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Module 2. Second and Third Vocation

The document discusses the concepts of second and third vocations. The second vocation refers to one of the four states of life - priesthood, single blessedness, marriage, or religious life. The third vocation refers to the immediate tasks and missions God calls a person to at a given moment. It emphasizes that every act in life, no matter how small, should be directed towards loving God. It also discusses the importance of understanding the four temperaments - choleric, melancholic, sanguine, and phlegmatic - in one's spiritual life and relationships. Understanding temperaments can help with patience, charity, and grappling with one's own struggles and sins.

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Lee Eun Ji
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
44 views2 pages

Module 2. Second and Third Vocation

The document discusses the concepts of second and third vocations. The second vocation refers to one of the four states of life - priesthood, single blessedness, marriage, or religious life. The third vocation refers to the immediate tasks and missions God calls a person to at a given moment. It emphasizes that every act in life, no matter how small, should be directed towards loving God. It also discusses the importance of understanding the four temperaments - choleric, melancholic, sanguine, and phlegmatic - in one's spiritual life and relationships. Understanding temperaments can help with patience, charity, and grappling with one's own struggles and sins.

Uploaded by

Lee Eun Ji
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Module 2.

SECOND AND THIRD VOCATION serves a particular area (education, health care, parish,
youth ministry, aged care, spiritual pastoral ministry, social
Topic 1: Second Vocation: A Choice among the Four States of work among the poor, as contemplatives or missionaries
Life
Four States of Life
second vocation:
*Each vocation: lives a life of faith & prayer to continually grow
the more stable call to one of the four states of life: priesthood, in one’s relationship with God
single blessedness, married, religious
is equal: one is not better or less than the other
Call to Holiness (primary vocation)
because God calls us to a particular vocation—whether
Four States of Life (second vocation) marriage, priesthood, religious life or single life—that vocation
is the best one for us, the one that 'fits' us best & makes us a
Sol happier person
Priesthood
Module 2-Topic 2: SECOND & THIRD VOCATION
Religious
Topic 1: Third Vocation:
Single the Call of the Moment

Married Third vocation:


Four States of Life the constantly changing immediate tasks/mission God is calling
Married: a person at the moment
lives a vow of faithful love to a spouse Call to Holiness
involves self-giving, love-giving & life-giving Four States of Life
commits in helping one’s partner grow & mature as a human Sol
person & Christian
Priesthood
seeks to form a home & their children in Christian faith &
values Religious

Four States of Life Single


Single:
Married
believes remaining single is the true & right way to faithfully live
one’s Christian call different circumstances, situations & challenges of life

may prefer to live alone or with a family or other single Biblical context of the third vocation:
persons You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all
has more opportunity to devote one’s time & energy in the your soul, and with all your mind.” (Matthew 22:37)
service of others means: loving God engages:
Four States of Life the total person
Priestly:
person’s totality: engaged when:
lives a life of total service to the Church—needs to embrace
celibacy & commit to a life of prayer one’s smallest desires, intentions & actions all directed to the
love of God
proclaims the Good News & teaches the Catholic Faith
“Jesus never divided His life into categories…God accepted
ministers the sacraments, builds up the local faith community Jesus’ total life.”
& leads them in worship
no distinction between natural & spiritual activities 
Four States of Life
Religious: “I do always those things that please the father” (John 8:29)

commits one’s life in sharing the life & mission (charism) of every act of His life was God’s.
their religious community
- Bert Farias
embraces the call to poverty, chastity & obedience
Every act of our lives should be a contribution to God’s glory.
nurtures their call through the life of celibacy, faith, prayer & “Whether you eat or drink, do all for the glory of God.” (I Cor
service 10:31)
“In Him we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:28) needs God’s grace to cultivate joyful acceptance,
selflessness & hope
-Bert Farias
usually compassionate, long-suffering, pious & contemplative
• St. Therese of Lisieux…lived each day with an
unshakable confidence in God's love *saints: St. John the Apostle, St. Therese of Lisieux, St.
Bernard of Clairvaux
• "What matters in life is not great deeds, but great
love. “ Sanguine people:

• Therese lived and taught a spirituality of attending to struggles with superficiality, lust & lack of perseverance
everyone and everything well and with love
needs God’s grace to cultivate purity, interior depth &
• Therese's spirituality is of doing the ordinary, with strength, & perseverance
extraordinary love…
usually cheerful, generous, sincere & sensitive to the
Challenge of third sense of vocation: suffering of others

In the different circumstances, situations & challenges of daily *saints: St. Theresa of Avila, St. Francis Xavier
life, no matter how trivial, we must respond to God’s call to us
to become better human beings Phlegmatic people:

…not chase sex, drugs, travel, houses, fame, “likes,” retweets, struggles with wrong things just to please others, laziness, &
and on goes the list to the point of sedating ourselves ability to confront or take initiative

…but to pursue the supernatural high that explodes interiorly needs God’s grace to cultivate fortitude, holy ambition &
from a personal union with God strength of will

Importance of Four Temperaments to usually tranquil, full of common sense, assiduous & almost
Catholics/Christians: immune to anger

*in marriage: *saints: St. Thomas Aquinas, Pope St. John XXIII

crucial for spouses: know & understand each other’s Note:


temperaments support each other in the journey to holiness
*each temperament is a blessing—it takes all kinds to run the
*in our Christian life: world

knowing & understanding the four temperaments help us just as distinct differences between man & woman dovetail &
understand other people, become patient & loving to them compliment each other, the unified interaction & charity
between all four temperaments is a powerful thing
gives: clearer view of other people’s struggles, challenges &
battles

good Christian: strives to familiarize oneself with the


temperaments & let such knowledge teach oneself charity

one’s temperament: crucial in one’s spiritual life (path to


holiness)

with a certain temperament, one will tend to commit certain


sins yet possess certain virtues that gives one the strength to
seek God

Choleric people:

struggles with anger, pride & impatience

needs God’s grace to cultivate gentleness, humility &


patience

would usually have a strong will, great constancy & energy


for carrying our one’s tasks

*saints: St. Paul, St. Jerome, St. Francis de Sales

Melancholic people:

struggles with being critical, moody & despondent

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