What Is a Vocation?
[fbshare type="button" float="right" width="100"] By Luke Burgis and Joshua Miller
[caption id="attachment_129910" align="aligncenter" width="768"]
For all men of every condition, in whatever honorable walk of life they may be, can and ought to imitate that most perfect example of holiness placed before man by God, namely Christ Our Lord, and by God’s grace to arrive at the summit of perfection, as is proved by the example set us of many saints.Vocation as State in Life. This is the most common usage of the word “vocation” among Catholics. It refers to four traditional states in life: marriage, priesthood, religious life, or single life. No doubt these basic commitments in life orient and put boundaries around one’s actions in the world (in the best possible way)—they are the way of love that a person walks. A married man can look at his wife’s face and think, “She is my pathway to heaven.” A priest could think the same when he picks up his breviary, celebrates the Mass, or listens to the penitent sitting in front of him in the confessional. But “state in life” does not constitute the totality of a vocation. It is simply the “state” in which one is called to live and love. Vocation as Work or Task. Many people feel called to dedicate themselves to a specific job, task, or ministry. This can certainly be part of God’s call. It’s dangerous to associate vocation only with doing, though. In the early twentieth century, the sociologist Max Weber popularized the idea that the Protestant work ethic was the virtuous driver of capitalism. Karl Barth, the great reformed theologian, pushed back strongly against this notion, warning that the identification of “vocation” with “profession” could easily lead to secularization. He was right. Work becomes a pathway to holiness only when it maintains its “vertical horizon,” contributing not only to the improvement of the material world but also to the sanctification of the world. These senses of vocation have jockeyed for position over the years. In Sacred Scripture, it would seem that only a select few people were called by God to some specific task: the prophets, the judges, Moses, and a few other “chosen ones.” What about everyone else? Here we need to make a critical distinction between an objective call from the Creator and the subjective awareness of that call. All have been called to a personal vocation in the very act of creation, but not all are fully conscious of what it is. And that’s okay. Because even when we don’t know how to speak the word at the center of our soul, the Holy Spirit does. “[T]he Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes with sighs too deep for words” (Rom 8:26), writes Paul. Luke Burgis is Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Ciocca Center for Principled Entrepreneurship at The Catholic University of America. Joshua Miller, PhD, is the co-founder of Inscape. He also helped build The Center for Leadership at Franciscan University of Steubenville where he currently serves as personal vocation mentor and mentor trainer for faculty and staff. Together, they wrote Unrepeatable: Cultivating the Unique Calling of Every Person.