Renewed_attention_Salesian_Brother


Renewed_attention_Salesian_Brother

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GUIDELINES AND DIRECTIVES 65
2.4 RENEWED ATTENTION TO THE SALESIAN BROTHER
Fr Ivo COELHO
General Councillor for Formation
The publication of Identity and Mission of the Religious
Brother in the Church by the Congregation for Institutes of
Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life at the end of
the Year of Consecrated Life is a good occasion to give renewed
attention to the vocation of the Salesian Brother. GC27 asks us
to "continue to reflect both on the aspect ofconsecrated life and
on the specific nature of the Brothers with regard to fraternal
life and the mision."' fnterestingly, as we will see below, reflec-
tion on the Salesian Brother opens up, in fact.
1. The journey made so far
While almost all our general chapters have taken up the
theme of the vocation of the Salesian Brother, let us begin with
the signifrcant document of GC2L (1978), "The Salesian Brother:
A lay religious vocation at the service of the Salesian mission."
Fr Vigand's famous letter, "The lay dimension of the Salesian
community" (AGC 298, 1980) was an authoritative comment on
this document of GC2l.In 1984 GC22 gave us the defrnitive text
of the Constitutions, and in 1986 there followed The Project of
Life of the Salesians of Don Bosco.In 1989 we have another fruit
of the decisions of GC22: The Salesian Brother: History, Identity,
Vocation Ministry and Formation'.In 2001, Fr Vecchi wrote
"The Beatification of Salesian Brother Artemide Zatti: A Star-
tling Precedent" (AGC 376), and accompanying this was a letter
of Frs Nicolussi and Domenech, 'A renewed and extraordinary
'GC27 69.7, and also 28.
'? Dicastero per la Formazione, The Salesian Brothen History, Identity, Vocational
Apostolate and Formalion (Rome: Editrice SDB, 1989).

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66 AcIs oF THE GENERALCOUNCIL
commitment to the vocation of the Salesian Brother." In 2003,
Fr Cereda published "Care and Promotion of the Vocation of the
Salesian Brother: A concrete commitment for the whole Sexen-
nium" (AGC 382). GC26 presented a vision of our same conse-
crated vocation in its two forms, ministerial and lay, highlighting
what is common along with the specificity and the reciprocity of
the two forms. Finally, in 2013, the Rector Major with his
council approved the revision of certain parts of the Ratio refer-
ring to the formation of the Salesian Brother3. From this journey
of reflection on the Salesian Brother, certain themes can be seen
to emerge: community, mission, consecrated identity.
7.7 Community
GC?L situated the Salesian Brother and the Salesian Priest
squarely within the Salesian community: "it will not be so
much the individuals who will perpetuate his [Don Bosco's]
ideals as his communities, 'formed of priests and laymen,'
closely united to each other by deep brotherly ties." For this
reason, the chapter went on, "the clear precise dimension of
each Salesian can only be studied and evaluated adequately in
the context of a brotherly and apostolic community." (GC21,
171) The chapter speaks, in fact, of the "Essential mutual rela-
tionship between the Salesian brother and the Salesian priest."
(GC21, 194-196)
This great intuition of GC21 was corroborated and deepened
by subsequent developments in the ecclesiastical magisterium.
Thus Chrlstifideles Laici places the different states of life within
"the Church that is Communion," and notes that they "are
linked among themselves in such a way that they are ordered to
one another," different yet complementary each with its unmis-
takable character and yet related to one another and placed at
each other's service (CL 55). In the three documents on the
states of life within the church - Pastores Dabo Vobis, Christifi-
' Available at www.sdb.org

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GUIDELINES AND DIRECTIVES 67
deles Laicl, and Vita Consecrata - we have an emergent "the-
olory of sign." What is specific to each state really belongs to all,
but is embodied in that state so as to serve as a sign and a
prophecy to the other states. Thus, for example, service is not
the mark of the deacon in an exclusive way. The whole church is
called to serve; the deacon is an icon of service, a reminder to all
in the church of our common vocation. In like manner, the lay
state bears witness to the sacredness ofcreated realities, and the
religious state is a sign of the eschatological character of the
whole church, reminding us all of our vocation to be so united
one day with God that there will be neither marrying nor giving
in marriage. (CL 55)
Thus when GC21 tells us the lay dimension is the specific
characteristic of the Salesian Brothera, it is clear that this must
be understood in relation to the community and to the Salesian
priest. Fr Vigand understood this very well: in his letter soon
after the chapter, he pointed out that the Salesian Brother is an
embodiment of the lay dimension and "secular slant" that char-
acterizes the congregation as a whole, and that the clarification
of the vocation of the Brother is a test for the clarification of the
lay element in our Societfi. The Salesian Brother, we might say,
is an icon of the lay dimension of the congregation. In the words
of GC24: "To his consecrated brethren he recalls the values of
creation and of secular realities," inviting them to collaborate
with the laity and reminding them that the apostolate goes
beyond strictly priestly and catechetical activity; "to the laity he
recalls the values of total dedication to God for the cause of the
Kingdom. To all he offers a particular sensitivity to the world of
work, attention to the local environment, and the demands of
the professional approach associated with his educative and pas-
n "The lay dimension is the concrete form in which the Brother lives and operates as
a Salesian Religious." (GC21, 178)
5 Egidio Vtcero, "The Lay Element in the Salesian Community," AGC 298 (1980),
section 5. See also section 4 where Vigand distinguishes three meanings of "laiciti" and
notes that the Salesian Brother is not "secular" in the sense in which laypeople within
the church are, but that his vocation has nonetheless a rea.l connection and a certain con-
gruence of thought and activity with the first two levels of "laiciti."

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68 ACTS OF THE GENERALCOUNCIL
toral activity."'To the religions of the world, we might add, he is
a prophecy ofthe beauty and sacredness ofcreated realities.
But the Salesian Brother is an icon also of communion and
fraternity, as suggestedby Identity and Mission of the Religious
Brother in the Church. This document has occasioned surprise
because of the way it focuses rather exclusively on the religious
brother as a sign of communion and fraternity. Fraternity, how-
ever, cannot be a marginal point for us who believe that God is a
mystery of communion and of love. For Pope Francis, the central
question before the church today is communion. The conse-
crated life is confessio trinitatis, and in his letter introducing the
Year of Consecrated Life the pope reminded us that consecrated
life is not meant to be shut up within itself: its vocation is to ex-
pand communion in ever-widening circles, in an expansion that
knows no limits.
So the Salesian Brother has a very special place within the
Salesian community, the educative and pastoral community, the
ecclesial community, and the human community: always and
everywhere he is an icon of fraternity. As GC21 had said: "He
[the Brother] lives in constant fidelity to his specific vocation
and becomes, together with his confreres, a sign of that new and
permanent brotherhood established by Christ" (GC21, 176).
7.2 Mission
A second point that emerges in the reflection of the congre-
gation is the charismatic centrality of mission. GC22 (1984), in
its elaboration of the defrnitive text of our Constitutions, chose
to centre all the elements of Salesian life and work explicitly
around mission. This may be seen not only in the contents of the
articles but also in the structure: "Sent to the young in commu-
nities following Christ." So it is in the light of mission that we
u See GC24 154, and Pascual CnAvez, "Il Salesiano Coadiutore," San Benigrro
Canavese, 19 March 2005 (unpublished) Gttp://www.Coadiutoresalesiano.net/index.
phpl2002-L4-chavez).

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GUIDELINES AND DIRECTIVES 69
have to ask about the identity of the Salesian Brother and the
Salesian priest.
A study of the Index of our Constitutions reveals that we
have only two articles on the specific identity of the Brother and
the Priest: C 45 and C 116 (and, interestingly, 6 articles on the
priest that regard authority). Unfortunately, the Index does not
mention an article of great importance, one that indicates to us,
clearly and synthetically, the identity of the Salesian, whether
Brother or Priest: C 98, th.e formation experience:
Enlightened by the person of Christ and by his Gospel, lived
according to Don Bosco's spirit, the Salesian commits himself to
a formation process which will last all his life and will keep pace
with his maturing in other ways. He learns by experience the
meaning of the Salesian vocation at the various moments of his
life and accepts the ascetical demands it makes on him.
With the help of Mary his Mother and Teacher, he gradually
becomes a pastor and educator of the young in the lay or priestly
state which he has embraced.
Pastor and educator of the young: this is our fundamental
identity, the supreme genus, that which is common to every
Salesian vocation. Only after this comes distinction: "in the lay
or priestly state which he has embraced," and this identity-
in-difference becomes concrete, in the initial stages of Salesian
life, through a formation that is basically equivalent (C 106), and
always through the effort to learn by experience the meaning of
the Salesian vocation (C 98), to discern the voice of the Spirit in
the events of daily life (C 119). It is within the educative pastoral
community that we manifest our common identity as educators
and pastors, along with the specifrcity and reciprocity of the two
forms of our vocation. Within this community, it is important
today to ensure greater visibility to the Salesian Brother.
Mission is not, of course, simply work. Our mission as pas-
tors and educators consists in revealing God. We are called to be
epiphany, as was Jesus: signs and bearers of the love of God for
the young, uultus misericordiae.

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70 Acrs oF THE GENERAL couNctL
7.3 Consecrated, id,entity
But the Salesian mission belongs to all the members of the
Salesian Family. We Salesians share in it as religious. As Fr
Cereda notes in his letter of 2003, there is need to talk also
about the dimension of consecrated life. Especially in the light of
the insistence on the sharing of our mission with the laity, the
clarification and appropriation of our consecrated identity is of
vital importance.
Uncertainties in the understanding of consecrated life have
had serious consequences for the living out of our Salesian voca-
tion in its two forms. On the one hand there is the temptation to
reduce the vocation of the Salesian priest to its priestly dimen-
sion alone, and that too very often to a merely functional under-
standing of the priesthood, when not to a clericalist hankering
for power, money and status. On the other hand there is the in-
ability to understand and value the vocation of the Salesian
Brother, with tendencies to either a clericalist compensation or
else a secularist reduction7.
Vita Consecrata (1996) was a great clarification of the place
of consecrated life within the church. But what does it mean to
be a "living memorial" of Jesus (yC 22)? What difference do the
vows make to the way we share in the Salesian mission? What,
we might ask, is the meaning of Jesus' celibacy? As always,
nothing that Jesus does is exhausted on the plane of the func-
tional. Jesus is always revealing to us the Father. He celebrated
the value of marriage and yet chose to be celibate. He pro-
claimed in word and deed the good news that our supreme voca-
tion is communion with God. The celibacy of Jesus is a powerful
anticipation and revelation of the "life of the resurrection,"
where there is neither marrying nor giving in mariage. Conse-
' Abraham M. Arrorv, "On the Sublime Vocation of the Religious Brother," Cozse-
crated Life Today, ed' Paul Vadakumpadan and Jose Varickasseril (Shillong, 2015) 10?;
and Andrea BozzoLo, "Salesiano prete e salesiano coadiutore. Spunti per un'interpre-
tazione teologica," Sapientiam dedit illi. Studi su don Bosco e sul carisma salesiano
(Rome, 2015) 318.

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GIJIDELINES AND DIRECTIVES 71
crated persons are called to be precisely living memorials of
Jesus, eschatological signs, in their poverty, chastity and obedi-
ence. In an age that has discovered the beauty ofbody and sexu-
ality, the created world and freedom, and that yet blights all by
exaggeration and overkill and an absolutizing of what is fragile
and relative, consecrated persons are spiritual therapy, sign,
prophecy. And it is our life that is a sign. The ministry of the
priest remains valid even if the priest is unworthy, but the con-
secrated person is a sign only through the limpidity of his life.
There is no chastity in a religious who is not chastes.
In a church that is not only Petrine but also Marian, and
Marian before being Petrine, consecrated life takes its place at
the Marian heart of the church. For the Petrine ministry is des-
tined to pass, but the Marian is the ultimate vocation of the
whole church'. Consecrated persons are a sign and a reminder to
the whole church of its final vocation and destiny. And also here
the Brother is a sign to his priest confreres in the community. His
vocation is the Salesian life in pure form'0, in statu nascendi", a
permanent reminder to his priest confreres of their consecration.
2. The path ahead
Reflection on the figure of the Salesian Brother thus leads us
to a new appreciation of the Salesian consecrated vocation in its
two forms. In the present guidelines, however, as we have said,
we would like to give renewed attention to the lay form of our
'See Bozzor,o 335.
e Catechisrn of the Catholic Church n. 773.
'o Philip RINaloI in ASC 4, cited by Vigand, "The Lay Element in the Salesian Com-
munity," AGC 298 (1980) section 5.
11 "In statu nascendi" (in the state of being born, or just emerging; nascent state)
refers to the state of certain elements at the moment of liberation in a chemical or elec-
trolytic reaction, characterized by a high reactivity. The term is now used analogously in
other fields to indicate the great potentiality of certain experiences/situations at their
origin, with the capacity to influence future developments. See, for example, Francesco
Ar,spnoNI, who uses it of the period in which a group of persons, united by common
hopes, come together to create a new force (e.9., a movement), seeing in these beginnings
dynamics which are very similar to those that we find when two persons fa-ll in love.

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72 ACTS oF THE GENEBAL C)UNCIL
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GUIDELINES AND DIBECTIVES 73
vocation. The statistics reveal that the number of Brothers in
initial formation is going down: only 7.907o as comparedto ll.927o
in the congregation as a whole, and even lower in regions with
greater growth in vocations (5.067o as of 31 December 2015). This
cannot be taken to mean that all is well with the large number
of aspirants to the priesthood. The question of the Salesian
religious identity is urgent for both forms of our vocation.
In the last few years, the congregation has exerted itself to
take care of the vocation of the Salesian Brother, as for example
through the revision of the Ratio concerning the initial forma-
tion of the Brother, and the setting up of centres for the specific
formation of Brothers (CRESCO, Guatemala City; Sunyani,
Ghana; Yaound6, Cameroon; Shillong, India; Paraflaque, Philip-
pines; and Turin - though ofthese, Sunyani and Turin are not
functioning any more, while Shillong is temporarily suspended).
In the present letter we would like to propose some more strate-
gies and lines of action at various levels of the congregation.
Study and reflection
on the Salesian
consecrated identity
in its two forms
Vocation animation
Initial formation
Strategies and lines ofaction
Guidelines in theAGC
Formation Sector
Notes on the Salesian consecrated identity and Formation Sector
the specific identity of the Salesian Priest and
Salesian Brother
Clarification of criteria for discernment
of the two forms of our vocation.
Formation Sector
Plans for the animation of the provinces
in the area ofSalesian consecrated identitv
in its two forms
Provincial and
Formation delegate
ofeach province
Taking advantage oftwo imnic figures
ofthe Salesian Brother and
the Salesian Priest
(Bl. Stefan Sandor and Fr Titus Zeman,
to be proclaimed blessed in 2017)
to promote the Salesian vocation
in its two forms
Provincial
Formation Delegate
with Provincial
Youth Ministry Delegate
Eegional courses for those in charge
ofprenovices in 2017
Regional Formation
Coordinators
with Formation Sector

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74 AcTs oF THE GENERALC)UNCIL
Initial formation
ofSalesian Brothers
Specific formation
of Salesian Brothers
Salesian studies
Personalized plan of formation
in line with the 2013 revision of the Ratio
on the Salesiaa Brother
Provincial in dialogue
with the Brother concerned
Presence and adequate preparation ofBrothers Provincial
within formation teams
Strengthening the existing centres
(CRESCO Yaound6, Paranaque) and studying
ways ofmaking other centres available
(Europe; South Asia; English speaking
AIlica-Madagascar)
Formation Sector
with Regional Councillors and
provincials concerned
Study of curriculum and methodologr
Formation Sector
for the specific formation of Brothers by means
of a worldwide Consultation
Online course to facilitate the formation
offormators in Salesian studies
Formation Sector
3. Conclusion
In a church that is communion, the vocation of the Brother
can be understood only in relation to the Salesian Priest, the
community, the mission, and the consecrated life. As Salesian
consecrated persons we are signs and bearers of God's love to
the young, living memorials of Jesus. In his letter at the begin-
ning of the year of consecrated life, Pope Francis insisted pre-
cisely on this:
I am counting on you 'to wake up the world', since the distinc-
tive sign of consecrated Iife is prophecy. As I told the Superiors
General: 'Radical evangelical living is not only for religious: it is
demanded of everyone. But religious follow the Lord in a special
way, in a prophetic way.' This is the priority that is needed right
now: 'to be prophets who witness to how Jesus lived on this
earth....'14
And again:
What in particular do I expect from this Year of grace for
14 FRANCIs, Apostolic Lettur to all Consecrated People on the Occasion of the Year of
Consecrated Life, 21 November 20L4,I1.2.

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GUIDELINES AND DIRECTIVES 75
consecrated life? That what I once said might always be
true: 'Wherever there are religious, there is joy."u
Through the intercession of Bl. ArtemideZatti, Bl. Stefan Sandor
and Ven. Simaan S*gr, Iet us pray for a Salesian consecrated life
that is transparent, visible and above all joyful. Joy is contagious,
and happy Salesians are the best publicity for our vocation. Let
us not forget t}rre uia pulchritudinis! (EG 167)
'5 FRANCIS, Apostolic Letter to all Consecrated People on the Occasion of the Year of
Consecrated Life ll.t.