Artificial Intelligence and the Salesian Mission in Interamerica
By JC Montenegro
(ANS – Los Angeles – November 5, 2025) – A regional study on Artificial Intelligence (AI) is reshaping how the Salesians of Don Bosco in the Americas perceive their mission in an increasingly digital world. Commissioned by Fr. Hugo Orozco, regional councilor of Interamerica, and supported by provincial leaders across 10 provinces, the initiative was launched to prepare for the 2025 Interamerican provincial gathering in Berkeley, Calif.
Coordinated by the
Youth Ministry Office of the San Francisco Province, the research did not aim merely
to analyze technology but to listen—to understand how AI is being encountered, questioned,
and lived within Salesian communities, schools, and youth ministries thruout the
region.
Listening to the
Region
The study gathered
the voices of 140 Salesians of Don Bosco and 1,375 lay collaborators from across
the Americas—from Mexico to Bolivia, from Ecuador to the Caribbean, and from the
United States to Peru. Together, they offered a panoramic view of curiosity, discernment,
and deep pastoral concern.
While many participants
describe AI as both a useful resource and a source of uncertainty, their reflections
reveal one shared conviction: technology must always remain at the service of humanity.
It can assist with homilies, translations, catechesis, and administration, yet it
must never replace the heart of the Salesian mission—personal presence, listening,
and relationship. “AI should help us be more human, not less,” summarized one respondent,
echoing the central theme of the study.
Hope and Caution
Intertwined
Thruout the region,
there is growing enthusiasm for the potential of AI in education, evangelization,
and pastoral communication. Salesians see how these tools can free time for mission,
simplifying routine tasks and enabling greater focus on the young. At the same time,
the study records strong reservations. More than half the respondents fear AI could
diminish personal contact, spiritual discernment, or create dependency and superficiality.
Others express concern about ethical risks, misinformation, and data misuse. The
emerging consensus is that AI is neither to be rejected nor blindly embraced—it
must be discerned. AI, they insist, should remain a servant of communion,
helping form thoughtful, compassionate, and critically aware human beings.
Formation: The Pastoral
Priority
The most consistent
recommendation from respondents is the urgent need for formation—technical, ethical,
and spiritual. Salesians across the 2 continents emphasize that any serious approach
to AI must integrate moral reflection and pastoral discernment. They call for regular
formation programs, beginning with initial religious training and continuing thruout
their apostolic life. Practical suggestions include short workshops, peer-learning
networks, bilingual materials, and local “AI champions” capable of mentoring others.
Such training, they
argue, will ensure that educators and pastoral workers remain faithful to Don Bosco’s
vision of integral education—one that unites reason, faith, and affection, even
in digital contexts.
Encountering the
Young in Digital Courtyards
A central insight of
the study is the recognition that AI already shapes how young people learn, communicate,
and make decisions. Many youths turn to digital tools—even for moral or spiritual
guidance—before approaching a mentor. This finding challenges Salesians to renew
their presence in what Don Bosco would call today’s “digital courtyards.” The task
is not to compete with technology but to guide its use, helping young people develop
conscience and critical thinking. Participants stress that while AI can assist with
preparation and organization, it can never replace the face-to-face encounter essential
to accompaniment, confession, or spiritual direction. The goal is clear: technology
should open paths to dialog, not close hearts to human contact.
Practical and Creative
Uses
At present, AI serves
mostly practical functions in Salesian ministry—drafting lessons, generating catechetical
materials, preparing talks, translating documents, or handling communication tasks.
A smaller group is experimenting with more creative applications such as digital
storytelling, design, or social media engagement aimed at youth. Looking ahead,
many dream of developing a “Salesian Copilot”—a digital platform rooted in the Salesian
spirit. It would support prayer, preaching, pastoral planning, and content creation
while upholding ethics, authenticity, and privacy. The goal is not to replace pastoral
discernment, but to simplify work and strengthen collaboration across the Americas.
Elder Confreres
and Accessibility
The study reveals enthusiasm
about the possibility of AI helping elder confreres remain engaged and connected.
Respondents suggest that simple, user-friendly tools could support communication,
prayer, and ongoing learning—provided they complement, never substitute, human presence
and fraternity. Proposals include accessible formats with voice dictation, large-type
text, and easy tutorials, helping bridge the digital divide within communities and
promoting inclusion for all members.
A Mature but Hopeful
Community
Demographic data show
that over half of the Salesians who participated are aged 51 or older, with an average
of 31 years in religious profession. Despite limited technical background, their
responses convey openness, curiosity, and pastoral creativity. For this mature community,
the challenge is not to master algorithms, but to ensure that technology deepens
authenticity, presence, and faith. AI becomes valuable only when it supports human
encounter and the mission of evangelizing the young.
A Synodal Process
in Action
Under the leadership
of Fr. Fabian Cardenas and Luis Chacon from the San Francisco Province, the research
was a model of synodality—walking, listening, and discerning together across languages
and cultures. The final report concludes with a clear direction: AI must become
a pastoral ally, helping people pray, think, and love more deeply. The call is not
only to use technology wisely but to return to the founding intuition of Don Bosco—to
be present, always and everywhere, with the heart of a father, teacher, and friend.
Looking Forward
The research team plans
to release a 2d phase focused on the voices of young people themselves—their hopes,
questions, and challenges regarding AI, faith, and vocation. This next step seeks
to continue the dialog begun in this 1st study: a process of discernment that unites
experience, ethics, and spiritual depth. Across the Americas, this call resounds
with renewed conviction: every innovation, every new digital tool, is another courtyard
in which the Salesian spirit is invited to dwell—accompanying, educating, and evangelizing
with wisdom, creativity, and joy.

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