's pastoral ministry."  Pope Francis


There were two instances when Pope Francis delved specifically and deeply on vocational ministry:

Here are his key insightsincluding a sharing of actual best-practices that produced results!

Three convictions about promoting vocations 

1. All pastoral action is oriented, by its very nature, to vocational discernment
  • Its ultimate goal is to help the believer to discover the concrete way to carry out the project of life to which God calls him.
  • Promoting vocations:
    • soul of all evangelization and of all the Church’s pastoral ministry
    • close connection with evangelization, education in the faith - leads to a personal encounter with Christ,
    • special - pastoral care of the family. Parents to: 
      • assume their mission joyfully and responsibly to be the first vocational animators of their children
      • free themselves and free their children from the inner barrier of selfish, calculating perspectives or of power, which often occur in the bosom of families, even those practicing the faith.
2.  Promoting vocations finds its most appropriate “humus” (fertile ground) in youth pastoral ministry
  • Vocation
    • not to be raised only at the end of the whole process or to a group that is particularly sensitive to a specific vocational call
    • must be constantly raised throughout the process of evangelization and education in the faith of adolescents and young people.
3. Prayer must occupy a very important place in promoting vocations
  • Jesus: "Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest” (Mt 9: 38). 
  • Prayer is the first and indispensable service we can offer to the cause of vocations. Vocation - always a gift from God
  • Prayer for vocations presupposes:
    • praying and working for fidelity to one’s vocation
    • creating environments where it is possible to listen to the Lord’s call; promoting the “Gospel of the vocation”, working tirelessly to create a vocational culture [Benedict XVI in the US said this means "to teach young people to pray and pray well", so "we will be cooperating with God’s call."] 
  • Pope Francis asked bishops of dioceses which were "blessed with vocations." "What did you do?" "First of all, a letter from the bishop, every month, to people who wanted to pray for vocations: old ladies, the sick, newlyweds... A letter every month, with a spiritual thought, with an aid, to accompany the prayer. Accompany prayer...We need to look for a way. The first task is prayer! Praying is the first thing. To pray with the heart, with one's life, with everything, with the desire that what I am asking be done. Pray for vocations." (RG) [See a collection of Prayer for Vocations here.]

Three challenges of promoting vocations

1. Trust in the young and trust in the Lord.
  • Trust in the young
    • there are many young people who seek full meaning in their lives
    • Stay awake to awaken young people to be centered in the Lord. Help the young to focus on Him
  • Trust in the Lord
    • Be sure that He continues to awaken in the People of God various vocations 
    • Say no to temptation that in some environments vocations are not possible
2. Clear knowledge of our society and the current generation of young people
  • So as not to give answers to questions that nobody is asking
  • Today young people must be on the move. To work for vocations it is necessary to make young people walk, and this is done by accompanying them. The apostolate of walking. And how to walk, how? Inventing pastoral actions that involve young people, in something that makes them do something: during the holidays we go for a week to do a mission in that country, or to do social assistance in that other country, or every week we go to the hospital, this one, that…, or to feed the homeless. (RG)
3. Conviction that following Christ is worthwhile
  • Total gift of self to the cause of the Gospel is beautiful and can give meaning to our whole life

Five Characteristics of Promoting Vocations

1. Differentiated - Jesus calls each one by his name. Offer what is needed for each person. 
2. Narrative - Young people want to see the model of Jesus in a concrete life
3. Ecclesial - based on Vatican Council II; participate in the life of the Church
4. Evangelical, and as such, committed and responsible
  • Start from the center of all pastoral ministry: Jesus Christ
  • Place the demands of the Gospel to live radically and sincerely, to accept responsibly the consequences of faith. 
5. Accompanied - create an atmosphere of trust, make young people feel that they are loved; with personal relationship 
6. Persevering - sow and wait patiently for the seed to grow. Our job is to plant. 
7. Youthful
  • dynamic, participative, cheerful, hopeful, risky, confident
  • filled with Jesus - the only path they have to travel, the only truth to which they are called to adhere, the only life for which it is worth giving everything (Jn 1.35)

Two Truths of Promoting Vocations

1. There are no magical answers
2. We are called to a true “pastoral conversion” - not only of language, but also of lifestyle, if we want to connect with young people and propose a path of faith and offer a vocational proposal.

It is true that a boy or a girl hears the Lord's call, but the call is always concrete: "I would like to become like this or like that". It is our testimonies that attract young people... Once a mother superior went to speak in a college; instead of speaking of the challenge of education, of the young people who are being educated, of all these things, she began to say: "We must pray for the canonization of our founding mother", and she spent more than half an hour talking about the founding mother, that this must be done, asking for a miracle... But the teachers thought: "But why does she tell us these things, while we need more... Yes, that's fine, that she be beatified and canonized, but we need another message". In the end, one of the teachersI met hersaid , “Mother, can I say something?” – "Yes" – Your founding mother will never be canonized." – "But why?" – "Eh, because she is certainly in purgatory." – "But don't say these things! Why do you say this?"  "Because if you who are the mother superior is so – let's say – silly, to say the least, your founding mother hasn't been able to form you". It is the testimony: that they see living in you what you preach. (RG)

RESOURCES ON VOCATION PROMOTION








Thursday, December 8, 2022

ABSOLUTE IMPORTANCE OF SILENCE: Liturgical rubrics on periods of silence at Mass

St. Josemaria: "There is no better way to show how great is our concern and love for the Holy Sacrifice than by taking great care with the least detail of the ceremonies the wisdom of the Church has laid down."


In his latest guidelines on the liturgy, Pope Francis stressed: "Among the ritual acts that belong to the whole assembly, silence occupies a place of absolute importance." He pointed out that silence is something "grand." It is not trivial, but "a point of arrival within a liturgical sequence." It is a "symbol of the presence and action of the Holy Spirit;" being an integral part of the sacrament it effectuates grace. (Desiderio Desideravi 52)

Grace is divine life and help, something we all sorely need. 

And so, he asks us to enact silence with "extreme care."  

When are these moments and what do the rubrics say about them? 

Here are quotes from the General Instruction of the Roman Missal (GIRM):

1. Within the Penitential Act (45, 51)

The Priest calls upon the whole community to take part in the Penitential Act, which, after a brief pause for silence, it does by means of a formula of general confession. (51)

Nature of silence – individuals recollect themselves (45)

2. After “Let us pray” of the opening collect (45, 54)

The Priest calls upon the people to pray and everybody, together with the Priest, observes a brief silence so that they may become aware of being in God’s presence and may call to mind their intentions. (54)

Nature of silence – individuals recollect themselves (45) 

3. Before the Liturgy of Word (56)

It may be appropriate to observe such periods of silence, for example, before the Liturgy of the Word itself begins. (56)

4. After the first two readings (45, 56, 128, 130)

It may be appropriate to observe such periods of silence, for example … after the First and Second Reading. (56)

Nature of the silence - All meditate briefly on what they have heard (45)

At the end [of the First Reading], the reader pronounces the acclamation The word of the Lord, and all reply, Thanks be to God. Then a few moments of silence may be observed, if appropriate, so that all may meditate on what they have heard. (128)

Then [after the reply to the acclamation after the Second Reading], if appropriate, a few moments of silence may be observed. (130)

5. After the homily (45, 56, 66, 136)

It may be appropriate to observe such periods of silence, for example…at the conclusion of the Homily (56)

It is appropriate for a brief period of silence to be observed after the Homily. (66)

When the Homily is over, a period of silence may be observed. (136)

Nature of the silence - all meditate briefly on what they have heard. (45)

6. After communion (43, 45, 164)

If appropriate, [the faithful] may sit or kneel during the period of sacred silence after Communion. (43)

Nature of silence - praise God in their hearts and pray to him (45)

After [the priest purifies the chalice and dries it with purificator], the Priest may return to the chair. A sacred silence may now be observed for some time, or a Psalm or other canticle of praise or a hymn may be sung (164)

7. After “Let us pray” of the post-communion prayer (165)

A brief period of silence may precede the prayer, unless this has been already observed immediately after Communion. (165)

Putting liturgical silence into practice

Of the seven moments, four are referred to with the word "may", while three are in the indicative: (1) Within the Penitential act, (2) After the "Let us pray" of the Collect, and (3) After the Homily. 

Still, Pope Francis in Desiderio Desideravi pointed out that silence is "present in the penitential act, after the invitation 'Let us pray,' in the Liturgy of the Word (before the readings, between the readings and after the homily), in the Eucharistic prayer, after communion." 

And so parishes and communities, may want to consider adapting all the seven moments of silence, given the "absolute importance" of these moments of silence at Mass--the very summit and source of our Christian life. 

Based on my internet search, many parishes instruct lectors to pause either for 2-3 seconds or 5-10 seconds. If one chooses the mid-point of 4 seconds, then the seven pauses will only mean an additional 28 seconds, that's less than half a minute--half a minute of receiving completely the powerful action of the Holy Spirit himself.   

At the very least, it is truly important that the three moments that the rubrics clearly indicate should be deliberately and calmly practiced.