MOSAIC Fall 2018 | Page 4

DISC E RNMENT IN THE MODE RN W ORL D FACILITATING VOCATIONAL DISCERNMENT AT SACRED HEART H e lpin g M e n D iscern a C all t o t he Priesth ood a n d C elib acy Msgr. Daniel Trapp D iscerning a call. At St. Augustine/St. Monica church on Detroit’s East Side, a beautiful painting on the triumphal arch shows Jesus calling people from every state of life to holiness. After World War II, the pastor of the then St. Catherine of Siena Parish brought two Italian artists to reproduce, in paint, the fourth century mosaics of St. Paul-outside-the-walls. Monsignor Vismara designed this interpretation of the vision from the Book of Revelation 4:4 to show Christ surrounded by the saints, as in Rome. But, instead of showing the twenty-four elders surrounding Christ, Monsignor Vismara directed that the artists paint male and female saints of every state of life, demonstrating, through liturgical art, the universal call to holiness. The first call that students at Sacred Heart must discern (that is, see through) is the call to follow Jesus, the call to holi- ness. That discernment, for seminarians and lay students, takes place in the years preceding applying to the seminary. If a student did not hear that call, if the stu- dent were only racking up credits, chanc- es are he or she would take their classes, but look and not see, listen and not hear. While we rightly distinguish academic from human and spiritual formation, all seminary formation is faith formation di- rected to living out the holiness and righ- teousness which exceed that of the Phari- sees (Mt 5:20). That call to holiness and righteous living, when heard and lived out, leads to a second call which is the state of life to which we are called. 2 DISCERNMENT FOR SEMINARIANS We are very blessed at Sacred Heart to have hundreds of lay students who dis- cern and live out their call to holiness as they study at the seminary. As graduate spiritual director for seminarians, I know best the vocational discernment process for seminarians, and will describe that. DISCERNING THE CALL ACCORDING TO THE LAW OF THE GIFT Pope John Paul II coined the term “the law of the gift” to describe the law within us to make ourselves gifts for others. This law is rooted in our creation according to the Book of Genesis. In the first chapters of Genesis, we have the capacity and duty to leave “the aloneness that is not good Sacred Heart Major Seminary | Mosaic | Fall 2018 (Gn 2:18),” and we have the capacity and duty to be life-giving, to make the earth fruitful and productive (Gn 1:28). No matter what state of life we live in, whether we are called to be married, sin- gle or celibate, God has created us each to move out of the aloneness that is not good, to find intimacy with others, and to be life-giving. As members of the Body of Christ, grace assists us to both live out this capacity and to fulfill our duty. There is an aloneness which is good (in- timacy with God) to which all people are called and there is a fruitfulness, a gen- erativity to which we are called as well. For married people, the law of the gift is expressed most fully when their love be- comes alive in new children of God, but the law (capacity and duty) is expressed