By Paddie Denton
Now, I know not everyone leaving University will like (nor
choose) these options, you also may not even be leaving University, but for one
reason or another these options are still sometimes a harsh reality. I am also
aware that the title is probably the worst bio ever for a dating site, but will
roll with it and be glad that this isn’t match.com. It can be quite easy for me to
feel lost in a sea of happy couples, with their annoying ‘we are soooo in love’
happy faces (not bitter). Or dwell in the feeling of being mugged off by your mate with
the flash new phone or car with cruise control, while your car is held together
more by its rust than actual welding (nope not envious). Or focus on the person from
your Tuesday 9 am lecture who always turned up hung-over that has some how landed
the job in the actual subject you just spent 3 years
studying! (nope not frustrated, not at all).
Okay, so maybe I am a bit bitter
with the cards God has dealt me right now. And I hope it's not just me who,
despite how much I love them, is jealous of my friends and others around me.
Jealous of how much more they have ‘their life together’ than I do, or how much
more convicted they are in their vocation, or how straight their path may seem.
Maybe it's not quite these words for you, but you get my point, this is my
prayer right now. And then, the amazing life events of your friends, which bring
so much joy, can be tough. Going to the weddings of people the same age as you,
or seeing your friend as a seminarian, or as a novice, thriving. And those of
you leaving Uni for the first time it gets worse, as suddenly people younger than you have their life sorted,
buying houses, getting engaged, having children, saving lives, going skydiving
(I have cool friends), are all bittersweet.
Last weekend, myself and some others from Youth 2000 joined
many other groups at Brightlights: Unlimited
@ Alton Castle. Now, Brightlights is a mix of Jesus, theatre, music, and
friendship, within the grounds of a castle (it ticks a lot of boxes). We were
all looking forward to having a bit of fun and light relief. The weekend had a
theme of 'unlimited', living life to its fullest through Christ, being
everything God intended you to be, living life to its limitless possibilities.
As you can imagine, this was not the message I could hear very easily, or wanted to
hear, not when I was feeling like I'm no longer achieving much in life. But
praise God for confession and the blessed sacrament. That weekend, and more
importantly the sacraments, gave me a chance to get out of my head, and
actually reflect on where I am and who I am, in the presence of God where the
lies of the devil are drowned out. And there I was reminded a simple lesson of
vocation and purpose I had forgotten. I remembered through His grace that
vocation is living out three simple things: Baptism, Work and Life.
So maybe you're not
married. Not joined your favourite religious order. Not gone off to the
seminary. Maybe you're very single and no closer on going down any of these
paths (raising my hand for this option). But that’s okay. Yeah maybe at times
it's lonely. Maybe there are moments where all you want is to ring some one up
and lay out all your pains of the day, (had my fair share of these moments
recently), but we have friends, families, pets (and they don’t talk back and
try to offer advice which wins them bonus points). Being single is a vocation
in itself, our service to God can be turned in entirety to it's Church and its
people, wherever the Spirit leads us.
Work
So maybe you want to serve God in your work very directly,
maybe God is calling you to work for his Church. But maybe that is one day.
Maybe God wants you to work in an office, being an example of truth and joy to
your work mates. Maybe God wants you to be unemployed, giving your time to
pray, explore your creativity, volunteer and give your time. Maybe you didn’t
get that job you really wanted because God has something greater for you,
waiting. What am I saying is there is no maybe about it, there is something
amazing waiting for you, not by our timing but by his. So be patient and listen
to the spirit.
Baptism
Basically none of the above matters. Well, it does, but not outside
of the context of your baptised self (and if you are not baptised get on with
it). When we are baptised we a baptised Priest, Prophet and King. We are washed
and sanctified. As baptised priests, we are called to grow in holiness through
prayer and communion with God, and then go out and spread that holiness in our
communities, families and friendships.
So, here is the true reality:
yes the cards you have right now may not be the cards you thought you would
have (or wanted) by this point, but it doesn’t matter. What matters is the answer to three
questions. Are you striving to greater holiness? Are you sharing the truth? Are
you bold and proud to be a loved child of God? For if you answer yes to all
three of these then it doesn’t matter that there is no ring on your finger,
that your job isn’t what you worked so hard for 3 years for, or that you don’t
know if you're called to be a husband or priest, wife or sister, because you are
already unlimited. Strive for it,
strive for your future vocation, but be content with where you are now, as
that’s were God intends you to be.
Holiness doesn’t wait for tomorrow, it could of started
yesterday, so let's all embrace it today.