WASHINGTON – The Catholic Church in the United States will celebrate National Vocation Awareness Week, Nov. 7-13. Dioceses will hold events to foster an appreciation for all vocations and pray specifically for those discerning a vocation to ordained ministry and consecrated life.
In his message for the 58th annual World Day of Prayer for Vocations, Pope Francis offered Saint Joseph, the foster father of Jesus, as a model for vocational discernment.
“Amid all these upheavals, (Saint Joseph) found the courage to follow God’s will. So too in a vocation: God’s call always urges us to take a first step, to give ourselves, to press forward. There can be no faith without risk. Only by abandoning ourselves confidently to grace, setting aside our own programs and comforts, can we truly say ‘yes’ to God,” he said, and exhorted the Church to look to Saint Joseph as an “outstanding example of acceptance of God’s plans.”
Bishop James F. Checchio of Metuchen, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations has encouraged dioceses to use National Vocation Awareness Week as a time for fostering vocations in their own local communities.
“Studies of those recently ordained and religiously professed consistently show that the encouragement of the parish priest is the most influential factor in vocational discernment. But, the accompaniment of the whole faith community is key for genuine vocational discernment – from one’s parents and family members to the Catholic educators as well as the vital role that youth ministers and fellow parishioners play as the early encounters for young people to the faith.”