We see this, although rarely, in a certain literary dependence. It is possible
that the “Seven Considerations” have been influenced by the ten meditations
proposed to Filotea in the first part of the Introduction to the Devout Life. In
fact, the consideration on paradise is almost taken to the letter from the
corresponding meditation of St. Francis de Sales.
One knows that Don Bosco used to recommend the reading of the writings
of the bishop of Geneva, and in particular, the Introduction to the Devout
Life. He also wanted to publish the complete works of the future doctor of
the Church (MB XI 438).
Above all it was the example of St. Francis de Sales, his sweetness, his
missionary fervor, his passion for souls, and his apostolic zeal which
influenced this Saint from Piedmont to choose him as patron and model of
his educative and evangelizing work.
These general characteristics gives us the “permission” to attempt some kind
of Salesian “lectio divina” among other possible ways.
Da mihi animas
(Gn 14:21)
A Salesian reading of “Da mihi animas”:
After the victory of Abram against the four great kings of the East, the king
of Sodom, having come to meet him, said: “Give me the people; keep the
goods for yourself.”
In the Latin text of the Vulgate one reads: “Da mihi animas, caetera tolle
tibi”, which Msgr. Martini* translated (Italian) as: “Dammi gli uomini, tutto il
resto tienlo per te (Give me the peope, all the rest keep them for yourself).”
[*Don Bosco appreciated this “learned interpreter of the Bible”, whose
authority is “universally accepted” (MB VIII, 784), declaring moreover that
the translation of the Bible by Martini with text and notes is one of the most
beautiful studies which could be made on the Bible (MB IX, 709).]
The literal sense appears equally in the “Sacred History” of Don Bosco, where
one can read: “The king of Sodom also offered to Abram all the spoils,
seeking only the freedom of his people; but Abram, excluding that which
belongs to his soldiers, refused to accept anything and generously returned
everything to him”.
Understood in the spiritual sense, the request made by the king of Sodom to
Abram becomes a prayer to God, asking from him “souls” to be saved,
renouncing everything else. Don Bosco made it his motto.
He spoke of it in the Life of the Youth Domenic Savio, when he narrated the
boy’s arrival at the Oratory of St. Francis de Sales in Turin. “As soon as he
arrived at the Oratory, he came immediately to my room in order to put
himself, as he used say, completely in my hands. Almost immediately his
gaze fell on the wall where a piece of cardboard displayed in large letters a
saying which I often used: Da mihi animas caetera tolle. He looked at them
attentively and I helped him to translate them as follows: 'Give me souls,
and take away everything else'. He thought for a moment and then said: ‘I
DB and Bible 2, Lectio divina. Page 4 of 6