Celebrating St. Catherine of Siena


Last Sunday we celebrated Vocation Sunday, also known as Good Shepherd Sunday. Whilst many homilies focussed on the call to priesthood and religious life, we need to remember that each and every one of us is called to a particular vocation in life. It is fitting to recall the words of St. Catherine of Siena, whose feastday we mark today: “If you will be what you should be, you will set the world afire. Don’t be content with the small things: he, the Lord God, wants them great” (St. Catherine). No ‘ifs’ or ‘buts’, no half measures! Don’t be contented with a mediocre life when God is holding out his hand to you to follow him in love and for love.

The heart is always drawn by love”
 (Dialogue 26). Love transforms everything. Christ lives in us in the measure in which we are transformed each day. Just like the tomb of Jesus is empty, nothing remains in death’s prison. Our existence is a manifestation of his love for us, won by the Cross. One of the phrases in St. Catherine's 4th Oration is that God is 'crazy about his beloved creature'. This is the depth, the height, the breadth of his love for us. In the link above you can hear one of the mystical prayers of St. Catherine as she prays to the Holy Trinity.

Yet, the world today tries to show us that we don’t need God, that we can have societies and families without him. And sometimes, for a moment, we can even believe it. Little by little we push h
im aside and we can become disconnected from God. We will never find our real vocation in life if we do not immerse ourselves in Him first. Thinking that we know what is best for us, we put our trust in ourselves, rather than putting our trust in God that made us. We draw away from God instead of moving closer.It can be our nature to complicate things and situations because we look for human perfection rather than spiritual perfection for our eyes see the things of the world and we automatically get caught up in the things of the world.

It's funny how we can be so disciplined in our secular actions, we shop for healthy foods, we exercise our bodies, we groom our appearances. But, when it comes to the things of the spirit, the things of God, we have a tendency to be like a small boat on a windy sea, we allow our emotions and feelings to toss us around to the point of exhaustion. Jesus wants us to set the world on fire with the love of his Holy Spirit. He wants our every action and reaction to reflect the love God has for us. “Set the world on fire” ….this is not a static invitation but one of action! 



St Catherine reminds us: “Love does not stay idle” (Letter T82) and again that “hope comes from love, because people always trust in those they love.”(Letter T352). When I look at my vocation, I see that I have the grace to belong to a natural family and this gives me my personal identity. I also belong to a religious family and this gives me a charismatic identity where my interior life also communicates a mission, at least, that is my hope. I continue to discover that, arriving at Perpetual Profession does not mean that the suffering and the fatigue of the journey will be taken away, more so, that it is united to Christ in a fuller manner and I trust more implicitly in God. I also realise more and more that each of our callings is different from another. Sometimes there is a calling within a calling but every calling is unique in the eyes of God the Father that made us. And why did God make us?  God made us to know him, to love him, and to serve him in this world, and to be happy with him forever in heaven. It is a continuous journey so happy travelling towards finding the unique plan which He has for you. 

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