receive a spiritual formation together with their education
imparted in accordance with the Salesian educational
method. For the method is also a way of the spiritual life.
Pope John Paul II, speaking of Don Bosco educator
and spiritual master in his letter Juvenum patris (for DB 88)
writes:
We need to get back to the true concept of
“holiness,” as a component of the life of every
believer. The originality and the boldness of a
plan for a “youthful holiness” is intrinsic to the
educational art of this great Saint, who can rightly
be called the “master of youth spirituality.” His
secret lay in the fact that he did not disappoint
the deep aspirations of the young (the need for
life, love, expansiveness, joy, freedom, future
prospects). At the same time, however, he led
them gradually and realistically to discover for
themselves that only in the “life of grace, i.e., in
friendship with Christ, does one fully attain the
most authentic ideals.” (15)
2. A Salesian Spirituality of Young People, Bosconian
Style
Don Bosco did in effect conceive and impart a spiri-
tuality intended for young people—“a method or way of
life,” to use his expression, that bears a typically Bosconian
stamp. He invited the young people of his earliest Oratory
to choose certain values, to adopt and act by certain stan-
dards, to organize their life as believers in a way that was
“Catholic”—in a word, to live in accordance with a spiritu-
ality and thereby enter the “way of holiness.”
That spirituality was a simple one to be sure, but it
was also designed and able to take the young people far
along the way of holiness. Moral lessons and spiritual
guidance were proposed though the Companion of Youth
(Giovane provveduto, 1st ed., 1847). They were also given
expression in Don Bosco’s biography of Louis Comollo (1st
ed., 1844), in his History of the Church (1st ed., 1845), in
his Bible History (1st ed., 1847) and in the Regulations of
the Home Attached to the Oratory (unpublished at the
time). These spiritual writings and the all-important, in
fact decisive, presence and inspired word of Don Bosco
himself, the educator and spiritual master, nourished the
spiritual life of young people like Michael Rua, Dominic
Savio and others in the 1850s. The great “experiment”
in the education of young people, and in the same act
in a spirituality of young people, continued in narrative
form in the biographies of Dominic Savio (1859), Michael
Magone (1861) and Francis Besucco (1864), in which Don
Bosco described three different, and yet so similar, spiritual
journeys.
The Bosconian style is evidenced in all of Don Bosco’s
writings intended for young people. But it is given the most
distinctive expression in the introductory section of the
Companion of Youth, just mentioned.
The Introductory Address (“Calling on the Young”) is
Don Bosco’s most personal statement of his love for young
people. He writes, in summary, “to discourage you from
virtue the devil tries to deceive you in two ways. The first
is to make you believe that the Christian life is a life of
sadness. On the contrary, it is a life of joy: ‘Serve the Lord
with gladness.’ The second is to deceive you into putting
off giving yourself to God to your old age. You would be
taking a grave risk. It is important that you make a decision
for God when you are young. This book is meant to show
you the way.” He concludes:
My friends, I love you with all my heart, and
your being young is reason enough for me to love
you very much. You will certainly find books writ-
ten by persons much more virtuous and much
more learned than myself; but, I assure you, you
would be hard put to find anyone who has a great-
er love for you in Jesus Christ, or who cares more
about your true happiness. (16)
The Address is followed by four series of
meditations providing spiritual and ascetical guidelines
for a young person’s Christian life. They are indebted to
St. Alphonsus’ Maxims for Eternity, and Preparation for
Death, to Charles Gobinet’s (1614-1690) Instruction de la
jeunesse, and to others.
In the paragraph, “Means to lead a good Catholic
life,” the chief structural concepts are as follows: God
loves the young, and wants them all to go to heaven. A
life of virtue is a life of joy, as the saints have shown us.
Obedience, spiritual reading, and the word of God are
ways to virtue. (17)
In the section, “Means of Perseverance,”
Don Bosco gives advice on temptation, deceits of the
devil, purity, devotion to Mary and vocation. There are
also things to guard against. They are idleness, bad
companions, bad conversations, scandal, temptations and
suggestions of the devil. (18)
Seven important considerations follow—all except
one derived literally from St. Alphonsus’ Maxims for
Eternity. They deal with such topics as the end of man, sin,
hell, etc. The last meditation, on Heaven, is derived from
St. Francis de Sales’ Introduction to the Devout Life. (19)
Thus was the Spirituality of Young people in the
Bosconian style created and handed down to subsequent
Salesian generations. It imparted purpose and depth to
Salesian educational efforts for years and lifetimes to
come.
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