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Welcome March as it brings the first day of spring with the vernal equinox, signalling the start of new beginnings. Use this Lenten time of reflection to read Michael Winstanley's 'Lenten Sundays' or focus on a prayer and reflection each day with the 'Swatch Journey through Lent' or explore the life of Jesus with your little ones with the colourful 'A Child's Life of Jesus'.

Don Martoglio's Message - Vicar of the Rector Major - We are Don Bosco Today!

Don Martoglio's Message - Vicar of the Rector Major - We are Don Bosco Today!

Posted: Fri, 28 Feb 2025 12:18

Don Martoglio's Message - Vicar of the Rector Major - We are Don Bosco Today!

Dear friends and readers, members of the Salesian Family, for this month's greeting in the Salesian Bulletin I will focus on a very important event that the Salesian Congregation is holding presently: General Chapter XXIX. This assembly, the most important one that the Congregation can experience, occurs every six years along the Salesian Congregation's journey.

Our lives are filled with many things and this Jubilee Year proposes to us many important events; however, I want to focus on a different one because, even if it would seem outside one's realm, still, it concerns all of us.

Don Bosco, our Founder, was aware that things would not end with him but that it was only the beginning of a long journey to be travelled. One day in 1875, when he was sixty years old, Don Bosco said to Don Giulio Barberis, one of his closest collaborators: "You will finish the work I am beginning; I am making the sketch, you will add the colours" [...] I will make a rough copy of the Congregation and I will leave to those who come after me the task of making it beautiful."

With this happy and prophetic expression, Don Bosco outlined the path that we are all called to take. Its highest form is what we are carrying out at this time in Valdocco: The General Chapter of the Salesians of Don Bosco.

The prophecy of the sweets

Today's world is not like that of Don Bosco, but there is a common characteristic: it is a time of profound change. Complete, balanced, and responsible humanisation [of his boys] in both their material and spiritual components was Don Bosco's true goal. He was concerned with filling the "inner space" of the boys, making "well-formed minds", "honest citizens". In today's world, this is more relevant than ever. Our world needs Don Bosco today.

Before all else, everyone must pose to themselves one simple question: "Do I want an ordinary life, or do I want to change the world?" But can we still even speak of goals and ideals today? Whenever a river stops flowing, it turns into a swamp – even with the help of humanity.

Don Bosco never stopped moving forward. Today he does so with our feet.

His conviction about young people was this: "This most precious segment of human society, upon whom all hopes of a happy future are founded, is not of itself of a bad thing… If at times these youngsters are already infected with evil, it is more often through thoughtlessness than through deliberate malice. These youngsters truly need a helping hand to take care of them and to lead them away from evil to the practice of virtue..."[1]

In 1882, in a conference to the Cooperators in Genoa: "By removing, instructing, and educating young people in danger, it is good for the whole of civil society. If young people are well educated, we will have a better generation over time." It is as if to say: only education can change the world.

Don Bosco had an almost frightening capacity for vision. He never says, "until now" but always "from now on."

Guy Avanzini, an eminent university professor, always repeated: "The pedagogy of the twenty-first century will be Salesian, or it will not be."

One evening in 1851, from a window on the first floor, Don Bosco flung a handful of sweets. Naturally, this resulted in great joy. One of the boys seeing him there, smiling at the window, yelled up to him: "Don Bosco, how wonderful it would be if you could see the whole world with oratories!"

Don Bosco fixed his serene gaze heavenward and replied: "Who knows, the day may come when the children of the oratory are truly scattered throughout the world."

Looking Far Beyond

But what is a General Chapter? Why fill these pages with a theme that is specific to the Salesian Congregation?

The Constitutions of the Salesians of Don Bosco, their way of life, in article 146, define it as follows: "The general chapter is the principal sign of the Congregation's unity in diversity. It is the fraternal meeting in which Salesians carry out a communal reflection to keep themselves faithful to the Gospel and to their Founder's charism, and sensitive to the needs of time and place.

Through the general chapter the entire So­ciety, opening itself to the guidance of the Spirit of the Lord, seeks to discern God's will at a specific moment in history for the pur­pose of rendering the Church better service."

The General Chapter is therefore not a private matter of consecrated Salesians, but a very important assembly that concerns us all, touching the whole Salesian Family and those who have Don Bosco within them, because the people, the mission, the Charism of Don Bosco, the Church and each one of us, of you, are at the centre.

Faithfulness to God and to Don Bosco along with the ability to see the signs of the times and of different places are also at the centre. This faithfulness is a continuous movement, renewal, and the ability to look far ahead while keeping one's feet firmly planted on the ground.

For this reason, about 250 Salesian confreres from all over the world have gathered to pray, think, discuss with each other, and look far beyond... in faithfulness to Don Bosco.

Then after having constructed their vision, they will elect the new Rector Major, the successor of Don Bosco and his General Council.

This Chapter is not something extraneous to your life, dear friend who is reading this, but is part of your life and your "affection" for Don Bosco. Why do I tell you this? So that you will accompany it with your prayer - prayer to the Holy Spirit that He may help all the capitulars know what God's Will is so we may give better service to the Church.

I think that GC29 – no, I am sure – will be all this: an experience of God that will help us "clean up" some parts of the sketch that Don Bosco left us, as all the General Chapters in the history of the Congregation have done before, always in faith to his plan.

I am certain that even today we can continue to be enlightened to be faithful to the Lord Jesus and our original charism with the faces, music, and colours of today.

We are not alone in this mission, and we know and feel that Mary, our Mother and Help of Christians, the Help of the Church and model of faith, will support all the next steps.

[1] The Biographical Memoirs of St. John Bosco. vol. II. New Rochelle, NY: Salesiana Publishers, Inc., 1966. pp. 35-36. online.

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