- Fortitude in enduring fatigue and fruitlessness of one’s own effort;
- Flexibility and ability to adapt oneself and to love life in an intercultural community;
- Capacity to learn a new language;
- Capacity to live in community and to work as a team with the members of the community, lay
mission partners, the young;
- Communion with and obedience to the local bishop in overall pastoral activity.
SPECIFIC PREPARATION
OF THE SALESIAN MISSIONARY
The Salesian who feels the call to be a missionary outside his own homeland, cultural milieu and
language group (ad exteros)[22], among those who have not yet heard the Gospel, where the
Church is not yet fully established (ad gentes)[23], through a life-long commitment (ad vitam)[24],
may offer himself any time to serve in missions.
Young confreres are preferred for their ease of learning a new language and culture and their spirit
of adaptation; generally it is preferable to end the process of discernment of their missionary
vocation during the post-novitiate, but it is also possible during the specific formation of the
Salesian priest and the Salesian brother.
The 19th General Chapter also opened the possibility for Salesians to be missionaries ad tempus, for
at least 5 years, “provided that they are considered suitable”[25]. This can be done for specific and
urgent tasks in the missionary activity of the Congregation or to help the confrere to better discern
his Salesian missionary vocation ad vitam.
Discernment
The process of discernment is a gradual and progressive journey with the help of a spiritual guide.
In this process, the candidate learns, like the Virgin Mary, to listen to the voice of the Spirit, to
purify and deepen his motivations, to discern his qualities and attitudes which determine his
suitability for Salesian missionary life. The community has also an important role in this process.
For this process the Criteria for the Discernment of the Salesian Missionary Vocation are used. It is
also possible that the candidate missionary is given, for example, on a trial basis for a year, the
experience of working in a missionary context outside of his own Province. This experience could
also be useful in the discernment of his Salesian missionary call.
When, as a result of the discernment, the candidate comes to the conclusion that he is called to serve
in the mission field, he sends a letter to the Rector Major in which explicitly manifests his wish and
puts himself at the disposition of the Congregation. This does not remove the opportunity to specify
his preferences or concrete predispositions for a determined mission territory, this applies in
particular to Project Europe.
The Rector Major, through the Councillor for the Missions, enters into dialogue with the confrere's
Provincial, asking from him and his Council a written opinion regarding the missionary vocation of
the candidate, always with reference to the Criteria for the Discernment of the Salesian Missionary
Vocation.