Acts_1972_268.ASC


Acts_1972_268.ASC

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YEAR LIII
ocToBEB 1972
N. 268
A[r$ mru $llpmrufi mllNHt
OF THE SALESIAN SOCIETY
SUMMARY
L Letter of the Rector (pago 3)
tbtTADCHlhefewooonemln-ouohopsnIsenpReepgeevvrreuwaireetda-aandne:ttcoltclltrloeerehoesAncsem-ta-i-pofI"antlnmelAsttLtlthhiefhso-flewsueyIvllooohthnYsaronfekaedooaelmrDumrrvtryetaeohp"nsnntaooatfCDisBfdir-ntosooa,tDntpnsycg-uBo-Ror-npeeull-lgRiasGAeas.ufFne!-taPilnl.o-ndoatnleersDDaTtnl-oiototehorynnsearsyllBSRwsloolou-onsvalrrickee'cseoilinKvet'-sumgelvndreasdcyeWasnllaisnStnfosacoae-srgtlkseleretssysatlfHahn---oneder
ll. Instructlons and Norms (page 271
1. Celebratlons ln honour of Don
Provincial
and 197 of
CthheapCteornsst-ltutio3n.s.On
the
Raupapli-catl2o.n
Doeflibaertriactlleonss19o6f
lll. Gommunlcatlons (page 30)
1. Beatificatlon of ,Don Hua 2. Modlfications in the Province
- of the PAS 3. Appolntments 4. The 102nd Salesian Mlsslon-
- - ary expedition 5. Salesian Press 6. The Superior Gouncil
- - and the Generalate.
lV. Actlvltles of the Superlor Gouncil and matters of general
lnterest (page 37)
V. Documents (page 40)
1. The new disclpline for Minor Orders and Diaconate - 2. Mass
in honour of Blessed Michael Bua.
Vl. Pontifical Magisterlurn (page 62)
1. "A hundred years: good example and work ln abundance"
- 2. Tradition inspires and urges progress 3. Morals, a re-strength-
- ening (slx addresses of Pope Paul Vl)
Vll. Necrology - Third llst for 1972 (p. 90)

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s.G.S. - ROMA

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I. LETTEB OF THE RECTOR MAJOB
My dear conlrires and sons,
the
laYsotuSuanreda"ylr.orfdythiaswmatoenothf
the joyous
(29 Oct.)
news that is
Don Bosco's
ours: on
first suc-
cessor, Father Michael Rua, will be declared "B1essed" in St.
Petef's, Rome.
The event is assuredly a matter for great rejoicing in our
Salesian family as it means so much for us. For this very reason
we must not let it degenerate into a mere superficial triumpha-
Lism. Don Rua's Beatification and the world-wide celebrations to
be held during the coming months must nor burn themselves out
oRradthisearppsehaorullidkethaewhioll-lion'e-tshse-owfirtphe-
a mere mansitory satisfaction.
new Beatus (whose lot it was
to be invited to "go halves" with Don Bosco) be for us an invita-
tion and inducement to further commitment. His Beatification
should bring to fruition in a realistic way the courageous renewal
which the Special General Chapter has commended to us.
It is clear that the surest and most efficacious way to attain
this goal is to stop and take a good look at Don Rua as a holy
Salesian, as Don Bosco's successor, and as the one who continued
Don Bosco's mission in the world. The Church has set him up
and proposed him to the faithful, and especially to us, as a practical
model of holiness.
Our new Constitutions state that the Church wants "to
assure us that the way of life we have chosen is true to the
Gospel." (Art. 200.) The Beatification of Don Rua is another
proof of the Church's will to recognise the Gospel image of our
Salesian vocation, and to show forth the Holy Spirit's sanctifying

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energy which was given to Don Bosco to ensure the growth
of his Salesian family.
To take a good look at Don Rua, then, means to get to
know him in'zma@ly, so that we can make our own a message
he has for us, a message that flowed from a life lived as a "true
Salesian of Don Bosco."
THE FAITHFUT SERVANT
Unfomunately the image of Don Rua has come down to us
in many ways srangely falsified: rather the result of personal
impressions than of documentation and objective study. Every
Salesian therefore must feel it a duty to go to the genuine sources
u,hich will afford him authentic knowledge of this great Salesian,
who was in a sense the second Father of our Congregation.
It is true that books on Don Rua are not numerous, and
almost all. arc in Italian only. We must make translations into
other languages, at least of the more significant works. (Some
countries have already done this.) Also I hope it will be possible
for new books to be written, taking advantage of the four folio
volumes of the canonical processes.
From an acoffate and complete knowledge of Don Rua we
shall gauge the exceptional and mature qualities of the man
destined by Providence to accept and treasure the precious but
fifficult legacy left him by Don Bosco. I7e shall realise that
Don Rua was a man faithful to the point of heroism. It was in-
deed his constant preoccupation to hand down intact the message
of Don Bosco, and to pledge his whole powerful personality in
the portrayal of the ideal Salesian as conceived and lived by our
holy Founder.
After Don Bosco's death Don Rua, with that influence every-
one acknowledged, camied on with conviction in the style and
spirit of his Father. Not for nothing did he kneel by Don

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Bosco's remains and feel the urge to spend himself totally in
utter fidelity.
He told his Salesians, "I knelt by Don Bosco's remains
weeping and praying for a long time. Furthermore, I made a
solemn promise to our dear Father. As I saw that I had to
accept his inheritance and take charge of the congregation (which
was the greatest of his works and cost him so much in labour
and sacrifice) I promised him I would srop at nothing to preserve
intact, as fiar as in me lay, his spirit, his teachings and the minu-
test traditions of his f.ami7y. Now, nineteen years atter that
I memorable day (he wrote in 1907) harvest my memories and
feel a great comfort in that with God's grace I think I have nor
broken this promise. And if there had been any danger of
forgetting it, Pope Leo XIII would soon have reminded me.
Often and energetically he avered that the Salesians musr guard
jealously the spirit of their Founder. And Pope Pius X spoke
in the same vein..." (Don Rua, circ. letters, ed. 1965, p. 43I).
Belief in Don Bosco's sanctity
Fidelity, Iike courage, is not something conferred; it must
be born of particular circumstances of nature or environment.
Don Rua's fidelity was born of his high regard for Don Bosco
and the consequent unlimited confidence he had in him: he
knew him to be endowed with exraordinary charisms: he knew
him to be a man of God.
An heroic band of soldiers or a mighry team of technicians
might rally round a leader possessing purely natrnal gifts; but no
matter how remarkable the gifts, they would not hold the loyalty
of a religious family though the centuries. Don Bosco was
not just a fran magnificendy endowed: he also had the requisites
of. an ambassador of God, with well-proven authenticity. To
understand the faschation he exercised over his boys and indeed
people in general (above all his first Salesians, who dedicated

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their lives to him), his character must be measured in the fight
of the supernatural. Besides very yotng followers such as
Cagliero, Fagnano, Lasagna, Costamagna (who could have been
dubbed hero-worshippers of a brilliant and daring leader) we
find matute men no less ready to be at his beck and call. Such
men were Count Cays,
enthusiastic and utterly
Fr. Alasonatti,
obedient as the
Fr. Lemoyne
youngest lad.
-
just as
The real explanation of attachment of this nature (which
borders on veneration) is found to be simply this: the holiness
of the leader. This is why we cannot examine a Founder in
minute detail using purely scientific criteria.
Don Rua in particular believed so completely in the holiness
of Don Bosco, and that his educative mission was a mandate
guided by God, that towards the end of 1860 he set up a com-
mission of confrBres under John Bonetti to record the sayings
and deeds of their Father and Founder. In t874 Don Rua set
up a second commission (under Fr. Lemoyne) with the same
purpose. This time he obtained the consent of Don Bosco. He
knew that Don Bosco "took no step except under the inspiration
of God".
!7e could indeed say that our nevr Beatus (as did all the
first Salesians) dedicated his fidelity to a Gospel "spirit" which
all acknowledged as the gift of God to their Father and friend,
Don Bosco.
Today the crisis of fidelity to one's vocation is often the
crisis of appraisal of the Foundet. One fotgets that he is also
a privileged soul on whom the Holy Spirit has lavished his gifts
for the building of a heritage of permanent values which will span
the centuries.
lf he were at the helm today
Every charism is a gift within the Church and for the Church;
and the Church is the supreme arbiter of the authenticity of every

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proiect based on the Gospel. The Church has given official
approval to our Constitutions; has canonised Don Bosco, Mother
Mazzarcllo and Dominic Savio. Now the Church beatifies Don
Rua, and has confirmed in a thousand ways the genuineness of
the spiritual heritage of Don Bosco. The Church is the tfeasury
and regulator of charisms, and also the authentic guardian of
the spirit of every religious family.
Don Rua was aware of this rruth; he loved it and it cost
him acute suffering. If today he were at the helm of the Con-
gregation, of this we could be certain: he would show exemplary
docility to the Church in her request for aggiornamenro in rdli-
gious Institutes as regards both Constitutions and living accord-
ing to the directions of the Second Yatican Council.
And Don Rua would have appreciated the efforts of our
Special General Chapter to probe deeply with understanding
and fidelity the mission and spirit of Don Bosco; and he would
have rejoiced at the new Constitutions, enriched as they are by
the "early spirit", with almost every page enlivened with the
name and words of our beloved Founder and Father.
The Church needs fidelity, fidelity in individuals and fidelity
in Institutes. Both these facets shine in Don Rua. He desired
with every ounce of energy that he as an individual, and the
Congregation with him, should live with absolute fidelity to the
spitit of Don Bosco. He knew the Churrhs' need of the specific
rvitness proper to every Religious famiy.
One of the constant sayings of Pope Paul VI to Religious
is, "Be yourselves." 'S7'e should as Salesians make this motto ouf
very own. It is always the theme of fidelity that should urge
us
it
on. Don
aloud.
Rua's beatification does
If anyone has "to his
not iust repeat this: it shouts
own self been true", it is
DatonDoRnuaB-oscfor'osmsitdhee
age
and
of eight years to seventy-three! Always
comFletely his! Always as the ready
for Don Bosco's least word. His sobriquet, "The Living Rule"
u/as no mere rhetorical flourish!

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Fidelity is relevant
'$7hile on the theme of fidelity, let me continue to delve
thoughtfully with refetence to out modern times, usually referted
to as "times of identity-crisis." This delving will help us see
Don Rua in the cadre of our present modern urgency.
It has been said that fidelity is God's greatest attribute.
(L6on-Dufour). Salvation history is always conditioned by "fidel-
ity to the Covenant." The People of God (and especially we
Salesians) will be judged fundamentally in the light of fidelity to
Baptism (which for us implies fidelity to our Religious profession).
Heaven indeed is the home of "the faithful servant" insofar as
he has been "faithful in little things."
Fidelity, viewed in the Saints, is constancy in friendship;
it is a strict adhetence to a Salvation-covenant. As we look at
Don Rua, we could say that fidelity entails the knowledge of
God as our friend; a union with him in a vocation-covenant; an
interior certainty that the values of such an alTegiance are perma-
nent and topical; the pledge to defend its integrity and to show
it to others by the way we live.
Such fidelity can only be the expression of a strong character,
for it imports the unceasing exercise of activities that are most
characteristically human: understanding, liberry, love and a rule
of life.
To be faithful, we need an understanding that seatches out
true values; a liberty that knows how to be committed to a basic
choice; a love that can blend the permanence of yesterday's values
with the novelties of today's; and a discipline of life that can
apply abstract philosophical principles to the hard realities
of li[e.
It is true that human liberty is characterised by the ability
to nnsay what it said yesterday, for in every psychological arca
events and signs of the times can carry wit} them overwhelming
discoveries.

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Still, the greatness of. a chatacter and the meaning of freedom
can never consist in a choice that is indifferent, nor in the ability
to be constandy clanging decisions.
A man's measure in gauged by his choice of true values and
by his commitment to translate them into his life. To keep all
possibilities of choice continually open signifies, in fact, to be
committed to nothing, never to get to the heart of any true
value, to sink blissfully into vague relativism, no longer to believe
in making a definitive choice. One can understand such an atti-
tude of indifference a moment before making a decision, but this
would never constitute greatness of character or mode of life.
Don Rua's vocation comes to light as a fundamental ciroice
which defines historically his freedom, his fidelity to his chosen
project, and his consciousness of belonging to the Congrega-
tion. These constitute the measure of grandeur in this great
character.
It must be added that this concrete example of Don Rua
shows us that fidelity is a daily conquest, and never static or
"cut-and-dried"; rather do we see it as a kind of challenge, always
lively and new, and needing every effort of the soul, especially
when living in a time of change.
Fidelity, indeed, is no mere repetition; it is not a matter
of mere doing. To be faithful we must avoid the danger of a
materially conservative regression, which substitutes for fidelity
a mere "fixism." At the same time we have to know how to
avoid the mistake of a superficial progressivism: this only befouls
fidelity, feeding it with relativism and naturalism.
In our new Constitutions there is a chapter which helps us
reflect on the meaning of our fidelity. It speaks of "a continued
effort of renewal"; "a dynamic urge to keep up to date";
"a sharing in the passion of Christ"; and a pledge "to make hum-
ble use of the means of defence against our v/eakness." (Arts.
118,119).
Understanding, libety, love, discipline ate the essential
components of a fidelity which sees death as the most expressive

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witness that puts the seal conclusively on a life lived true to
the "Salvation-pact."
\\7e see Don Rua's death not as a simple chronological
coincidence of two things: his permanent Salesian vocation and
his last breath! Rather was it the supreme expression (a wit-
nessing, a "mattytdom") of his fundamental choice made in
freedom and in love of Jesus Christ in the spirit of Don Bosco.
How true are the words of the new Constitutions: "ff we
accept sickness and the infirmiry of old age with faith, then we
exercise our fidelity in a special way" (Art. L2L); and the hour
of death is considered as "the moment... when his consecration
will reach its highest fulfilment." (Art. t22)
I think, and often with distress, that these days we have
special need of the lesson of fidelity so eloquently demonstrated
by Don Rua: we need it both as individuals and as communities,
so that we can show that fidelity demands the use of spiritual
understanding, aloyal, choice of "belonging", apostolic love, manly
discipline.
God grant that every Salesian confrbre identify his perpetual
profession with the fundamental choice of his life; please God,
let there flourish in every community the awareness that our
vocational values are relevant; and let us work busily and vigo-
rously to dtaw near to God, urged on by our Salesian spirit of
sacrifice.
HE BELONGED COMPLETELY TO DON BOSCO
Let me now prove my points by taking some of the more
characteristic elements of our Salesian heritage and seeing how
Don Rua, the "faithful Salesian," practised them.
Pastoral love
Our new Constitutions tell us: "Pastoral love is at t"he very
heart of our spirit." (Art. 40) Don Bosco's whole life is per-

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meated with the presence of God: its outlet being a thirst fot
the salvation of souls, especially the young ("Give me souls...").
Don Rua had the most thorough understanding of this. In
his circular letter of 24 Aug, 1894, he wrote: "Don Bosco
never took a step, never uttered a word, never began a task
u,hich did not aim at the salvation of the young... The salvation
of souls was his heart's desire; 'Da mihi animas' was for Don
Bosco not iust a matter of words, but of deeds."
In Don Bosco's rooms we see framed his two mottoes of
Salesian spirituality. They are perhaps the oldest relics of Val-
docco. The fust was the one that caught the eye of Dominic
Savio and formed the subject of the first conversation between
master and pupil: "Da mihi animas, caeteta tolle". The second,
still
save
over
one's
the entrance, says: "One thing
soul". And Don Bosco succeeded
is
in
nlievcinegsstahreys-e
to
two
mottoes, and having his sons live them, too. They were the
spring of their apostolic activity during life, and theit last and most
spontaneous thought when dying. The enormous activiry of
Don Rua seemed out of place with his frail appearance: the
only explanation is in these fwo mottoes of Don Bosco's spiritual
teaching.
This passion for souls in Don Bosco and Don Rua never
became an excuse to neglect man's material progfess. Rather it
was the driving force of many initiatives, ways and means to
face up to the wants of needy youth, materially, intellectually
and socially.
As a son of Don Bosco, Don Rua never forgot that he
would prove false to his vocation if it did not embody practical
enterprises in education; he did not reduce chariry to a mere
horizontalism, but insisted, with Don Bosco, that it be very
practical and dedicate itself, as the new Constitutions express
it, "to help permeate the temporal order with the spirit of the
Gospel. \\7e must work for the total well-being of all men,
especially the young, helping them to become honest citizens
and good Cristians". (Art. L7).

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UVork and Temperance
Another characteristic of our Salesian heritage, and called
by Don Bosco "ouf bannef", is expressed clearly and forcefully
as "I7ork and Temperance."
This is a complete pedagogical program of fidelity: it un-
derlines the regular life; it gives eficacy to our mission, and
holiness to our Religious state.
Already the Acts of the XIX General Chapter had emphasised
this vision of Salesian work by affrming significantly: "Prayer
and work are like two clasped hands, never separated, and cer-
tainTy never in opposition. Jesus himself exemplified this".
A Worker Saint
Don Bosco summed up his way of life in this recommendation
with Gospel simplicity: "I do not recommend to you penances
and disciplines, but work, work, work." (l/LB. IV, 216). He
himself was a shining example. '!U7e know this on his doctor's
- authority he died s<hausted with f.atigrc, worn out by ceaseless
work. And his first Salesians did not lag behind him. More
than anyone else, Don Rua was in this matter a f.a;thf.al replica
of of our Father, Don Bosco.
In 1876 Don Bosco himself said: "Don Rua could certainly
be called a victim of hard work." In that same year Don Rua
was Prefect General, Cateclist General, Rector of the Oratory,
Director of the Salesian Sisters, Spiritual Director of the Barolo
Refuge and preacher and ordinary confessor in the c-hurch of
Mary Help of Christians, not counting various other duties that
were given to him from time to time. Already in 1868 he
had come near to dying through over-work; it was soon after
the celebrations for the conseoation of the Sanctuary of Mary
Help of Christians. "Dear Don Rua", Don Bosco had said to
him at that time, "I don't want you to die; you have still a

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lot of work to do." Then he gave him his blessing and added
confidently: "Listen, Don Rua: even if you threw yonrself out
of the window in your present condition, I assure you, you would
not die." (Avreoer, "Un altro D. Bosco", p. 138)
A past pupil, Professor Rinaudo, on the stafi of the Uni-
versity of Turin and a member of the Turin City Council, paid
the finest of compliments to Don Rua as a hard worker and
a saint. When his colleagues, setting aside party distinctions, had
convened to honour Don Rua's remaifls, he turned to them and
said: "Don Rua was the ideal saint, earnesdy sought by troubled
souls. His faith was crystal-clear, diamond-tough, not lost in
mystical contemplation. He was truly the modern-dav worker-
saint. From 1845 (when for the fust time, at eight years of
age, he experienced the fatherly love of Don Bosco) right to
the day when his stamina exhausted itself and he lay on his
death-bed, he did not enjoy a single day of rest: sixty-five years
of assiduous and fruitful work!... He was the true figure of a
working ascetic." (AuErnnv, B. Micb. Rua, 1972, p. 774)
Temperance
And with work, temperance: they go together. Our work
is always work by the poor for the poor, with no rest when
finished. The Salesian never retires on a pension: this is well
known to our many confrBres who are advanced in years but
still battling away in the front lines. We could translate "work
& temperance", then, by "hard-working poverty".
Poverty (which is the guarantee of absolute temperance) is
the only climate in which our Congregation can live and prosper,
especially these days. Of the seventythree circular letters of
Don Rua to the Salesians the most striking is assuredly that
on Poverty. A witness at the Apostolic Process states: "By
his
of
rceilricguiolaursoansPceovtiecirstymD. o'Sn7Rithuoauhtams ebauniilnt gfotroh, imhesehlaf sa
monument
left us his
portrait!" (Aurrnev, op. cit. p. 158)

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_L4_
Don Rua was only too well awate of Don Bosco's serious
warning: that our Congregation would have had its day when
ease and comfoft were found among us.
Also in the Regulations for the Co-operators (he liked to
call them "salesians without vows") he ffaces out a mode of
life having all the austerity of Religious poverty: "Modesty in
clothing, frugality at meals, simplicity in furnishings, restraint
in conversations, exactness in the duties proper to their state of
life." These are the five "comforts" of Salesian Iife both "inside
and outside the walls".
Gentleness
Now I make mention of a virrue in Don Rua I think was
nworitttseonotbhvaiotu"spa-tienbcuet
nevertheless
is the most
rich in
heroic
values. It has
of the virtues,
been
since
from no angle does it look heroic". There is much tuth in
this. It is much easier to work furiously than to be patient:
indeed, without patience our most characteristic virtue (kindliness,
amiability in speech and bearing) would no longer be a virtue.
Only when this kindliness is stable and unchangeable can it be
called gentleness and meekness. Even if the splendid and
fascinating kindliness of Don Bosco is not obvious in Don Rua,
it is
fruit
tohferheernoeivceprtahteielenscse.-
meekness, evenness of character: the
Experience teaches us this lesson: the stricter a person is
with himself, the more generous, understanding and indulgent
he is towards others. The saints who were most severe with
themselves were never inffansigent or hard towards their neigh-
bour. Don Rua went even further. A page on which are written
his Retreat resolutions (Lanzo, 1876) ends with this sentence:
"I shall never judge anyone, except myself." !7hen his duty
obliged him to correct a person regatding t}e observance of the
Rules or Vows, he did not condemn the confrbre's ransgression:

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rather did he remind the confrBre of his commitment. In this
way he helped his son to do God's will.
Kindliness
Don Rua's meekness was not only the result of self-control:
it embodied also kindliness and true tenderness. W'e must nor
be deceived by his lean counrenance, his eyes red with tiredness,
his conffolled gestures; to discover love we must examine the
heafi, not the features.
It is Don Rua himself who gives us the clearesr picture of
his heart when he wrote to the confrBres in Argentin a a few
days after the death of Don Bosco, "The immense goodness that
chaructetized the heart of our beloved Don Bosco of Saintly me-
mory has heightened by word and example the spark of love
that the dear Lord has placed ir my own heart. I feel elecrified
by Don Bosco's love. f, his successor, do not possess the great
virtues of our Founder, but oh indeed I feel God has granted me
Don Bosco's love for his spiritual sons".
Moreover, we have a sure gauge for measuring the strength
of Don Rua's love: his sufferings, which he enveloped with
peaceful resignation and sereniry when faced with the sorrows
of those about him and the trials of the Salesian family; and in
Don Rua's
bitter.
life+ime
he
had
many
trials
-
some of them most
Professor Rinaudo, mentioned above, knew Don Rua inti-
mately; and he could say this about him: "His eyes shone with
goodness, meekness, kindness; his speech was both fum and
gentle; he possessed the leniency of a mother. No-one ever
saw him angry. In the bitterness of his trials his counrenance
was placid and serene and rudtated love, peace and forgiveness.,,
(Aunrnev, op. cit., p. I74)

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Two predilections
-L6-
The element characterizing our Salesian vocation is our
mission for youth and the people. Pastoral charity is our motivat-
ing force in a lively love that finds its outlet in education; this
in turn prompts us to educative enterprises that are practical in
nature, their special scope being needy youth and the missions.
Our life and labour is with the "young and tl:e poor" to make
them good citizens and upright Christians.
But the highest opression of our apostolate is the spreading
of the Gospel. "Don Bosco began his work with a simple
catechism. Preaching the Gospel and catechising are fundamental
to our mission. As Salesians we are all' and at all times educators
in the f.ao.th." (Const., Art. 20)
\\7e Salesians must see ourselves as always and everywhete
missionaries for youth; we ate Christ's envoys for his "Good
News" to the masses.
Youth first
The birth of a charisma is its most authentic moment; and
so the inspitational genius and the peculiar methodology of the
Salesian mission among the young are found most tobust in the
apostolic action of Don Bosco in the Oratory's first years. It
ii there that we see the deep preoccupation for evangelizng and
catechtzrng; it is there that everything is based on the "pteventive
system" of friendship and confidence; it is there that we see
with special clarity what is today termed "youth pastoral."
\\[hen v/e revert to the birth of Don Bosco's rvork and
speak of the "Oratory," we do so not in the simple remembtance
o{ something begun within a definite structure; rather do we
see it as Don Bosco's pastoral action at its primal source and
brought to its meaningful realisation.
To say that the Oratory is our fust love does not mean

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(t67))
that we regard it as a determined "work" of a particular period
in history. Rather do we see it as a c-hoice of a pamicular
apostolic style and pastoral attitude that should consrirute rhe
very heart and cenme of every Salesian foundation or activity.
Certainly in Don Rua's time the Oratorywas a practical
continuation o[. a special rype of work. His constant and earnest
promotion of the Oratory is precisely what underlines his fidelity
to the Salesian mission.
His dream: to every Salesian House an Oratory
In his deeply faithful interpretation of Don Bosco's mind,
Don Rua, in more than twenty circular letters, insisted that it was
urgently necessary to open Oratories in all urban centres. His
dream was that every Salesian House should have one attached
to it and provide it with all the necessary means and personnel.
This was his idea of a true guarantee that our work was really
geared to the salvation of the young.
Don Rua never forgot that it was as an Oratory boy that
he had fallen under the spell of Don Bosco; and that his greatest
apostolic satisfaction as a cleric was to go every Sunday to St.
Aloysius' to organize the Oratory with his lively enthusiasm.
Canon Ballesio, who as a young man collaborated with Don
Rua at Borgo Vanchiglia (which Don Rua directed for seventeen
years) has left us this testimony: "In the long summer days we
left Valdocco promptly and got to St. Aloysius' for an early start.
IUTe spent all the morning among the youngsters, either in the
church or in the playground. \\)7e got back to our Oratory
iate evening and the boys came with us. They used to garher
round Don Rua and tug at his arms and cassock. As they
neared their homes they left him, shouting their farewells. !7e
arrived at Valdocco at a Tate hour and supped as best we could."
(Aivrennr, D. Micb. Rua, I, 165)
Not haphazardly is the cradle of the Society called, and
always will be called, "The Oratory." This is a perpetual reminder
2

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18
of the fountain-head of our educative charisma and our most
solemn life-pledge. Don Rua's example at Vanchiglia (on the
periphery of Turin) is a lesson to us all that souls are to be
sought where they actually live, even if a long way from our
Houses. 'We could
tical gtoups in the
call them our
slums, on the
"oFulytsinkgirtsOtoaftothrieesc" it-ies6.21I7shslas-t
possibilities and what necessities to be faced up to, especially
in the big cities!
True, all tlis means getting out of a certain routine, and
maybe out of our fixed rhythm of work (which perhaps has
some of the material comforts of the easy life). Here is where
the jolt must be given.
He wanted the Congregation to be "missionary"
Like Don Bosco, Don Rua had a special feeling for the
missions. He was anxious to set up mission foundations in
every continent. In his twentytwo years as Rector Major he
organized more than twenty missionary expeditions, the largest
one being two hundred
sets one thinking!
and
ninetyfive
confrbres
-
a figure that
With ecclesial insight he insisted on respect for local customs
which were not discordant with the Gospel. Indeed, it was
his wish that the missionaries should adopt the life and usages
of the new countries, renouncing their own. (FneNcBsre, Don
Mi.c. Rua, p. L59).
Don Rua's words, and even more so his practical example,
confirm what I wrote in my last letter in the "Acts," viz., that
the Congregation, to be true to itself ("qualis esse debet") must
be in the deepest and widest sense rnissionary. It is precisely
from this mission-mindedness (let me hammer this home with
my deepest conviction) that the Congregation will fill its lungs
with oxygen, life-giving and continuous.

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Solicitude for the Go-operators
(t675)
Don Rua had very much at heart the growth and organisation
of
ir
the
the
wSoarlelds,iaannCdoa-roepecraallteodrsb-y
who extend the Salesian mission
Don Bosco "our extern confrBres."
Don Bosco's initial idea of the Salesian Co-operators u/as
a kind of preview of something between Catholic Action and
Secular Institutes. It is hardly to be wondered at then that
this "great concept" did not receive approval in its original design,
and that even some of his Salesians were rather vague about it.
Don Rua however never had a doubt. His heart and mind
were firmly entrenched in this magnificent "foundation" of Don
Bosco. Like Don Bosco he had to sufier the bitterness of the
"great concept" being misunderstood, in spite of its being spelled
out in clear terms.
In his circulat letter of 19 February, L905, Don Rua wrote:
"When Don Bosco presented to his sons the Regulations for
Co-operators, some 'men of little faith' had doubts about the
success of the new enterprise. But Don Bosco, in that resolute
tone of voice that allowed no objections, told them, 'I assure
you, the Association of the Salesian Co-operators will be the rnain
support of our works.' This Association cost Don Bosco many
sacrifices; but it has received the blessing and encouragement of
Supreme Pontifis; it has been embraced enthusiasticully by bishops
and cardinals; it will always be the main support of Salesian
works. This Association is in our hands, dearest sons; it is
cur task to make it known, to spread it abroad and to make
its harvest plentifr:l. I wish I had Don Bosco's oratorical powers
to convince you that we must devote all our energy and zeal to
develop this crown of Salesian enterprises. If through our negli-
gence it were to decline, it would show that we had not taken
to heart the recommendations of our Founder."
Dear confrBres, if this lack of understanding, even among
Salesians, of the "grand concept" (so much ahead of its time)
was excusable seventy years ago, I do not hesitate to say that

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20
today, in the light of the Special General Chapter, it would be
an unpardonable rejection of the wishes of Don Bosco and Don
Rua. The renewed pastoral vision of the Church does not allow
us to neglect the apostolic involvement of the laity, their direct
collaboration, their co-responsible participation in the Salesian
mission in the world.
The objections put forth for not getting down to the business
of organizing and putting life into the Co-operators teally lack
validity. I say bluntly, they are the fruit of insensibiJiy to things
apostolic and Salesian; the result of a superficial evaluation of the
manifold advantages that the Church and the Congregation derive
from the renewal of this true vocation, the Salesian Co-operators.
Seventy yearc ago, in the letter quoted above, Don Rua
iamented in his fatherly way: "I confess in all sincerity, I cannot
feel happy when I see certain confrEres wotking indefatigably
to found and direct other associations, without giving thought to
that of the Salesian Co-operators, which is so utterly Salesian."
These days Don Rua would have gone further in expressing
his regret: he would have said, "Shed your tears that the Lord's
vineyard is short of workers; that our Salesian works are in grave
difficulties because of shortage of personnel; meantime you
neglect so many elements so ready to live the spirit and mission
of Don Bosco in the world."
In some of our houses lay folk work side by side us Sale-
sians, and we have never put to them the ideal of becoming a
Co-operator. These conscientious, apostolic, brotherly co-work-
ers would join the ranks of our Co-operators (at teast, many of
them would). Meantime, through our remissness they too often
remain simple "externs," mere workmen.
The Special General Chapter devoted itself in depth to the
subject of the Co-operators: we have only to read and put into
practice the twenty pages of Document 18. The Special General
Chapter maintains convincingly that our Congregation (as Don
Bosco said, and Don Rua emphatically repeated) can look to the
future with confidence because the Congegation is willed by

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(t677)
God, guided by Mary Help of Christians and "backed up by
the Salesian Co-operators." (And "backed up" does not mean
"hand-outs": it means "co-operating," "working together").
Parugraph 7)0 of. the Acts of the Special General Chapter
says explicitly, "The Co-operator, as Don Bosco envisaged him,
is a true Salesian- in-the-world; i.e., a Christian (be he alayman,
lay-Religious or priest) who, even if he has no religious vows,
follows a vocation to holiness by offering himself to work for
the young in the spirit of Don Bosco, in the service of the local
Church and in communion with the Salesian Congregation,".
I hope that the Special Provincial Chapters will focus theit
attention on this point. I believe it to be one of the most
significant parts of our renewal.
I look forward to the fact that the Provinces, in the light
of practical decisions made in this regard, will establish just how
nght Don Bosco and Don Rua were when they insisted that our
trust should be placed, after God and Mary Help of Christians,
in the apostolic contribution of the Salesian Co-operators.
I"ove of the past pupils
In one of the last years of his life, Don Bosco said to the
past pupils who had gathered round him for his feast-day, "You
cannot image my ioy at seeing you here with me. I always love
being among the young, but it is a great and ineffable consolation
to me to be surrounded by -y grown-up children, for they are
no longer ,ust my hope, but rather the fruit of my labours and
cafes".
It is exactly in fidelity to this spirit of our Founder that
Don Rua busied himself in a special way with the Past Pupils.
"Let us be convinced," he said, "that by holding fast to them
when they have left us, we shall bring salvation not only to them
but also to many of their relations, friends and acquaintances."
It was Don Rua who was responsible for the first real
oryaruzng of this great force for good in the world. He wanted

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-22
the Co.operatots organized, knowing that it is the bond of union,
not mere numbers, that makes for sffength.
The tecent \\florld Congtess of Past Pupils (1970), among
other things, realised an ardent wish of Don Rua: they recogni-
zed that the Past Pupils should engage in apostolic work. He
had dreamed of them as aposdes of good, not only in their own
families, but also in theit social milieu. And the recent Special
General Chapter approved this motion, together with another of
still greater commitment, feelingly suggested too by Don Rua on
many occasions, and in line with Don Bosco's mind: viz., that the
Christian past pupils who were involved in apostolic work should
be enrolled as Salesian Co-operators. No-one is more prepared
to become a "Salesian in the world" than a past pupil.
DON RUA'S MESSAGE FOR THE SEVENTIES
Returning to the imminent beatification of Don Rua: I
wish to add a few considerations on the relevance of his message
today.
In a former letter I recalled the words of the "Osservatore
Cattolico" of Milan, speaking of the sixty-four year old Don Rua.
The article ended with a fine summing up: "His goodness can-
not be put into words; his activity is extraordinary."
This goodness was not something acquired over the years.
He always possessed it-from youth to old age.
When Don Rua was twenty eight and rector at Mirabello,
cleric Cerruti had this to say: "f sdll recall those two years
of Don Rua's rectorship at Mirabello. I always remember his
untiring labours; his delicate, refined prudence in governing the
House; the zeal, not only religious and moral but also intellectual
and physical, that he showed for the confrEres and youth entrusted
to him. Still lively is my recollection of his chafity (it seemed
not so much fatherly as motherly) with which he encouraged
me in my serious ill:ness in May, '1,865". (Alrreorr, op. cit.,l, 175)

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-n-
lf I had ten Don Ruas!
(167e)
Don Bosco, who knew Don Rua more closely than anyone
else, did not hesitate to make this sweeping statement: "If I had
ten Don Ruas, I would go on and conquer the wotld." (AMAoer,
t p. cit., II, 25L)
Don Cagliero's testimony is on the same lines. In 1879,
when he maJe his first ttip back from America, he was asked
by Don Bosco for the names of three confrBres whom he consid-
eied capable of governing the Society on the death of the Foundet.
Straighi u*uy i. replied, "Three? Later on, yes. But at the
rnorn.rt there is only one: Don Rua." Don Bosco smilgd 2n6
added, "There is only one Don Rua: he has always been the
right hand of Don Bosco." And Don Cagliero, with his usual
iripetuous sincerity, rejoined, "Not only arm, but head, mind and
heart."
He was possessed of. an exffaordinary activity yet was
habitually serene (following Don Bosco's lead). These qualities
were demonstrated in his regular achievements in the expansion
of our Society.
His capacity and courage (he had his finger on the pulse of
the times and understood them thoroughly) shone in the orga-
rization and direction of the six Congresses of the Salesian Co-
operators. This he made his own personal responsibity-. The
Congress of Bologna (1895) opened the series. The Civilti Cat-
tolica wrote: "The Intetnational Congress of the Salesian Co-
opefarors at Bologna was a splendid instance of religious activity,
perfectly organized. The Salesians deserve highest commendation
for appraising the times and suiting their work to these times,
having chosen as their apostolate the poor and the working.
classes." (Ciuilti Cattolica, May, L895, p. 485). It was an
extraordinary fact for those days that correspondents represent-
ing-
sixty newspapefs wefe pfesent.
After eighty years several reflections
arise
spontaneoutly
it
the face of these initiatives and activities of Don Rua. Nfe should

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-24-
attend to them in proportion to our responsibiliry in guiding and
encouraging the Congregation. Here is a question that muit be
asked: "nflhat has been done at the locf and provincial com-
p""ity level to walk the path of Don Rua? \\flhat is going to
!e do-ne to_make up for the time and opportunities that-perf,aps
have been lost?"
The working classes
In complete fidelity to the Salesian charism relating to the
people, Don Rua was at ease even among the strikers, suiceeding
in settling the very bitter dispute in the textile industry in Turin-,
1906. His interest in the workers was not an isolated happening.
In 1889 he was at the rut7slay station of Porta Nuova to *il.o-"
two thousand workers on their way to Rome. In the three-
quarter-hour stop he conquered the hearts of. all, speaking in
beautiful French, simple and correcr.
In 1891 seven mainloads of workers, organtzed by L6on Har-
mel, stopped at Turin to pay homage to Don Bosco,s remains before
continuing on to Rome. Don Rua was host to the four thousand
men at the valsalice college and ate with them at their meal in
the shade of the coumyard mees. Towards the end of the meal he
spoke to them and expressed his admiration to them for their social
Inovement, asking them to offer Leo XIII his homage. The assem-
bly accorded him prolonged applause; they recognised in Don Rua
an aposde, simple-hearted and ftathedy, who had won their hearts
from the very first moment. (Aunrnev, op. cit., p. 122)
An invitation in the name of Don Rua
I wish to end this letter by appealing in the name of Don Rua
to each and every one of you, as though in a personal, heart-to-heart
chat. I invite you ro look to Mary Help of Christians, the true foun-
dress of the Salesian Society. I make this invitation in the name

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(1681)
of Don Rua, who undertook the responsibility for the erection of
the Sanctuary of our heavenly mother, andfifty years later arranged
her solemn coronation.
It is Our Ladywho, in accordance with God's will, presides
over the events of our Congregation. It is she who, in the Beatifi-
cation of Don Bosco's most faithful disciple, repeats to us the
message of fidelity. n7e need light to understand her message well,
and abundant grace to practise what we hear with the same enthu-
siasm we had when making our first vows.
But for our fidelity to reach this standard, it must, like Don
Rua's, be extended to each and every one of the components of the
Salesian spirit. These are the same components that guided our
Special General Chapter, and which appear: vividly and clearly in the
two hundred atticles of the new Constitutions.
Especially should we read and meditate on Article 119, which
is entitled "Our Fidelity." It begins with a statement quite
Gospel-like in simplicity and depth, "Fidelity to the commitment
made at our Religious Profession is an act of. faith in Our Lord
who has called us."
The depth of our fidelity is in propomion ro the degree
of our faith: for our faith regulates our work. St. Francis of Sales
describes faith brilliantly when he writes: "It is that heavenly
ruy that makes us see God in all things, and all things in God".
In the Diocesan Process for Don Rua, Car&nal Cagliero made
the following deposition: "fn Don Rua there was no grasping
egotism; he only sought God" ("In Don Rua non B mai sraro
esistito nB f io nb il mio, ma soltanto Dio"). He was the man of
perfect faith; and this explains why his fidelity was complete,
integral and fruitful.
I Dear confrBres, at the beginning of this letter invited you
to "look carefully" at Don Rua. I can only conclude with the
same recommendation. Let us study Don Bosco's most faithful

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-26
lieutenant, following in his footsteps and imitating his example.
His fidelity is for us today a powerful summons to personal
renewal and a spur to better understanding of the values of our
Salesian vocationl it urges us on to a choice of a more loyal
and clear "belonging" to the Congregation; it is a call to a pas-
toral commitment more in tune with the times and the people;
it bids us embrace a rule of life more virile and more constant.
These days our fidelity means an authentic reliving of the
same spirit and the same mission but in new situations. It is
in this sense that we must follow in the steps of Don Rua. It
is in this "imitation" that we shall find the most efficacious
and practical, way to pay homage to and turn to best account
the gift the Church is bestowing on us with the Beatification of
Don Rua.
May the Virgin Help of Chtistians guide and help us to be
Salesians as he was.
Father Aloysius Ricceri,
Rector Maior.

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II. ]NSTRUCTIONS AND NOBMS
1. Celebrations in honour of Don Rua
Tbe Sacred Congregation for Diuine Vorsbip, at the request of
the Salesian Postulator of Causes, has issued an indult containing the
liturgical rules for functions in honour of Don Rua.
These celebrations, which may consist of a feast (possibl;l preceded
by a triduum) should take place not later than 29 Oct., 1973.
During the celebrations the Mass of the new Beatus may be said
on all days except on Solemnities, Sundays of Advent, Lent and
Eastertide, Ash \\Tednesday, Holy \\feek and Easter week.
In the Masses, the Gloria is said; in celebrations of special solem-
nity, the Creed also may be said.
On the days when the Mass of Don Rua is allowed, one may also
validly celebrate his Vespers.
The Sacred Apostolic Penitentiary too, grants plenary and parti-
al indulgences on the days of celebration.
The plenary indulgence is conceded once only to the faithful who
have availed themselves of the Sacraments of Penance and Eucharist
and recited a prayer for the Holy Fathet's intentions, and then visit
the church or public oratory where the celebrations are being held
and recite the Lord's Prayer and the Creed.
The partial indulgences are granted to those who, on the afore-
mentioned days, make an act of contrition and devoutly visit the church
or public oratory where the celebrations are being held.
2. Deliberations of the Ptovincial Chapters
a) On 4 Oct., 1972, the Vicar of the Rector Major, Ft. Cajetan
Scrivo, sent the Provincials the following letter.
Dear Father Provincial,

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-28
The Superior Council is beginning to receive from those Provinces
who have completed the work of their Provincial Chapters the relative
Acts and Deliberations.
I would be grateful if you would bear in mind what follows.
To f.aci\\tate and speed up the work of the Offices and Superiors
who will be examining the documents personally and in reams, the
definitive Acts of the Chapters should be forwarded to the Superior
Coun'$ci[leinretqwueelsvte
copies.
those Provinces
who
have
already
sent
less
rhan
twelve copies of their Provincial Chapter Acts to please forward us
a further consignment to make up the required number.
b) Article 178 of the Constitutions reads: "The deliberations of
the Provincial Chapter have binding force only after the approval of
the Rector Major and his Council, with the exception of what is
prescibed in Article 177, no. 5."
This presmiption must be followed: the confrBres should not
be officially presented with the Provincial Chapter Acts as definitive
and juridically operative; nor should the deliberations be put into
effect, even in part, before receiving the approbation of the Rector
Major and his Council.
3. On the application of aticles 196 & 197 ol the Constitutions
Tbe Economer General bas sent to Proaincials and Prouincial Econon-
ers tbe lollowing letter dated 15 September, 1972.
Dear ConfrBres,
One of the prescriptions of the New Constitutions to be put into
effect is that of article 197 , n which it is established that the Rector
Nlajor and his Council are to determine the limits within which (for
the economic operations indicated in the previous article, 196) autho-
risation of the Provincial and his Council is sufficient.
Now, in order to fix such limits, it is necessary to know the
opinion of each Provincial Council and the decisions of the Episcopal
Conferences. Please then forward to us the proposal of your Council

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29-
( 1585)
and information regarding the latest deliberations of the Episcopal
Conference in this matter.
I wish to point out that the sum fixed by the Episcopal Confe-
rence has regatd to the competence of the Superior General, who,
within the limits of that amount, does not need the "nihil obstat"
of the Holy See (v. Manuale del Segretario Ispettodale, p. 14).
It is plain, tJrerefore, that what the Episcopal Conference deter-
mines is only a basis indicating where the limits should be fixed within
which the Provincial with his Council has competence.
The Provincial Council, therefore, in formulating its proposal in
this delicate matter, should look carefully into the question, so that it
can point out to the Superior Council what amount (in accordance
with the prescriptions of aticle 196) it considers it oppotune to leave
to the competence of the Ptovincial with his Council.
Iflhere the Episcopal Conferences have not made any decision in
respect of this matter, the Provincial Councils will set about examin-
ing how the Province stands and the local economic conditions.
Please note that in all circumstances the Provincials must act in
accordance with art. 196 of the Constitutions as long as the Rector
Nlajor has not fixed the limits of competence for the respective
Provinces.
For practical purposes, please show amounts in NATIONAL
CURRENCY TOGETHER WITH THE U.S. $ EQUIVALENT.
I am pleased to take this opportunity to send my kindest regards
and to wish you all well.
Father Ruggiero PILLA,
Economer General.

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III. COMMUNICATIONS
1. Beatification of Don Rua
The Salesian family is participatirrg in the Beatification of Don
Rua in a busy series of celebrations scheduled for Rome and Turin.
At ROME, the ceremony of Beatification in St. Peter's v/as
arranged for 9.30 a.m., Sunday, 29 October. At midday the Salesian
tamtly paid homage to His Holiness in the piezza of. St. Peter's. At
5.00 p.m., in the Great Hall of the P.A.S., and in the presence of the
authorities and various representatives, The Hon. Antonio Alessi spoke
at the civil commemoration of the new Beatus. Next day, at St.
John Bosco's Basilica in Rome, the Salesians honoured Don Rua
with a concelebrated Mass presided over by the Rector Maior.
Also in Rome there was a triduum in honour of Don Rua begin-
ning 30 th. Oct. (i.e., Monday, Tuesday & S7ednesday) in the three
Salesian churches of Santa Maria Liberatrice (Testaccio), S. Giovanni
Bosco, and the Sacro Cuore. There were many concelebrations
presided over by cardinals, bishops and Salesian superiors.
At TURIN (bitthplace of Don Rua) the celebtations will take
place on 9-12 November. Meetings, "conferences" and various func-
tions are planned: they will be geared for Salesian youth, the clergy
and nuns in Turin, and the Salesian families. The civil function will
be held in the theatre of Valdocco; the speaker will be Professor
Italo Lama of the University of Turin.
It is expected that large numbers of the Salesian family, both
from Italy and abroad, will participate in this event of deep spiritual
jov.
2. Modifications in the Province of the P.A.S.
The preceding "Acts" of the Superior Council gave notice of cer-
tain changes in progress in respect of the Salesian Pontifical Athenaeum
(r'.4.s.).

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( 1687 )
Now with certain ordinances ftom the Rectot Major (dated 3
Oct., L972), the following decisions have been made in this regard.
The first ordinance takes cognisance of the particular importance
the Special Genetal Chapter accorded to "the separation of the academic
centre from the houses of residence and formation so as to ensure the
realisation of the fundamental objectives of both"; it also takes into
account that "the reasons that led to tlre setting up of the Province
of the P.A.S. have now ceased to exist"; it consequently establishes
that this Provinces is now suppressed.
The second ordinance establishes that the "Gest Maestro", which
houses the personnel attached to the P.A.S., is now transferred to the
dependence of the Rector Major and is constituted an "ens sui juris."
The document, furthermote, appoints that the Rector Maior govern
the community "ad instar Inspectoris."
The third ordinance annexes to the Central Province five Houses
formerly belonging to the suppressed Province of the P.A.S. Four
of these are in Rome (Convitto S. Giov. Bosco for priest students;
Convitto S. Franc. di Sales for students not yet ordained; the Com-
munity of the Padsh of S. Maria della Speranza and the Istituto
S. Tarcisio for students of Pontifical Universities). The fifth House
now belonging to the Central Province is the Don Bosco International
Institute of the Crocetta (Turin).
3. Appointments
t) Procurator General
Father Decio Teixeira, former Provincial of Belo Horizonte,
Brasil, has been called to succeed Father Louis Castano in the office
of Procurator General to the Holy See.
The Congregation expresses its deep gratitude to Father Castano
on the occasion of his relinquishing the task he has carried out so
diligently for eighteen years. Earnest good wishes go to Father
Teixeira for the service he is about to render the Society.
b) Tbe Rector Major's Delegate lor the Academic Centre ol the P.A.S.
Fr. ANtHorw Jevrcnnr, being the Rector Magnificus of the Salesian
Pontifical Athenaeum, has been appointed the Rector Major's Delegate

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( 1688 )
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{or the academic centre of the P.A.S
inspectoris".
He will govern it "ad instar
c) New Proaincials
The following confrEres have been appointed as Provincials
Fr. Alrnr,o C.e,nnene: Brasil Province of Belo Horizonte.
Fr. Jornt Lucrtrr: Novarese Province.
Fr. LIvus Ortoxu: Middle-East Province.
4. The 102nd. Salesian Missionary Expedition
On the 1st. of October the 102nd. Salesian Missionary Expedition
was farewelled in the Basilica of Mary Help of Christians, Turin.
This year's new missionaries number twentyfour: eight priests, eight
iaybrothers and eight clerics (14 from kiy, 6 from Sfain, Z firrm
the Philippines, L from Poland and L from Belgium). The Central
Province provided 4; the Southern Province, 4; Sicily, 2; The Philip-
pines, 2; and one each from the following: Subalpine, Veneta-Verona,
Novarese, Addatic, Poland-Krakow, Belgium North, Seville, Cordoba,
Valencia, Madrid, Leon and Bilbao.
16 will go to Latin America (Brasil, 5; Bolivia, 2; Cht7e, 2;
Ecuador,2; Venezuela,2; Argentina, L; Colombia, 1; as yet unde-
cided, 1).
6 to Asia (Middle East,2; Thailand, 2; Bhutan, 1; Macao, 1).
2 to Alrica (Gabon, l; Zake, 1.).
5. Office of tfie Salesian Press
The Of{ice headquarters of the Salesian Press have been transferred
(as have othet offices) to the new Generalate in Rome.
Among the vatious tasks is that of collecting as much new as pos-
sible about the Salesian family and rechannslling rhe information round
the world in accordance with modern journalistic usage.
To facilitate this important work, those in charge of Salesian
reviews are invited to forward to this office a copy of all publications.

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'Sfe are interested not only in reviews with a wide circulation, but
also in local publications, Provincial newsletters and roneoed copies of
various organizations.
Please address these publicarions to
IIFFICIO STAMPA SALESIANO,
Casella Postale,9092,
00100, Roma
Italy
6. The Supedor Council and the Generalate
For tbe inlorntation and use ol conlrdres bere is a tist ol fianzes
and duties ol tbe Superior Council and. other conlrlres at tbe Genera-
late, Rorne. It is up to date October, 1972.
RECTOR MAJOR
Secretaries
FR. ALOYSIUS RICCERI
Fr. Silvio Silvano
Fr. Joseph Abbi
Bt. Cajetan Guidi
VICAR GENERAL
Seuetary
FR. CAIETANO SCRIVO
Fr. Mario Mauri
FORMATION OF SALESIAN PERSONNEL
COUNCILLOR
Consultor lor on-going lormation
Consultor for lirst formation
Consultor lor Salesian Brothers
Secretary
FR. EGrDro vrcANd
Fr. Peter Brocardo
Fr. Joseph Aubry
Br. Renato Romaldi
Fr. Michael Solinas

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34-
YOUTH "PASTORAL"
COUNCILLOR
Consultors
Secretary
FR. ROSALIO CASTILLO
Fr. Anthony Ferreira
Fr. John Romo
Fr. Peter Dalbesio
ADULT "PASTORAL" & SOCIAL COMMIJNICATIONS
COUNCILLOR
Consultor lor pastoral tbeology
Consaltor lor parisb "pa.storal"
Consultor lor nass media
Secretary
FR. JOHN RAINERI
Fr. Mario Midali
Fr. \\flilliam Bonacelli
Fr. John Cherubin
Salesian Co-operators
General Secretary
Cenftal Office
Fr. Augustine Archenti
Salesian Past Pupils
General Secretary
Fr. Humbert Bastasi
Press
Director
Editor
Public Relations
Photographic Arcbiaes
Fr. Amedeo Rodinb
Fr. Enzo Bianco
Br. Guy Cantoni
Br. Francis Milani
Salesian Bulletin (H. Q. at Valdocco, Tarin)
Director
Editors
Fr. Teresio Bosco
Fr. Peter Ambrosio
Fr. Chatles De Ambrogio
Correspondence
Irudexing e Sbippi.ng
Fr. Michael Obbermito
Br. Arnaldo Montecchio

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TflSSIONS
COI'NCILLOR
Consultor
Secretary
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FR. BERNARD TOHILL
Fr. Anthony Altarejos
Fr. Timothy Munari
ECONOMER GENERAL
Semetary
Property Ollice
Administration
FR. RUGGIERO PILLA
Br. Severino Valesano
Fr. Romeo Tavano
Br. Joseph Restagno
Fr. Mario Stelfli
Br. James Torasso
Br. David Basso
Ft. Fortunato Faggion (Turin)
Br. Ernest Zanena
Br. Joseph Ronco
Fr. Peter Robaldo (Turin)
Technical Olfice (buildings, etc.)
Olfice lor Transport & Trauelling
(stationed at Valdocco, Tarin)
Fr. Mark Alciati (Turin)
Br. John Rubatto
Fr. Vittorio Tatak
Br. Louis Da Roit
Br. Joseph Sersen
COTINCILLORS ENTRUSTED VITH GROUPS OF PROVINCES
FR. LOUIS FIORA
FR. JOHN TER SCHURE
FR. ANTHoNT vr6r,rpe
FR. GEORGE VILLIAMS
FR. JOSEPH HENRIQUEZ
FR, JOHN VECCHI
Secretar"l: Fr. Orestes Giraldo
Secretaryt Fr. Alfted Fleisch
Secretaryz Fr. Angelo Berenguer
Secretary: Fr. Louis Tavano
Secretary: Fr. Gianfranco Coffele
Secretary:

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GENERAL SECRETARIATE
GENERAL SECRETARY
luridical Office
Elenco
Statistics
Arcbioes
Library
Translators: Englisb
Frencb
Gerrnan
Spanish
Mail €r Sbipping
FR. DOMIMC BRITSCHU
Fr. Mario Grussu
Fr. Peter Santi)
Fr. Faustinus Ayuso
Fr. Vendelino Feny6,
Fr. John Homola
Fr. Gregory fuanda
Fr. Alan McDonald
Fr. Joseph Manguette (at Li6ge)
Fr. AIfted Fleisch
Fr. Gregory Aranda
Br. Renato Celato
Br. Egidio Brojanigo
SPECIAL OFFICES
Procurator General
Secretary
Postulator General
Vicar lor tbe Daughters ol Mary
Help of Cbristians
Assistant for the'Tolontarie" ol
Don Bosco
Ft. Decio Teixefua
Fr. Peter Schinetti
Fr. Charles Orlando
Fr. Joseph Zavattato
Fr. Stephen Maggo

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IV. ACTIVITIES OF THE GENEBAL COUNCIL
AND MATTEBS OF GENERAL INTEREST
1,. In the Generalate
_ During the summer season, after the feverish days of transferdng
the generalate from Turin to Rome, the Superor Council suspendeJ
its general meetings to allow the rcgional councillors to visit the
various provinces.
Those Superiors who remained at the generalate, with the
Rector Major, set about the problem of appointing the local superiors
(Provincials and Provincial Councillors). As is well-known, the appoint-
ments of the local superiors are made and approved by the Rector
Major with his council, taking into account "a wide consultation among
the members of the province". An analysis of the voting showed thai
in practically all the provinces a laybrotJrer was included on the
council.
The Superior Council also continued with the re-organising of the
various departments which make up the generalate. This task was
far ftom simple; the transfer from Turin to Rome (this new venfure
was urged by the Special General Council) not only meant a physical
shifting of men and materials but also a most intense activiry in study
and restructuring.
The various departments of the generalate are not yet finalised in
every detail, but for the information of the confrEres there is a list
of names and duties in tJre "documents" section of these Acts.
2. Meetings witb confrires
During the summer period the superiors still at Rome had
many occasions to meet the Salesian family; some of these meetings
were quite imFortant.
The Rectot Major was present at Mornese for the centenary
celebrations of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians (5 Aug.). In

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September he received the professions of the novices of Monte Oliveto
and Pacognano and was present at the opening of the special provin-
cial chapters of the Southern and Veneta-Ovest provinces. On 1
Octobet he took part in the farewell ceremony of the new missionaties
at Turin-Valdocco; and on 9 October he opened the academic year
c'{ tfie P.A.S. at Rome.
Fr. Scrivo was in Portugal for the opening of the Provincial
Chapter; and Fr. Viganb at Cison di Valnarino for the Veneta Est
Chapter.
Fr. Castiflo gave the reffeat in Ecuador and opened the Special
Provincial Chapter in Venezuela.
Fr. Raineri presided over a number of functions. At Lisbon:
the reunion of the Iberian Peninsular delegates of the Co'operators
vrho are preparing a study week on "Salesian Cooperator Spirituality";
at Rome: the commission for the revision of the statutes of the past
pupils; at Lugano: the "Italian National Council" of the past pupils.
He also attended the closing of the Ligurian Special Provincial Chapter.
Now he is organising the celebrations for the Beatification of Don Rua.
Fr. Tohill visited the Mission Offices of New Rochelle and Bonn.
ln September he directed the preparatiotr course for the new mission-
aries and accompanied them to Turin for the fatewell ceremony.
3, The uisits of the Regional Superiors to their respectiae Proainces
The visits of the Regional Superiors to their respective Provinces
were completed on 10 October. These visits had three main purposes:
d) to meet the Provincials and the Provincial Councillo$ and gather
up-to-date information on the state of the Provinces; b) to meet the
preparatory commissions of the Special Provincial Chapters to resolve
possible difficulties and to ensure the regular running of the Chapters;
r) to meet the personnel of the houses of formation.
Fr. Fiora visited his Provinces and was present at the Retreats;
he also visited the summet vocational study-camps. He was at Mor-
nese for the centenary celebrations of the Daughters of Mary Help of
Christians and at the Past Pupil Convention at Lugano. Now with
Fr. Raineri he is organising the celebrations for the Beatification of
Don Rua.
Fr. Ter Schure visited the European Provinces of his region.
Amongst other things he was busy with the urgent problems of the

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20
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migrants to Germany, Swizerland and Sweden, studying with the con-
frBres ways and means to solve these problems more effectively.
Fr. M6lida held many meetings with Provincials. He also confer-
red with representatives of the laybrothers from all parts of Spain;
school representatives; those responsible for the aspirantates; and those
in charge of the &afting of the new guide-manual for the Practices of
Piety. At Bilbao he discussed with the Chapter members the problem
of relations between the Congregation and the "Adsis" youth move-
ment. Then he spent September studying and discussing with Provinc-
ial Councils the deliberations of the Special Provincial Chapters which
had completed their work.
Fr. \\7i11iams visited Great Britain, Ireland, U.S.A., Canada,
Australia, The Philippines, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Vietnam,
Thailand, Burma and India. At Hong Kong he spohe with the mem-
bers of the Special Provincial Council; and at Madras he held a meet-
rng with the Ptovincials of the Indian Provincial Conference. In The
Philippines he witnessed the violent downpours (twenty-eight days
cf continuous rain) which caused much damage and claimed many lives.
Some of the Salesian Houses were temporarily cut off by the floods,
but apaft from this nothing serious happened to them.
Fr. Henrlquez visited his twelve provinces in eighteen &fferent
States, and in Bolivia spent some time with every community. He
vras able to gather information on three ways of renewal in his
Provinces: the reconstruction of the vocation section (after the uncer-
tainties of the new methods on trial); a noticeable progress in the
deepening of community life and a consequent increase in pastoral
activity; and thirdly an apostolic orientation towards needy youth.
Fr. Vecchi spent some of his time in setting up the machinery
of the
Brasil.
rwo
He
Provincial
carried out
ctohnefeErexntrcaeosrdininahryisVreisgitiaontio-n
Argentina and
to the Province
of Cordoba, Argentina, and tackled a number of local problems. He
also visited the Provinces of Uraguay , Paragaay, San Paolo and Recife.
4. Now tbat all haae returned.
I7ith the return of the Regional Superiors the Superior Council
now resumes its general meetings. The main work at present is the
careful examination of the documents of all the Provincial Chapters
with a view to thefu approval.

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V. DOCUMENTS
1. The New discipline fot Minor Orderc and Diaconate
On the L5tb ol Aagust, 1972, Pope Paal VI issued tuo Apostolic
Letters in uhich are prornulgated the new discipline ol Minor Orders
and tbe Diaconate.
Tbe following ffanslation ol the tuo docurnents appeared in tbe
Englisb edition of tbe "Osseraatore Romano" dated 21.st September,
1.972.
An Apostolic Letter by whicb tbe Discipline ol First Tonsure,
Minor Orders and Subdiaconate in tbe Latin Cburch is Reforrned
(<< Ministeria Quaedam >>)
Even in the most ancient times certain ministries were established
by the Church for the puq)ose of suitably giving worship to God and
fot offering service to the People of God according to their needs.
By these ministries, duties of a liturgical and charitable nature, deemed
suitable to varying circumstances, were entrusted to the performance
of the faithful. The conferring of these functions often took place by
a special rite, in which, after God's blessing had been implored, a
Christian was established in a special class or rank for the fulfilment
of some ecclesiastical function.
Some of these functions, whicl were more closely connected
rvith the liturgical action, slowly came to be considered as preparatory
institutions for the reception of sacred ordefs, so that tfie offices of
porter, lector, exorcist iand acolyte were called minor orders in the
Latin Church in relation to the sub&aconate, diaconate and priest-
hood, whic-h were called major orders: generally, though not every-
where, these minor orders were reserved to those who received them
on their way to the pristhood.

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Nevertheless, since the minor orders have not always been the
same, and many tasks connected with tfiem, as at present, have also
been exercised by the laity, it seems fitting to reexamine this practice
and to adapt it to contemporary needs, so that what is obsolete in
these offices may be removed, what is useful retained, what is necessary
defined, and at the same time what is required of candidates for
Holy Orders may be determined.
Actiue participation
lfhile the Second Vatican Council was in preparation, many
pastors of the Church requested that the minor orders and subdiaco-
nate be reexamined. Although the Council did not decree anything
concerning this for the Latin Church, it enunciated certain principles
for solving the question, There is no doubt that the norms laid
down by the Council regarding the general and orderly renewal of the
liturgy ( 1) also include those areas which concern ministries in the
liturgical assembly, so that from the very arrangement of the celebra-
tion the Church clearly appears structured in different orders and
ministries (2). Thus the Second Vatican Council decreed that "in
Iiturgical celebrations, whether as a minister or as one of the faith-
hrl, each person should perform his role by doing solely and totally
what the nature of things and liturgical norms require of him" (3).
!7ith this assertion is closely connected what was written a little
before in the same Constitution: "Mother Church earnestly desires
that al7 the faithful be led to that firll, conscious, and active participa-
tion in liturgical celebrations which is demanded by the nature of the
liturgy. Such participation by the Christian people as "a chosen race,
a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a purchased people" (l Pt Z9: d.
2.4-5) is their right and duty by reason of their baptism. In the res-
(1) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Saoed Liturgy
Sacrosancturn Conciliam, 62: AAS 56, 7964, p. L17; d. also 2L: loc. cit.,
pp. 105-106.
(2) Cf. Ordo Missae, Institutio Generalis Missali.s Romani,58, typical edition
7969, p. 29.
(3) Second Vatican Council, C,onstitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacro-
sanctaT?z Concilian, 28: AAS 56, L964, p. 107.

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totation and promotion of the sacred liturgy, this full and active
participation by all the people is the aim to be considered before all
else; for it is the primary and indispensable source from which the
faithful are to derive the true Christian spirit. Therefore, through
the needed programme of instruction, pastors of souls must zealously
strive to achieve it in all their pastoral work" (4).
In the preservation of certain offices and in their adaptation to
contemporary needs, there
with the ministries of the
are those
'S7ord and
which are especially
of the Altar and in
connected
the Latin
Church are called the offices of lector and acolyte and the subdiaconate.
It is fitting to preserve and adapt these is such a way, that from this
time on there will be two offices: that of lector and that of acolyte,
vrhich will include the functions of the subdiaconate.
Otber offices
Besides the offices common to the Latin Church, there is nothing
ro prevent episcopal conferences from requesting others of the Apos-
tolic See, if they judge the establishment of such offices in their
region to be necessary or very useful because of special reasons.
L'o these belong, for example, the offices of porter, exorcist and
catedrist (5), as well as other offices to be conferred upon those
rvho are dedicated to works of charity, where this service has not
been given to deacons.
It is in accordance with the reality itself and with the contempo-
rary outlook that the above-mentioned ministries should no longer
be called minor orders; their con{erring will not be called "ordination",
but "installation"; only those however who have received the diaco-
nate will be properly known as clerics. Thus there will better appear
the distinction between clergy and laity, between what is proper and
reserved to the clergy and what can be entrusted to the laity; thus
tlrere will appefi more clearly their mutual relationship insofar as
"the common priesthood of the faithful and t}e ministerial or hierar-
(4) Ibid., 14: loc. cit., p. 104.
(5) Cf. Second Vatican Council, D*rer-. Ad Gentes, 15: AAS 58, L966,
p. 965; ibid., 17:. loc. cit., pp.967-968.

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chical priesthood, while they differ in essence and not only in degree,
are nevertheless intettelated. Each of them shares in its own special
rvay in the one priesthood of Christ" (6).
Having weighed every aspect of the question well, havhg sought
the opinion of experts, having consulted with the episcopal conferences
and taken their views into account, and having taken counsel with
our venerable btothers who ate members of the Sacred Congregations
ccmpetent in this matter, by out Apostolic Authority we enact the
fporlolovwisiionngsnoofrmthse, dCeorodgeatoinfgC-anoinf
and
Law
inusnotfial rnaoswniencefsosracrey ,-andfrowme
promulgate them with this Letter.
I. First tonsure is no longet conferred; entrance into the clerical
state is joined to the diaconate.
II. \\7hat up to novr werc called minor orders, are henceforth
called "ministries."
IIL Ministties may be committed to lay Christians; hence they
are no longer to be considered as reserved to candidates for the sacra'
ment of Ordets.
IV. Two ministries, adapted to present-day needs, are to be pre-
served in the whole of the Latin Church, namely those of lector and
acolyte. The functions heretofore commited to the subdeacon are
entrusted to the lector and the acolyte; consequently, the major order
of subdiaconate no longer exists in the Latin Church. There is nothing,
however, to prevent tlre acolyte being also called a subdeacon in some
if it places, the episcopal conference judges opportune.
Vord ol God
V. The lector is appointed for a function proper to him, that of
reading the !7ord of God in the liturgical assembly. Accordingly, he
ts to read tlre lessons from Sacred Scripture, except for the Gospel,
in the Mass and other sacred celebrations; he is to recite the psalm
(6) Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lurnen Gentiurn, 70:
AAS 57,1965, p.14.

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between the readings when there is no psalmist; he is to present the
intentions for the praye.r of the faithful in the absence of a deacon
or cantor; he is to direct the singing and the participation by the
faithful; he is to instruct the faithful for the worthy receprion of the
sacfaments. He can also, insofar as necessary, take care of preparing
othet faithful who by a rcmporary appointment are to read the
Sacred Scripture in liturgical celebrations. That he may more fittingly
and perfectly fulfil these funcdons, let him medirate assiduously on
Sacred Scripture.
Let the lector be aware of the office he has undertaken and make
every effort and employ suitable means to acquire that increasingly
warm and living love (7) and knowledge of the Scriptures that will
make him a more perfect disciple of the Lord.
VI. The acolyte is appointed in order to aid the deacon and to
minister to the priest. It is therefore his duty to attend to the service
of the altar and to assist the deacon and the priest in liturgical celebra-
trons, especiully in the celebration of Mass; he is also to distribute
Holy Communion as an extraordinary minister when the ministers
spoken of in canon 845 of. the Code of Canon Law are not available
or are prevented by ill health, age or another pastoral ministry from
performing this function, or when the number of those approaching
the Sacred Table is so great that the celebration of Mass would be
unduly prolonged.
In the same extraordinary circumstances he can be entrusted with
publicly exposing the Blessed Sacrament for adoration by the faith-
ful and afterwards replacing it, but not with blessing the people.
He can also, to the extent needed, take care of instructing other
f4ithful who by temporary appointment assist the priest or deacon
in liturgical celebrations by carrying tlre missal, cross, candles, etc...,
<,r by performing other such duties. He will perform these functions
the more worthfly if he participates in the Holy Eucharist with
it increasingly fervent piefy, receives nourishment from and deepens
his knowledge of it.
(7) Cr. Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Lirurgy
Sacrosanctum Concilium, 24: AAS 56, 1964, p. 107; Dogmatic Constitution Del
Verban, 25: AAS 58, 7966, p. 829.

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Destined as he is in a special way for the sevice of the altar,
the acolyte should learn all matters concerning public divine worship
and strive to grasp their inner spiritual meaning: in that way he
will he able each day to offer himself entirely to God, be an example
to all by his seriousness and reverence in the sacred building, and
have a sincere love for the Mystical Body o{ Christ, the People of
God, especially the weak and the sick.
VII. In accordance with the venerable uadition of the Church,
rnstallation in the ministries of lector and acolyte is reserved to men.
g F ollow in r e q uir ern en t s
VIII. The following are requirements for admission to the minis-
tries:
a) the presentation of a petition freely made out and signed
by the aspirant to the Ordinary (the bishop and, in clerical institutes
of perfection, the major superior) who has the right to accept the
pcririon;
D) a suitable age and special qualities to be determined by the
episcopal conference;
c) a fftm will to give faithful service to God and the Christian
people.
IX. The ministries are con-ferred by the Ordinary the (bishop
and, in clerical institutes of perfection, the major superior) according
to the liturgical rite "De Institutione Lectoris" and "De Institutione
Acolythi" revised by the Apostolic See.
X. Intervals, determined by the Holy See or the episcopal confer-
ences, shall be observed between the conferring of the ministries of
lector and acolyte whenever more than one ministry is conferred on
the same person.
XI. Candidates for the diaconate and priesthood are to receive
the ministries of lector and acolyte, unless they have already done so,
and are to exercise them for a fitting time, in order to be better
disposed for the future service of the ITord and of the Altar. Dispen-
sation from the part of such can&dates is reserved to the Holy See.

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XII. The conferring of minislliss does not imply the right to
sustenance or salary from the Church.
XIII. The rite of installation of a lector and of an acolyte is to
be published soon by the competent department of the Roman Curia.
T'!7heesoerndoerrmths asthawllhcaotmweeinhtaoveeffdeecctreoend
1 Jamary 1973,
in this Letter, in
motu
proprio form, be established and ratified, notwithstanding anything to
the contrary.
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on 15 August, the Solemnity of
the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in the year 1972, the
tenth of our pontificate.
Paulus P. P. VI
An Apostolic Letter in "Moto Proprio" Form l-aying dowru certain
Nlorrus regarding tbe Samed, Order ol the Diacoruate
("Ad Pascendum")
For the nurturing and constant growth of the People of God,
Christ the Lord instituted in the Church a variety of ministries, which
work for the good of the whole body (1).
From the apostolic age the diaconate has had a clearly out-
standing position among these ministries, and it has always been held
in gteat honour by the Church. Explicit testimony of this is given
by the Aposde Saint Paul both in his letter to the Philippians, in
which he sends his greetings not only to the bishops but also to the
deacons, (2) and h a letter to Timothy, in which he illustrates the
qualities and virtues that deacons must have in order to be worthy
of their ministry (3).
Later, when tle early \\Friters of the Church acclaim the dignity
of deacons, they do not fail to extol also the spiritual qualities and
virtues that ate required for the performance of that ministry, namely
fidelity to Christ, moral integrity, and obedience to the bishop.
(1) Cf. Second Vatican C.ouncil, Dogmatic Constitution Lunaen Gentiun, L8
AAS 57, 1965, pp. 2l-22.
(2) Cf. Phil 1:1.
(3) Cf. 1 Tim 3:&13.

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Saint Ignatius of Antioch declares that the office of the deacon
is nothing other than "the ministry of Jesus Christi, who was with the
Father before all ages and has been mani{ested in the final time" (4).
He also made the following observation: "The deacons too, who are
ministers of the mysteries of Jesus Christ, should please all in every
way; for they are not servants of food and drink, but ministers of the
Church of God" (5).
Saint Polycarp of Smyrna exhorts deacons to "be moderate in
all things, merciful, diligent, living according to the truth of the
Lord, who became the servant of all" (6). The author of the Didascalia
Apostolorurn, recalling the words of Christ, "Anyone who wants to
be great nmoDg you must be your servant" (7), addresses the following
fraternal exhortation to deacons: "Accordingly you deacons also should
behave in such a way that, rt your ministry obliges you to lay down
your lives for a brother, you should do so... If the Lord of heaven
and earth served us and suffered and sustained everything on our
behalf, should not this be done for our brothers all the more by us,
since we are imitators of him and have been given the place of
Christ?" (8).
Deacons' ministry
Furthermore, when the writers of the first centuries insist on the
importance of the deacons' ministry, they give many examples of the
manifold important tasks entrusted to them, and dearly show how
nruch authority they held in the Christian communities and how
great was their contribution to the apostolate. The deacon is descri-
bed as "the bishop's ear, mouth, heart and soul" (9). The deacon is
(4) Ad. Magnesios, YI, l; Patres Apostolici, ed. F.X. Funk, I, Ttibingen
1901, p. 235.
(5) Ad Tral.lianos, II, 3; Patres Apostolici, ed. FJ(. firnk, f, Tiibingen,
1901, p. 245.
(6) Episn:la Ad Pbilippenses, Y,2: Patres Apostolici, ed,. FX. Funk, I,
Tiibingen, 1901, pp. 301-301.
(7) Mt 20:26-27.
lII, (8) Didascalia Apostolorun,
t3, 24: Didascalia et Constitutiones Apos-
tolorum, ed, F.X. Funk, I, Paderborn L906, p, 2L4.
Il, (9) Didascalia Apostoloram, 44, 4i ed. FJ(. Funk, I, p. 138.

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at the disposal of the bishop in order that he may serve the whole
People of God and take care of the sick and the poor (10); he is
correctly and righdy called "one who shows love for otphans, for
the devout and for the widowed, one who is fervent in spirit, one
who shows love for what is good" (11). Furthermore, he is entrusted
with the mission of taking the Holy Eucharist to the sick confined
to their homes (12), of confetting baptism (13), and of attending to
preaching the !7ord of God in accordance with t}e express will of
the bishop.
Accordingly, the diaconate flourished in a wonderful way in the
Church and at the same time gave an outstanding witness of love for
Christ and the brethren through the performance of works of charity
(L4), the celebration of sacred rites (15), and the fulfilment of pastoral
duties (15).
Profound. exanination
The exercise of the office of deacon enabled those who were to
become priests to give proof of themselves, to display the merit of
tmheenirtswfoorrk,reacnedivtiongatchqeuirdeigpnreitpyaoraftiothne-priedslthoofowdhaicnhd
were require-
the office of
pastof.
As -:me went on, the discipline concerning this sacred order
(10) Cf. Traditio Apostolica, 39 and 34: La Tradition Apostolique d'e Saint
Hippolyte. Essai d.e reconstitution by B. Botte, Miinster, L963, pp. 87 and 81.
(lL) Testanentam D.N. Iesu Cbrixi, I p8; edited and translated into
Latin by I-E. Rahmani, Matnz L899, p. 9).
(12) Ct. Saint Justin, Apologia I,65,5 and 67,5: Saint lusdn', APologiae
duae; ed G. Rauschen, Bonn, 1911, pp. 107 and 111.
(1r) Cf. Ternrllian, De Baptisno, XVII, 1: Corpus Cbristianorurn, I, Ter-
tulliani Opera, pars I, Turnholt, 1954, p, 29L.
(14) Cfr. Didascalia Apostolorarn, II, 17, 2: ed. F.X. Funk, I, p. tl2;
c!. Testamenturn D.N. Iesa Cbristi, I, J1: edited and tanslated into Latin by
I.E. Rahmani, Munz L899, p.75.
(15) Cf. Didascalia Apostoloram II,57,6: 58, 1: ed. FX. Funk, I, pp. 162
and 166.
(16) Cf. Saint Cyprian, Epistolae XV and XVI: ed. G. Hartel, Vienna, 1871,
pp. 513-520 cf. Saint Augustine, De catechezandis rudibus, I, cap. I, 1: PL 40.
309-310.

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was changed. The prohibition against conferring ordination without
observing the established sequence of orders was strengthened, and there
was a gradual decrease in the number of those who preferred to re-
main deacons all their lives instead of advancing to a higher order.
As a consequence, the permanent diaconate al-ost entirely disappeared
in the Latin Church. It is scarcely the place to mention the decrees
of the Council of Trent proposing to restore the sacred orders in
accordance with their own natlue as ancient functions within the
Church (17); it was mudr later that the idea matured of restoring
this important sacred order also as a truly permanent rank. Our
predecessor Pius XII briefly alluded to this matter (L8). Finally, the
Second Vatican Council supported the wishes and requests that,
where suc:h would lead to the good of souls, the permanent diaconate
should be restored as an intermediate order befween the higher ranks
of the Church's hierarchy and the rest of the People of God, as an
expression of the needs and desires of the Christian communities, as
a driving force for the Church's service or diaconia towards the local
Christian communities, and as a sign or sacrament of the Lord Christ
himself, v/ho "came not to be served but to serve" (19).
Lonstitution "Lumeru Gentium"
For this reason, at the third session of the Council, in October
1964, the Fathers ratified the principle of the renewal of the diaconate
and in the following November the dogmatic constitution Lumen
Gentiunz was promulgated. In the 29th article of this document a
description is given of the principal characteristics proper to that state:
"At a lower level of the hierarchy are deacons, upon whom hands are
imFosed 'not unto the priesthood, but unto a ministry of service'.
Foi strengthened by sacramental grace, in communion with the bishop
and his presbyteri',m, they serve the People of God in the ministry
of the liturgy, of the word and of charity" (20).
(17) Sessio XfrIII, capp. I-IY: Mansi, )ffiIII, coll' 118-140.
(18) Address to the Pamiapants in the Second International Congress of
the Lay Apostolate, 5 October L957t AAS 49, L9r7, p.925,
(19) Mt 20t28.
(20) AAS 57, 1965, p. 36.
4

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The same constirution made the following declaration about per-
mancy in the rank qf deacon: "These duties (of deacons), to very
necessary for t{re Iife of the Churdr, can in many areas be fulfilled
only with difficulty according to the prevailing discipline of the Latin
Church. For tfiis reason, the diaconate can in the future be restored
as a proper and permanent rank of the hierarchy" (21).
Restoring tbe Diaconate
However, this restoration of the permanent diaconate required
that the instructions of the Council be more profoundly examined and
that there be mature deliberation concerning the juridical status both
of the celibate and married deacon. Similarly it was necessary that
matters connected with the diaconate of those who are to become
priests should be adapted to contemporary conditions, so that the time
of diaconate would furnish that proof of life, of maturiry and of apti-
tude for the priestly ministry which ancient discipline demanded from
candidates for the priest}ood.
Thus on 18 June 1967, we issued in rilota propfio form, the
Apostolic Letter Sacrurn Diaconatus Ordinem, by which suitable cano-
nical norms for the permanent diaconate were established (22). On
17 June of the following year, tl,rough the Apostolic Constitution
Pontificalis Romani Recognitio (2)), we authorized rhe new rite for
the conferting of the sacred orders of diaconate, priesthood and epis-
copacy, and at the same time defined the matter and the form of the
otdination itself.
Now that we are proceeding further and are today promulgating
the Apostolic Letter Ministeria Quaed.arn, we consider it fitting to
issue certain norms concerning the diaconate. \\7e also desire that can-
didates for the diaconate should know what ministries tley are to
exercise before sacred ordination and when and how they are to take
upon themselves the responsibilities of celibacy and liturgical prayer.
Since entrance into the clerical state is defered until diaconate,
(21 Ibid.
(22) AAS 59, 1967, pp. 697-704.
(23) AAS 60, 1968, pp. )69373.

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there no longer exists the rite of first tonsure, by which a layman used
to become a cleric. But a new rite is introduced, by whidr one who
aspires to the diaconate or ptiesthood publicly manifests his will to
offer himself to God and the Church, so that he may exercise a sacred
order. The Church, accepting this offering, selects and calls him to
prepare himsel{ to receive a sacred order, and in this way he is
properly numbered among candidates for the diaconate or priestJrood.
It is especially fitting that the ministries of lector and acolyte
should be entrusted to those who, as candidates for the order of dia-
conate ot priesthood, desire to devote themselves to God and to the
Church in a special way. Fot the Church, which "does not cease to
take the bread of life from the table of the Wotd of God and the
Body of Christ and offer it to the faithful" (24) considers it to be
very opportune that both by study and by gradual exercise of the
ministry of the Votd and of the Altar candidates for sacred orders
should through intimate contact understand and reflect upon the
double aspect of the priesdy office. Thus it comes about that the
autfienticity of the ministry shines out with the greatest effectiveness,
In this way the candidates accede to sacred orders fully aware of their
vocation, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord, constant in prayer and
aware of the needs of the faififul (25).
Norms promulgated
Having weighed every aspect of the question well, having sought
the opinion of experts, having consulted with the episcopal confe-
rences and taken their views into account, and having taken counsel
with our venerable brothers who are members of the Sacred Congre-
gations competent in this matter, by our Apostolic Authority we enact
the following
provisions of
ntohremsc,oddeeroogfatCinagn-on
if and insofar as
Law until now
- necessary from
in force, and we
promulgate them with this Letter.
I. a) A .rite of admission for candidates to the diaconate and to
rJre priesthood is introduced. In order that this admission be properly
(24) Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verburn, 2lz
AAS 58,1966, p.827.
(2r) G. Rom. 12:11-11

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made, the free petition of the aspfuanr, made out and signed in his
own hand, is rcquired, as well as the written acceptance of the com-
petent ecclesiastical superior, by which the selection by the Church
is brought about.
Professed members of clerical congregations who seek the priest-
hood are not bound to this rite.
b) The competent superior for this acceptance is the Ordinary
(the bishop and, in clerical institutes of perfection, the major superior).
T'hose can be accepted who give signs of an authentic vocation and,
endowed with good moral qualities and free from mental and physical
defects, wish to dedicate their lives to the service of the Church for
the glory of God and the good of souls. ft is necessary that those
who aspire to the transitional diaconare will have completed bt least
their twentieth year and have begun their course of theological studies.
c) In virtue of the acceptance the candidate must care for his
vocation in a special way and foster it. He also acquires the right to
the necessary spiritual assistance by whicJr he can develop his vocation
and submit unconditionally to the will of God.
II. Candidates for the permanent or transitional diaconate and
for the priesthood are to receive the ministries of lector and acolyte,
unless they have already done so, and arc to exercise them for a fiting
time, in order to be better disposed for the future seryice of the
'S7ord and of the Altar.
Dispensation from the reception of these ministries on the part
of such candidates is reserved to the Holy See.
Stgned declaration
III. The liturgical rites by yhish admission of candidates for the
diaconate and the priesthood tales place and the above-mentioned
ministries are conferred should be performed by the Ordinary of the
aspirant (the bishop and, in clerical institutes of perfection, the major
superior).
IV. The intervals established by the Holy See or by the episcopal
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sthtuedimesin-istroyf
the ministry of lector and that of acolyte,
of acolyte and the order of deacon must
and between
be observed.
V. Before ordination candidates for the diaconare shall give to
the Ordinary (the bishop and, in clerical institutes of perfection, the
major superior) a declaration made out and signed in thir own hand,
by which they testify that they are about to receive the saced order
frcely and of their own accord.
VI. The special consecration of celibary observed for the sake of
the kingdom of h.urr"r, and its obligation for candidates to the priest-
hood and for unmarried candidates to the diaconare are indeed linked
with the diaconate. The public commirment to holy celibacy before
God and the Church is to be celebrated in a particular rite, even by
religious, and it is to precede ordination to the diaconate. Celibacy
taken on in this way is a diriment impediment to entering marriage.
In accordance with the traditional discipline of the Church, a
mamied deacon who has lost his wife camot enter a new marriage (26).
VII. a) Deacons called to the priesthood are nor to be ordained
until they have completed the course of studies prescribed by the norms
of the Apostolic See.
b) In regad to the course of theological studies to precede the
ordination of permanent deacons, the episcopal con{erences, with
attention to the local situation, will issue the proper norms and
submit them for the approval of the Sacred Congregation for Catholic
Education.
Liturgy ol tbe Hours
VIII. In accordance with norms 29-30 of. the General fnstruction
for tfie Liturgy of the Hours:
a) Deacons called to the priesthood are bound by their sacred
ordination by the obligation of celebrating the liturgy of the hours;
b) it is most fitting that permanenr deacons should recite daily
at least a parr of the litorgy of the hours, to be determined by the
episcopal conference.

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IX. Enrance into the cledcal state and incardination into a diocese
are brought about by ordination to the diaconate.
X. The rite of admission for candidates to the diaconate and
priesthood and of the special consecration of holy celibacy is to be
published soon by the competent department of the Roman Curia.
Transitional Norrrus. Candidates for the sacrament of Orders who
have already received first tonsure before the promulgation of this
Letter, retain all the duties, rights and privileges of clerics. Those who
have been promoted to the order of subdiaconate are held to the
obligations taken on in regard to both celibacy and the liturgy of the
hours. But they must celebtate once agah their public commitment
to celibacy before God and the Church by the new special rite preced-
ing ordination to the diaconate.
All that has been decreed by us in this Letter, in rnotu proprio
form, we order to be con{itmed and tatified, anything to the contrary
notwithstanding. !7e also determine that it shall come into fotce
on L January 1973.
Given in Rome at Saint Peter's, on L5 August, the Solemnity
of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mury, it the year 1972, the
t(nth of our pontificate.
PAI]LUS P.P. VI
(26) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic l*tluer Sa*am Diaconatus Orilinem, l& AAS
59, 1967, p. 701.
2. Mass in honout of Blessed Michael Rua
On
'Vorsbip
5 October, 1972 Tbe
approued tbe Latin text
Sacred Congregation fo,
and tbe Italian translation
Diaine
ol tbe
Mass in bonour ol Blessed Michael Rua. The Latin text is gitten here;
ue are still awaiting tbe approual ol tbe trartslation into English.

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Texto latino
Antilona ad introitum (.1 Sam. 2,35)
Suscitabo mihi sacerdotem fidelem, qui iuxta cor meum et animam
meam faciet.
Collecta
Deus Pater omnipotens, cuius imaginem beatus MichaEl Rua
sacerdos tuus in adolescentibus docuit excudendam, fac nos quaesumus
tua clarescere sanctitate, ut qui ad iuventutem educandam vocamur,
formam Filii tui exhibeamus ingenuam.
Qui tecum.
Lectio Printa
(Vivit Dominus, et vivit anima hra, quia non derelinquam te)
Lectio libri Regum (2 Reg. 2,L.6-15)
Cum levare vellet Dominus Eliam per turbinem in caelum, ibant
Elias et Eliseus de Galgalis. Dixitque Elias ad Eliseum: << Sede hic,
quia Dominus misit me usque ad Iordanem >. Qui ait: << Vivit Do-
minus, et vivit anima tua, quia non derelinquam te >. Ierunt igitur
ambo pariter. Et quinquaginta viri de filiis prophetarum secuti sunt
eos, qui et steterunt e contfa longe; illi autem ambo stabant supet
Iordanem.
Tulitque Elias pallium su rm et involvit illud et percussit aquas,
quae divisae sunt in utramque partem, et transierunt ambo per siccum.
Cumque transissent, Elias dixit ad Eliseum: <,< Postula quod vis ut
f.aciam tibi, antequam tol7ar a te >. Dixitque Eliseus: << Obsecro ut
fiat in me duplex spiritus tuus >. Qui tespondit: << Rem difficilem
postulasti; attamen si videris me, quando tolTat a te, erit tibi quod
petisti; si autem non videris, non erit >>.
Cumque pergerent, et incedentes sermocinarentuf, ecce currus
igneus et equi ignei diviserunt utrumque; et ascendit E1ias per turbinem
in caelum. Eliseus autem videbat et clamabatt <<Patet mi, pater mi!
currus Isradl et auriga eius! >>. Et non vidit eum amplius. Apprehen-
ditque vestimenta sua et scidit illa in duas partes. Et levavit pallium
Eliae, quod ceciderat ei. Reversusque stetit super ripam fordanis; et
pallio Eliae, quod ceciderat ei, percussit aquas, et non sunt divisae;

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sf di-i1; << IJbi est Deus Eliae etiam nunc? >. Percussitque aquas,
et divisae sunt huc atque illuc, et transiit Eliseus.
Videntes autem filii prophetanrm, qui erant in Ieridro e conua,
dixerunt: <,< Requievit spititus Eliae super Eliseum >. Et venientes in
occursum eius, adoravenrnt eum proni in terram.
Verbum Domini.
Psalrnus responsorius (Ps. 15,L-2,5-6,7 -8,1L)
g. Dominus pars hereditatis meae.
Conserva me, Deus, qu6niam speravi in te.
Dixi Domino: << Dominus meus es tu,
bonum mihi non est sine te )>. ry.
Dominus pars hereditatis meae et calicis mei:
tu es qui detines sortem meam.
Funes ceciderunt mihi in praeclaris;
insuper et hereditas mea est mihi. ry.
Benedic,am Dominum qui tribuit mihi intellectum;
insuper et in noctibus erudierunt me renes mei.
Proponeba- Dominum in conspectu meo semper,
quoniam a dextris est mihi, non commovebor. y.
Notas mihi facies vias vitae,
plenitudinem laetitiae cum vultu tuo,
delectationes in dextera tua usque in finem. V.
Lectio secunda
(Caritas numquam excidit)
Lectio Epistolae beati Pauli apostoli ad Corinthios (L Cor. 12,
3l-13, 8a)
Fratres: Aemulamini charismata muota.
Et adhuc excellentiorem viam vobis demonstro.
Si linguis hominum loquar, et Angelorum, catitatem autem non habeam,
factus sum velut aes sonans aut cymbah,m tinniens.
Et si habuero prophetiam
et noverim mysteria omnia et onnem scientiam,
et si habuero ofirnem fidem ita ut montes transferam,

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caritatem autem non habuero,
nihil sum.
Et si distribuero in cibos paupefl.rm omnes facultates meas,
et si tradidero corpus meum ita ut ardeam,
caritatem autem non habuero,
nihil mihi prodest.
Caritas patiens est, benigna est.
Caritas non aemulatur, non agit superbe,
non inflatur, non est ambitiosa,
non quaerit quae sua sunt, non irritatur,
non cogitat malum,
non gaudet super iniquitatem, congaudet autem veritati;
smni2 suffert, omnia credit, omnia sperat, omnia sustinet.
Caritas numquam excidit.
Verbum Domini.
(t7t3)
Alleluia et Versus ante Euangeliurn (Io 15,16)
y. Alleluia
f. Ego vos elegi de mundo, ut eatis et fructum afferatis, et
fructus vester maneat, dicit Dominus.
ry. Alleluia.
Eaangeliurn
(Veni, sequere me)
Lectio sancti Eoangelii secundum Marcum (10, 17-30)
In illo tempofe, cum egrederetur in viam, accurtens quidam et
genu flexo ante eum, rcgabat eum: << Magister bone, quid faciam ut
vitam aetetnam percipiam? >.
Jesus autem dixit ei: u Qrid me dicis bonum? Nemo bonus,
nisi unus Deus. Praecepta nosti: "Ne occidas, ne adulteres, ne fureris,
ne falsum testimonium dixeris, ne fraudem feceds, honora patrem
tuum et matfem" >>.
Ille autem dixit ei: << Magister, haec omnia conservavi a iuventute
mea )>.
Iesus autem, intuitus sum, dilexit eum, et dixit illi: << Unum

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tibi deest: vade, quaecumque habes vende et da pauperibus, et habebis
thesaurum in caelo; et veni, sequere me
Qui, contristatus in hoc verbo, abii't>. maerens; erar enim habens
possessiones multas.
Et circumspiciens Iesus ait discipulis suis: << Quam difficile qui
pecunias habent in Regnum Dei introibunt! >.
Discipuli autem obstupescebant in verbis eius. At Iesus rursus
respondens ait illis: <( Filii, quam difficile est confidentes in pecuniis
in Regnum Dei introire! Facilius est camelum per foramen acus transire
quam divitem intrare in Regn'rm Dei >.
Qui magis admirabantur dicentes ad semetipsos: << Et quis potest
salvus fieti? >.
Intuens iflos Iesus ait: << Apud homines impossibile est, sed non
apud Deum; omnia enim possibilia sunt apud Deum >>.
Coepit Petrus ei dicere: << Ecce nos dimisimus omnia, et secuti
sumus te >.
Ait Iesus: << Amen dico vobis: Nemo esr qui reliquerit domum,
aut fratres, aut sorores, aut matrem, aut patfem, aut filios, aut agros
propter me et propter Evangelium, qui non accipiat centies tanfirm,
nunc in tempore hoc, domos et fratres et sofores et matres et filios et
agros cum persecutionibus, et in saeculo futuro vitam aeternam >>.
Verbum Domini.
Super oblata
Quae tibi donamus, Domine, spiritalem nostri oblationem signi-
ficent: ut quae in corpus et sanguinem Christi Filii tui mutantur,
divinam nostri mutationem producant.
Per Christum.
Antilona ad communionem (Io 17,26)
Notum feci eis nomen tuum, et notum faciam, ut dilectio qua
dilexisti me in ipsis sit.
Post comrnunionern
Quos tua mensa, Domine, satiasti redde prudentia vigiles et
caritate sollertes, ut in parvulis ac pauperibus ministrandis omnibus
omnia esse valeamus et ineffabile largitatis tuae promere sacramentum.
Per Christum.

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VI. PONTIFICAL MAGISTERIUM
1. A Hundred yeas . Good example and work in abundance!
Address given by Pope Paul VI to the 2300 Daughters of Mary
Help of Christians assembled in the Yatican "Hall of Blessings" on
the occasion of the Congregation's first centenary.
The official text appeated in the "Osservatore Romano" (16 July,
1972). The following text is talen from a tape-recording, and adds
(in italics) the many spontaneous "asides" of His Holiness during the
address.
First ol all, our greeting go to the Motber General; and tbrougb
her we greet this fine and wonderlul (<< bella bella >>) religious larnily
oi sisters.
Dear sisters in Cbrist, ue are deligbted to receiue you in audience.
Our regret is tbat our tirne is neuer as abundant as oar allection lor
yoa. You can certainly see at this n2oment how mucb ioy, appreciat-
ion, hope and adniration we leel for your religious farnily; and bou,
,,ts we look around, we seerz to see notbiilg less tban a panotarna of
the Churcb, since you are indeed, nou scattered in euery corner ol
tbe globe. And so togetber let us reioice uith Mary Help of Christians.
Beloved daughtets in Christ.
lVith our spirit {rrll of fatherly emotion we extend our greeting
to so many chosen representatives of the Daughters of Our Lady Help
of Christians, come to bring us the testimony of their loyalty and devo-
tion in the centenary year of the foundation of their Instirute.
Tbe Holy Father had me in mind
Before addressirug your good selues, and belore thinking ol tbat
uast number ol Salesian sisters wbo are united witb you at this mo-
rnent gazing bitber as at the Church's focal poirtt, we raise otr.r minds
to all the sisters ubo haue gone belore you. A hundred years! ,So

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many generations! So many sisters! So many wonderful exarztples!
Sacb great uork! Such fatigues and rnerits! So rnany gracious souls!
All sent by tbe Lord. and. nou taken back to his bosorn. Tbey haue
accornplished, their pilgrimage and are assuredly in beauen gioing
glory to tbeir Madonna.
Indeed to these cbosen souls we send. our greetings. 'We pray
that God, if tbey so need, may grafit them all complete peace; and
tbougb our buman laculties lack tbe pouer to perceioe tbe Corumu-
nion of Saints, yet ue reioice in it iust tbe same. Il we bad the
- - ability to perceiae reality as it truly is spiritual reality ue uould
mdeed see ourselaes in the rnid.st of an enorlrzor,r.s gathering ol saintly
souls, looely and pure, all bere at tbis moment to celebrate tbe cente-
nary of your spiritual family.
This meeting calls to our mind the great and well-deserving affay
of your humble and generous fellow Sisters who, in every continent,
spend their lives joyfully and cheerfuIly.
(Indeed, ue baoe rernarked tbi:s serenity and joy on the laces
ol tbe sisters) working ioylully and energetically for tbe interests ol
tbe kingdorn ol God., to help the Cbucb, and lor tbe good ol souls.
"A,s we think of the r6le your zealous religious family plays in
the Chuch, a host of thoughts and emotions crowd in on us, and we
only wish we could give them fitting expression without being Iimited
by this brief audience.
Ve are inundated witb duties ubicb cut sbort tbe tirne at our
dtsposal; so, as u)e said before, ue are all the ?nore open uitb you
m mind and. heart euen tbougb time is short. I uould like all ol
jou to say "THE POPE HAS THOUGHT OF ME".
The Cburcb is bonoured. by your progress
Ve wish however our first words to be words of gratitude
to God.
Indeed ue do tbank God at tbis rlorzent, because, as we look at
you, be helps us see and sense sornetbing ol bis presence in tbe bistory
of hurnan affairs. You are all the work ol bis bands and you are
belping in his plans ol rnercilul salaation. Togetber let us tbank birn
lTohratnhkesyeubulnodr.retbdisyebaerasu. tTifublanmkanyiofeus,tadteioanr. God. Te Deun laud,amus.

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And we are oruly toaching tbe fringe. One day we sball see your
rruagnificent religious lamily in its splendour, its ricbness in uisdorn,
?nerc!, and actioe Godly presence. So oar first gratitude is to God,
and then to one and all of you for the comforting and promising
spectacle tfiat your congregation offers us on such a significant date.
A bundred yea.rs are not enough lor tbe Daughters of Mary
Help of Cbristians. Hou many, tben? A tbousand? Ve must cast
loruard our tbougbts and, gratitude to all the luture aocations: tbey
uill come to your welcoming arnzs as sisters, tben tbey will be your
pupil's!7aendseleatienr
uill
you
be
the
your motber superiors.
uninterrupted continuiry
and
splendid
flouri-
shing of an ideal of charity and zeal.
I'rn sure you all knou hou to erzbroider! Vbat bappens uhen,
alter rnaybe ueeks, montbs, years,
spread it out and say, "Look, isn't
loa haae linisbed
it loaely!" You
tbe job? You
baue uorked at
one d.etail, tben anotber, tben a tiny section, etc. All ol a sudden
tbe whole design opens ap arud displays its beauty and meaning. So
it is uith yoar congregation. Ve open up tbe embroidery of your
bistory and see tbat in a hundred years you baoe indeed accomplisbed
a louely pattern ol goodness, louing care, loae ol God arud salaation
of so'!u7els.reLtuertnustoretphoaitcefirtsogt emtboemr. ent when this ideal of charity and
zeal burgeoned forth, that distant 15th. of August, 1872, when, thanks
to St. John Bosco and St. Maria MazzareTTo, the first daughters of
Our Lady Help of Christians at Mornese offered the Lord their young
lives and began their apostolic progress along the ways of the world.
In the course of these hundred years, thar little seed has shot up
and grown in a marvellous way, like a majestic tree whose branches
now reach to every part of the wodd, wherever the ardent zeal of.
the sons of Don Bosco is poured forth. How many reasons, therefore,
for congraarlating you, beloved daughters! May you be blessed for
them. The Church is honoured by your progress, your evangelical
testimony, your generous apostolic dedication.
But it is dear that the celebration of such an important date
in the Iife of your Institute cannot be limited just to looking back
at a luminous past.
Now a look at tbe present. The address we sbould. haue prepared
uould baue been indeed interesting: to point out briefly the pbeno-

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nzena of religioas and spiritual life; today's contradictions and diffi-
culties; tbe buman ernbroilments tbat surround us; to examine and
giae an accoant of tbe state of things after a hundred years.
I This would indeed be extremely interesting. Bat imagi?le you
ayGococudors-agenilotoeefosnrmoypaopkuoerrttdbuunistiiteieesx,sa.ynozEainuraetrnieosnipldolyatsoiliybuilr-itiaeiss,eiouyneoriyusrdldairiynffiiytceuodlut,ieyusoi,suyboautroer
at least auare of the present, and watcb honestly and diligently ooer
this oista ubich tbe Lord opens up for your mission.
It is necessary to look towards tbe fature, too
Vben at uork, ue often look about us, don't ue? Ve glance
ahead at our surroundings, our task in band, abat tomorrou uill
bfing. In a sense ue become propbets in a small way. At least il we
don't make lirrn pronouncements, we ask questions about the future.
The Lord not only perrnits, but urges as to keep aft ele ort tbe
iuture. "Lift up your heads and look," says the Lord irt one ol bis
aenxdbolortoaktiotnos.tb"eLfiulttuurpel.o'uVrebdeoadnso.t"
You too nzust lilt up
know delinitely wbat
your heads
lies abead,
but ue can catch a glimpse of oar future tasks, duties, tbe patbs our
liues must follou.
'S7ill your congregation be able to respond to the appeal of the
Church in this present tormented hour?
You know that our heart lies deep in this subject.
I sball do my utruost
What a rnornehtous bour tor the Cburcb! You are uell aware
yaltoibaorfoeiunuitttgbgb.bei-ntysJ??,ua-g-snotdoaudwyblobrioetuatsltoeuooklieuilcnrtloiwodhnbnoteosall,drfcntggsyoweoounuisdetrbriianbnstrsioooetruunaulrstcibsttoi-.oitln'biVn?isgeth?eato-sskso:ouwuwlbsbtabaotetftsismoeoueretdrsoomalfrosegdooeuworlnsed
And tben ue are enguffed in tbis great flood ol entertainment
and dissipatioru proper to these times. You certainly rnust aieu it

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uitb fear. Irnagine then how your Pope feels about it when he
oiews'Wtbeissasitlaitne
ol allairs so tempestaous.
tbe barque ol Peter: it wiil
neuer
sink.
But
peter
himsell was te*ified during tbe storra on Lake Genesareth (and
sailing
at-tbat
sulaeseph.isHeiorbe)is- lesauns dslJuensbuesrisnlgerpigt!btVine
baae aluays
the rnidst oy i
puzzled
ttor*.
Tbe disciples call oat to hirn, "At^aken, Lird! Look, tDe are sinking!,'
lesus arises, and uitb a diaine, kingly gesture, be calms tbe wlids.
A-11eat serenity preaails.
"Wby are you afraid?" as
Then
il to
he turns to bis disciptes and says,
sa!, "I arn bere. Eien il I steZp,
yoa
uit!
nast not
9l)rist is
lear
uith
what is going on around you. For whoeuer is
life, is witb God, is aictorious ouer all opposition
and dllliculties encountered on the way ol lile.,,
\\7ill your congregation know how to answer the call of the Church
in her hour of torment?
IToliness is the answer
in
b-eMr yhebaorpt,e"iIs
tbat
shall
eacb one ol you
do rny u.tmost,.
will
reply
silently,
deep
doun
IUThat
vitality of
means will your congregation use to
the robust stock planted by your
ensure that the old
holy founders wifl
continue to flourish in all its fulness? For these questions, my
daughters, there is only one answer,
to pat euerytbing brielly in a lew words. Time is lacking to
dilate on the rnany diflicutt problerns and agonizirugs ol today;
f-ruitfuthlneersesisofotnhley
one
past,
answer; and as it explains the
infallibly ensures the vitality of
exffaordinary
your institute
for the future: boliness. If your are holy, there is little else to say.
mid,sFt oorfyaoull
this means ensuring the primary of interior life in the
your educational, charitable and missionary activities,
without ever fearing that your apostolic dynamism will be diminished
thereby, or that you may be prevented from dedicating yourselves
completely to the service of others.

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Loae ol prdyer
So many obiect tbat prayer takes time and kills attention and
tbougbt. Tbis is not trae. Prayer rneans tbat ue restock ourselaes
uitb energy, thougbts, rnotiaes, strengtb, inspiration, tbe presertce of
God; and oar poor hurnan actiaity is thus rendered capable ol getting
- things done great things, too!
It means loving pruyet' poverty, the spirit of sactifice, the cross'
It also means a pattioJ.laf commitment on your part to reproduce in
your life of piety and apostolate the examples of the adoring and
operative love of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Oh, how we would like this matked Marian character, which
everywhere constitutes the unmistakable note of the spiriruality of the
daojhters
you in all
of
its
OoruigrinLaal dfryesHhenlepsso.fYCohurishtaiaoenst,bteopbriueilepgreeseorvlebdel-oanmgoinngg
ttohinagretliigiMouas rfya.mIiliy
wbich belongs completely to Mary and owe_s eoery-
not your Institute the living mon"ment that Don
Bosc-o wished to erecr to our Lady, as a sign of imperishable gatitude
for the benefits received from her?
And was it not also a sign of hope tbat bis difficult and conzplex
u,ork needed. To speak paradoxically, so rnucb was accomplished uitb
so little.
Yes, daughters, as long as you learn, {ollowing the .example of
Mary, to direit everything to Christ, her divine Son, as long as you
ke"p'yoor eyes fixed on h.., God's masterpiece, *1s model and ideal
owdefidl"lircn.aretyivoencr,ondinsreiyecrr"aiopteldifntlfiefyeoa, unthrdeIfnessruvtpiotpuuotrer,t
of all apostolic heroism, there
that source of genero,sity and
holiness and grace, which has
made you such valuable collaborators of Our Lord Jesus Christ for the
salvation of souls.
Tbis is ubat the Churcb expects lrom yotr.
And it is not a rzatter ol a mere promise, dear daughters in
Cbrist. Fnovr vou rHE cHURcH EXPECTS MUcH'.. iust as irt tbe past;
in fact
days it
rfloreso, as today's sacrilices are lelt rnore markedly.
is not so easy to be a religious, to wear tbe babit and
Tbese
to liae
and uork in tbe midst ol youtb.

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Di.fficulties tbere baue aluays been, but today (and we know)
cne need,s a larger dose ol generosity, dedication, readiness to suffer,
patience and uisdoru than was needed. yesterda!. So in the name ol
Cbrist (Wbom ue represent so unworthily vE AsK oF You DEDrcATroN,
SACRIFTCE, TOTAL GTVTNG OF YOURSELyES TO THE MADONNA FOR THE
GLORY OF CHRIST IESUS.
This is what the Church expects from you. Do not disappoint
her expectation, but respond to a degree beyond her hopes.
Il onty ue u)ere able to console tbe hearts of lesus and Mary in
this way:
natter of
to giae naore than ubat is
sanctity; to go beyond the
aosrkdeinda-ry
but this "nlore"
?zzeasure is wbat
is 4
Our
Lord expects lrom us et)efi wben be does not say so' or sa:)s so as a
counsel rather than a PrecePt.
Souls at bigh-pressure
I Our prayer is with you; and tbis is a brief sentence, but rzean
itt ue sball pray for yoa.
Our prayer asks from the Lord, through the intercession of the
Blessed Virgin, for the reward of etemal merits for what you have
done so fat, fot constant generosity for the present, and for increasingly
abundant apostolic fruits for the future.
Ve bope you will aooid, ubat, alas, bappens at tinzes to certain
religious farnilies. Don't allow yoar pressure ga.age to drop; ft.or yoill
capacity
laitb in
iyoorusrarcnriilsicseiontotloesdseimn;innoisrhtb. eItirnispeotuusr
ol your enthusia-sm
bope, rather, tbat
and
you
always be bigb-pressure souls in a ioyous erttbusiasm.
At tbis juncture may I quote Our Lord's uords: 'Tou baae cbosen
tbe better part". Hold it tigbt as a precious possession.
Our thoughts and our affections are with you.
Ve tbank you in tbe name of atl who neaer tbank you: we tbank
yowofbuoGlmoordy'tsohuekigbnogiuoddeorybnoe,unaebnlaidtuteeloddroIrstesoacloyierttyos;oa!ionlsa, tf;boeMr tnyhaednaCteuhguobrfctehar,sllf,ottbrbeatsbneek, gsyoloourulys.
God gr:ant you happiness; God bless you. Rernernber, notbing is lost;
notbiig is lost! Hittory rnarcbes on; time rans out; but uork done
for God is engraued on bis Sacred Heart and renzains tbere aluays. One
5

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yy d.a2 will lind in it your reuard lor your dedication to the glory
ol God.
fq[y, our apostolic blessing, which we impart to you and to all
your fellow-sisters as a pledge of the choicest graces of ir."u.n.
Rernernber that our beart is open to you alt. ve uant our allection
to. g_o- witb our blessing to reacb out tto ubereaer tberc is a riiugbter
ll - \\ary Help ol Cbristians in euery corner ol tbe gtobe tbe'aery
- - il lurtbest a'uay in Patagonia. Tbriugb tbe power-and good.ness
- God, ntay our apostolic blessing reacb eiery ,oiou of tbe iartb.
2. Tmdition inspires and urges progress
During his journey to udine on the occasion of the Eucharistic
C_ongress, Pope Paul VI, on the 16th. September lur,, ,roff"d ,t
Venige and gave an address to priests, brothers
in "Ossefvatore Romano", 17 Sept., 1972.)
and
nunr.
(F,rll
te*t
The Holy Father took his cue from the
Mark, where he was speaking, He referred
teovoitcaatisve,,aBapslaficceafor:fIl
st.
of
higt-ory, of mingled echoes of different civilizations, u plu.-. {illed with
sublime
eloquent
atrfutisotuicgh-exthperescseinontusr,iems aetvuernedtoloon*g
ago, and yet ever powerfully
pr.r"rrt day,'. H.re ,r. ,aa.
selections from the Pope's address.
What a wonderful vision it is granted to us to summon up in
our inmost heafi, a vision which evokes a marvellous and centuries-
old chdstian experience, which
just its monument, but a living
has
and
consrructed here not only and not
original expression, which gathers
together
and love
ve
and unites
generations
would thus
ilnonog-npeasidt eanntdicathlousendo"ftthirert.pmrr.prt*etd*pdu,lste.
oI fuirh
future.
like to underline the imporiance of tradition. !7e
yould
for it.
it and
urge you to preserve it, to encourug. a ,.nr.
!7e urge you to maintain your .on?id.nce in
to use it as a powerful and inspiring force,
of it and respecr
it, to understand
and as a serious
and reponsible commitment to further gro*th and continual pfogress.
An unbreakable cbain
\\tre think that the goodness and wisdom of the peoples of venero,
to whom you belong, together with the firmness and-seriousness of

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your priestly and religious consecration, make you especially open to
receive and to make fruitful our simple and paternal exhotation: lbve
the treasure of the spiritual heritage which Venice as it were sums up
and offers you in this place.
The problem of fidelity to the religious patrimony received is not
a problem only of today, although at the present time it presents itself
with a certain seriousness that especially justifies, it seems to us, this
spontaneous conversation. Indeed, on an occasion such as this, u/hat
other words could you expect {rom us? Do you recall the preoccupation
of Saint Paul? "If anyone preaches a version of the Good News
different from the one you have already heard, he is to be condemned"
(Gal. 1:9): here the "hearing", the receiving, indicates a funda-ental
moment of the continuity and fruitfulness of the Christian message, that
is of tradition. This is confirmed by the words with which the
Apostle introduces his important testimony concerning the Eucharistic
Ivlystery: "For this is what I received from the Lord, and in turn pass
on to you" (1 Cor. llz23).
To receive and to pass on: this is tradition, of which Saint Paul
shows himsel{ such a iealous guardian.
This receiving from the Lord, and then passing on, and again
- receiving and continuing to pass on with faithfulness and in entirety
("...take gteat carc of what has been entrusted to you, have nothing
to do with pointless philosophical discussion..." [ 1 Tim. 6t20f) without
dranges, without ceasing to listen to the truth, without lending an ear
to ar:bittxy interpretation or to fables, to the myths of yesterday and
today (cf. 2 T1m.
broken. It is the
4:4)
duty
o- f
this constitutes a chain that cannot be
our moment in history. And it concerns
above a1l, obviously, the unchangeable content of the religious and
moral teaching of the Catholic faith.
Ileligious and baruan aalaes of nadition
But then tradition brings with it so many other values. It is
enough to think of t}ose which concem ecclesiastical discipline, worship
and Chdstian piety, spiritudity and asceticism; and those concerning
the figure or, as people say today though not without an involvement
- in a conffoversy t'hat is often fruitless and dangerous the identity of
- the priest and the religious, which has come down to us after centuries

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of definition and consolidation, on the foundation of the essential ele-
ments that go back to the will of the Saviour. They ate a17 values that
have been tried, proved in various ways and guaranteed by the teachings
and directives of ecclesiastical authoriry, by the lives of rJre saints,
by the "sense of the faitlrful." What a ric-h and precious heritage
which a certain conformist, iconoclastic, woddly and desacralizing men-
tality risks undermining and dissipating. It is easy to take away and
to suppress, but it is not easy to substitute, as long as one seeks and
intends not iust any substitute, but a substitute of authentic value. i
And we could make analogous observations concerning some
- - human values and not a few of thought, att,hle and civic existenec.
Tradition is not imrnobility
Matk well, ours is not a praise of imes past, but the recognition
- - and acceptancs sen5gious, justified and dutiful of values that
if transcend human competence and conquer time, even the maturing
,of some of these values has taken place through rhe course of history.
Recognizing and appreciating the values of tradition is not passivity,
but an attitude that is positive, reflective, critical and free. It is a way
o{ being committed. Respect for, a sense of and a love of tradition
are not immslfiry. On the contrary it demands moral strength, dis-
cipline in thought and habit, solidiry, depth, an abrhty to resist the
shortlived fashion of the times; it requires, in a word, personality: that
human and Christian personality of which so much is said, but which
is not so easily formed and possessed.
For the values of which it is the carrier and for the commi .nent
which it demands of us, tradition obviously cannot but be an element
of progress, both personal and communal. Being a living reality, tra&-
tion has in itself a striving towards the future. It guarantees organic
growth; it assures t-he authentic and not deceptive rcalizationof progress;
it assutes genuine and not just apparent development.
And so we can rejoice sincerely at the efforts that are being made,
and encourage tfiose efforts that must be undertaken, tfuough a healthy
tenewal in the level of doctrine and pastoral activity, in order to attain
a deeper, purer, more committed taith, a Christian life more intense in
all its aspects, botJr individual and social, a witness of priesdy and
religious Iife more closely modelled on rhe Gospel and the example of

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Jesus, and hence more effective for the salvation of modern man.
\\flhat great undertakings the Church in Venice has promoted in the
course of its history, ih order to face and solve the problems of
the t:me! lVhat gteat and valuable works it has brought to comple-
tion! How numerous are the ranks of its Saints! From these examples
therefore gather energy and enthusiasm for a gteat leap forward,
keeping your creative abilities alert and ever renewed, with the aim
of finding an adequate and far-sighted solution to the problems of today
and tomorrow.
fn entrusting to your intelligence and to your goodwill these reflec-
tions, we conclude with this exhortation: Be faithful, generously and
dynamically faithful to Christ, to the Church, to your vocarion, to your
mission.
3. Morals... a re-sttengthening
Durirug tbe past summer months, tbe Holy Father, in his general
audiences, gaae eleuen addresses, all on the sarue tbeme: "Christian
Life & Morality." "I7e need ", be said, "to rediscover the principles
basic to our conduct." Tbe addresses be desuibed as "tteating of impor-
tant themes, but in such simple terms as to bring us back to the
Gospels, where the revelation of God's great truths is reserved for
his 'little ones'." We giae a selection of these addresses...
a) Changing tirnes... tbe searcb lor tbe unchangeable
Address of Pope PaulVI at tbe general audience giaen 5 July, 1972.
I7hat is life? \\7hat quelifies it essentially?
From this elementary, but fundamental question comes a first an-
swer, whidr is worth remembering: life is made for acrion; it is not
static, it is dynamic; it changes, develops, moves, seeks, desires, works,
aims at some goal. It is not enough to exist; it is necessary to use
existence to reach something new, something more, something perfect,
good and hrppy. ff experience has awakened in us this conception of
Ii[e in search of a purpose, we have arrived at the threshold of the
moral problem, the human problem par excellence. If action, in
fact, which gives increase and meaning to life, uses what is most

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human in us, thought, will, and therefore freedom, t}en to speak of
a moral and to speak of a human act is the same thing (cf. S. Th. I-II,
1, 3). This first observation is already a break-through, which would
invite us to linger over it with other reflections, among which let the
following be sufficient for the present: we cannot disregard the moral
value of our life.
Here a second observation arises and it is tfiis: in the wodd in
u,hich we live, does there exist, or rather does there still endure a
moral system that stamps on life its human face, as we have been
accustomed up to now to consider normal and authentic? Let us
note some general aspects of our times, by whicl our lives are deeply
upset. For example, one of the most general aspects of present history
is change: everything changes. There is not a corner of our lives that
is immune to change. Every science, every art, every activity, every
social relationship, every collective phenomenon, such as the school,
transportation, the economy, health and social services, the legislative
and political frameworks...; everything changes, the public mentality,
rnorals, ...so much so that the history of our times is charucteized
with the terms "evolutionr" "pfogress," "revoludon." Is not t-he
human type" "changing too? \\Vhat human, moral element remains,
in this fastmoving transformation of life? '!7e possess a heritage of
concepts, evaluations,
changed?
traditions...
rVhat
is
to
be
kept?
I
'ffhat
to
be
Certain aalues essential
Also in the field of the Chutch, preserved for centuries, how
many forms of life, how many customs, how many values are subject
to a critical progress as regards the validity of their permanence. Is
not "aggiornamento," which is talked about so much, exlrressed, per-
haps, in a transformism, which alters not only the external features of
ecclesiastical life: language, dress, rite, activity..., but also the interior
concepts on which it is based, faith, worship, the structure of charity
and discipline? !7e all feel, on the one hand, that something can
and perhaps must be changed, but at the same time we know, on the
other hand, that there are other things so important (if only for
certain values of their own, such as att, history, tadition, the treasure
of institutions and civilizations accumulated in the centuries...), and so

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essential, such as divine truth and the ecclesiastical constitution auth-
oritatively and legitimately derived from it, that they must nor give
way before this overwhelming wave of transformism, abdication, un-
faithfulness, but must be defended, preserved, reasserted; renewed
in inner feeling and in outer forms, absolutely.
Discernntent needed
That is, we are faced with a new duty, characteristic of our times,
the duty of distinguishing between what is obsolete, or perhaps it
would be better to say capable of improvemenr, and what on the
contrary must be stable and fixed, if we do not want to lose life, we
mean the inalienable and permanent raison d'€tre. Let us say at once
that we cannot make this distinction arbitranly by ourselves. Mem-
bers, as we are, of an organtzed and civil social body, we will have to
reflect on and respect what this legitimate society orders and com-
mands us to do; a problem of authority arises at once, even if it does
not forbid solutions of evolution, which, 'tr- f.act, civil constitutions
admit and promote today. This holds good all the more in the social
and mystical body which is called the Church, in which the &vine
element calls for a continual effort of improvement, and at the same
time imposes faithful obedience, to the point of heroism, to her dog-
matic and orthodox identity, protected and guarded, taught and inter-
preted by a legitimate authority, to which this service of charity for
truth was divinely committed.
But let us conclude at once with two observations, or rat-her two
exhortations.
The fitst one: we must tealize without fear and without inner
mistrust of our times, that Providence has caused us to be born in a
historic hour such as ours, characterized, we were saying, by change
and progress. Let us try to understand this condition of developing
humanity, and let us bless with a wise and open heart the good things
that human effort offers human life.
The second one: let us keep our balance at the changes that are
taking place around us; on the contrary let us try to discover in them
a need, far more logical, of higher principles to support the movements
in which we are engaged, in order that the latter may be neither over-
powering, nor anarchical, nor amorphous, but rather invincible and

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72
imFelled to traverse, in time, the ways of God, which must lead us
beyond .:me.
b) Cbristian Morality Means Liaing According to Faitb
Add,ress ol Pope PaulVI at the general audience of 26 Jaly, L972.
The thought that guides our litde talk at. the General Audiences
in this period is the seatch for moral principles for our Christian
life. I7e see this Christian life of ours exposed to a thousand dangers.
Let us disregard for the present those that attack doctrine; let us
limit ourselves to those that lay snares for and subvert the moral
norm, life as it is lived; and let us be content with some fundamental
and g'!7uiedinhgavperiancnipilmesm. ense problem to consider: the relationship
between natutal, profane, secular Iife and Christian life. Today we
are witnessing a g;gantic effort to remove from the ordinary way
of life every sign, every criterion, every commitment of religious deri-
vation. The attempt is made, often even within the Christian world,
to claim exclusive and absolute dominance for lay conduct, expecially
in its public and exterior forms. There are movements of thought
and action that try to detach morality from theology; morality should
be concerned only with the relations between men and with man's
personal conscience: in the moral field there is no need, they maintain,
for any religious dogma. Because of the legitimate fact that many
expressions of thought and human activity must be governed by
ptinciples of their own (sciences, for example), and that the very orga-
nizatton of the State can be conceived according to a wholesome and
reasonable laicism (as our venerated predecessor Pope Pius XII already
said: cf. A.A.S., 1958, p. 220), it is claimed that religion should not
only no longer appear in public, but should no longer have any inspir-
ing and guiding influence in civil legislation and in practical norms.
Even when teligious freedom is officially recognized, it is often sup-
pressed and oppressed in ptactice, and sometimes with intimidating
and vexatious methods which succeed in stifling, even within cons-
ciences, the free and open profession of religious sentiment.
Does cbristian morality exist?
Vhat have we got to say? Let us recall in the first place the

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distinction that must indeed be affirmed and observed between the
temporal order and the spiritual order, according to the decisive words
of the divine
and to God
Master: "Render to
the things that are
Caesar
God's"
the things
(Mt. 22,
that
2l).
are Caesat's,
But let us
add: just as there exists a problem of relations, that is of distinction
and relationships, between faith and reason, so there exists a problem
of relations between faith and mofdity. Ve all divine the solution
to this problem, which maintains that these relations are very close and
operad;e (and, from certain points of view, far more so than the
relations between faith and reason, because here, between faith and
morality, that is, befween faith and life, the distance between the
t*o t.i-r concerned is less) but it is still a very delicate and complex
problem. Let us try to formulate some clarifying principle.
Does a Christian morality exist? That is, an original way of
living, which is called Christian? \\[hat is Christian morality? We
codJ define it precisely in an empirical way by stating that it is a way
of living ,..otdiog to the faith, in the light of the truths and example
of Christ, ,rrch as we have learned from the Gospel and from its first
apostolic irradiation, the New Testament,
coming of Christ and a new form of
oaulwraeyxsisintenvcieew, t,hoef
a second
so<alled
Paro,rIia, and always by means of a double aid, one interior and
ineffable, the Holy Spiiit; the other exterior, historical and social,
but qualified and authorized,
Paul's incisive and synthetic
the ecclesiastical magistefium.
formula: "He who through
{_asiothSits.
righteous shall live" (Rom. 7, t7; Gal.3, 11; Phil. 3, 9; Heb' 10'
li),
anJ
is valid for us, in irs exegetical significance and in
extensive application to the whole style of Christian
its practical
life. "The
essential characteristic (of Christian ethics) is that it is bound to the
faith and to baptism" (Cf. A Feuillet, Les fondentents de la morale
cbr€tienne d'aprbs l'|pttre aux Romains, in Reaue Tbomiste, luillet-sept.
1970. pp. 357386).
God must come lirst
So we must draw tq/o conclusions that are very important for
our modern mentality. First conclusion: our practical conception of
life must feserve the first place for God, religion, faith and spiritual
health; and not iust an honorary first place, purely formal, or ritual,

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but
say,
also logical and
I p-ossess, duly
functional. If
honouring this
I am a
title in
christian, everyone must
myself, the key to inter-
pderegtrereeaol -flffree,a_ltheexissutepnrecme,emgoyoidntfaonrtguibnlee,
the highest
dignity-, .y
g-iorrorrdio, ltuhbeleprime
free-
dom. My position with regard to God is thl most precious and mosr
ilnpoftant thing.
God: "I am the
The hierarchy of my duties keeps the first revel
Lord thy God" (Ex. 20. 2). Christ will repeat
for
it:
"seek first the kingdom of God" (Mt. 6, 33).
The
humanism
first orientation of
is geared, remains
life, the central axis to
the theological one. The
which my
command-
rnent that surpasses and synthesizes all the others is always the one
that bids us love God (cf. Mt.22,37; Deut.9,5). It is a sublime
commandment, which is far from easy, but which in the very effort
of- its
other
l-ofuwlfeilrmceonmtmparnoddmuceenstst,htehemfoirrsivt eamanodngthwehiecnheargnyd,toinfuitslfitlutrhne,
oTithtrhreuirsssnutesamuikgpehopnbrfeoastushsriepoirnsootoohsfefuroflsfofi,cvliieoesvnoletofv(oe.Gf..ooGhdfoo,odwiunirtsmntehealefing(yhccobpfon.euvLoricp, iJlsieono,n. tm2oth,duaca9thy-;,rs4odov,eeltu2hOdoae)tf.
themselves that_ they have simplified the moial problem by neglecting
its fundamental religious principle and reducirrg it to a hurianistic
philanthropy!) also compromises the relationship of real love for man,
a relationship that easily deteriorates,
disinterested, no longer constant. It
no longer universal,
may beiome patial,
no
and
longer
drere-
fore a principle of struggle and hatred.
I)oing the will ol God
oj
thTehreelnigitohuesrefaicstoarniolthmear nc'sonocpluersaiotinve:
recognition of the pdmary
systim, does not imply any
shirking of the urgenr
of human society, as
duries connected wiih justice
if purely religious obser,,rance
and the progr.r,
*.r" .rrorgi, to
exonerate the conscience from obligations of solidarity and generosity
to one's neighbour. Far less does the recognition of the rerigioui
primacy in morality produce a selfish and irrational curb on the posi-
tive search for remedies for social ills; on the contrary. Let us recall
the Lord's severe words: "Not every one who rry, to me, ,Lord,
Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the wili

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of my Fathet who is in heaven" (Mt. 7, 2l; cf.. Ml 25. ,31-46); ail
l.t ,r, recall the Apostle's exhortation: faith working through love
(cf. Gal. 5, 6).
Need lor greater iustice
Fortunately, nowadays this imperative of social iustice to make
our Christian profession operative, to give faith its consistent expres-
sion in charity, is very widetpread and felt, particularly among the
young. 'We, too, will do well to become aware of its stimulus in our
[,.urtt and to comply with the Chutch's urgent invitation today
(expressed also by the Council and by the last Synod) to promote
gr..t.t justice in the wodd. \\[e must be careful, as we weie saying,
,,ot to deprive our bene(icial activity of its immanent religious inspirat-
ion, and .we must also be careful not to make religion a political
pr.i"*r, or an instrument in the service of purposes, other than the
just and honest ones of the real good of one's neighbour' But we
will take care tather to educate outselves at the school of an authentic,
prayerful and operative Christianity and to testify with our_consistency
L.r*..n faith and charity in the midst of our modern world, how true,
how human, how transcendent Christ's Gospel is.
c) The will: intention, cboice, decision
Pope Paul's address at tbe general audience ol 23 August, 1972'
To be good, to be just, to be holy, one must will to be so' To
give to one,s own moral stature as a man and as a christian its perfect
il.ur,rr. it does not suffice to grow passively in years and to assimilate
the formation from the environment in which one lives. It is necessary
voluntaril-yspteocifimic press upon one's personality an
to give a
ch amctit to one's temperament.
interior thrust and
It is not sufficient
to iulfil in any way, submissively, the duty which one cannot avoid;
just
act
as
as
it does noi
one wishes
suffice
against
to defend one's
possible undue
liberty to think and to
interference or external
compulsion.
should make
Liberty ilroUa not
its corrscious choices
remain slothful and
and therein commit
passive,_ but it
the will. The
v,ill is an essential and decisive factor of the moral life, that is, of
the life that is tnrly human.

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Man's driaing lorce
. Thr fr.lty to act excels in the sphere of the good. It is the
real driving force of a man through which he tends tJself-affirmation,
to the develooment of himself, to the attainment of what he lacks,
to his own end and happiness. rt is par exceilence the faculty of love,
which in man is mansformed from biing something instinctive, of the
senses and of the passions into something spiritual, !7hen directed
to its true and supreme object, which is the infinite and most real
Goo_d, namely, God, it epitomizes and fulfils every duty, at once finding
in the love of the neighbour irs expression both by wuy of an inro-
duction to it and as a substitute for it, and also an expression which
is concrete and social and, under certain aspects, indislensable (cf. 1
Jotn 4, 20).
It-is most important, especially during one,s youth, to have an
exact idea of the will in,man's make-up, *d to pr.i.r itr upright and
letiof{efe.lhicvateisv,ett9hueosefdf-gteors.ierrevnetro"ygoaooctdht,ewarniedllv"athtlhueeartceiaopsnah-ocoiuftyltdhteobevlo"a*vrpieor.u.r,rAe"d*cpet.hrrteia.rineraJ"g.pe,r"ntrehrsoust'
has foolishly spoken of the "will ro lo."r" (virte zur Macbt: Nietz-
sche); we prefer to speak humf,ly of the power of will. Note a funda-
mental observation. The_will is a
light; it needs thought. The good,
dynamic force; it needs
if it is to be iesired and
a guiding
wiued i-i
a human way, must be known.
lamp of the will. A blind will
The
can
intellect musr therefore be the
remain lazy and slothful, or it
msrtuapcyraetnmuraenlsetoonsduins.e, lrethstsoumegnahdyst,thhoeerrfetaofuoolrtethowefrasthstteheawittsiallrcednfoaeelrssgeineosortincaorwnvtaarayinsryedtefofpoertnthsde.
on ignorance alone. !7e must therefore be zealous about the regulation
of our spiritual existence. while the imporrance of the *i[ iruy
ceed that of
nevertheless
speculative thought in the classification
it must depend upon the f,eason; it is
of human
a rational
uulr".*r-,
desire;
idea-power is its definition.
see how operative energy, such as the will is, is more
highly valued in
tigation, in the
modern
field of
life in comparison with philosoplrlcal inves-
pedagogy and in the deveropment of civil
progress. (cf. M. Blondel, L'Action). nflhile recognizing the primary
function of thought, we can support and even foster-- iri lust -."rrr"

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and in forms coordinated with the global plan of life and of human
- destiny the voluntarism characteristic of our time, and we can link
it and in a certain manner derive it, from our Christian vision of life.
Christianity, which has in the faith its deepest roots, is volunta-
rist in practice. Christian education tends to form srong and active
souls. Sloth and idleness are not permitted in the school of Christ.
Recall for example, the parables of the Gospel: those of the seed,
the talents, the labourers who had not been hired. "\\(hy do you
stand all the day idle?" are the words Christ puts in the mouth of
the owner o( the vineyard (Mt. 20, 6). The period of this life is
always linked by Our Lord with the urgency of a continual activity
(cf. John 9,4; 5, 17; Ll,9).
One may perhaps object: did not Our Lord reproach Martha
q,ho was completely engaged in household chores, and prefer Mary
who listened in silence at his feet? (Luke 10,41). Do not the tradi-
tional commentaries on this Gospel scene find in Martha the personi-
fication of the active life, and in Mary that of the contemplative life,
while assigning to the latter the fitst and supreme place? Be that
as it may, the contemplative life is not an abdication of the will;
rather, because of the very commitment which it implies it is, more
than any other condition of life, extremely voluntary. The contem-
plative
foreign
ltiovem-an'swshpicirhitumaloldifeer,nwsoouciledtyc,efretaveinrliyshnleyesdtrfaoirniintsg
after ends
instruction
and
and
smupopraolrtp-assiisvitnyo, tsqpuirieittuisaml ,atphaatt$isatnodstahye, itreinsunncoitatiniodniffeorfentchee
exercise of one's own wifl (cf. the condemnation of quietism in the Bull
Caelestis Pastor, 1687, of Blessed Innocent XI, Denz, Scb., 2195, tf.;
2181., ff .). Q6nlsmFlation is an arduous and loving activlty not directed
to practical action but concentrated in the highet faculties of the soul.
It is a special clearism; it is a providential function in the communitarian
economy of the ecclesial body and also of secular society,
Sin of ornissioru
Now that we must bring this discourse to an end, we cannot
refrain from exhorting everyone, who has the sense of his own Christian
calling, to reflect on the importance of education of the will in order
to avoid the situation, on the last day, where our gift of life, and

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still more of the Christian life might be laid to our charge as an
unfulfilled responsibility, if for no other reason than a fatal sin of
omission (cf. Mt. 25, 31, tf..). That is the dreadful eschatological
condemnation of Christ the judge: "I7hen you have not done (the
good that you should have done to your neighbour in need), you have
not done it to me!" (cf. also 2 Petet,2,2l).
!7e admire the awakening active and generous energies for the
innumerable needs, which as if with a reviving and growing rhythm,
are evident in our world, and aheady spread all over the earth; and
we encourage and bless them with all our heart.
Tbe aoluntary act - tbree mornents
\\7e wish to recall the three moments of the good will as t}ley
appeaf to us in turning over once again the golden pages of St. Thomas
Aquinas concerning the nature of the voluntary act. The first mo-
ment concerns the intention. In order to act well we must before
all else have the right intention, which awakens the will and directs
it to the thing desired as good, by reason of the good which it
represents. This rectirude reaches out beyond tle thing itself to the
Supreme Good, to the ultimate end, which subordinates to itself in
hierarchical order every virtuous good (cf. I-II, 9, 1). Then comes the
moment of choice, of decision, of love, when the soul moves itself with
liberty and power, with a capacity to make great sacrifices for the
sake of great conquests (ib. 13). Finally there is the third moment,
that of execution, of command, of practical actiyity (ib. 16), with all
the virtues it requires, the so-called cardinal virtues, because under
them are arranged and orgaruzed human actions directed to the good.
God's grace
Having said all this we should rcalize that we have omitted in
this very brief exposition an operative factor of transcendent and
indispensable importance: the grace of God! Divine grace infuses into
us the very capacity "to \\riIl and to do" precisely in relation to the
good will (cf. Phil. 2, l3). It is a marvel and a mystery of the
Ckistian life. But it is a sea which we cannot sail today, so immense

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is it. Nonetheless, may t}e Lord strengthen the good will in all of
us by his grace, under the auspices of our Apostolic Blessing.
d) Tbe principles that rnoald our li.ues
Address ol Pope Paal Vl at tbe general audience giaeru )0 August,
1972.
You recall the episode in the Gospel that tells of the young man
who
I do
ad&essed Jesus
to have eternal
as a "Good
life?" (Mt
Master,"
19, 16).
and asked him: "'lJ0'hat must
The question of that young
man seems to interpret the voice of many upright and generous
people of our time who asks themselves, or inquire from others,
from the masters of life especially, and more often from public
opinion, from the modern trends of thought and behaviour: what
should one do? \\7hat is the practical line to follow? How must
one live?
Modern rnan in doubt
I7e who are seeking to restore an authentic interpretation of the
Christian Iife today, are immediately aware of a very striking indiv-
idual and social phenomenon: moral uncertatnty. Modern man, with
all his conquests, is filled with doubt as regards t}e motal norm that
should guide and direct his life. He treads his path fortuitously, or
he is carried along by the human tide, following the fashion in
thought and behaviour that surrounds him on all sides. He proclaims
that he is free, and he daims for himself a personal autonomy that
frees him from certain traditional and environmental bonds. At the
same time, however, he allows himself to be moulded interiorly and
manipulated extedorly by imFonderable prevailing factors that influence
his experience in a dominant and iresponsible manner
True it is that the moral life, not only as to what it is, but also
as to what it ought to be, is of its nature in a permanent problema-
aticctsiotantes.-
not in regard to the principles,
Conscience, law, social customs
but in regard to
usually resolve
individual
the moral
problems of practical life that are continually being presented to the
human spirit. Thus our present life is engaged in a constant effort
to overcome doubts about what to do, and to provide one's self with
a pfactical plan, even though temporary, for practical action.

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80
But to this, as it were, constitutional unceftainty of man in regard
to his own actions, tlere is added today another very serious uncer-
tainty, namely, ideological. This calls in doubt every moral norm,
insinuating into the minds of many people of our time the persuasion
that all rules governing human activity up to the present are open
to question, nay rather, they are untenable; they can be cJranged, and
they must be changed.
The age of "liberation" has arrived, understood in a radical
sense. It declares lapsed the whole body of laws, the rights of others
and one's own duties. It seeks to inaugurate a new style of life which
demolishes the previous one (what revolutionary foolhardiness!), and
it proposes to establish a new order (or a disorder) in which everyone
does as he pleases, without perhaps lsalizing that this is the surest
rray to bring about a dictatorial regime. Tacitus acutely observed:
"ut auctoritatem evertant libertatem praetendunt; cum everterint,
libertatem ipsam aggtediuntur" (To overthrow authority they hold
out the pretext of libetty; then when authorif,v has been disposed of,
they turn their attack on liberty itself).
In any event the fact is that in the sphere of action many laws
are changing, and today more than ever before. This rendets legiti-
mate and teasonable the question we are posed very concisely: today,
what are we to do? Or better still: what are the principles that should
mould, inspire, transform and govern our action in order that it may
be good, human and Christian?
The norm of motality in its unchanging principles, those of the
'n!7aetuaradlmlait,whoawnedvearls, othtahtosuencoefrtathinetyGmoasypealr,isceanwnhoetnuwndeeprgroobcehat}negsee.
principles more deeplyl or in the case of their logical development and
practicaJ. application. If not, why study, and in what would moral
progress consist? \\7e also admit that many changes can and should
rrt times be inttoduced in the positive laws actually in force. These
rrormally serve a useful purpose in regard to action, always presup-
posing however the fundamental rectitude of such changes. Do we
not always speak of reforms, aggiornamenfo, renewal, etc.? This is
so principally because the "circumstances," that is to say, the condi-
tions of the just, the useful and the possible in which our actions
take place,are themselves, changeable, and this is so today more than
ever before.

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Spirit ol rnod.ern actiaity
This changeableness of circumstances is at present very deeply
felt. It is this attention to the very many changes which alter and
upset the pattern of traditional life that makes us all excited and
hasty, not only in the acceptance of the novelties that surround us
on all sides and bevdtch us, but also in the furthering of all kinds of
novelties by ourselves, and in the approval of every kind of change,
understood as progress and being up-to-date. This reaches the limit
of the most daring expressions of genius and the most extravagant
exhibitions of capricious innovation. To change, to invent, to risk,
such is the spirit of modern activity.
This frenzy to change everything does not appear to be awate of
the squandering of the patdmony of tradition, often precious and
claracteristic. Nor does it seem to take note of the &fficulty in giving
to the new expressions of moral life the logical stability and the ethical
and juridical solidity which should distinguish it by insuring its constant
duration in time and its widespread ditfusion among men, as would
be demanded by history and civilization, of whic-h we would all wish
to be upholders.
Critical conditions ol modern tbougbt
The phenomenon of moral weakness and decadence is aggravated
b5 the critical conditions of modern thought which is opposed to the
philosophical fotmulations of the past, and is dissatisfied with those
crf our own time. Together with many other things, the new genera-
tion tepudiates also the rigorous discipline of thought. In its place
they put experience, of whatever kind it may be. That is a surviving
criterion of subjective truth, which in itself is incapable of furnishing
solid principles fot human conduct. Nay rather, if left to itself, it
plays the role of tempter and accomplice of the many deviations and
degradations to whicl one is led under the guidance of experience
alone. There exists today an effort to derive from experience a stimu-
Itrs, and then a moral teaching; but what efforts are needed to arrive
there, what doubts to be disposed of before one succeeds!
6

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82-
Lloral certai.nties
!7e shall at last have to fetufn to some moral certainty to guide
our conduct, not as a brake on the intensity of action demanded by
our time, but as a fixed hinge for secure movement. \\7e must over-
come the great danger of a relativism which is unfaithful to our salutary
human and Christian principles, and servile ro the miumphant ideas
of a given culrural and political period. (Do you recall Giusti's satirical
and humorous "Brindisi di Girella"?)
I[e believers especially must be mained for the difficult task
of distinguishing in the progra--e of the activiry of ourselves and
others what must be defended and observed, even at the cost of
sacri.fice (who are the martyrs?), from what can be jettisoned or reform-
ed. \\tre should have an idea of the so-called "siruadon ethics"; we
should perceive the dangers of this theory when rurned into a moral
norm dominating the subjective instinct, usually utilitarian, of how
to adapt our behaviour to this or that situation, without taking
sufficient account of the objective moral obligation and of the subjec-
tive demands of a noble consistency (d. Dena. Scb. 39L8-392L).
ic C at as t r o p b nih ilis rn
.s7e will return to the remedies which can free us from the moral
uncertainty which is widespread today and sweeping people along
towards a nihilism which could be under every aspect catastrophic.
Well then, the remedies: first, a correct notion of the natural law
(ct. S. Tb. I-lI, 94); second, habitual recourse to one's true conscience
(d. Rom. 14-23); third, confidence in obeying those who have authority
over us, both in the family circle (Eph. 6, L; Col. ),20;7 Pet. 3, 1;
etc.), and also in civil society (Rom. 13, 1-4; I Pet. 2, l3-I7) and in
the Church (Lk. 10, 16; Mt. 28,20; etc.). In the economy of salvarion,
having before our eyes the example of Christ, "made obedient unto
death, even to the death of the cross" (Phil. 2, 8), obedience does not
degrade the human person but raises him up to the digrrity of a son
of the Father, and inserts him on the communitarian plane of charity
and unity, characteristic of the Gospel.
To claim to free a believer from the magisterium established by
Christ, whether for the purpose of liberating him from the dogmatism

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of ecclesiastical teaching, or to break the bonds of hierarchical authority
instituted by Christ in the Chutch, would imply depriving him of the
certainty both of the faith and of the norms of morality, this charism
of the certainty of faith proper to Catholicism, and to prefer the
senseless torment of shadow doubt, of spiritual loneliness, of apostolic
barrenness. This would, as it were, undermine the communion whicle
in the sincere adherence to the authentic Church makes us live in
Christ and of Christ, and would make us hear repeated by Him the
threat (or the condemnation?): "He who is not with me, is against
me; and he who gathets not with me, scatters" (Lk. 1,1,, 23).
As for ourselves let us humbly thank the Lord, and let us ever
implore Him that he make us walk with docile and strong step in the
light and in the security of his way.
- e) Cbastity possible, easy, bappy.
Address of Pope Paul VI at tbe general audience giuen 13 Sep-
tember, 1972.
In these weekly talks we have for some time drawn the attention
of our visitors to the moral aspect of life. Like so many other things,
it is undergoing cJeanges and deteriorations which cannot leave indif-
ferent those who, like us Christians wish to impress on their conduct
a line in conformity with certain natural and religious principles. \\7e
wish to, and we must, follow the Master, Jesus the Lord. \\fle wish
to open his Gospel in such a way that we do not feel condemned by
this code of ttuth and life, but rather are instructed and raised
to the ideal form of conduct in keeping with our Christian vocation.
Now there is a subject to be dealt with, on which there would
be such a lot to say, because of its importance in t}e moral develop-
ment of our lives, that of chastity. It is of such importance that it
claims for itself, al-ost as if by auronomasia, the title of "morality"l
and because of the seriousness and quantity of old and new problems
growing round this delicate subject. But this is not, of course, the
place to deal with it; let it suffice to enunciate it, so that everyone
can give his attention and vigilance to it. Here are some sections
teferring to it.

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-84
Delicate topics
1. The subject is intruding upon us in a hauntingway, [t cannot
be passed over in silence by those who have pedagogical functions
with regard to youth, the formation of spirits, healthy morals, public
morality. A delicate theme, because it is of an impressive nature, and
therefore traditionally treated with great care, sometimes even an
excessive care because covered by reticence. Today it is presented with
studied and often provoking ostentation.
1On the scientific plane, psychoanalysis; on the pedagogical plane,
sexual education; on the literary plane, obligatory eroticism; on the
plane of advertising, base allurement; on the plane of entertainment,
indecent exhibition, straining towards the obscene; on the plane of
publications, pomographic magazines spread perfidiously; on the plane
of amusements, the pursuit of the most ignoble and seductive onesl
on the plane of love, which is the highest plane, confusion between
sensual and physical selfishness and the lyrical and generous drer-
of the gft of. oneself.
'Walking i.n mud.
2. Ve must realize that we are living in times when human animal-
ity is degenerating into unresuained corruption; we are walking in
mud. If we have a sense of personal dignity and of respect for others,
for society, and above all the sense of our elevation to the Chtistian
level, as sons of God, baptized and sanctified by grace (which is the
lighting of the Holy Spirit in our persons), we must put ourselves
into a state of defence, repudiation and renunciation of so many exhi-
bitions and manifestations of modem debauchery; and not surrender
either out of acquiescence or fear ot what people will say to the
pollution of the surrounding immorality.
3. And we must rcalue that the impurity to which we refer is
not a right of the young man marching towards life, of modern man
vrho must free himself of the old traditions, of mature man, as if
he were immune from the disorders that stem from contagion with
the provoking filthiness.
'!7'hy, what do we mean by impurity? !7e mean the prevriling
of the instincts and passions of animal man over rational and moral

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ruan. A prevalence that stimulates, fascinates and exalts the former;
degrades and humiliates the latter; males the former vulgar, vicious
and sad, the latter short-sighted and insensitive and sceptical with
regard to things of the spirit (dr. I Cot. 2, l4); it is a grave disorder
jn our human being, which is complex and composite; a disorder that
can easily sink even lower.
Graae problems
4. It is imFossible to pass over in silence the lower degrees
towards which our society is moving, sliding over the so-called freedom
of the senses and of morals. They are the great questions that do
not make it either strong or glorious: contraception, abortion, the
unfaithfulness of married love, divorce... Then at the initiation to
sensual pleasure there begin drugs... The life of man is at stake; true
Iove declines. Grave, present problems, which are so much discussed,
and should be even more.
'5. I-et us conclude with a positive section, the one on Christian
formation. It is concentrated in one of the beatitudes of the Gospel:
"Blessed are the pure in heart, they shall see God" (Mt. 5, 8). Many
things can be discovered in this: the relationship between religious
Ufe and the discipline of morals; the primary seat of purity, namely
the heart, that is our inner li[e, our thoughts, our emotions, our ima-
gination, our conscience (d. Mt. 5, 27, ff.;15,29); austerity, that
is the fortitude, the real integrity of our conduct, a necessary condi-
tion to maintain and arouse the order of our being, disjointed bv original
sin and made guardian of the treasures of the kingdom of God (cf.
2 Cor, 4, 7), the excellenry of pure, honest love, blessed by the
sacred bond, the supreme excellency of virginity consecrated to the
one absolute, divine Love... Purity is the atmosphere in which love
breathes.
6. !7e wish to add another word. !7e have said, on other
occasions, that Christian morality is difficult in itself. \\[hat should
we say about this chapter, on chastity and purity, which nearly all
those outside of Christian life think it is impossible to observe? \\fle,
too, will say that it is indeed difficult, in view of the circumstances
in whicl man's 1i[e takes place, especially today; but we add at once,
correcting in practice the first general statement: no, it is easy; with

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self control, with the droice, when possible, o[. a healthy environ-
ment of life, purity is possible if we like; nay more, with prayer
and with the sacaments: it is easy and it is happy!
!7e say so for you, young people; for all of you!
f) Cbarity, tbe syntbesi.s ol moral lile
Address of Pope Paal VI at tbe general audience giuen on 2otb,
Septernber, 1,972.
"Loue is tbe answer"
We will deal once more, in this little sermon incorporated in
the general audience, with human activity; namely, with ow acting
(that is, man's acts within himself), ov doing (that is, the actions
we accomplish outside ourselves), (cf. S. Th., c. Gentes, II, l), ia a
word, with our activiry. It is on this aspect of life that the interest
of modern man is most concenttated, tending as he does to assess
everything in relation to the activity, the dynamics of the exercise of
his faculties. !7ork has a primacy in our world, as we all know: it
has even become the constitutional basis of society. Every life, every
thing must be in movement, ordained to produce, measured by the
potentid of its operative forces; even culture is subject to quanti-
tative, of rather operative measures; science is understood in the
sense of its practical application; freedom is appreciated with regard
to the capacity of acting and doing, enjoying, that it permits. Modern
man tends to apply the accelerator in every aspect of his existence.
For him "to act more" is as good as "to be more". "To have more"
and "to enjoy more" is his ideal.
- 'S7e observe with great interest this principle phenomenon
of modern life, which goes by the names of work, progress, develop-
ment, prospetity, civtlization, because it is a human phenomenon. 'V7e
can say with Terence in ancient times: << homo sum: humani nihil a
I I me alienum puto )>, << am a man: do not consider anything human
alien to me >>. Ife Christians, furthermore, appreciate this operative
intensity, which characterizes our times, also for reasons of out own,
which confet a decisive importance on man's activity both with regard
to human perfection (d. Blondel, l'Azione; 0116 Laprune il oalore del-

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87
(1743)
la aita), and with regard to salvation: according to ouf works we will
be iudged on the scales for eternal life.
Tbe Gospel lesson
If, therefore, our action rises to become the first of the values
that qualify life, sometimes putting in the shade, in practice, even the
precedence of knowledge and the excellence of being, on which,
however it depends (<< nil cupitum quin praecognitum >>, and << operari
sequitur esse >>, the mastets say), problem number one is concentrated
on the content of operating, that is to say, on what we must do and
why we do it, on the object and on the intention. lVhat is, therefore,
the principal duty of out existence? Can the genetal programme of
our operating be summsd up in a dominant ideal?
IUTe would like everyone to be able to discover the marvellous
loftiness usd simFlicity of the Gospel lesson, in this connection. !7e
all know it, but let us read it again together. << One of them (the
Pharisees), alawyet, put a question to try him (Jesus): Master, which
commandment in the law is the greatest? Jesus said to him, Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole heart and thy whole
soul and thy whole mind (and the Evangelist St. Mark adds: and
thy whole strength; L2, 30). This is the greatest of the command-
ments and the first. And the second, its like, is this, Thou shalt love
thy
and
neighbour as
the prophets
thyself.
depend >
O(Mn t".th2e2se,
two commandments,
35-40).
all the law
So God had already spoken in the Old Testament (cf. Deut. 6,
5). Jesus confirms: this is to be done. God's will as regards man
is as follows: that he should love God and his neighbour. And
here is the core of all morality, the supreme end of wiII, the first
principle of upright action.
There are so many things that could be said in comment on
these unsurpassable words; too many for this talk of ours. Let us
note, just as an example, the logical necessity and the happy possibility
of concentrating all duties in fwo main ones, nay rather one only, the
end and principle of upright action: love of God and the complemen-
tary one of love of one's neighbour. And this possibility is, particu-
larly from the didactic aspect, very use{rrl, very convenient, we could
say, for every mentality, especially today for us moderns, who dislike

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mental effort and notionism.
'The Gospel takes us at once to the sgmmil, and synthesizes
everything in a double duty, and contains and hierarchizes everything
<< in nuce >>: the supreme object is love, also the end for which we
must carry out subordinate duties: love. "Love is the ansu/er to every-
one of the commandments" (Rom. 13, 10).
The significance of love
And here there arises a formidable question: do we really know
what love is? Is not this wotd among the ones most used, and
therefore most difficult to define? Among the words that are poly-
valent, in the meanings attributed to it? Is it not among tfie most
ambiguous wofds, even zrmong the most sublimated and the most
degraded? Does it not refer to contradictory forms of our spirit,
referred, on the vertical plane, to ascensions towards God, who is
Love and towards whom our natural and supernatural vocation is essen-
- - tially directed? (St. Augustine's symthesis: Thou oh God made
us fot Thee; and our heart is resdess until it rests in Thee! Con{. 1,
1); and referred
grading descents
o- f
this seme word
sensual and even
-unnatoturthaleamniomsat livtyu,lgdaoreasnitd
de-
not
drag people down, Iike the inevitable pull of ffavtty, below the levels
of all decency and all honest happiness? And on the horizontal,
that is the interpersonal plane, cannot love mean now the most
generous dedication, now the most selfish lust, or even both at the
same time? It will not be easy to give a univocal meaning to the
ambiguous word "love," which fluctuates between "eros" and "agape"
(cJrarity), berween instinctive passionate sympathy and the aspiration
to good, to happiness, to li[e.
Cboice of the saprerne Good.
How shall we practise this fundamental precept of love of God
and our neighbour, if the very word does not help us to an exact
interpretation of its meaning? The fact is that we will have to endea-
vout, in the first place, to dunty our ideas. True love is the cons-
cious and voluntary act towards good. Nature helps us to make fot
good; inclination, instinctive and sensual love, becomes an act of

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will; becomes real love. So it is a question of a twofold operation:
choice and strength. \\7e must choose (in ordine intentionis) the
supreme Good, th" on" that alone and really is proportionate to the
iniatiable scope of our power of desiring and loving; and then we
must make ull o.r. spiritual and sentimental fotces converge towards
the supreme Good, which is God. And from this accomplishment of
our very first duty, the combined effort of intelligence and will, which
fixes our moral gravitation in God, who is Himself supreme Love, nay
more dtaws from Him our operative energy, is derived the capacity
of accomplishing every other duty (ordo executionis) which is planned
on t}at first oni and ukes on its honesty, its dignity, its form of con-
versation of the creature with the Creator, dte son with the Father
The whole of life becomes love. Real love, pure love, sffong love,
happy love. And with this first love, which is religious, as you see,
^nedighirbooouor,t
be otherwise, is connected
both as a ladder to climb
the second love, love of one's
up to love of fu; and as a
-oliu. to apply one,s own activity in the service and for the benefit
of one's neighbour.
Releuance of tbe Gospel today
If we Christians understood this Gospel of love, its law, its
necessity,
u"lu., b"
oitvserfreakretinlit-yb,yittsheredleovuabntcethtaotdachy,riswtieanwityo,ulodunr ofat itleht(Gouarl.-
5, 6), is unable to solve social questions in justice and peace, and that
it is necessary to get this capacity from economic materialism, dass
hatred and civil struggle, with the danger of letting our christian
profession be submerged in the ideologies of those who combat it and
of gi"iog human questions bitter and illusory solutions, and even
-perhaps, eventually, antisocial and antihuman ones.
Th.t" retums to our memories and to our hearts St. Paul's hymn
"I to charity: rlay speak with every tongue that men and angels use;
yet, if I lack charity,I am no better than edroing btonze, or the-clash
tf
is
cymbals... Charity is patient,
never perverse or proud, etc.
is kind; chaity
Charity endures
feels no envy;
to the last..."
charity
(I Cor.
xIrI).
Charity,
this
is
the
synthesis
of
our
moral
life.
Let
us
think
about it.

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VII. NECBOLOGY
Fr. Oswald Andrade
* at
years
Fartnra
of age;
(S. Paulo - Brasil) 17.5.1895; f
56 prcfession; 48 priesthood; he
Campinas, (Brazil) 8.8.1972;77
was a Rector for 20 years.
He was one of the veterans of the province of San Paulo. He lived
Don Bosco's spirit and possessed a marked affabitty; truly a life that
was deeply spiritual. His superiors entrusted him with duties of great
responsibirity: he was founder and first Rector of the Salesian Institute
"Don Bosco de Americana - San Paulo".
Fr. Tbomas Barutta
*.at Rosario (Argentina)
ol age1' 46 profession; 38
6.5.7908; f Mendoza (Argentina) 10.7.1972;
priesthood; he was a Rector for 3 years.
64
years
of
A man of unusual talent, he was a
history; a prolific wrirer, a powerful
tireless
orator;
researcher
he lived
in the field
his religious
agd priesdy life totally in accord with Don Bosco's tenets. For thirty-
eight years in succession he was entrusted with the teaching and formation
of priests at the international Institute of Villada-c6rdoba. His many
pupils remember him with affection and gratirude.
Fr. Marius Bosticco
* at Bardonecchia (Turin - Imty) 233.19L9 f Turin 23.7.1972; 53 yeats of.
age; 15 profession; 26 priesthood; he was a Rector for 3 yeas.
_ The major part of his $a[ssian life was spent ir work that was mostly
administrative; and he fulfilled these tasks *16[ rtiligence, rove of poverry
and dedication. His main work will be remembered ar generously given
mtsoaacrntifh,i_ceew.,riteh-cboouuntt.spstrrpueectentintosngieoonnesfr,othuoesblyscerfroovcarenhtttiaasn-bdelaodvlioeffvdiceCur lrotofyceepatotravr.eorHtfyep. rwIiv{aeastigoaarvigeoaontodd
the Congregation all his best efforrs.

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-9L-
(t747)
Fr. Maarilio Candusso
t * ar Ragona (Udine - Italy) 27.8.L90p; U4h"
profession; 29 priesthood; he was a Rector for
6}2yje.a1r9s'72;
62
yars
of.
age;37
For forry years he was a hard worker in the missions,
(from whencl h. *", expelted) then in the Philippines'
rp..iA way dedicat"d to poor and abandoncd yo,r1th, and
activities in the Festive oratory. After a long illness he
first in china
He- was- in a
titeless in his
died in serene
acceptance of God's will.
Mgr. Josepb Cognata
f ,,at Girgenti (Italy)
g6 years"of ?{ile; a7
14.10.1885;
profession;
Pellaro di Re_ggio calabria (ItoJv) 22il
63 priesthood; he was a Rector for 15
.1972;
years;
t Bishop of no:l,z- years, tetirement, 21 yeats, Titular of Farsalo 9 years'
him
A bishop who suffered much but
to rrimrer father unexpectedly.
bore all
In the
with
first
a smile' God called
years of his_ Salesian
labifniesdhhoaepll-gwoavfheoBhokimvnaeswetlnl heimnlgth)tuh)se,ianastnsicdtaillllwysoptroekaetkhdeagdaempnoiresinrtooglulaystelyoifinnhciopmlrleo'gveHideainnwgdaofsoramrtoatrhdyee'
rfaopnuidtnidtoeardrtaoan.ids"erm.cuaTlateorriiamnlsantkieteuetdtehseoowff owthroekmopeofnot(hrS,"aolppiseainraiisnnhgeOsabmlanotuemrsebeoerf-ff.ictoahfce.ioshuSesal,cterehrsde
Heart), and impressed
of Don Bosco. (The
on them
Instirute
a solid formation according to the spirit
now enjoys Pontifical Right.) Painful
.irorrJ.rr,uodings and difficulties caused him to resign the direction of
his works and a[o his bishopric; the which gave him the chance of displaying
his absolute tfusr
he lived a life of
isnacGrifioced.inFproramyetrhaantddasyil,eannt,dseforernealsmuofsfet rtihnigrt.yAyefaerws,
years
hnp.
before
*hi.h
his death he
compensated
had
for
the comfort of a
his many trials.
fatherly gTryt"- from the
He also had the joy of
knowing that the works founded by him continued in strong development,
remainiig faithful to the stamp of spiritualiry he had given them'
Fatber Ruggyro Dal Zotto
f * ar vesrenannova (verona - Italy) 16.9.1909;
years of age; 44 profession; 36 priesthood; he
a
was
Shillong (Indta) 8.7.1972;
a Rectot for 16 years
62
of
A
the
missionary
people in
in Assam since 1935, he spent
a mosr backward area. \\rith
himself in--the service
his apostolic zeal and
unlimitei cirarity he won the zeal and goodwill of everyone, not only in
his mission centre, but in the whole region.

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(1748)
-92-
Fatber Julias Deretz
t * at Lille (c6tes du Nord-- France) 52.1886; Lorena (Brasil) 19.6.1972; g6 years
<,f age; 67 profession; 58 priesthood
He spent most of his Salesian life in our houses in cuiab6, corumbd,
Niter6i, Bag6 and Lorena. rn L932 he was chaplain to the rroops of san
Paulo. He was an exemplary priest and religious and an efficient, painstak-
ing, learned teacher. Further to other studies, he had ako attended the
Ltniversities of London and caen. His passing has reft great sorrow.
Fatber Francis Fossati
t *._at Monza (Milan - haly) 5.1.1,-897; Bombay (Indta) 24.8.1972; 75 years of age;
47 profession; 41 priesthood; he vas a Recor 6 years.
AII who knew him lamenr the loss of a saresian of sterling character
who was deeply attached to Don Bosco and the congregatio"n; a man
dedicated to prayer and the sacred ministry, especially d th"e co*ersional.
He made use of considerable correspondencl *d rtu.p-"ollecting to further
extend his priesdy encouragement and advice.
Father Octaoius Gretter
f ]-Ri.9 dos Cedros (Santa Cataina - Brasil) 27.L0.1912; Campo Grande (Brasil)
5.7.7972; 59 years oL age; 39 profession; 29 priesthood. ^
:Hpggdi.srth-haAuep.r oaSovsotarcoaclhelaabasttripeiaoylnanf-oiaCnfunrotnodnodmgfrroiehttrgsehaetvSth-ieosiesnantlteaearwslstiaao.srnrpH-kbiiipnrosiagtygrsoi"se.rfhaHh"touaiesfpi.np.Rthlihaniiurseotsst,i'sdatye,soemasaa.rchcsltaeeiviydroi,troiyoniksoa,hnhhtisditem..s.baoitrico.uorriutfioi,cgtihreh.ye.,t
diocesan sgmin6ry
H9 passed away
of campo Grande, which he administered till his
unexpectedly, a *ouble to no-one, at a friend's
death.
house
where he was staying for a few days, rest.
Fatber Vincent Horaitb
t lb-lJicis) n8y.7,.1K9o7s2ic; e6(2czyeecahroc-solof vaagkeia;)
25.rr.r909;
37 professionj
San Domingo
28 priesthid.
(Dominican
Repu-
iis"nnanodneJ1eumoaamnfnadBthnoaessocdofciootacentefnesSasaacsnnoirpryDa;aorhnimsedhlidenssgpi.inorHi.tuhiHsaigeldhdevsirareiresegcauutrpod/arris.gahtsHotaealivntweedoaircrnekhseeeedrxrvfiwfenedimtohaeuonurpdtoLmuysu.ct.iecrnyhot
so as the better to penetrate into the world of his parishioners.

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93
(t74e)
Father Ludoaic Macalak
t o Nowe Targ (Krak6w - Poland) 25.8.1930; Milkowice (Potand) 2).7.7972;
42 yearc of age; 24 profession; 15 priesthood.
Father Ludovic died prematurely in a street accident while going to
say Holy Mass. He will be remembeted as a Salesian priest, exemplary
and serene.
Father Augustine Raltaelli
* Volano (Trent - Itaty) 24.2.1907; f Vallecrosia (Imperia - Itdv) 22'8'7972;
65 years of. age; 39 profession; )0 priesthood'
A Salesian of the old school, observant, devout and resigned to God's
holy will in bearing his long illns55. He has left us all the memory of
his profound goodness and his zeal for the good of souls'
Father Louis Raineri
t * Grognardo
accident (he
(Alessandria - ltaly) 24.1L.L92); Andora (Savona -
belonged to the house at Alassio) L4.9.L972; 48
Italy), in
years of
a street
a$e; )L
profession; 22 priesthood; he was a Rector 3 yars,
A priest and Religious of edifying observance and an untiring worket"
In spite of poor health he was unfailing in the exact fulfilment of his duties
and always gave to his conftBres whatever help he was capable of.
Fatber Siloester Rajzer
* f Lancut (Lvov - Poland) 6.L2.1914; IGak6v (Poland) 1.9.1972; 57 years of
age; )9 profession; 29 priesthood; he was a Rector 9 years.
He came of a large and truly Christian family. Of the nine children,
five became religious (two Salesians, one Daughter of Mary Help of Christ-
ians, and two sisters in the Polish congregation of Fra Alberto). Fathet
Silvester is well remembered by his confrBres as a priest full of zeal aad
hard work. He died rather suddenly but well prepared to meet his Maker.
Cleric Micbael Sagez
* - f Colmar (Haut-Rhin France) 27.5.L949; Sindara (Gabon) L1.7.L972; 21
ye.ars of age; 3 profession.
Fot one year only did he help with his youth and zeal our missionary
66mmunigy of Gabon. He was &owned in the river NgouniE. He rests
next to an African Salesian who died last year.

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( 1750)
-94-
Fatber Cbarles Sinona
* Locamo (Canton Ticino - Switzerland) f L2.6.1879; Bagnolo (piedmont -
Cuneo, Italy) 291972; 9.1 years of. age; 77 profession; 70 priesthood.
was
A real
long,
apcatitvriearachnd-
he died
fruitful.
at ninetythree yearsof age.
He taught philosophy in
His
our
apostolate
houses of
formation both in Italy and abroad. Back in Italy, he rvas for some
years spiritual director of the novices of the Salesian Sisters; and they
still remember him with gratitude. The name of Father simona is linked
with a group who spread devotion to the Sacred Heart. \\)firh these latter
Father Simona was generous in advice and encouragement. The Lord
tewarded him with a venerable old age and the joy of celebrating the
seventieth anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood.
Fatber Josepb Valenti
f *-Lentini (Syracuse - Italy) 27.4.1917; S. Lorenzo (Rome) 11.9.1972;61 years
of age; 44 profession; 36 priesthood.
He was called by the Iord after long service as an educator and
administrator, especially in the large houses in Rome: Pio XI, Sacro
Cuore and Gerini. Confrbres and young men (especially the past pupils of
Pio XI) remember his activity, his priestly avarlabrlity and his Salesian
cordiality. \\Veary and in poor health, he spent his last year as prefect
at the National Delegates' Centre.
Father Ambrose Zappa
t * Villa Romanb (Como - kaly) 29.4.7908; Bagnolo, Piedmont (Cuneo - Italy)
30.8.1972; 64 years of age; 48 profession; 38 priesthood; he was a Rector for
12 yeas.
His priestly ministry was first tested in delicate duties helping Fr.
Peter Berruti (Vicar of the Rector Major). Then he was elected Matt.r
of Novices and Rector of the Houses of Formation in the central Province,
in Argentina and in Ecuador. He displayed in these tasks masterly and
fatherly qualities, winning the affection and confidence of his many spirirual
s9ns. Taken seriously ill, he returned to Italy, completely at his superiors,
disposal. The lesson he bequeathed us was work, prayer, quiet recollection
and humility.

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.3° elenco 1972
N.
COGNOME E NOME
LUOGO DI NASCITA
DATA DI NASC. E MORTE ETA LUOGO DI M.
ISP.
137 Sac. ANDRADE Oswaldo Fartura (BR)
138 Sac. BARUTTA Tomaso Rosario (RA)
139 Sac. BOSTICCO Mario Bardonecchia (I)
140 Sac. CANDUSSO Maurilio Ragogna (I)
141 Mons. COGNATA Giuseppe Girgenti (I)
142 Sac. DAL ZOVO Ruggero Vestcna Nuova (I)
143 Sac. DERETZ Giulio
Lille (F)
144 Sac. FOSSATI Francesco Monza (I)
145 Sac. GRETTER Ottavio Rio dos Cedros (BR)
146 Sac. HORVATH Vincenzo Vysny (CS)
147 Sac. MACALAK Ludovico Nowy Targ (PL)
148 Sac. RAFFAELLI Agostino Volano (I)
149 Sac. RAINER! Luigi
Grognardo (I)
150 Sac. RAJZER Silvestro
Lancut (PL)
151 Ch. SAGEZ Michele
Colmar (F)
152 Sac. SIMONA Carlo
Locarno (CH)
153 Sac. VALENTI Giuseppe Lentini (I)
154 Sac. ZAPPA Ambrogio
Villa Romano (I)
17.5.1895
6.5.1908
23.3.1919
27.8.1909
14.10.1885
16.9.1909
5.2.1886
5.3.1897
27.10.1912
25.11.1909
25.8.1930
24.2.1907
24.11.1923
6.12.1914
27.5.1949
12.6.1879
27.4.1911
29.4.1908
8.8.1972 77 Campinas (BR)
SP
10.7.1972 64 Mendoza (RA)
Cr
23.7.1972 53 Torino (I)
PAS
12.5.1972 62 Udine (I)
Fi
22.7.1972 86 Pellaro di R.C. (I)
8.7.1972 62 Shillong (India)
Ga
19.6.1972 86 Lorena (BR)
SP
24.8.1972 75 Bombay (India)
By
5.7.1972 59 Campo Grande (BR) CG
8.7.1972 62 S. Domingo (R. Dom.) A
23.7.1972 42 Milkowice (PL)
Kr
22.8.1972 65 Vallecrosia (I)
Li
14.9.1972 48 Andora (I)
Li
1.9.1972 57 Krakow (PL)
Kr
11.7.1972 23 Sindara (Gabon)
Ly
2.9.1972 93 Bagnolo P. (I)
No
11.9.1972 61 Roma (I)
Ro
30.8.1972 64 Bagnolo P. (I)
No

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