THE MARCH OF THE LAITY

STRENNA 2009, by Pascual Chávez Villanueva
A VAST MOVEMENT FOR THE YOUNG
Solidarity is shown through. the civil, social and missionary volunteer movement.It constitutes for the individual a possible significant vocation of commitment. Understood as willingness to devote time to the advancement of promotional, educative and pastoral initiatives, it leads persons to the sharing of responsibility. (CMS 20)
Speaking about the "Salesian Family" today is to describe a certain "sense of citizenship." The expression is not found in Don Bosco's "terminology," but it is present in his heart and in the spirit of everything he did. There can be no doubt that for our Father the centre and purpose of his whole life was the mission received from God which he saw taking shape more and more clearly following his dream at nine years of age, without that dispensing him from the obligation, which at times was difficult and painful, of discerning the path it was to take and discovering the means to put it into practice. The various activities and work Don Bosco undertook, including the founding of his Congregation, and with Mary Mazzarello, that of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians were not an end in themselves, but a way of carrying out the mission. Describing the charism as "Salesian" rather than suggesting any sense of direct descent indicates a spirit and a style of action inspired by the loving kindness of Saint Francis of Sales. It is possible to think of a movement as formed by concentric circles at the centre of which is the "animating nucleus" which is the FMA and the SDB consecrated religious. Certainly the tiny seed has become a large tree and this a wood. In the 2009 Strenna I expressed the very practical form of our mission in this way: "Let us commit ourselves to making the Salesian Family a vast movement of persons for the salvation of the young".
We are then a "family", not a "work group"; a family which lives in communion and has a mission, like a heart that beats with a double rhythm, the systolic and the diastolic, the two alternatives which cannot be separated without losing their identity. Two documents point the way: the Common Identity Card and the Common Mission Statement. Communion points us towards an affective relationship, an appreciation of individuals and of groups, it speaks of doing things together and conviviality. The mission reminds us that it is not a question of just "being together" as on mount Tabor, but of working in harmony for the education and the evangelisation of the young. The clearest example of this dialectic union is to be found in the Past Pupils' belonging to the Salesian Family. The Salesian Constitutions say that thy "are also members [of the SF] by reason of the education they have received" (SDB.C. 5). No one who has been in one of our houses or centres can be "rejected", something unthinkable in a family. "The bonds are closer when they commit themselves to take an active part in the Salesian mission in the world" (ibidem): in a family the collaboration of everyone in the common mission is no small matter. Speaking about a "movement" underlines the dynamism of the mission and recalls the passage in the gospel which describes Jesus walking towards Emmaus with two disciples; the disciples for us are the young: we are called to accompany them to Jesus, the only one who can give meaning to their lives.