Wednesday, January 29, 2020

TRIDUUM TO THE FEAST OF DON BOSCO - DAY 3

DON BOSCO - THE SAINTLY FOUNDER

The Three Promises - his salvific itinerary 


Why did Don Bosco found a congregation? Was that part of his dream at nine? It wasn't. It was no where in the horizon. Not even the historical context warranted such a move of founding a religious congregation while dozens of others were being suppressed and clamped down. What was in Don Bosco's mind? Of course, the mission given to him in his dream: show them the beauty of virtue and ugliness of sin; win them over with your loving kindness. In due time, he was promised that he would understand what he was called to. 

Don Bosco began to work for a small group of young people who needed him the most and that small group grew bigger by the day! At a point of time, he realised that even without being much conscious of it, he had opened himself to a mighty big world that the Lord held before him. Those words of our Blesssed Mother in the dream, "This is your field" was coming alive in ways and magnitude that were unprecedented. Don Bosco could not be satisfied with leading a few youngsters to God, he wanted to lead all the youth from all over the world, to God and to salvation! And the Congregation and the Salesian Family was the salvific itinerary that he proposed. An itinerary that consisted of three promises, three concrete promises - Bread, Work and Heaven! 

Da mihi animas, caetera tolle - that yearning to take the young to the Lord was uppermost in the heart of the saintly founder, who considered that not only as his passion, but also the way to his salvation. He proposed the same to his followers, his sons and daughters, his family, which stands spread far and wide today as Salesian Family. And this salvific itinerary, Don Bosco made it sound so simple with his three promises!

Bread - that was the promise of the Divine Providence. When Jesus called, if you wish to be my disciple, give up everything, take up your cross and then, come follow me, Jesus was underlining the God who provides, the God who takes care of our every need! The promise of bread is not so much a promise of convenience and absence of suffering, but a challenge to a way of life that is totally dependent on God! A life of poverty that depends on God and thrives on God's providence. 

Work - that was the promise of Divine Will. Work is not just doing, it is not achieving, it is not sealing my name on everything around me, as if to say, I own them all! Work, more than doing, is the vocation to do the Will of God. The one who does the will of the Father is my brother, my sister, my mother! Don Bosco's promise of Work was born from his conviction that he was an instrument in the hands of God, and everyone who joined him became such an instrument. A life of obedience, that concerns itself with doing the will of God and nothing but the will of God.

Heaven - that was the promise of Divine Intimacy. We are a people of God, citizens of heaven, our celestial destination. But all the way to heaven, is heaven! That is the call we accept when we pray, 'May your kingdom come'. When we live a life of total dependence on God, a life totally for the will of God, that would be a life of pure and spotless love, the love that is born from the love of God, from that divine Intimacy that creates a paradise, wherever we are! 

Don Bosco's promises etch an itinerary so sure to take us all the way to that salvation that awaits each of us - the divine providence that sustains us, the divine will that guides us and the divine intimacy that sanctifies us. Let us walk with Don Bosco, profoundly certain that we are on a salvific itinerary. 




To be given more!

WORD 2day: Thursday, 3rd week in Ordinary time

January 30, 2020: 2 Samuel 7:18-19,24-29; Mark 4: 21-25

What a lovely seen to picture in our minds - David seated before the presence of the Lord and speaking his heart out! What an example we have! 

David acknowledges the amount of good that the Lord has done on his behalf, the way the Lord raised him up from nowhere. He realises too well, that to be given so much means there is much more expected of him. Though he failed in some ways, due to his weaknesses, his love and dedication to the Lord never ceased.

The Lord chose to raise David up and David proved himself worthy of that choice in spite of his weaknesses: doesn't it look like the story of anyone among us? The Lord has chosen us and we need to live worthy of that choice in spite of our weaknesses and limitations. Yes, we are given with a clear and challenging example in the Word today, and this call has two important dimensions to it.

The first is the need to realise the fact that I am called. The more I live humble and aware of the fact that I am chosen, the more I would be blessed. At times we think we are too small to be chosen, too ordinary to be called. Small or big is never the matter with God - with God every one of us is God's child and every one is chosen and called, in a very particular way.

The second dimension: the more I am blessed the more have I to grow worthy of it. I am never a finished product. I need to be always aware of the goodness of the One who has called me and negotiate all the tricky deviations and treacherous pitfalls on my journey. Weaknesses do not hurt as much as not being aware of them or justifying them! 

To be given more, means I have to grow more. What a lovely way to sanctity!