A GOOD WORD FOR 2025 GRADUATES

Istock 2192265913

What's Your Calling?

What’s a Good Life?
A Good Word for 2025 Graduates

Fr. Frederick Edlefsen

How do you want to live? Do you want a family? Do you want a mission as a single person? In Aristotle’s words, “What is a good life?” The Church asks the same question but with a twist, “What’s your vocation?” “What’s your calling?” Young adults often ponder careers, as they should. College students ask, “What do I want to do after college?” Graduates ask, “What do I do
now?” Good questions. Take it to another level. What do you have the grace to do? “What I
want to do” is a good question. But “what I have the grace to do” is a deeper question, potentially in agreement with “what I want to do”.  

What “I want for me” is about your career. What “gift I have to to give” is about your vocation. To be sure, “what you want” and “what you can give” are not necessarily opposites. Grace purifies “what you want” and turns it into generosity. You get back from what you give. That’s how
love works. Welcome to the wonderful world of being human!  There’s no sharp dividing-line between career and vocation. But there’s a difference. A vocation flows into a career, like a river into a desert. A career receives new life when you reflect and meditate in silence, making yourself available to the grace of your Confirmation.  Confirmation turns Baptism into a vocation – Christ’s mission.

A vocation transforms a career into a labor of love, a life-giving gift to the world. Without a vocation, a career becomes a lonely pit of “me and myself.” A vocation transforms a career into act of love for God, family, neighbor, and the world. Vocations purge careers of selfishness.
Vocations bless careers with generosity. “What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and yet lose his soul” (Matthew 16:26)?

Christ suggests vocation in the Greatest Commandment, “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind” and its sequel, “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Matthew 22:37-39).  Our world needs careers formed by vocations. Vocations create friendships and solidarity. Vocations are love in real time. Vocations are Christ in action, here and now, through your life.

What’s your calling?

Categories: 

More Stories

A Saintly Jubilee Addition

October 26, 2021

During its 75th anniversary year, Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Arlington opened a prayer garden honoring its late former...Read more

STATEMENT BY BISHOP MICHAEL F. BURBIDGE ON U.S. HOUSE PASSAGE OF “WOMEN’S HEALTH PROTECTION ACT”

September 24, 2021
September 27, 2021

In the United States, the tragically pervasive acceptance of abortion has resulted in more than 62 million abortions since Roe v. Wade . Still,...Read more

THE ROMANTIC SENSIBILITY OF JEROME KERN

Reflections on the Golden Age of American Pop Music in Honor of my Late Father by Fr. Frederick Edlefsen
September 27, 2021
THE ROMANTIC SENSIBILITY OF JEROME KERN In Honor of my Late Father, Martin Edlefsen

By Father Frederick Edlefsen

...Read more

Subscribe to Blog