GUIDELINES AND DIRECTIVES 35
our activity is becoming prayer, experience of God, but can also
suggest the conditions of possibility for moving towards such
prayer and experience.
1. In the first place, we find an element that is essential and
indispensable: being in the midst of young people and with them.
This "active and friendly presence" (C 39) that we call "assis-
tance" has nothing to do with a police kind of presence that is in-
terested solely in keeping order. But neither is it merely some-
thing on the basis of which we then go on to do other, more im-
portant things. Our mission does not consist in "doing things"; it
consists in being like Jesus and in him, epiphany, revelation, the
Face of the Father; it consists in being signs and bearers of his
love (C 2). Salesian presence is a concrete mediation of the pres-
ence of "God-with-us"; and in some way we can say that it is an
anticipation of Jesus'prayer to the Father for all of us: "Father, I
desire that they also, whom you have given me, may be with me
where I am" (Jn 17, 24). This "being-with" constitutes the heart
and essence of eternal life: being with God and with all our broth-
ers and sisters.a This is one of the aspects in which all of us are
called to grow: all of us, and not only our young confreres, are
called by vocation to be "assistants".
2. Salesian presence is marked by a very clear characteristic:
the consciousness of mission. The text of the Constitutions
speaks not just about "people", and not even merely about
"young people", but explicitly about "those to whom he is sent."
No matter how much good will we have, we will not find the Lord
a It is worth dwelling on Salesian presence as an anticipation of eternal life, and as
essentially a being with God and with all our brothers and sisters. On the former point, see
J. Ratzinger, "My Joy is to Be in Thy Presence: On the Christian Belief in Eternal Life",
in J. Ratzinger, God is Near Us: The Eucharist, the Heart of Life (lSan Francisco: Igrratius
Press, 2003). On the latter, see the pregrrant suggestion ofJ. A]ison that "thejoy that was
set before him [Jesus] " (Heb 12, 2) was precisely "the possibility of delighting forever in a
huge celebration along with a huge multitude ofus human beings, people who are good,
bad, creative, depressive, but humans and, for that reason, loved." J. Alison, .Bois ing Abel:
The Recouery of the Eschatnlogical Imagination (New York, Crossroad, 1996), 189. "Where
your treasure is, there will your heart be also" (Mt 6, 21). The heart ofJesus is certainly
set upon his Father and upon us, his brothers and sisters.