you," she is not uttering a word of simple bureaucratic obedience. It is an
invitation to recognize the presence of the One who can transform the crisis
into something new, and to be willing to do exactly what He commands,
even when it seems absurd.
At this historic moment in which we live in a heavy and dramatic atmosphere,
where war seems to be the only possible grammar and the law of the strongest
dominates international and personal relations, where human bonds are
reduced to commercial transactions and profit logic, the theme of the Strenna
2026 is not naive. On the contrary, it is a prophetic cry that invites the Salesian
Youth Movement to recognize that the moment we are living in – where we notice
that the wine of harmony and respect for the weakest is lacking – is also a
moment of grace that calls us to respond with a witness rooted in the person of
Christ. We want to commit ourselves as servants who listen because they believe.
II. An authentic word in the face of ambiguous language and lost truth
In his address to the Diplomatic Corps on January 9, 2026, Pope Leo XIV points
to a radical problem of our age: language, which is normally the privileged means
of knowing and encountering one another, is being used in an ambiguous way:
it "is increasingly becoming a weapon with which to deceive or strike."
In this context, the Pope states as an example, words are losing their true value:
"peace" can also mean domination through military power, "freedom" can also
translate into imposed ideological uniformity, "rights" become self-referential and
mutually exclusive. This highlights a shift towards a humanity marked by a
"short circuit of human rights," where the pursuit of goods and power "kills"
peaceful coexistence.
This is the "field" where the Salesian Youth Movement is called to live and dwell:
to recover the true word, not deliberately ambiguous, in order to
understand and say things, and marked by authentic friendship, embodied
in the daily pastoral journeys and fraternal experiences, within which and as a
guarantee of them, an unambiguous word flourishes and resounds, one that
does not betray the truth.
III. Sincere listening as transformation
Mary's invitation is not trivial conformism. "Do whatever he tells you"
presupposes, first of all, deep listening. This mature, attentive, and penetrating
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