Not only to pray, but to encourage
Vocation does not arise from nothing
Sometimes it seems that vocations—to the priesthood, to marriage, or to consecrated life—spring from nowhere, as if God called in secret without anyone else having a part.
But it isn’t so: God calls through concrete faces, living communities, people who truly care.
That’s why it’s not enough to pray for vocations. It has to be proposed with one’s life.
Pray, yes… but with eyes open
Jesus said it clearly: “The harvest is plentiful and the laborers are few; pray therefore the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest” (Mt 9:37-38).
That prayer is not passive or theoretical. It is a call to make us ourselves collaborators of God, those who help others to discover their path.
To pray for vocations means to look around: at the young people in your parish, your friends, those who serve with joy, those who listen with patience, those who live the faith with integrity.
When you see someone like that, don’t keep quiet. It may be time to raise, with simplicity and discretion:
» “Have you thought about what God is calling you to?”
Sometimes a question like that, posed by a priest, a catechist, or a believing friend, awakens vocational discernment that may have been sidelined by oneself.
Each one seeks the holiness of the other
Vocation is not a private matter. We are all responsible for the holiness of the other.
A layperson who encourages, a mother who prays, a priest who proposes, a community that accompanies… all take part in the birth of new vocations.
The world needs good spouses, good priests, good consecrated women. And that begins when each person is a good example of his or her vocation and strives to show the joy of self-giving.
Point out, accompany, pray
Look attentively. Write in your heart the names of those who convey joy, hope, service.
Accompany them with your friendship, with your prayer, with your example.
And pray each day:
“Lord, let each one discover their path, and may we know how to accompany one another in discernment.”
A vocation born in community
No vocation flourishes in isolation. It arises in a community that prays, that listens, that walks together.
Synodality—this walking together—is not only a pastoral method: it is the very way in which God calls.
Each vocation, each story, is the fruit of a people that accompanies, proposes, and sustains.
