God is calling young people to be saints too

Today and tomorrow, we call to mind our special bond with believers who have passed from this life to the next, a bond that we call the Communion of Saints. We are the Church Militant, still struggling against evil in this life. 

Today, we celebrate the Church Triumphant, those who we know are already in heaven. Tomorrow, on All Souls Day, we pray for the Church Suffering, those still undergoing purification in purgatory. Anyone in heaven is a saint, whether officially canonized or not, and every one of you is called to be a saint as well. 

When I was a priest in Oklahoma, I was very involved in the cause of Blessed Stanley Rother, the first officially declared martyr born in the United States. But my involvement with saints is much more extensive than that. For instance, I have been present for the canonization of several other Americans: Kateri Tekakwitha, our first Native American saint, and Sister Marianne Cope, who ministered to lepers in Hawaii for 35 years along with St. Damian DeVeuster, plus other American saints, John Neumann and Junípero Serra. 

I was also present for the canonizations of Pope Paul VI and Pope John Paul II, whom I had met several times.

What all these saints have in common is that they were all teenagers or young adults when they responded to God’s call in their lives. Blessed Stanley Rother entered seminary right out of high school, and Marianne Cope entered the convent two years after graduation. Kateri Tekakwitha was drawn to the Lord as a teenager and was only 24 when she died after giving courageous witness to her Catholic faith to fellow members of the Mohawk tribe.

The message for us is that every one of us has an important role in God’s plan and that God often calls people when they are still teenagers. I myself was in 11th grade when I began to feel the Lord’s call in my life more intensely. 

Here in Little Rock, in most of my 16 years as your bishop, we have had at least one young man enter the seminary from Catholic High — last year, it was three young men, Parker Vail, Luke Parker and Matthew Lamb — plus Pedro Cervantes, who was a college student in Magnolia. 

And last month, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of Sister Deborah Troillett, who entered the Sisters of Mercy shortly after graduating high school here at Mount St. Mary. Also this year, Laurie Nick, a Mount St. Mary’s graduate and Christ the King parishioner, entered the Olivetan Benedictines in Jonesboro. But you know, none of these young people just heard the Lord’s call the week before graduation.

Every one of them had been praying about it and feeling God’s tug in their heart for several years before they finally got the courage to quit resisting and say instead: “Yes, Lord, your servant is listening.”

Of course, there are many other roles in God’s plan to which he calls people and by means of which he draws us to himself. That’s the difference between a vocation and a career. A career is something we choose; it is a response to the question “What do I want to do with my life?” and so remains focused on the self. A vocation, on the other hand, responds to the question, “What does God want me to do with my life?” and so is focused on something bigger than the self — and that is where true happiness and holiness lie.

How about you? God does call teenagers. If you feel that tug but are afraid to respond, what’s the reason? Fear of making a commitment? Fear is a very common obstacle. We want to live up to the best that is in us, but we are weak, so the Church holds up for us all these saints who responded to God’s call as teenagers to intercede for us and for us to imitate. 

Some of these saints were called to serve the Lord as priests or religious, but most, like Kateri Tekakwitha, were called to serve him in the secular world as laypersons. Every one of you has an important role in God’s plan and God does call teenagers. 

Do you have the courage to say yes? It is through your response to his call that you will find holiness and happiness, fulfilling your role in God’s plan — and thus, this day, when we honor all the saints, will become your feast day as well.

Bishop Anthony B. Taylor delivered this homily for All Saints Day Nov. 1.

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