I have discerned that I am not called to monastic life after
all. When I left my position as rector of St. Paul’s on-the-Hill, I believed
that God was calling me to be a postulant with the Society of St. Margaret in
Massachusetts, where I would have the opportunity to discern if I was being
called to a life-long commitment to their order. What happened really surprised
me (a sure sign that I’m letting go of control and really listening/hearing
God). As soon as I left St. Paul’s on-the-Hill, I felt more open to God and God’s
will for me. I went on a seven-day silent directed retreat at the Jesuit Center
in Wernersville PA a on January 7th. The picture of the tree in the
fog was taken during the retreat. Early in the morning, I would wake up to this
fog surrounding the grounds and the retreat center, which spoke to me of God’s
loving embrace…the Holy Spirit surrounding me with care and a gentleness.
During the retreat, I realized that I had made the decision
to go to the convent (apply to go) based on good reasons; it was reasonable for
me, but not based on an actual call from God. So I prayed about what had
caused me to think I was called to monastic life, and in the prayer I knew it
had to do with wanting to serve God with the sort of devotion that the Sisters
have…I too wanted to be transformed to God’s greater glory so as to live my
life to God’s glory and in the service of others. In this prayer, God was
helping me with what we, in spiritual direction, call the discernment of
spirits. The idea being that we are called by God to live life to the fullest
and that everyone is called to glorify God in his or her life, and that to do
so we have to make choices.
In order to know what to choose, we take part in a process
of discernment. In the lives of those who are seeking to do God’s will –seeking
to be faithful followers of Christ—we can be faced with two good choices…either
one could be good for us and good for the world. But as St. Ignatius said, we
are called to what is most in tune with God’s purpose for us, which always has
something to do with freeing us to be more fully ourselves and to be servants
to others. This is what I knew I was being called to address on the retreat, and
I felt the freedom to do so, and the grace to have the courage to do so. It has
taken courage for me because I’m the sort of person who does not change a plan
that has been made and publicized widely, including being reported in the Virginia Episcopalian!
I wanted to go the convent. But, in my prayer, I received a clear sense from God, direction from God, to continue to live my life in “the world” and not go to the convent. Instead, I heard God say to me that I am being transformed now, in the life I live, in the life God has given me as the person God has created me to be, right here and now. I share this with you because I know some of you want to know more than can be put on Facebook, or that I wanted to put on Facebook, and also because what has been going on in my life has taught me a lot about discernment and perhaps hearing my story will be helpful to you in your discernment now or later.
As well, this was an “angel in the alley” experience
for me, in that I experienced grace in an unexpected way. I’m living now with a
deep sense of joy and freedom even though all of my plans have, in a sense,
fallen apart. But in my plans falling away, I’m more able to live my life for
God and be more fully the person God has created me to be…more than ever.