ST. JOHN BOSCO
Dear Beloved of the Father,
Today we celebrate the feast of the Father and Teacher of Youth - Don Bosco. We wish all the Salesian Fathers, Sisters, Lay Brothers and all those associated with Don Bosco and all Christ's faithful a very happy feast. May this great saint bless us all and intercede for us. May his zeal for winning souls for God be rooted in every activity we undertake. I have give below the Life of Don Bosco, the Major Events of his life, his Preventive System and his Inspiring Words for our reading and reflection. God bless you all.
Fr. Lawrence Louis Rodrigues
(FOR SOCOM.BARODA)
LIFE OF SAINT DON BOSCO
Father and Teacher of Youth
"God gave him wisdom and understanding and a heart as vast as the sand on the seashore." With these words, the Church ushers in the feast on January 31 in honour of St. John Bosco, affectionately known to his spiritual sons and daughters all over the world as Don (Father in Italian) Bosco.
John (Italian: Giovanni) Melchior Bosco was born of poor parents in a little cabin at Becchi, a hillside hamlet near Castelnuovo, Piedmont , Italy on 16 August, 1815 . When he was little more than two years old his father died on May 11, 1817 , he was only 33 years of age, leaving the support of three boys to the mother, Margaret Bosco. The mother, Margaret Occhiena, had to struggle to bring up the family. Her lively faith, her confidence in God, her spirit of prayer, her strength of spirit enabled her to tide over difficult times. These sterling qualities were absorbed by John as he grew up under her loving care.
Don Rua writes: "His confidence in God was so great that whenever he found himself faced with a difficulty greater than usual, he seemed to be more joyful than was his custom." Cardinal Cagliero testifies that Don Bosco would repeat in moments of severe trial, "There is a God in Israel - let nothing disturb us, let nothing frighten us."
Devotion to Mary
"I learnt to recite the Rosary on the knees of my mother," Don Bosco often told his pupils. He was very particular that the Rosary should be recited in all his houses. Every year he took a group of boys to the chapel dedicated to Our Lady of the Rosary at Becchi for the feast in October. En route they entertained the towns with their band and singing.
"Be devout to Our Lady," was the advice Mamma Margaret gave her son John when he left in 1830 to stay and study at Castelnuovo. On October 25, 1835, after John received the cassock and was preparing to join the Seminary at Chieri, his mother took him aside and said, "When you came into the world, I entrusted you to the Blessed Virgin; when you commenced your studies I recommended you to practise devotion to Her; now I urge you to give yourself wholly to Her. Associate with companions who are devoted to Her and when you are a priest do you utmost to draw people to Her." In 1941 he was ordained priest on the eve of Trinity Sunday by Archbishop Franzoni of Turin .
Today, Don Bosco's name is so linked with the Blessed Virgin that she is often known as "The Madonna of Don Bosco." He raised several monuments in honour of Our Lady.
Character and Growth of the Oratory
Leaving the seminary after his ordination, Don Bosco went to Turin where he entered zealously upon his priestly labours. It was here that an incident occurred which opened up to him the real field of effort of his afterlife. One of his duties was to accompany Don Cafasso upon his visits to the prisons of the city, and the condition of the children confined in these places, abandoned to the most evil influences, and with little before them but the gallows, made such a indelible impression upon his mind that he resolved to devote his life to the rescue of these unfortunate outcasts. On the eighth of December, 1841, the feast of the Immaculate Conception, while Don Bosco was vesting for Mass, the sacristan drove from the Church a ragged urchin because he refused to serve Mass. Don Bosco heard his cries and recalled him, and in the friendship which sprang up between the priest and Bartollomea Garelli was sown the first seed of the "Oratory", so called, no doubt, after the example of St. Philip Neri and because prayer was its prominent feature. Don Bosco entered eagerly upon the task of instructing thus first pupil of the streets; companions soon joined Bartholomeo, all drawn by a kindness they had never known, and in February, 1842, the Oratory numbered twenty boys, in March of the same year, thirty, and in March, 1846, four hundred.
In his vision or dream which he is said to have had in his early boyhood, wherein it was disclosed to him what his lifework would be, a voice said to him: "Not with blows, but with charity and gentleness must you draw these friends to the path of virtue."
Don Bosco's method of study knew nothing of punishment. And in 1887 he wrote: "I do not remember to have used formal punishment; and with God's grace I have always obtained, and from apparently hopeless children, not alone what duty exacted, but what my wish simply expressed." In one of his books he has discussed the causes of weakness of character, and derives them largely from a misdirected kindness in the rearing of children. Parents make a parade of precocious talents: the child understands quickly, and his sensitiveness enraptures all who meet him, but the parents have only succeeded in producing all affectionate, perfected, intelligent animal. The chief object should be to form the will and to temper the character. In all his pupils Don Bosco tried to cultivate a taste for music, believing it to be a powerful and refining influence.
In his rules lie wrote: "Frequent Confession, frequent Communion, daily Mass: these are the pillars which should sustain the whole edifice of education." Don Bosco was an indefatigable confessor, devoting days to the work among his children. He recognized that gentleness and persuasion alone were not enough to bring to the task of education. He thoroughly believed in play as a means of arousing childish curiosity -- more than this, he places it among his first recommendations, and for the rest he adopted St. Philip Neri's words: "Do as you wish, I do not care so long as you do not sin."
Don Bosco was truly gifted with many qualities: a keen mind, a powerful memory, enormous strength. While in the seminary he supported himself by working as a tailor, blacksmith, shoemaker, carpenter, violinist, acrobat, and magician. All these talents came in handy during his lifetime of working with youngsters.
Don Bosco used all his talents for God and for the mission entrusted to him, to be an Apostle of the poor and abandoned youth. He lost his father when he was barely two years old. Yet he became a father to thousands of youngsters. He went to school only at the age of 15 after overcoming several hurdles. Yet he founded many technical, academic and boarding schools for others. The politicians of his day were closing down monasteries and convents, and banning Religious Orders. Yet he had the courage to found the Salesian Society for men (1859); the Institute of the Daughters of Mary, Help of Christians, for women (1872); and the Association of Salesian Cooperators for lay people (1876).
Our Lady, Help of Christians
In 1868 to meet the needs of the Valdocco quarter of Turin , Don Bosco resolved to build a church. The church was consecrated 9 June, 1868 , and placed under the patronage of Our Lady, Help of Christians. In the same year in which Don Bosco began the erection of the church fifty priests and teachers who had been assisting him formed a society under a common rule which Pius IX, provisionally in 1869, and finally the Salesian Society was given permanent status within the Catholic Church in 1874.
He used devotion to Our Lady to lead people to the Holy Eucharist. He raised three monuments in honour to her: the Basilica of Mary, Help of Christians at Turin; the Institute of the Daughters of Mary, Help of Christians, which he said was a living monument to thank our celestial Mother for all the favours she had showered on him; and the Work for Late Vocations, which he termed the "Sons of Mary" project.
Trust in Divine Providence
To Don Bosco we may apply the words of Holy Scripture concerning Abraham: "He believed against all hope and became the father of many peoples."
Don Bosco would undertake mighty works with little or nothing in his purse. His contractors and suppliers, however, were perfectly sure that everything would be taken care of. "Would that we were as certain of being paid by everyone as we are by Don Bosco. He may be slow but he never fails, for he has Divine Providence at his disposal. Don Bosco's word is more than a banknote."
In his life, the supernatural became natural
Don Bosco gently passed away at 4:45 a.m. , January 31, 1888 . "Tell my boys that I await them in heaven," he had whispered 3 days earlier. He was canonized on Easter Sunday, April 1, 1934 by Pope Pius XI, who declared, "In his life, the supernatural became natural and the extraordinary the ordinary."
In 1988, on the occasion of the first centenary of his death, Pope John Paul II proclaimed Don Bosco the "Father and Teacher of Youth" and in his letter of declaration, singled out the interchange between education and holiness as the characteristic aspect of Don Bosco's personality: "He was a holy educator, he drew his inspiration from a holy model: St. Francis de Sales, he was the disciple of a holy spiritual director - St. Joseph Cafasso, and he was able to form from among his boys a holy pupil - St. Dominic Savio."
Statistics
At the time of Don Bosco's death in 1888 there were 250 houses of the Salesian Society in all parts of the world, containing 130,000 children, and from which there annually went out 18,000 finished apprentices. In the motherhouse Don Bosco had selected the brightest of his pupils, taught them Italian, Latin, French, and mathematics, and this band formed a teaching corps for the new homes which quickly grew up in other places. Up to 1888 over six thousand priests had gone forth from Don Bosco's institutions, 1,200 of whom had remained in the society. The schools begin with the child in his first instruction and lead, for those who choose it, to seminaries for the priesthood. The society also conducts Sunday schools, evening schools for adult workmen, schools for those who enter the priesthood late in life, technical schools, and printing establishments for the diffusion of good reading in different languages. Its members also have charge of hospitals and asylums, nurse the sick, and do prison work, especially in rural districts. The society has houses in the following countries: Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, England, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Palestine, and Algiers; in South America, Mexico, in South America, Patagonia, Terra del Fuego, Ecuador, Brazil, Paraguay, The Argentine Republic, Bolivia, Uruguay, Chile, Peru, Venezuela, and Colombia. In the United States the Salesians have four churches: Sts. Peter and Paul and Corpus Christi in San Francisco , California ; St. Josephs in Oakland , California ; and the Transfiguration in New York City . Very Rev. Michael Borghino, Provincial for America , resides in San Francisco .
MAJOR EVENTS IN THE LIFE OF DON BOSCO
1784: February 4 - Birth of Francis Bosco, father of John Bosco, at Castelnuovo d'Asti
1788: April 1 - Birth of Margaret Occhiena, mother of John Bosco, at Capriglio
1812: June 6 - Marriage of Francis Bosco and Margaret Occheina at Capriglio Parish
1815: August 16 - Birth of John Melchior Bosco at Biglione's house in the hamlet of Becchi
1815: August 17 - Baptism by Fr. Joseph Sismondi, Pastor of Castlenuovo
1817: May 12 - Francis Bosco dies of pneumonia leaving three children: Antonio, Giuseppe, and John in the care of Margaret
1825: June - The mysterious dreams foretelling Don Bosco's future began. The first dream showed him designs and details that would characterize his mission for poor and abandoned children.
1826: March 26 - John makes his first communion on Easter Sunday. Mamma Margaret told repeatedly told him: "John, my son, God is going to give you a great gift. Try to prepare yourself to be worthy of him."
1827-1829 - The discord between Giovanni and his stepbrother Antonio caused Giovanni to leave home in midwinter. The Moglia family's farm in Moncucco provided shelter for him.
1831: November - John went to stay in Chieri public school for ten years. The experience of living as a boarder not only allowed to develop his knowledge of different trades, but also prepared him psychologically for his future youth apostolate.
1833: August 4 - John was confirmed by Bishop Anthony Gianotti of Sassari at St. Blaise Parish, Butigliera.
1833: October 26 - John received his clerical habit at the parish church in Castelnuovo
1835-1841: After overcoming many difficulties, John enters St. Philip's Seminary in Chieri. He began his philosophical and theological studies and started "Joyful Company" work with young people.
1840: March 29 - John received tonsure and minor orders
1840: September - 19 Reception of Sub-diaconate
1841: February 17 - John Bosco is ordained to the Diaconate
1841: June 5 - John Bosco was ordained priest by Most Reverend Luigi Franzoni, archbishop of Turin .
1841: The Wandering Festive Oratory is formed with collaborators.
1841: November 3 - Ecclesiastical college; 3 more years of Pastoral Theology
1842: February - Oratory numbered 20 boys
1842: November 3 - Mother of John Bosco moves to the Oratory to help care for the boys.
1845: September - A boy named Michael Rua came to the oratory for the first time.
1845: October - Don Bosco published the Storia Eclesiastica for the use of students.
1846: April 12 - The oratory moved to the rented shed of Mr. Francesco Pinardi in Valdocco. The oratory had found its home forever.
1846: July - Don Bosco became seriously ill.
1846: November - Because of his long and serious illness, Don Bosco decided to stay at home for a while until his recovery was complete. When he returned to Turin his mother Margaret came with him and became mother to his boys.
1847: May - A young man came to the oratory looking for a place to sleep. This was the start of the boarding school.
1847: December - Don Bosco started his second oratory in Porta Nuova
1848: Mama Margaret began the custom of the `Good-night'
1851: Don Bosco signed the first contract with an employer on behalf of young workers. This was a step toward union action in defense of workers.
1853: Autumn - First workshops were opened with Don Bosco as the first teacher
1854: January 20 - Salesian Society is officially recognized
1854: Summer - The cholera epidemic invaded Turin . Don Bosco's boys were distinguished for their care of the sick.
1854: October 29 - Dominic Savio is registered at the oratory. He will be the first pupil of Don Bosco to be canonized.
1855: March 25 - Michael Rua made his vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience into Don Bosco's hands. He became the first Salesian.
1856: November 25 - Mama Margaret dies, Valdocco Oratory, Turin
1857: March 9 - Dominic Savio died.
1858: Don Bosco went to Rome to introduce his institutions to Pope
Pius IX.
1860: July 29 - Michael Rua was ordained a priest. He was the first of Don Bosco's students to be ordained a priest.
1863: Don Bosco opened the first Salesian Institute outside of Turin in Mirabello.
1864: March - Don Bosco began the construction of the Sanctuary of Our Lady Help of Christians in Valdocco.
1868: The great Basilica of Mary, Help of Christians, the “mother-church” of the Salesian Movement, is completed
1870: The Association of Salesian Past Pupils is established
1871: December 7 - Don Bosco became very ill as he went to visit the Salesian Institute in Varazze
1875: November 11 - The first group of ten Salesian missionaries departed for South America with Father Giovanni Cagliero leading them.
1876: Don Bosco founds the Salesian Cooperators, the lay branch of the Salesian Family
1879: The first Salesian missionary entered Patagonia , Argentina , and Chile .
1880: Pope Leo XIII requested Don Bosco to finish the Sacred Heart Basilica in Rome
1884: December 7 - One of Don Bosco's students, Giovanni Cagliero, was ordained bishop. He would later be the first cardinal from the Salesian Congregation
1887: April - Don Bosco traveled to Rome for the last time for the consecration of the Sacred Heart Basilica
1888: January 31 - The Death of Don Bosco
1934: Don Bosco is canonized by Pope Pius XI on Easter Sunday
Don Bosco developed a method of education, the "Preventive System" which became a beacon that would guide the youth of his day and lead them to a successful life. Today, over forty thousand committed followers, and interested persons use this method to achieve the stated goal of Don Bosco: "to create good Christians and useful citizens."
REASON
It is most reasonable to reach "civil, moral, and intellectual" fulfillment as a human person through a life of faith.The first dimension of this methodology focuses on the concept of reason. It not only challenges the educator to embrace fulfillment through a life of faith but it also requires that the educator be reasonable when interacting with the young. It is essential to acquire the ability to know and understand the human dynamics of young people and to be able to communicate and dialogue with them. The reasonable style of education brings meaning and purpose to the roles of parents and educators. Their efforts become more creative and interactive. A healthier rapport develops and becomes a dynamic constructive force in education. John Bosco would say "Students my not only be loved, they must know that they are loved. This he achieved by making himself available, taking a keen interest in their studies, work, sports, clubs, and in all their activities while noticing a change in behavior patterns or withdrawal symptoms. Body language does not escape parents and educators who are attentive. We cannot underestimate the need for spending quantities of quality time with the young.
RELIGION
Live according to the TRUTH entrusted to the Church. The young, through example, will be afforded diverse opportunities to develop an informed conscience, act responsibly, and embrace their sacramental liturgical life, in becoming responsible partners in social living.
The second element of this educational method is Religion built upon the Gospel of love and the Beatitudes. It is the ground where personal accountability for one's actions is encouraged and fostered. There is a significant difference between acting in good conscience and acting from an informed conscience. Genuine formation is found in the official guidance of the Church and consistent involvement in a believing faith community. To study and live according to these truths is an invitation to prayer and grace that comes from embracing a sacramental liturgical life and devotion to Mary and the saints as role models for true discipleship. Don Bosco insisted that individual responsible involvement was the road to be traveled if one was serious about helping to improve the society and build Christian communities. Emphasis on personal accountability in fulfilling one's duties and obligations was an essential part of John Bosco's efforts to build character. By constant and kindly insistence on fidelity to one's routine obligations and acceptance of ones circumstances, Don Bosco was preparing his youngsters to find their place in society and to become morally productive citizens.
LOVING KINDNESS
Reach the hearts of youth through demonstrating that one is genuinely concerned with their welfare. With confidence in the transforming power of love, one must foster "heart-to-heart" communication and affirm them in their struggle to grow and mature.
The foundational principle that Don Bosco chose for his approach to help the young to mature and to find their place in society was CHARITY which he expressed by the words LOVING KINDNESS. To quote his own words "the practice of this system is wholly based on the words of St. Paul : 'Love is patient and kind. It bears all things, hopes all things, endures all things.'" This basic virtue was the foundation of all his efforts; it was the mainspring of all his actions on behalf of youth. Scattered throughout the writings of his nineteenth century educator we find expressions such as these: "Education is a matter of the heart, friendly counsels which appeal to the heart of the young and win over the heart, the educator will speak in the language of the heart. I will do all I can if only I will win over the hearts of the young. After winning the heart of a pupil, the educator can exercise great influence over that person. Let us make ourselves loved, and we shall possess their hearts."
INSPIRATIONAL WORDS OF DON BOSCO
“Da mihi animas; tolle ceteras”: “Give me souls; take away the rest.”
"All armies are useless unless assisted by God."
"Why is it that we have so little liking for spiritual things? This is because we love Jesus Crucified so little."
"Be brave and try to detach your heart from worldly things. Do your utmost to banish darkness from your mind and come to understand what true, selfless piety is. Through confession, endeavor to purify your heart of anything which may still taint it. Enliven your faith, which is essential to understand and achieve piety."
"Do good while you still have time."
"Remember, God does not pay us for results, but for effort."
"Divine Providence , in its own good time, will defend the innocent."
"All past persecutors of the Church are now no more, but the Church still lives on. The same fate awaits modern persecutors; they, too, will pass on, but the Church of Jesus Christ will always remain, for God has pledged His Word to protect Her and be with Her forever, until the end of time."
"Believe me... nobody can be truly happy in this world unless he is at peace with God."
"Son, if you want peace, you must first rid your heart of the devil."
"Patience smooths away lots of difficulties."
"Forgive others everything; yourself, nothing."
"Willingly suffer a bit for God Who suffered so much for you."
"Be guided by reason and not by passion."
"What do the pleasures of this world amount to? What is not eternal is worth nothing. Those who allow their passions to rule them, overtaken by death and buried in the eternal flames of hell will shriek in tears: "Fools that we were and how dreadfully wrong!""
"To do what we are told, for love of Jesus, makes us very pleasing to God."
"Disobedience is the root of every evil."
"Be obedient and you will become a saint."
"Guard your eyes since they are the windows through which sin enters the soul."
"Begin to practice self-denial in little things, so that later you will be able to do so in bigger ones."
"Guard your eyes so that one day you may deserve to gaze upon the Blessed Virgin Mary in Heaven."
"Holy Mass is the great means to appease God and avert His chastisement."
"The best time to ask and obtain favors from God is the time of the Elevation."
"Mary is the Star of the Sea. She never forsakes those who trust in Her, so let us get under Her protecting mantle. She will lead us out of the danger and guide us safely to port."
"Our dear Mother Mary, Help of Christians, would like you to receive Holy Communion every Saturday in Her honor."
"The Blessed Virgin, like a good Mother, seeing danger threatening Her children, hurries to their rescue. Do you want to please your Heavenly Mother? Practice the virtue dearest to Her – chastity.
"The fullness of love in all the mothers of this earth could never equal the love Mary has for each one of us."
"We must consider ourselves as nothing before the Lord and be convinced that without His help we can do nothing but commit sin."
"Listen; there are two things the devil is deadly afraid of: fervent Communions and frequent visits to the Blessed Sacrament."
"Help me to save souls. The devil works overtime to lead souls to hell; let us do as much to save them."
"A man’s entire life should be a continual preparation for death."
"Go to Communion frequently. If you only knew what a great truth this is! Frequent Communion is the main column sustaining the moral and physical world, preventing it from collapse….Believe me, my dear children, I do not think that I am exaggerating when I say that frequent Communion is a solid column upon which one pole of the world rests, [and] devotion to Our Lady is the column which supports the other pole."
"Trust in the power of the Holy Eucharist and Our Blessed Lady. Do what you can and leave the rest to God."
"Go to the foot of the tabernacle and say one Pater (Our Father), Ave (Hail Mary), and Gloria (Glory Be) when you can’t do anymore. This is enough to strengthen you against temptations. If someone has faith, makes visits to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament, and makes his daily meditation, I tell you, it will be impossible for him to sin."
"I urge you to help each other save your souls by good example and advice."
"Shun bad companions, associate with good ones."
"Now let me tell you something about the sacrament of Penance. To draw fruit from this sacrament, it is not enough to go to confession frequently. One must also honestly strive to not sin. In general, go to confession once a month, and not oftener than once a week, unless your confessor advises it, lest you make it hard for others to find time for confession. As for Holy Communion, receive as often as you can, according to your confessor’s advice, whenever your conscience is free from sin."
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