Dictionary Definition
vocational adj : of or relation to a vocation or
occupation; especially providing or undergoing training in special
skills; "vocational school"; "vocational students learning to
repair a motor"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
vocationalTranslations
of or pertaining to a vocation
- Finnish: ammatti-, ammatillinen
(of education) that provides a special skill
rather than academic knowledge
- Finnish: ammatti-, ammatillinen
Extensive Definition
otheruses vocational
education A vocation is an occupation for which a
person is suited,
trained or qualified. It is also the
inclination to undertake a certain kind of
work, especially a religious career; often in response to a
perceived
summons; a calling. This type of vocation
is either professional or voluntary, that is carried out
more for its altruistic
benefit than for income,
which might be regarded as a secondary aspect of the vocation,
however beneficial.
Background
Vocations can be seen as fulfilling a psychological or spiritual need for the worker, and the term can also be used to describe any occupation for which a person is specifically gifted, and usually implies that the worker has a form of "calling" for the task. The word "vocation" comes from the Latin vocare, meaning "to call"; , however, its usage before the sixteenth century, particularly in the Vulgate, refers to the calling of all humankind to salvation, with its more modern usage of a life-task first employed by Martin Luther.The idea of vocation is central to the Christian
belief that God has created each person with gifts and talents
oriented toward specific purposes and a way of life. Particularly
in the Orthodox
and Catholic
Churches, this idea of vocation is especially associated with a
divine call to service to the Church and humanity through
particular vocational life commitments such as marriage to a
particular person, consecration as a religious, ordination to
priestly ministry in the Church and even a holy life as a single
person. In the broader sense, Christian vocation includes the use
of ones gifts in their profession, family life, church and civic
commitments for the sake of the greater common good.
The idea of a vocation or "calling" has been
pivotal within Protestantism.
Martin
Luther taught that each individual was expected to fulfill his
God-appointed task in everyday life. Although the Lutheran concept
of the calling emphasized vocation, there was no particular
emphasis on labor beyond what was required for one's daily bread.
Calvinism
transformed the idea of the calling by emphasizing relentless,
disciplined labor. In the
Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536), Calvin defined the
role of "The Christian in his vocation." He noted that God has
prescribed appointed duties to men and styled such spheres of life
vocations or callings. Calvinists distinguished two callings: a
general calling to serve God and a particular
calling to engage in some employment by which one's usefulness is
determined.
The Puritan minister
Cotton
Mather, in A Christian at his Calling (1701), described the
obligations of the personal calling as, "some special business, and
some settled business, wherein a Christian should for the most part
spend the most of his time; so he may glorify God by doing good for
himself." Mather admonished that it wasn't lawful ordinarily to
live without some calling, "for men will fall into "horrible snares
and infinite sins." This idea has endured throughout the history of
Protestantism. Three centuries after John Calvin's death, Thomas
Carlyle (1843) would proclaim, "The latest Gospel in this world
is, 'know thy work and do it.'"
The legacy of this religious ethic continues to
exert its influence in an increasingly secular world. Modern
occupations which are seen as vocations often include those where a
combination of skill and community help are implied, such as
medical, care-giving, and veterinary occupations. Occupations where
rewards are seen more in spiritual or other non-financial terms,
such as religious
occupations, are also seen as vocations. Borderline occupations,
where community
service and more personal reward are more evenly balanced, such
as politics, may often
be regarded as vocations.
Many forms of humanitarian campaigning, such as
work for organisations such as Amnesty
International and Greenpeace can
also be considered vocations, although the term tends to imply that
the activity is a full-time job rather than a part-time activity or
hobby....
The emerging church movement, catholic social
thought, and an increased interest in reformation thought has
renewed interest in the Christian idea of vocation. Another aspect
of vocation is working through how to define/discuss/and revitalize
the importance of vocational thought not defined by an official
church body. Several books have discussed this topic as well as the
Catholic Church has defined the calling of the worker in Laborem
Exercens.
Books that have attempted to define / clarify
aspects of vocation:
- A Theology of the Laity by Hendrik Kraemer
- The Fabric of this World by Lee Hardy
- Your Work Matters to God by Doug Sherman and William Hendricks
- The Call by Os Guinness
- The Preaching Life by Barbara Brown Taylor
- Let Your Life Speak by Parker J. Palmer
See also
External links
References
vocational in German: Berufung (Religion)
vocational in Spanish: Vocación
vocational in French: Vocation
vocational in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Vocation
vocational in Italian: Vocazione
vocational in Dutch: Roeping (idee)
vocational in Polish:
Powołanie