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Evangelization and the Call to Holiness and
Mission
By
Monsignor Vincent J. Grimalia, V.G.
Our Diocesan mission statement begins with
these words: “We the Catholic faithful … are
called.” It acknowledges the Church as a
mystery of vocation, of our being called
together to holiness and mission.
It reflects the Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church from the Second Vatican
Council, which states: “God, however, does
not make men holy and save them merely as
individuals, without bond or link between
one another. Rather has it pleased Him to
bring men together as one people, a people
which acknowledges Him in truth and serves
Him in holiness.” (Lumen Gentium,
Chapter 2, #9); and, “Fortified by so many
and such powerful means of salvation, all
the faithful, whatever their condition or
state, are called by the Lord, each in his
own way, to that perfect holiness whereby
the Father Himself is perfect.” (Chapter 2,
#11)
The Diocesan Pastoral Plan for Vocations
comments on our Mission Statement: “This
statement speaks of vocation; it says we are
all called. Through parish self-study and
pastoral planning for the mission of
evangelization, we answer the call; we
respond to our vocation. Evangelization then
becomes our work of calling others to their
call from God or, in others words, to their
vocation.”
Pope John Paul II has stated in a variety of
ways the connection between the vocation or
call to holiness and the vocation or call to
mission: “The call to mission derives, of
its nature, from the call to holiness….The
universal call to holiness is closely linked
to the universal call to mission. Every
member of the faithful is called to holiness
and to mission.” (#90, Redemptoris Missio)
A deeper understanding of the meaning of
call or vocation in Catholic theology and
spirituality is necessary for a parish to
appreciate its mission. Both the Parish
Pastoral Council and the Called to
Holiness and Mission: Pastoral Planning in
the Diocese of Scranton are concerned
with deepening that understanding and
providing motivation for developing a
culture of vocation.
The Diocesan web site has information that
can help a parish to accomplish this aspect
of its mission by clicking on “Clergy
Formation,” and then clicking on “Pastoral
Plan for Vocations.”
Called to Holiness and Mission: Pastoral
Planning in the Diocese of Scranton
has two criteria that support the importance
of prayer and the promotion of vocations.
“Parishioners are encouraged to cultivate a
culture of vocation in the parish and are
educated to ‘live their lives as a vocation’
(Pope Benedict XVI) to holiness and
mission.” And “Formation and education in
vocational awareness is an integral part of
the parish catechetical programs and the
religious formation program in the Catholic
school.”
In Veritatis splendor, sections 7 and
8, Pope John Paul II states: “In the rich
young man, whom Matthew’s Gospel does not
name, we can recognize every person who,
consciously or not, approaches Christ the
Redeemer of man and questions him about
morality. For the young man, the question is
not so much about rules to be followed but
about the full meaning of life. This is in
fact the aspiration at the heart of every
human decision and action, the quiet
searching and interior prompting which sets
freedom in motion. This question is
ultimately an appeal to the absolute God
which attracts us and beckons us; it is the
echo of a call from God who is the origin
and goal of man’s life.”
It is important to understand our life as a
vocation as we search for personal meaning
and responsibility. Pope John Paul continues
in Veritatis splendor: “The question
which the rich young man puts to Jesus of
Nazareth is one which rises from the depths
of his heart. It is an essential and
unavoidable question for the life of every
man, for it is about the moral good which
must be done, and about eternal life. The
young man senses that there is a connection
between moral good and the fulfillment of
his own destiny.”
We need to deepen our awareness of the
meaning of vocation or calling. In a message
to the 1997 Congress on Vocations in Europe,
Pope John Paul II stated: “Life has an
essentially vocational structure. In fact,
the plan for it stems from the heart of the
mystery of God: ‘He chose us in him (in
Christ) before the foundation of the world,
that we should be holy and blameless before
him’ (Eph 1:4).”
Pope John Paul looked at life in terms of
four general vocations or callings that can
help human beings in their search for
meaning and responsibility. He writes: “All
human existence is therefore an answer to
God, who makes his love felt especially on
some occasions: the call to life; the
entrance into his Church's communion of
grace; the invitation to bear witness in the
Christian community to Christ according to a
completely personal and irreplaceable plan;
the definitive call to communion with him at
the hour of death.” In other words, life is
a gift and a responsibility and finding our
vocation in life satisfies the deep human
hunger for meaning.
Writing in Pastores Dabo Vobis, Pope
John Paul shared some important thoughts on
the mystery of the Church as Vocation and
the theology of vocation in the life of
every member of the Church. When we see our
lives in terms of vocation, we see ourselves
in terms of responsibility and gratitude.
Because we have a vocation we are called to
be active members of the Church and parish,
we are called not only to receive, but also
to contribute. We are also moved to see our
lives not as individuals independent of the
Church, but as members of the Church, giving
and receiving.
Our American society places a high value on
individualism. We tend to be formed by
individualism and often are unaware of its
influence and its potential to distort the
Gospel message and the nature of the Church.
These words of John Paul II come as a
challenge and a correction, a call to
conversion on the level of our understanding
and our thinking and acting. Pope John Paul
reminds us that we are called to communion
with God and with one another, and communion
leads to community and social concerns about
charity and justice.
One of the criteria of Called to Holiness
and Mission: Pastoral Planning in the
Diocese of Scranton states:
“Evangelization is recognized as an
essential aspect of the life and mission of
the parish.” Evangelization and the pastoral
care for vocations and the promotion of
vocational awareness are aspects of the
evangelizing mission of the parish and not
simply occasional activities.
In his 2008 Message for World Day of Prayer
for vocations, Pope Benedict XVI stated:
“Vocations to the ministerial priesthood and
to the consecrated life can only flourish in
a spiritual soil that is well cultivated.
Christian communities that live the
missionary dimension of the mystery of the
Church in a profound way will never be
inward looking. Mission, as a witness of
divine love, becomes particularly effective
when it is shared in a community, ‘so that
the world may believe’ (cf. Jn 17:
21). ..Gathered around the Virgin Mary,
Queen of the Apostles, as in the beginning,
the ecclesial community learns from her how
to implore the Lord for a flowering of new
apostles, alive with the faith and love that
are necessary for the mission...”
The outward, missionary attitude of the
parish and the quality of its life as a
community, its unity and holiness will be a
sign and instrument of its evangelizing
mission, and it will support the thinking of
our Diocesan pastoral plan for vocations and
the criteria approved in Called to
Holiness and Mission. A parish not in
unity within itself or with the diocese is
not a sign or expression of an evangelizing
mission.
A parish that prays, promotes and educates
about vocations also will enrich its own
self-understanding of what a parish is and
make its mission more fruitful
In the Vatican document In Verbo tuo,
we can learn from the following
inspirational message: “The pastoral care of
vocations is the same age as the Church; it
arose at the same time as the Church, in
that poverty unexpectedly inhabited by the
Spirit…The Apostles gather together in the
cenacle ‘and with one accord devoted
themselves to prayer...with Mary, the mother
of Jesus’ (1, 14), and immediately they act
to fill the post left vacant by Judas with
another chosen from among those who had been
with Jesus from the beginning: so that ‘he
might become with us a witness to His
resurrection’ (1, 22).
“And the promise is fulfilled: the Holy
Spirit descends with riotous effect and
fills the house and the lives of those who
before had been timid and fearful, with a
rumble, a wind, a fire... ‘And they began to
speak in other tongues...and each one heard
them speaking in his own language’ (2, 4.6).
And ‘Peter standing..., lifted up his voice
and addressed them’ about the history of
salvation (2, 14), an address that cuts
those that hear it ‘to the heart" and
provokes the decisive question about life:
‘what shall we do?’(2, 37).
“At this point the Book of the Acts
describes the life of the early community,
which was marked by some essential elements,
such as their diligence in listening to the
teachings of the Apostles, brotherly union,
the breaking of bread, prayer, sharing of
material goods; but at the same time the
feelings and goods of the Spirit (cf 2, 42
48).” [This passage provides the inspiration
for our Diocesan Mission Statement.]
“In the meantime, Peter and the Apostles
continue to work wonders in the name of
Jesus and to proclaim the kerygma of
salvation, regularly risking their lives,
but always supported by the community,
within which the believers form ‘one heart
and soul’ (4, 32). In it, as well, needs
begin to grow and diversify, and so deacons
are instituted to meet these needs of the
community, even the material needs,
especially of the weakest (cf 6, 1 7).
“Such strong and courageous witness can only
provoke the ire of the authorities, leading
to the first martyr, Stephen; this
underlines that the cause of the Gospel
requires the whole person, even his life (cf
6, 8-7,70). Saul, the persecutor of
Christians, also assents to the sentence
condemning Stephen; this is the same man
who, shortly, will be chosen by God to
proclaim to the pagans the mystery hidden
for centuries and now revealed.
“And the story continues, ever more as a
sacred history: the story of God who chooses
and calls men to salvation, even in
unforeseen ways, and the story of
individuals who allow themselves to be
called and chosen by God.
“These notes are enough for us to recognize
in the early community the basic lines of
pastoral work in a totally vocational
Church: on the level of methods and
contents, of general principles, of the
programs to be followed and the specific
strategies to realize it.
“‘The pastoral care of vocations springs
from the mystery of the Church and places
itself at her service.’ (55) The theological
foundation of the pastoral care of
vocations, therefore, ‘can only arise from
an assessment of the mystery of the Church
as a mysterium vocationis’ [a “mystery of
vocation or call”].
“John Paul II clearly recalls, in this
regard, that ‘concern for vocations is a
connatural and essential dimension of the
Church's pastoral work’, i.e. to her life
and mission. Therefore, in a certain sense,
vocation defines the deepest being of the
Church, even before her work. In the very
name, ‘Ecclesia,’ is indicated her
vocational make-up, because she is truly an
assembly of those called.”
A deeper understanding of the evangelizing
mission of the Church as a mystery of
vocation helps a parish and its members to
see the pastoral care for vocations and the
promotion of a deeper understanding of
vocation as an essential aspect of its
evangelizing mission. To evangelize is to
promote the awareness of every person being
called, having a vocation, and given a
responsibility to share in the mission of
the Church. To evangelize is to call people
to respond, to accept their responsibility.
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