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Holy Father's Message for the World Day
of Prayer for Vocations
Venerable Brethren in
the Episcopate,
Dearest Brothers and Sisters
The celebration of the coming World Day of Prayer for Vocations gives me
the opportunity to invite the entire People of God to meditate the theme
Vocation in the mystery of the Church. The Apostle Paul writes: “Blessed
be God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ … even as he chose us in him
before the foundation of the world … He destined us in love to be his
sons through Jesus Christ” (Eph 1,3-5). Before the creation of the
world, before our coming into existence, the heavenly Father chose us
personally, calling us to enter a filial relationship with Him, through
Jesus, the Incarnate Word, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Dying
for us, Jesus introduced us into the mystery of the Father’s love, a
love which completely embraces his Son and which He offers to all of us.
In this way, united with Jesus, the Head, we form a sole body, the
Church.
The weight of two millennia of history makes it difficult to grasp the
novelty of this wonderful mystery of divine adoption, which is at the
centre of St Paul’s teaching. The Father, as the Apostle reminds us,
“has made known to us the mystery of his will …, as a plan to unite all
things in him” (Eph 1,9-10). And he adds, with enthusiasm: “In
everything God works for good with those who love him, who are called
according to his purpose. For those whom he foreknew he also predestined
to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the
first-born among many brethren” (Rom 8,28-29). The concept is indeed
wonderful: we are called to live as brothers and sisters of Jesus, to
feel that we are sons and daughters of the same Father. This is a gift
that overturns every merely human idea and plan. The confession of the
true faith opens wide our minds and hearts to the inexhaustible mystery
of God, which permeates human existence. What should be said therefore
of the temptation, which is very strong nowadays, to feel that we are
self-sufficient to the point that we close ourselves to the mysterious
plan of God for us? It is the love of the Father, which is revealed in
the person of Christ, which puts this question to us.
In order to answer the call of God and start on our journey, it is not
necessary to be already perfect. We know that the awareness of his own
sin allowed the prodigal son to start on his return journey and thus
feel the joy of reconciliation with the Father. Weaknesses and human
limits do not present obstacles, as long as they help us to make us more
aware of the fact that we need the redeeming grace of Christ. This is
the experience of St Paul who confessed: “I will all the more gladly
boast of my weaknesses, that the power of Christ may rest upon me” (2
Cor 12,9). In the mystery of the Church, the mystical Body of Christ,
the divine power of love changes the heart of man, making him able to
communicate the love of God to his brethren. Down the centuries many men
and women, transformed by divine love, have consecrated their own
existences to the cause of the Kingdom. Already on the shores of the Sea
of Galilee, many allowed themselves to be conquered by Jesus: they were
in search of healing in body or spirit, and they were touched by the
power of his grace. Others were chosen personally by Him and became his
apostles. We also find persons, like Mary Magdalene and other women, who
followed him on their own initiative, simply out of love. Like the
disciple John, they too found a special place in his heart. These men
and women, who, through Jesus, knew the mystery of the love of the
Father, represent the variety of vocations which have always been
present in the Church. The model of one who is called to give witness in
a particular manner to the love of God, is Mary, the Mother of Jesus,
who, in her pilgrimage of faith, is directly associated with the mystery
of the Incarnation and Redemption.
In Christ, the Head of the Church, which is his Body, all Christians
form “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own
people, that you may declare the wonderful deeds of him” (1 Pt 2,9). The
Church is holy, even if her members need to be purified, in order that
holiness, which is a gift of God, can shine in them with its full
splendor. The Second Vatican Council highlights the universal call to
holiness, when it affirms: “The followers of Christ are called by God,
not because of their works, but according to his own purpose and grace.
They are justified in the Lord Jesus, because in the Baptism of faith
they truly become sons of God and sharers in the divine nature. In this
way, they are really made holy” (Lumen Gentium, 40). Within the
framework of this universal call, Christ, the High Priest, in his
solicitude for the Church, then calls, in every generation, persons who
are to take care of his people; in particular, he calls to the
ministerial priesthood men who are to exercise a fatherly role, whose
source is the very fatherhood of God (cfr Eph 3,14). The mission of the
priest in the Church cannot be substituted. Therefore, even if in some
regions there is a scarcity of clergy, it should never be doubted that
Christ continues to raise up men who, like the Apostles, leaving behind
all other work, dedicate themselves completely to the celebration of the
sacred mysteries, to the preaching of the Gospel and to the pastoral
ministry. In the Apostolic Exhortation Pastores Dabo Vobis, my
venerated Predecessor John Paul II wrote in this regard: “The relation
of the priest to Jesus Christ, and in him to his Church, is found in the
very being of the priest by virtue of his sacramental
consecration/anointing and in his activity, that is, in his mission or
ministry. In particular, «the priest minister is the servant of Christ
present in the Church as mystery, communion and mission. In virtue of
his participation in the ‘anointing’ and ‘mission’ of Christ, the priest
can continue Christ’s prayer, word, sacrifice and salvific action in the
Church. In this way, the priest is a servant of the Church as mystery
because he actuates the Church's sacramental signs of the presence of
the risen Christ»” (n.16).
Another special vocation, which occupies a place of honor in the Church,
is the call to the consecrated life. Following the example of Mary of
Bethany who “sat at the Lord’s feet and listened to his teaching” (Lk
10, 39), many men and women consecrate themselves to a total and
exclusive following of Christ. Although they offer different kinds of
services in the field of human formation and the care of the poor, in
teaching or in assisting the sick, they do not consider these activities
as the principal aim of their life, since, as the Code of Canon Law well
underlines, “The first and foremost duty of all religious is to be the
contemplation of divine things and assiduous union with God in prayer”
(can. 663 §1). Moreover, in the Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata
John Paul II noted: “In the Church's tradition religious profession is
considered to be a special and fruitful deepening of the consecration
received in Baptism, inasmuch as it is the means by which the close
union with Christ already begun in Baptism develops in the gift of a
fuller, more explicit and authentic configuration to him through the
profession of the evangelical counsels” (n. 30).
Remembering the counsel of Jesus: “The harvest is plentiful, but the
laborers are few; pray therefore the Lord of the harvest to send out
laborers into his harvest”. (Mt 9,37), we acknowledge the great need to
pray for vocations to the priesthood and to the consecrated life. It is
not surprising that, where people pray fervently, vocations blossom. The
holiness of the Church depends essentially on union with Christ and on
being open to the mystery of grace that operates in the heart of the
Christians. Therefore, I should like to invite all the faithful to
nurture an intimate relationship with Christ, the Teacher and Pastor of
his people, imitating Mary who kept the divine mysteries in her heart
and meditated them diligently (cf Lk 2,19). Together with her, who
occupies a central position in the mystery of the Church, we pray:
O Father, raise up among
Christians
numerous and holy vocations to the priesthood,
to keep the faith alive
and guard the gracious memory of your Son Jesus
through the preaching of his word
and the administration of the Sacraments,
with which you continually renew your faithful.
Give us holy ministers of your altar,
who are careful and fervent guardians of the Eucharist,
the sacrament of the supreme gift of Christ
for the redemption of the world.
Call ministers of your mercy,
who, through the sacrament of Reconciliation,
spread the joy of your forgiveness.
Grant, O Father, that the Church may welcome with joy
numerous inspirations of the Spirit of your Son
and, docile to His teachings,
may she care for vocations to the ministerial priesthood
and to the consecrated life.
Sustain the Bishops, priests and deacons,
consecrated men and women, and all the baptized in Christ,
so that they may faithfully fulfill their mission
at the service of the Gospel.
This we pray You through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Mary, Queen of Apostles, pray for us.
From the Vatican, 5th March
2006.

Benedict, Pope and Pontiff, XVI
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