National Eucharistic Pilgrimage inspires wave of priestly and religious vocations

When MacKenzie Warrens spent weeks crossing the country with Jesus in the Eucharist during the 2024 National Eucharistic Pilgrimage, she had already discerned her vocation as a consecrated virgin. What she did not expect was how profoundly the experience would deepen that calling.
“I already knew what I was called to,” Warrens told EWTN News. “Any lingering doubts that may have been in my mind were completely gone with the pilgrimage. It was just even more clear… ‘This is, without a doubt, my vocation.’”
Months after completing the pilgrimage, Warrens took vows as a consecrated virgin in the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. For Warrens and many others who walked thousands of miles with the Eucharist, the pilgrimage became more than a journey across America. It became a path toward discovering or confirming the vocation God had prepared for them.
Forty‑five young adults have served as perpetual pilgrims since the National Eucharistic Pilgrimage began in 2024, and organizers told EWTN News that 26 of them are discerning or pursuing forms of consecrated life.
Growing harvest of vocations In the interest of transparency, organizers noted that eight of the men discerning…



