course asks us really to cooperate with his grace, and therefore invites us to invest all our
resources of intelligence and energy in serving the cause of the Kingdom. But it is fatal to
forget that ‘without Christ we can do nothing’ (cf. Jn 15:5)”.27
In sanctity the primacy of God shines unchallenged: holiness is never a personal
project to be planned and carried out in line with times, methods and options decided by
ourselves; more than a generic desire of God, it is his will expressed for each of us (1
Thess 4,3); a pure grace, always a gift, that we cannot acquire by ourselves, but neither
can we reject it without serious consequences. God has created us good, indeed even
very good (cf. Gen 1,26-31), and has seen us as holy “before the world was created” (Eph
1,4); but it remains for us to do our part: we can help God to complete in us his creative
work if we allow him to realize his wonderful and highly original design in us. More than
this is not asked of us; but neither is anything less.
– For us Salesians, holiness is built on the daily response, as the expression and
fruit of the spirituality and ascesis of “da mihi animas cetera tolle”. God, the source of all
holiness, cannot fail on his side. It is our response that needs continual stimulation
because, as St Francis de Sales says: “Even though the source may be abundant, the
water enters a garden not in proportion to its quantity but only according to the breadth,
great or small, of the channel which allows it to enter”.28
Hence the indispensable need for mortification, i.e. the death of everything that
shuts off our being from the gift; everything in us that puts God in second place does not
deserve our care or attention. Ours is a paschal existence; the path towards Easter – as
we know very well – passes necessarily by way of Calvary (cf. Mt 16, 21-23): he who was
raised to life had first been crucified. For the Christian, therefore, mortification is not an
objective but a means; it is not the goal but the way to it; we do not need to look for it, but it
cannot be avoided.
Our Saints are a living testimony to such a desire for holiness and to a journey of
this kind towards life and resurrection. In this connection I recall some expressions of
Blessed Maria Romero: “Take from me, O Lord, everything you have given me in the past
and give me nothing more in the future, but grant me the grace to live each day united
more intimately to you in an uninterrupted act of love, abandonment and trust without
losing your presence for even an instant”.29 “O God whom I adore, to love you, make you
loved and see you loved by others is all I desire and yearn for, my ambition, my concern
and obsession”.30
2. We are educators to holiness
Since, as Salesians, we can never separate our identity as religious from that as
educators, nor our religious consecration from the apostolic mission, anything we say
about our sanctification necessarily implies a plan of holiness for our young people. For us
too “the pastoral path is that of holiness”.31
The Pope wanted to remind us that “holiness is the best guarantee of an
efficacious evangelization, because in it is to be found the most important testimony to
offer to young people, the ones for whom you carry out your various activities.” 32 The Holy
27 NMI, n. 38
28 ST FRANCIS DE SALES, Treatise on the love of God, bk II, ch. 11.
29 GRASSIANO Domenica, Con Maria tutta a tutti come Don Bosco, p. 228
30 o.c. p. 417
31 Cf. NMI, 30. “stressing holiness remains more than ever an urgent pastoral task.”
32 JOHN PAUL II, Address in the audience to the Capitulars cf. GC25, 170