THE MESSAGE OF THE VICAR
Father Stefano Martoglio, SDB
While continuing my service as vicar
in the coming months, quietly, very simply, and completely in continuity, I’ll
replace the Rector Major in leading the Congregation to the general chapter that
will open on February 19, 2025.
Dear readers of Salesian media,
I’m about to write these lines with trepidation because, having been a reader of the Salesian Bulletin since I was a child in my family, I now find myself on a different page, having to write the first article, the one reserved for the Rector Major. I do so willingly because this honor allows me to give thanks to God for our Father Angel, now a cardinal of Holy Roman Church, who has just finished ten years of valuable service to the Congregation and the Salesian Family, following his election at General Chapter 27 in 2014.
Ten
years later, he’s now completely at the service of the Holy Father, to do whatever
Pope Francis will entrust to him. We continue to carry him in our hearts
and accompany him with grateful prayer for the good he’s done for us because
time doesn’t diminish but, rather, strengthens gratitude. His personal story
is a historic event not only for him but also for all of us. Although he leaves
us, in the canonical sense, for an even greater service to the Church, he remains
always with us and within us.
In complete
continuity
Now,
as a Congregation, and by extension as a Salesian Family, how do we move
forward? Quietly, very simply, and completely in continuity. According
to the Salesian Constitutions, the
vicar of the Rector Major also has the task of filling in for or replacing the
Rector Major in case of need. This will be the situation until the next general
chapter. The Salesian Constitutions say
this in a more organic and articulated way, but this is the fundamental
concept. Remaining in my service as vicar in the coming months, I will
replace the Rector Major in leading the Congregation to the general chapter that
will open on February 19, 2025. This is indeed a demanding task and one for
which I ask you immediately to pray and invoke the Holy Spirit for fidelity to
the Lord Jesus Christ, with the heart of Don Bosco.
My name
is Stefano
Before
moving on to the important things, a few words to introduce myself. My name is
Stefano, and I was born in Turin to a typical Italian family. My father, a
Salesian past pupil, wanted to send me to the same school that he had attended
in his time; my mother, also a past pupil of a Catholic school, was a teacher. From
them I received life, and a simple, concrete faith life. This is how my
sister and I grew up; there are only the two of us.
My
parents are already in heaven, in God’s hands, and they’ll break into huge
smiles seeing what’s happening to their son. They’ll surely comment
“Don Bosco, keep your hand on his head!”
As a Salesian
I always belonged to the province of Piedmont-Valle d’Aosta, until GC27, when I
was asked to coordinate the Mediterranean Region (all the Salesian realities
around the Mediterranean Sea, on the three continents that overlook it, but
also including Portugal and some areas of Eastern Europe). This beautiful
Salesian experience transformed me, making me international in the way I see
and feel things. GC28 took a further step, asking me to become vicar of
the Rector Major, and here we are! I’ve spent the past ten years alongside Father
Angel, learning in those years to feel the heart of the world, in a Congregation
that’s truly spread over the entire earth.
The
near future
The
service I’ll give in these coming months, until February 2025, is to accompany
the Congregation to the next general chapter, which will be celebrated in Valdocco
(Turin), starting on February 16, 2025, with a retreat, before the work begins
on the 19th.
Dear
friends, the general chapter is the highest and most important moment in the
life of the Congregation. Representatives from all the provinces of the
Congregation gather together (we’re talking about more than 250 confreres) to
do three things, essentially: to get to know each other, to pray and reflect in
order to “think about the present and the future of the Congregation,” and to
elect the next Rector Major and his entire council. This is the very important
moment that Father Angel addressed in his reflection on its theme: “Passionate
about Jesus Christ, Dedicated to the Young.”
This
theme that the Rector Major chose for our Congregation will be articulated in
three different and complementary aspects: the centrality of Christ in our
personal lives and religious consecration; the dimension of our community
vocation, in fraternity and in co-responsibility with the laity to whom the
mission is entrusted; and the institutional aspects of our Congregation: an
evaluation of the animation and governance by our congregational leadership. These
are three aspects of a single, life-giving theme.
Our
Congregation needs this general chapter experience very much after so many
events that have touched us all. Imagine—our last general chapter began
very close to the beginning of the pandemic, and it was precisely because of Covid
that it had to end early.
Building
Hope
To
celebrate a general chapter is to celebrate hope, to build hope through
institutional and personal decisions that allow us to continue Don Bosco’s “dream,”
to give it a present and a future. Each of us is called to be a dream, the
dream in God’s heart, and a dream come true.
In
our Salesian tradition, there’s a beautiful phrase that Don Bosco spoke to Father
Rua when he recalled him to Valdocco from Mirabello—really to take Don Bosco’s own
place: “You were Don Bosco in
Mirabello. Now you’ll be that here at the Oratory.” This is what
really matters: “to be Don Bosco today”—this is the greatest gift we can give
the world.
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