1.7.1. Joy was the condition DB wanted for his boys at the Oratory.
1.7.2. DB was able to make a connection between the natural desire for happiness and the
supernatural which enabled him to create an atmosphere of spirituality.
1.7.3. Communion is the possession of God who gives us joy.
1.7.4. DB knew that whatever required the serious use of the mind was something young
people didn’t like. Yet he was able to make them like praying so that prayer became an
outlet for their need for joy.
1.7.5. Joy is not limited to the spirit. It must been seen externally. The body also manifests the
joy that is within.
1.7.6. Grace adapts itself to nature. In youth it shows itself in fun and enjoyment. Jumping,
running, making noise, the playground, music, song and theater are ways by which
youth intensely relishes their happiness.
1.7.7. QUOTATIONS
1.7.7.1. DB: “Be happy. But if it is to be happiness, it should come from a conscience
free from sin.”
1.7.7.2. CY: “I wish you well and I willingly grant you those amusements which are
not sinful.”
1.7.7.3. DB: “Joy. Study. Piety. This is the great program which when practiced will
enable you to live happily, and to do a lot of good to your soul.”
1.7.8. Joy is an excellent means of escaping from idleness which is an occasion of sin.
1.7.9. Psychological effect of joy. It absorbs the detritus of melancholy and of bad talk.
1.7.10. Liturgy of joy. “While at play, or in conversation or in other pastime, raise your mind to
God.”
1.8. IT IS EASY TO BECOME A SAINT
1.8.1. Become a saint. To the ears of XIX century youth, “Saint” is a word associated with
courage and daring. The Saint is a champion, a hero who through extraordinary feat
merited the honors of the altars.
1.8.2. GPD (1885): “Give me an obedient boy (adolescent) and he will become a saint. A
disobedient boy on the other hand will take a road that leads to the loss of every
virtue.”
1.8.3. Aspiration taught by DB to his boys: “Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus, St. Joseph and St.
Louis Gonzaga, obtain for me the grace of becoming a saint.”
1.8.4. DB firmly believed in youthful sanctity. He believed that for each stage of life there
exists a perfection relative to that stage.
1.8.4.1. He counseled Dominic Savio: “Be persevering in the fulfillment of your duties
of study and piety…and don’t miss taking part in recreation with your
companions.” Formula for Dominic: “Piety. Study. Recreation.”
1.8.4.2. Formula for Besucco: “Joy. Study. Piety.”
1.8.5. Reaching a heroic level is expressed in the adjective “perseverante” or persevering.
1.8.6. He also believed that there exists perfection appropriate for one’s state of life.
1.8.7. Expressions of DB: Youthful sanctity consists in the practice of religion or in giving
oneself to God (darsi a Dio).
1.8.8. Young people should not think that sanctity is for adults and old people. In fact, one
becomes a saint in one’s mature years or old age only because he was already a saint
from his youthful years.
2. FOUNDATIONS
2.1. RELATIONSHIP OF MAN WITH GOD
Youth Spirituality in the Companion of Youth, Page 3 of 13