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4. Priority for the
qualification of Confreres
In the Report on
the State of the Congregation I ended the part dedicated to the
"Preparation of the confreres" with the following statement:
"The state of our resources, the implications of our commitments and the
general growth in the world ask everywhere of our confreres and communities
further progress in cultural preparation and spiritual strength. The
perspective therefore is to consolidate…, dedicating a special period to the
requalification of our personnel, and in particular those in directive
positions, sending the greatest possible number of confreres for specialist
training, and improving initial formation on the basis of the experience we
have already gained"
It was an
evaluation I thought to be imperative, open to interpretations not always well
understood, but matured in prayer and suffering. It seemed, indeed, like a
guideline with fundamental consequences in the six years ahead.
Today I am
convinced that we must wager on this priority investment and translate it into
some concrete commitments, accepting the consequent limitations which it seems
must follow. A conscious choice is being imposed on the Congregation and
Provinces, which will make possible a qualitative leap in the way' of life
of every confrere, in the mentality and practice of communities and
consequently in the form in which provincial objectives are set out. It
is not a question of a light retouching but of something more radical, though
not completely new because in many parts the process has been already begun.
I know that it
is not easy to live at a personal level and translate into an action of
government the salesian balance between "for you I study" and
"for you I always work", between love and the search for pedagogical
and pastoral quality. The urgent needs of the mission, scarcity of personnel,
the new opportunities we are offered, the multiplication of projects, constant
elements in salesian experience and a positive result of "Da mihi
animas", urge us to be enterprising. And that must continue. But care must
be taken that activity does not lead to weariness, repetition, cultural
stagnation, mental distractions, and improvisation.
It is not the first
time in the history of our Congregation that attention is being given to
decisive choices for a change of practice, in the light of perceived demands
and to prepare for new and flourishing developments which appear possible but
only on certain conditions. They follow phases of growth which were necessarily
rapid, and by forestalling exhaustion they prepare for others equally
flourishing.
I would like to
recall three interventions, made at different moments in history but which
together emphasize the same concern we have today. All three establish a
criterion and a line of action for guaranteeing the preparation of confreres
and quality in fulfilling the educative mission.
In the years
1905-1906 Don Rua wanted to organize and ensure regularity in the
studies of the young confreres. There were many frontiers of work, personnel
was on the increase but still insufficient, the criteria for involvement in the
works were those of the Founder, but the expansion of the Congregation and the
needs of the Church made evident the need for a change. There was in fact the
risk of sacrificing formation to the urgent needs of the works and cutting down
the course of philosophy and theology.
"We must
give greater regularity every day", wrote Don Rua, " to our own
affairs, and to this effect we place before even the most noble of other aspirations,
the moral and intellectual formation of our clerics". "In
practice", he went on, fully aware of the difficulties that would be
caused by the decision he was about to announce, "we propose two items:
Do not propose to the Superior
Chapter, for a period of at least five years, the opening of new houses or
foundations, nor the enlargement of those now existing. We cannot do it,
and that is all there is to it.
Consider carefully your houses
one by one, and when you have seen which ones you can suppress for the
better arrangement of the rest of the Province, put the proposal to the
Superior Chapter. It is not their number we must have at heart, but their
proper and regular functioning".
And in a letter of 1906 he returned decisively to the
same points.
In 1928 there was an intervention of Don Rinaldi.
Vocations were increasing in a consoling manner (there were about 1,000
novices); salesian works, and especially the missions, were developing at an
impressive rate and new requests were being constantly received; Provincials
did not have the personnel for so many works and not infrequently studies were
sacrificed, and with them the formation of the young confreres.
Faced by such a situation, and aware that the mission
could not be fulfilled without the necessary preparation, Don Rinaldi wrote in
the Acts of the Superior Chapter of September 1928: "I have therefore
decided, with the full approval of the Superior Chapter, that during the four
years from 1929 to 1932 no new foundations will be accepted, neither of houses
or of missions. This pause, well understood by Provincials and Rectors, will be
a benefit for the Provinces; it will bring tranquility to the houses and relief
to all the confreres; rather than a harmful break, it will mark a true progress
for our Society, because it will serve for a better cultivation of vocations
and prepare the Congregation for a more solid development in the future".
And I complete this reference to our history by
recalling some expressions written by Fr Ricceri in 1966, in the
official presentation of the documents of the GC19. The context is not
difficult to understand. Vatican II had recently finished, and we were on the
verge of discovering new horizons and pastoral needs, made decisive by the
encouraging vision of the Church, its mission and its relationship with the
world. "Connected with this need for formation", wrote Fr Ricceri,
"there is the other not less important one of qualification of the
individual confrere for the various tasks to which obedience calls him. Today
society will not accept into its structures utility men, men without cultural,
technical or professional training… People, and the Church first of all,
consider us authentic specialists in pedagogy and the apostolate. We must, to
the limit of our capacity, live up to this reputation… A bit of practice is no
longer sufficient… From now on every manifestation of our activity calls for
qualified personnel… It is not a question of collecting degrees or specializing
for its own sake, and much less of encouraging selfish or ambitious desires to
study for one’s own satisfaction but with sterile application to the
apostolate; what is required is simply an adequate preparation to work
fruitfully in one of the innumerable fields of action to which Providence has
called us. It can be seen at once what and how many consequences for superiors
and confreres follow from these changes". And some months later he wrote
in the Acts of the Council: "If we want to respond to the inescapable
demands of our mission, more must be done to give to all the activities of
Salesians that qualification which is not a luxury but an ever more evident
necessity".
The period immediately preceding our own on the other
hand, under the guidance of Fr Egidio Viganò, emphasized the same emergency
and took efficacious steps to resolve it, with the reorganization of the
formative processes reformulated in the Ratio, with the updating of study
programs in line with the evolution in nearly all the branches of theology and
knowledge, with the beginning and extending of ongoing formation and the
foundation of new Institutes corresponding to qualifications for the present
day (pastoral work, social communication).
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