Help Aleteia continue its mission by making a tax-deductible donation. In this way, Aleteia's future will be yours as well.
*Your donation is tax deductible!
I’m not scheduled to preach this weekend, but here’s something from the vault that may be timely.
We talk a lot in this church about vocations. Here in the parish, we have the novena to St. Jean Vianney every summer. We pray regularly for an increase in vocations. We encourage parents to talk to their children about considering life as a priest or brother or a sister.
But this Sunday, I’m going to talk about a vocation that doesn’t get as much attention – but should. It’s one that has affected every man, woman and child in this church today. And it’s one that many here are living out every day – maybe without even realizing it.
It’s probably the most visible vocation in the world.
I’m speaking, of course, of marriage: the vocation of being a husband or a wife.
This Sunday marks World Marriage Day and so the church takes this opportunity to celebrate this sacrament — to honor men and women who have made this commitment to one another, to renew wedding vows, and to remind ourselves of what it means to be married.
Though this takes place just before Valentine’s Day, those who are married know: it’s not all chocolates and roses. Sometimes, it’s sour grapes and poison ivy. It’s socks on the floor and dishes in the sink and diapers that need changing and meetings with teachers and paying bills and fixing the car and snoring at three in the morning. It’s not always easy.
But nothing of value is.
Being married isn’t just a lifestyle choice, or a living arrangement that has tax advantages and can result in two or three little deductions.
No. Marriage is something else. Something more. Something deeper. Something greater. Something that should inspire awe and wonder.
It is, in fact, a vocation.
But how many of us treat it that way?
How many of us – even the most faithful Catholics – look on this sacrament as something like Holy Orders?
How many of us realize that those of us who are married are a part of something sacred?
How many of us understand that this life we live as a married couple is – like the life of a priest or religious – a calling?
It is. Make no mistake: those who are married have been called to this way of life. God has spoken to us, just as he has to priests and religious, and He has summoned us to live our lives in a radical way – putting the interests of another person, or even the interests of an entire family, ahead of our own. He has asked us to do this for better or for worse, in sickness and in health, for a lifetime. Share this mission with me, He says. Offer your life for this great adventure: to be a spouse, to begin a family, and continue My work of creation in the world. That is His calling to us.
It is a wonder, and a mystery – and a summons that can’t help but leave us feeling humbled. Married life is God extending Himself through time, continuing what began when He first called forth light and life. The creative work of the Creator continues, through every husband and wife, who then strive to bring light and life into the world. It’s a holy covenant. It’s a sacrament.
And yes: it is a vocation.
And like any vocation, it requires an ongoing dialogue with God. And it is something to be done, a way of living, that should give glory to God.
In the letter we just heard, St. Paul wrote: “Brothers and sisters, whatever you do, do everything for the glory of God.” That includes the ordinary, everyday, mundane acts of married life. Give glory to God with every dish you wash, every bill you pay, every sock you toss in a hamper instead of leaving on the floor.
Make of your marriage a prayer.
Years ago, the first time I preached on this subject, I asked my wife, “What do you think I should say about marriage in my homily Sunday?”
And without hesitating, she said, “It’s so important to pray. Separately and together. Because God knows the strengths and weaknesses of the other person better than you do. You need His help.”
Every marriage does. Every vocation does. No priest or brother or sister or deacon can last long without an active prayer life. And so it is with this vocation of marriage. It requires what the Church has so beautifully described as “the domestic church” – each couple, each family living and praying and sharing together, finding communion together.
It is something beautiful. And holy.
It is a vocation. And as I tell couples in my wedding homily: the great goal, the highest goal, of any marriage is to try to make your spouse a saint.
Imagine what might happen if we honestly, sincerely treated marriage that way—and treated it as a vocation.
Parishes would have regular marriage vocation fairs.
There would be a marriage novena to Mary and Joseph, asking their intercession to call forth more good husbands and wives.
There would be prayers offered regularly to Saints Louis and Zelie Martin – the parents of St. Therese of Lisieux.
There would be an ongoing effort, in every family, in every parish, in every diocese, to pray for holy marriages, just as we now pray for holy priests.
If we began to have that kind of a mindset, more of us might then come to see this sacred calling as, indeed, a calling that is sacred. A marriage wouldn’t just be 50 or 60 years following a big overpriced party with a dress you only wore once.
We would begin to see it as a kind of daily prayer – an offering to God, and an offering to one other person. An offering made once. And forever.
Imagine what it might be mean if we all thought of marriage that way.
Imagine how that might change our church – and change our world.
— Originally preached February 13, 2011