Last summer
vacation, my benefactor asked me to visit her in the hospital where she works.
Since my duty that time as tutor started at 4 o’clock in the afternoon, I
proposed that I could have my pastoral visitation for a half day. And she
agreed. On the first day, she introduced me to all the staff of the hospital
and to some patients.
It was a very
meaningful and memorable experience. After five days of being there, I learned
a lot. I encountered different people with different perspective and status in
life. I heard different stories of their lives. I let them share and talk. I
comforted them for a short period of their pains and sufferings. I laughed with
them. Sometimes I ate with them. But what struck me most in all my conversation
with them, they asked me some questions, “What makes me to decide entering
seminary? Why?” For a moment, I just gave my full swing smile. It is very hard
to explain in details and I was in hesitation that they may not understand me.
Consequently, I continued to reflect as days had passed. Other would say it’s a
call. Eventually, I convinced myself that time that it might be. I am convinced
that I am happy about it. This was how I grasped it cognitively.
Many months had
passed. Many things have changed. Still, I am on the process of discernment. I
believe that whatever it is, it should be an action. Whatever calls it maybe, I
have the power to decide and live it. I can choose not to do it. But I can
choose to do it, to give my life and love in that way to bless and call forth
the good in me.
One book stated
that “Calls are around us. We are never bereft of call.” Yes, it’s true. We are
called in different ways. We have to recognize that some calls come as
whispers; some calls come in very ordinary ways. In responding to this call, it
equates to responsibility. We are called in this way and we should act and do
what we are expected to be.
Like those
individuals in the hospital, they are called by God in different ways. The
doctors, the nurses, the patients – mothers, fathers, wives, sons, they are
called in that field and they continue to live in that God’s way of calling
them. Same as well to what I have now, to what I am now. Though I am not meant
to be a priest someday, in optimism, I believe that in this way I called by God
to serve Him more faithfully. In serving others, in reaching out to my fellow,
on the kind of work I have now, this is where God’s way of calling me belongs.
It is just like
in the Word of God. It invites us to dig deep and to be awed by God’s strange
ways of Divine Election. Now, these make up God’s pedagogy that every person is
a potential, that everyone is a risk and all that matters is teachability.
I am called to
be here; to be with the grassroots of the community and everyone either is
being called because no person is really born, made, naturally endowed and
tailor-fit for anything. Every person even those who have studied and
specialized in their fields will have to adjust and learn as they settle into
specific working environment.
Finally, let us
ask God who elected us to do a specific mission for Him to help us do it well.
Amen.
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