DISCERNMENT FOR WOMEN

Women are beloved daughters and desire to be mothers.

What type of mother are you called to be?

A mother is one who makes space for another.
They receive others as a gift and cherish their inherent dignity.

Discerning Consecrated Life

TIP 1: Do Not Be Afraid

Ask the Lord to make His desires your desires.

Do not fear: I am with you; do not be anxious: I am your God. I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my victorious right hand.
– Isaiah 41:10

TIP 2: Create a Timeline

Usually a year of serious discernment can provide a lot of clarity. Obviously, we can’t control God’s timing, but we can do the hard work of discernment on our end and then go forth in peace. Some women get sucked into a vortex of perpetual discernment, which can be very confusing and exhausting.

Entrust your vocational discernment into the hands of Mary and chose a Marian feast as an ending date.

TIP 3: Pray, Pray, Pray

This is obvious, but there are some specific prayer practices that can be especially helpful.

  • Go to daily Mass. This will be the source and summit of your day and your life.
  • Make frequent Confessions (at least once a month). Many sisters have confession every week and this Sacrament is a source of incredible grace.
  • Create space for solitude and silence every day. Become familiar with the voice of the Good Shepherd, so that when He calls, you will recognize his voice.
  • Learn how to pray the Liturgy of the Hours (as this is prayed by most religious communities)
  • Pray the Rosary.  Ask Our Lady, Star of the Sea to guide your discernment.

TIP 4: Find a Spiritual Director

Your pastor may be able to provide spiritual direction, a recommendation, or reference for you. Consider contacting the vocation office. The vocation director can also provide spiritual direction or give a recommendation.

Some priests are more open to taking a new directee if they know that it is a short term commitment. Say something like, “Would you have time to meet 3 times in the next 6 months as I am discerning my vocation?”

You could also go on a directed silent Ignatian retreat. You can start with a 1 or 2 day retreat and work your way up to an 8 day retreat.

TIP 5: Research and Pray with the Charisms

Look into the various religious orders (Benedictine, Carmelite, Dominican, Franciscan, Ignatian, etc.) and their charisms. Also dive deep into the Evangelical Counsels (chastity, poverty, and obedience).

TIP 6: Learn More About Active vs. Contemplative Life

Religious life can take on many forms: cloistered, monastic, mendicant, contemplative, active, and so on. The Council of Major Superiors for Women Religious and the Institue on Relgious Life are good places to start.

TIP 7: Spend Time with Other Women Who are Discerning

Many dioceses offer Women’s Discernment Weekends, Marian Dinners, and discernment houses.

TIP 8: Start Visiting Sisters

Come and See Weekends with religious communities are such incredible opportunities. Receive the hospitality of sisters, listen to their vocation stories, ask all your trivial and serious questions, experience their prayer, community life, and Apostolates.

TIP 9: Ask for Intercession

Ask for the intercession of St. Ignatius of Loyola and pray with him the Suscipe:

Take, Lord, and receive all my liberty,
my memory, my understanding,
and my entire will,

All I have and call my own.
You have given all to me.
To you, Lord, I return it.

Everything is yours; do with it what you will. Give me only your love and your grace, that is enough for me.

Read E-Book

Contact A Consecrated Woman for a Conversation

Sr. Amy Marie

The Marian Sisters

Sr. Fidelis Marie

The Missionary Benedictine Sisters

Monica Hejkal

The Apostolic Oblates

Resources for Discernment

Discerning Religious Life

A comprehensive guide to help women discern Religious Life with clarity, confidence, and joy. Foreword by Cardinal Dolan.

Women Religious App

Discover more about religious communities who are members of the Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious. Hear vocation stories and learn more about the gift of religious life to the Church and to the world.

For Love Alone

The Story of Women Religious: Giving their lives, for love of Him.  This film opens its audience to the lives of modern women who have responded to a personal call to follow Jesus Christ with the gift of their own lives.

Labouré Society

The Labouré Society exists to provide financial assistance and spiritual support to individuals who must resolve education loans in order to pursue a vocation to the priesthood and/or religious life in the Catholic Church.

Avow Discernment Groups for Women

Our goal is simple: to help women draw closer to Jesus as they discern a possible vocation to religious life. We use the tried-and-true model of “discernment groups” because they work.

Vocations Directory

The Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious (CMSWR) publishes a Vocations Directory of its member communities every two years.

Fund for Vocations

The Catholic lay faithful partner with and assist the Fund for Vocations – and the wonderful young men and women we exist to support.

Discernment of Spirits

Understand St. Ignatius of Loyola’s Rules for Discernment and how their insights are invaluable for our spiritual growth today. This book is for all who desire greater awareness of God’s action in their daily spiritual lives.

Prayer for Discerning a Vocation

Lord, my God and my loving Father, you have made me to know you, to love you, to serve you, and thereby to find and to fulfill my deepest longings. I know that you are in all things, and that every path can lead me to you.

But of them all, there is one especially by which you want me to come to you. Since I will do what you want of me, I pray you, send your Holy Spirit to me: into my mind, to show me what you want of me; into my heart, to give me the determination to do it, and to do it with all my love, with all my mind, and with all of my strength right to the end. Jesus, I trust in you.

Amen

Hey! I’m Zach Eischeid. I grew up in Elgin, Nebraska and belong to the Saint Boniface Parish. I attended Saint Boniface Elementary and graduated from Pope John XXIII Central Catholic High School. Saint Boniface Parish is a great place to learn about the Faith with our schools and to see so many parishioners helping each other and our parish in a myriad of ways.

My discernment has been around for as long as I can remember. Since I was a toddler, the priesthood always amazed me. However, around junior high, I kept pushing it to the back of my mind because I didn’t want to be labeled as that “extra-religious guy.” After graduating, I decided to attend Benedictine College to major in Theology. Towards the end of my first year at Benedictine, while at my sister’s wedding dance, I oddly had a strong feeling about seminary. A month later, I attended the priest ordination while teaching Totus Tuus, and started weeping during the procession in the cathedral. This sign was big encouragement in finally giving my future in God’s hands. I am currently at Kenrick Glennon Seminary in St. Louis and have made many fraternal friendships, as we are all on the same journey of striving to be what God wants us to be.

For all those with even an inkling about entering seminary, I encourage you to be open to it. Pray about it, frequent the sacraments, and remember: “You were not made for comfort. You were made for greatness.” And remember, every priest and seminarian has gone through what you are going through.

In my down time, I like playing any sport, especially basketball and baseball, jamming on the ukulele, listening to Christian rap, watching Nebraska football, and combating heresy.