4.5 Quelques exemples de vocations authentiques ?

Vocation

La Bible contient beaucoup d’histoires de personnes appelées par Dieu. Une histoire bien connue est celle de la vocation de Moïse, qui a mené à la libération du peuple d’Israël de l’oppression de Pharaon. Bien qu’il ait hésité, Moïse a finalement fait ce que Dieu lui demandait.

Plus célèbre encore, la vocation de Marie, qui est devenue mère de Jésus. Au lieu d’objecter quand il lui a été demandé de coopérer au plan de Dieu, Marie fut capable de faire entièrement confiance à Dieu, parfois sans réellement comprendre ou connaître la suite des événements.

Moïse fit ce que Dieu lui demandait et il libéra son peuple de l’esclavage. Marie dit aussi oui à Dieu et, dès lors, rendit possible notre salut par Jésus.
The Wisdom of the Church

How does Mary cooperate in the divine plan of salvation?

By the grace of God Mary was kept free from every personal sin her whole life long. She is the one who is “full of grace” (Luke 1:28), “the all holy”. When the angel announced to her that she would give birth to “the Son of the Most High” (Luke 1:32), she freely gave her consent with “the obedience of faith” (Romans 1:5). Mary thus gave herself entirely to the person and work of her Son Jesus, espousing wholeheartedly the divine Will regarding salvation. [CCCC 97]

Was Mary only an instrument of God?

Mary was more than a merely passive instrument of God. The Incarnation of God took place through her active consent as well.

When the angel told her that she would bear “the Son of God”, Mary replied, “Let it be to me according to your word” (Lk 1:38). The redemption of mankind by Jesus Christ thus begins with a request by God and the free consent of a human being—and a pregnancy before Mary was married to Joseph. By such an unusual path Mary became for us the “Gate of Salvation”. [Youcat 84]

This is what the Popes say

I am often asked, especially by young people, why I became a priest... I must begin by saying that it is impossible to explain entirely.  For it remains a mystery, even to myself. How does one explain the ways of God? Yet, I know that, at a certain point in my life, I became convinced that Christ was saying to me what he had said to thousands before me: 'Come, follow me!' There was a clear sense that what I heard in my heart was no human voice, nor was it just an idea of my own. Christ was calling me to serve him as a priest. [Pope John Paul II, Los Angeles, USA, 14 Sept. 1987]