ENGADINE (Sydney): 14 December
2011 --
St John Bosco College at Engadine realised a long time wish
when space
for a school chapel was finally found this year. After much
building
refurbishment and creative work by both students and staff,
Bishop
Peter Comensoli solemnly blessed the new chapel on November
30th.
Picking up the theme from the first mass reading, telling of
the
rededication of the Jerusalem temple altar in the book of
Maccabees,
Bishop Peter urged the college community to remember St
Andrew’s day
each year as a very special day when a sacred sanctuary was
blessed in
the very physical and community heart of our school.
The chapel is named after St Francis de Sales, linking it to
the
history and ministry of the Salesians of Don Bosco in the
South Pacific
and the world at large. When St John Bosco began his work
for destitute
boys in mid 19th century Italy, he took inspiration from
Francis de
Sales who lived a ministerial style of loving kindliness and
ready
adaptability to the background and needs of people from all
walks of
life. As Don Bosco set up an enduring foundation for his
work for youth
in Turin, he dedicated the first purpose-built chapel to St
Francis de
Sales. Consequently it seemed appropriate that Bosco
College would
follow its patron's actions and similarly dedicate its first
chapel to
the same saint who welcomed all and enthused them with
deeper knowledge
of the God of love.
The chapel is only large enough to hold one or two class
groups, but
was designed to open out onto a large balcony which
overlooks the main
assembly courtyard. Using the balcony as the sanctuary for
the
ceremony, the whole college community gathered beneath to
celebrate the
special blessing mass. It also highlighted the new altar,
which is
beautifully formed from a single slab of oiled timber,
resting on a
eucalypt trunk pedestal. This natural construction connects
the
Eucharist with life in the tree lined playground outside the
chapel and
class rooms, and evokes both an appreciation of living
growth and the
tree-become-cross on which Jesus died for us. The
tabernacle,
vestments and sacred vessels were largely donated from other
Salesian
and Mercy Sisters chapels which have recently closed in
Adelaide and
Geelong.
Concelebrating with Bishop Peter were the Provincial Elect
of the
Salesian Australia-Pacific province, the College Chaplain
and the
priests of the Engadine parish.