Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Homily for Tuesday, Week 4 of Ordinary Time

Homily for Tuesday
4th Week of Ordinary Time

2 Sam 18: 9-10, 14, 24-25, 30—19: 3
Mark 5: 21-43
Feb. 3, 2026
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

David Mourns for Absalom
(Gustave Dore')

In our 1st reading we heard one of the most heart-wrenching stories in the Bible.  It seems to come to us out of nowhere, partly because we missed the readings for Monday of Week 4 on account of yesterday’s feastday, and partly because only 2 passages of the whole sad tale of Absalom make it into the lectionary—a tale that takes up a section of ch. 12 and almost all of ch. 13-18 of 2 Samuel.

Absalom has come to battle and defeat because he’s been vengeful, resentful, ungrateful, proud, and lacking in filial piety.  He’s attempted to overthrow God’s anointed king.  So God undoes him, which is part of the message that the biblical historian intends for us.

We heard the Cushite messenger’s wish that all the king’s enemies should suffer Absalom’s fate (18:32).  Those who indulge in Absalom’s vices risk a worse fate from the Lord.

David, on the other hand, exhibits a spirit of forgiveness and mercy.  He anticipates the sentiments that Jesus shows in the double episode of today’s gospel:  willingness to go out of his way for the welfare of someone in anguish (Mark 5:24), sensitivity to the touch of a desperate woman (5:30), gentleness with a child (5:41), and even the practical wisdom of seeing to food for a youngster (5:43).

David lost his son.  Jairus got his daughter back.  By imitating David’s patience and Jesus’ compassion, we strive to defeat the vices that might impede our happiness and we feed our hope that on the Last Day Jesus will take us by the hand and bid us rise.

Monday, February 2, 2026

February Message of the Rector Major

THE MESSAGE OF THE RECTOR MAJOR

Fr. Fabio Attard, SDB

Coherence

The privileged path to charity


A passage from the Gospel of Luke, 11:37-41, recounts how Jesus, on his way to Jerusalem, accepts an invitation to dine with a Pharisee. We witness a dialogue that represents a confrontation between two visions of religiosity: the formal one, centered on rules about rituals, and the one of the heart, proposed by Jesus.



In response to the question put to Jesus about why he doesn’t observe the traditional ritual actions, the Pharisee is invited to go beyond outward actions and to verify whether the outward appearance truly corresponds to what is in his heart.


Jesus accepts the invitation without conditions.

Like the Pharisee, we too can invite Jesus to our table. His response is astonishing: Jesus always accepts, without imposing any conditions. He doesn’t demand that our house be in order, nor does he require any guarantee that we’re coherent. “He went and sat down at the table” – with this disarming simplicity, Jesus enters the life of the Pharisee, already knowing what he’ll find, aware of the contradictions, the shadows, and the duplicity.


This is the first liberating message: Jesus doesn’t wait for us to “have it all together” before coming to us; he comes to help us put things in place. We don’t have to hide who we truly are to be worthy of his presence; on the contrary, it is precisely our incompleteness that causes us to need an encounter with him.


Presence that brings clarity

But beware: while Jesus accepts without imposing conditions, his presence is never neutral or “innocuous.” Jesus enters and brings light. The Pharisee perhaps expected an obliging guest, someone to show off, to present to his acquaintances: “Look! Jesus is coming to my house.” Instead, he finds himself exposed, yet without being humiliated or embarrassed. Jesus’ presence casts light on the contradictions, bringing into the open what we’d prefer to keep hidden.


It’s not an attack; it’s more like turning on a light in a room: the light doesn’t create the dust that’s there, but it makes it visible. Similarly, Jesus doesn’t cause our defects, but gently and gradually helps us to see them for what they are. In short, his presence is an invitation to bring clarity to our lives: to examine with honesty where we’re authentic and where we hide behind masks, where there’s coherence and where there’s a disconnect between what we appear to be and who we truly are.


Beyond appearances: the call to personal coherence

“You Pharisees clean the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside you’re full of greed and wickedness.” Jesus doesn’t condemn outward practices in themselves – the ablutions, the public prayers, the observance of rituals – but he sheds light on that subtle and terrible division between the external and the internal, the duplicity of those who care for their image while neglecting their heart.


It’s a temptation that spans all time. How much energy we spend building a flattering image! On social media, in professional life, even in our most intimate relationships: we filter, we select, we show only what makes us look good. Instead, Jesus calls for coherence at a very personal level, even before the public level. It’s not about what others see, but about who we truly are when no one’s looking. It’s there, in the intimacy of the heart, that our authenticity is put on the line.


A vision without shadows

“Fools! Didn’t the one who made the outside also make the inside?” There’s a profound human and spiritual insight here: the human being is one. We’re not divided into airtight compartments – the public and private spheres, the body and the spirit, the exterior and the interior. We can’t keep areas of our lives hidden in the shadows, thinking that they won’t contaminate the rest.


Jesus’ invitation is to see clearly, without shadows: to a life in which there are no hidden corners where we cultivate vices, selfishness, or duplicity. It’s about inner transparency where everything is brought into the light of the conscience and of grace. This doesn’t mean instant perfection, but radical honesty: recognizing our weaknesses, calling them by name, and neither justifying nor hiding them. This is the first step towards healing.


Almsgiving as a gift of oneself

“Give what’s inside as alms, and behold, everything will be clean for you.” Here lies the culmination of Jesus’ message. True purification doesn’t come from external rituals, but from giving what’s within. Coherence has the power to be a bearer of goodness. The word “alms” in Greek has its roots in the word “mercy” and “compassion.” It’s not just a matter of giving money, but of giving ourselves: our time, our attention, our presence, our vulnerability.


When we live this inner unity, when there’s no longer a division between who we are and who we appear to be, then from this unity emanates true charity and authentic mercy: it’s a genuine gift, not calculated, not a means to a personal end. We don’t give to appear generous, but because generosity has become who we are.


Young people’s thirst for adults who are authentic and coherent.

This message resonates particularly strongly today, especially for the younger generations. Young people live immersed in a culture where everything has a price and everything’s calculated in terms of return and utility; identities are fragmented among a thousand profiles, masks, and social roles; relationships are mediated, filtered, and often anonymous or superficial.


In this context, young people have a desperate thirst for authentic adults: people who practice what they preach, who don’t have one face for the public and another for their private life, and who don’t lie for convenience’s sake.


We must never forget that young people don’t look for perfect adults – they reject them as fake. They look for adults who are authentic: capable of acknowledging their own weaknesses, of being consistent in the small things of everyday life, of keeping their promises, and of having an inner life that’s visible. The greatest service we can render to the new generations is not to give them moral advice or rules of conduct but to bear witness to an authentic life.


The timeless invitation

The Pharisee invited Jesus once. But the text reveals to us that Jesus is always available to be invited, today as he was two thousand years ago.


The question for each of us is: are we willing to welcome him, knowing that his presence will confront us with the truth about ourselves? Are we ready to let him shed light on our shadow areas? And then, after having welcomed this light, are we willing to live authentically, renouncing our masks, and giving to others not what turns to our benefit, but rather “what’s within us”?


In a world thirsting for truth, being authentic is not a spiritual luxury: it is the first act of charity that we can perform. Especially toward those, like young people, who have the right to see that it’s possible to live without duplicity, that integrity isn’t a utopia, and that coherence between the inner and the outer self is the path to true freedom.

1st Feast of St. John Bosco in Vanuatu

The 1st Feast of St. John Bosco in Vanuatu
Don Bosco works miracles in Oceania


(ANS – Port Vila, Vanuatu – February 2, 2026)
 – The first Salesians arrived in Port Vila on 13 December 13, 2025. On December 18, they settled into their temporary residence, with the aim of understanding the pastoral context and local culture and, over time, preparing a Salesian project capable of responding to the situation of young people in this country, the most recent to welcome Bosco’s Salesians, the 137th[1] overall in the world.

Being new, the Salesian pioneers had planned to celebrate the feast of Don Bosco in a simple way, together with just the clergy and religious. Unexpectedly, however, it was the parishioners themselves who approached the Salesians, asking to learn more about Don Bosco. Accepting the invitation of the parishioners, the novena Mass was celebrated in the main church and, in the afternoon, the Salesians, together with the parish leaders, visited the nine communities, bringing with them a picture and a relic of Don Bosco.

The visit included a brief presentation of Don Bosco’s life, an explanation of the meaning of the relic, the Rosary with the possibility of confessions, and finally a moment of pastoral exchange during which the local communities expressed their spiritual needs and desires, while the Salesians explained how they could walk together.

Unexpectedly, during the novena, it was Don Bosco himself who performed miracles. “The way people venerate the relic with great devotion and prayer was something that moved us all. Local communities flocked in large numbers to welcome ‘Don Bosco’s visit’, and many approached us for confession after 5 or even 10 years!” testified one of the missionary pioneers.

During the same novena, a teacher from the Catholic school approached Salesian Bro. Paulus Bataona, telling him that he wanted to become a Salesian. “I explained to him that, being married, he could become a Salesian Cooperator,” says Bro. Bataona, “and he replied: “Yes, I want to become one! In recent days, I have already searched for information on the internet and I understand quite well who a Salesian Cooperator is!”

“It was a pleasant surprise,” continued the Salesian, “because none of us had talked about the Cooperators; in fact, we thought it was still too early to talk about the Cooperators, even though we had already begun to spread devotion to Mary Help of Christians and were also open to the possibility of the Association of Mary Help of Christians (ADMA). But Don Bosco has gone ahead of us,” Bro. Bataona explains.

When the teacher then approached Fr. Alfred Maravilla, the director of the mission, expressing the same desire, he told him that a formation program could begin once the minimum number of four candidates had been reached. “In that case, Father, we can start right away, because I already have 4 adults who, like me, want to become Cooperators too!”

“We are deeply touched to see how Don Bosco is truly helping us to realize his dream in Oceania,” exclaimed Fr. Maravilla.

During the feast of Don Bosco, the small village church was packed with faithful for Mass presided over by the chancellor of the diocese of Port Vila, as the bishop was out of the country.

“We were really touched by how the people prepared practically everything: the celebration, the lunch according to Vanuatu tradition, the program, and the logistics,” observed Fr. Moïse Paluku, the 3d member of this 1st Salesian community in the Melanesian archipelago. We really have no words to express our joy at seeing how the first feast of Don Bosco resonated in the hearts of the people. They themselves said it publicly: “From now on, this is our ‘Don Bosco Day’!”



[1] The “official” count.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Homily for 4th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Homily for the
4th Sunday of Ordinary Time

Feb. 1, 2026
Matt 5: 1-12
1 Cor 1: 26-31
Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx
St. Francis Xavier, Bronx

The Sermon on the Mount
(Cosimo Rosselli)

“When Jesus saw the crowds, he went up the mountain, and … he began to teach them” (Matt 5: 1-2).

When Moses went up Mt. Sinai, God gave him the 10 Commandments and the rest of the laws that were to guide and govern Israel.  St. Matthew presents Jesus as the new Moses who ascends a mountain—really, it’s just a hillside near the Sea of Galilee—and gives his disciples a new law.  This is the Sermon on the Mount, which takes up ch. 5-7 of Matthew’s Gospel.  We’ll read parts of ch. 5 on the next 2 Sundays before we begin Lent on Feb. 18, which has its own cycle of gospel readings.

The Sermon on the Mount begins with what we call the Beatitudes.  They’re not 10 in number, but 8.  Nevertheless, they’re Christ’s new set of commandments—not to replace the 10 Commandments from Mt. Sinai but to supplement or perfect them.  On Feb. 15, we’ll hear Jesus say, “Don’t think I’ve come to abolish the law or the prophets.  I’ve come to fulfill them” (Matt 5:17).  He adds, “Unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you won’t enter the kingdom of heaven” (5:20).  The Beatitudes and the rest of the Sermon on the Mount instruct us on how to build on what Moses taught so as to become more like Jesus, the Son of God.

(Vatican News)

In fact, in 2020 Pope Francis called the Beatitudes “the ‘identity card’ of Christians because they outline the face of Jesus himself, his style of living. . . .  These ‘new commandments’ are much more than a set of rules.  Indeed, Jesus does not impose anything but reveals the way of happiness—his way—by repeating the word ‘blessed’ eight times.”[1]

A preacher I know refers to the Sermon on the Mount’s first words as “a lesson plan—instruction in how to achieve holiness and happiness by being a disciple of Christ.”[2]  In fact, some translations use the word happy rather than blessed.  But blessed is more suggestive of our spiritual dependence on and hope in God.  We’re concerned about more than just an earthly or emotional happiness.

The Beatitudes propose to us virtues:  poverty of spirit or detachment from material goods; mourning or sadness at the evil in the world; mildness and humility; a desire for holiness.  They tell us how to act so as to become holy:  be merciful, be pure, be peaceable, be completely committed to God’s kingdom.

Take note that Jesus addresses this message to “the crowds” who’ve come to him.  It’s not just for the 12 apostles, not just for a restricted or special circle of his friends, not just for priests and nuns.  It’s for everyone.  It’s for our practical lives as his followers.

For example, we’re called to “hunger and thirst for righteousness.”  That means being in a right relationship with God—pursuing holiness.  It also means wanting what’s right, what’s just.  Jesus’ teaching has social and cultural implications.  He tells us, his disciples, that we’re blessed if people insult us and persecute us and utter evil against us falsely for following him.  Insult, lies, and persecution are exactly what’s happened to people in some American cities when they’ve spoken up for and tried to defend their vulnerable neighbors, fellow human beings created in God’s image.  It means being merciful to the poor, the hungry, the refugee, those in danger—in our country or anywhere else.

Is this political?  Yes.  It’s the politics of putting the Gospel into practice, which is our right and our responsibility as citizens and as disciples of Jesus.

USCCB

Back in November, the bishops of the U.S. issued a statement on immigrants.  Among other things, they said:  “We are saddened by the state of contemporary debate and the vilification of immigrants.  We are concerned about the conditions in detention centers and the lack of access to pastoral care.  We lament that some immigrants in the United States have arbitrarily lost their legal status. . . .  We oppose the indiscriminate mass deportation of people.  We pray for an end to dehumanizing rhetoric and violence, whether directed at immigrants or at law enforcement.”[3]  That was back in November.

A few days later, Pope Leo backed up the bishops and told reporters, “When people are living good lives—and many of them for 10, 15, 20 years—to treat them in a way that is extremely disrespectful, to say the least,” is not acceptable.[4]

Last week Abp. José Gomez of Los Angeles wrote for his archdiocese that “America was the first nation to be established on the belief that human rights come from God and that the government’s purpose is to protect these rights,” and that “we do not lose our rights based on the color of our skin, or the language we speak, or for not having the proper documents.”  Bp. Anthony Taylor of Little Rock wrote in his diocesan paper, “This is a pro-life issue.  And it will remain a pro-life issue so long as millions of people continue to live lives trapped in desperate circumstances, where countries with means refuse to help.”[5]

In one of his parables, Jesus tells us that on the Last Day we’ll be judged in part by how we’ve treated strangers.  He’ll say to the saved, the sheep of his flock:  “I was a stranger and you welcomed me....  As often as you did it for one of my least brothers and sisters, you did it for me.”  And to those going to hell, he’ll say, “As often as you neglected to do it to one of these least ones, you neglected to do it to me.” (Matt 25:31-46)

St. Paul tells the Christians of Corinth—and us—that they and we aren’t “wise by human standards,” nor powerful nor highborn (1 Cor 1:26).  Rather, they and we have been chosen by God for a different standard than the wealth, power, and glory that the high and mighty of the earth strive for.  God has called us to find our wisdom personified in Jesus Christ.  He’s called us for holiness thru our union with Jesus (1:30), which flows from his lesson plan, his way of happiness, laid out in the Beatitudes and the rest of the Sermon on the Mount.



[1] General Audience of 29 January 2020 at www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/audiences/2020.

[2] Deacon Greg Kandra, Scripture Reflection for Feb. 1, 2026, Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time, The Pilot online, 1-28-26.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Salesian Missions Funds Renovation of Ivory Coast Prenovitiate

Salesian Missions Funds Renovation of Prenovitiate in Ivory Coast


(ANS – Korhogo, Ivory Coast) 
– Salesian prenovices in Korhogo, Ivory Coast, have a new residential accommodation thanks to donor funding from Salesian Missions of New Rochelle. With the funding, an addition was constructed and renovations were made which benefit the 25 young men who live and are educated there.

The variety of facilities was designed and constructed to support residential, educational, and communal needs. They include 2 dormitories, one lecture room, a chapel for spiritual activities, a dining hall, and 3 rooms allocated for formators, along with an administrative office. These spaces form a comprehensive complex aimed at fostering a supportive environment for residents and prenovices.

Stephen Akyene, a prenovice, said, “The house now is perfect for young prenovices. The various pastoral activities that we take part in there are helping to form us into good Salesians. The house and space we now share will aid us in our growth both spiritually and academically.”

According to the World Bank, 46% of people in the Ivory Coast live in conditions of poverty — with 12% of the population living in severe poverty on less than $1.25 a day. Ivory Coast has one of the highest HIV/AIDS prevalence rates in West Africa. While a wide range of national and international initiatives focus on HIV/AIDS awareness, prevention, and testing, the collapse of public health facilities in the north as a result of years of conflict has made the situation worse.

Salesians continue their work providing shelter, education, and social development services to youths and their families. They also work with the victims of war to heal the country’s deep wounds. They listen, help victims seek compensation, and work for social reconciliation between opposing groups. Known for their work with child soldiers around the globe, Salesians are also providing training for youths, some of whom had been aggressors during the war.

Source: Mission Newswire

"Good Christians and Joyful Citizens"

“Good Christians and Joyful Citizens”

Don Bosco’s Joyful Education


(ANS – Rome – January 30, 2026)
 – Among Don Bosco’s most famous expressions, one particularly effectively summarizes his educational dream: to form “good Christians and honest citizens.” Numerous scholars – including Fr. Pietro Braido, who speaks of a true formula of Salesian educational humanism – have shown how this synthesis expresses a project of integral education, capable of bringing together lived faith, human maturity, and social responsibility. In this context, cheerfulness is not an accessory element, but one of the most evident signs of educational success: where young people appear dull and sad, the Salesian style has not yet unleashed its full power.

At the root of this vision lies what St. John Paul II in Iuvenum Patris defined as authentic Christian humanism. Don Bosco sees every young person as a person called to the fullness of life, in which human growth and the life of grace go hand in hand. He rejects both a disembodied spirituality and a humanism without God: he insists on study, work, friendship, and the responsible use of free time, but he directs everything toward Christ and salvation. For this reason, he clearly states that one cannot be a good Christian without becoming an honest citizen, nor can one be an authentically responsible citizen without a conscience formed by faith.

It is Don Bosco himself who simply points out the way to this fullness. He proposes to the young Francis Besucco an essential and realistic program, capable of combining serenity, commitment and spiritual life: “Cheerfulness, study, piety – this is the great program. By practicing it, you’ll be able to live happily and do much good for your soul.” These few words encapsulate a concrete and everyday pedagogy, far from any sad moralism and deeply rooted in the real life of young people.

In this context, we can understand why, in the Preventive System, the pedagogy of joy and celebration is considered a constitutive and non-negotiable element. Studies remind us that “joy and cheerfulness are constitutive elements of the system, inseparable from study, work, and piety.” Don Bosco translates this principle into very concrete educational practices: games, theater, music, celebrations, walks, always deeply connected to sacramental life. The playground refers to the church, recreation to confession and Communion, celebrations to charity.

It is an educated and oriented joy, free and often noisy, but never disorderly or empty. It is a joy that is also capable of saying “no” sometimes, because it is based on a positive vision of man, in which nature and grace, duty and recreation are not opposed but mutually supportive. In this sense, cheerfulness becomes almost a vocation: the Christian way of living life with trust, responsibility, and hope.

Being “Good Christians and joyful citizens” therefore means living citizenship with an evangelical heart. Don Bosco wants young people who are capable of thinking and acting with religious convictions, but at the same time ready to take on their civic duties responsibly: working honestly, respecting just laws, collaborating in social peace, contributing to the common good. He does not propose an escape from the world, but a responsible immersion in reality, illuminated by the Gospel. “Good Christian” and “honest citizen” are not two parallel identities, but 2 inseparable dimensions of the same person.

A recent article describes the atmosphere of the Valdocco oratory as follows: “The boys could learn to be good Christians and honest citizens, and they could savor joy as the highest measure of Christian life.” For Don Bosco, cheerfulness thus became a sort of educational and vocational thermometer: if a young person is constantly gloomy, isolated, and lacking in enthusiasm, something is not working; if, on the other hand, he knows how to play, commit himself, and pray with a serene heart, then he is on the right path. It is no coincidence that in his famous Letter from Rome of 1884, Don Bosco calls on the Salesians to be familiar with young people, especially during recreation, as a privileged place of education: without familiarity, love can’t be shown; without love, trust can’t be born; and without trust, there can be no true education.

In our time, when many young people associate faith with sadness, renunciation as a less human proposal, Don Bosco’s idea of cheerfulness is surprisingly relevant. It testifies that the Gospel makes us more human, not less; that it is possible to be deeply Christian and fully integrated into social life, work, and culture. Where young people grow up capable of praying and studying, of serving and engaging in the city, of smiling and making others smile, Don Bosco’s charism continues to offer the world its most convincing response: a daily holiness that knows how to be joyful.

Film Review -- St. John Bosco: Mission to Love

FILM REVIEW

SAINT JOHN BOSCO: MISSION TO LOVE

Produced by LuxVide in association with RAI, Blue Star Movies, and the Salesians (2004).

Directed by Lodovico Gasparini. Starring Flavio Insinna, Lina Sastri, Charles Dance, and Lewis Crutch.

English or Italian vocal, with Spanish or English subtitles option. Color. 200 minutes. DVD.

Includes behind-the-scenes features and a viewers guide.

            When Saint John Bosco: Mission to Love was first shown on Italy’s RAI-TV, according to reports it drew a greater audience than soccer games over those two nights—no mean feat in Europe. “This just NEVER happens in Italy!” remarks an Australian Salesian working in Rome. “Italians thought this film was just the best thing since sliced bread.” Ignatius Press has finally brought to part of the English-speaking world this long-awaited production. (It appears that Ignatius did not secure world-wide rights.)

            Mission to Love tells Don Bosco’s story in dramatic and lively fashion. After an opening scene based on conflict with his archbishop, it flashes back to his life in Becchi. He narrates to his mother a part of his first dream, meets Fr. Calosso and starts to study, has numerous confrontations with a large, angry Anthony, leaves home to study for the priesthood in Chieri, is ordained, goes to Turin and learns of the difficulties met there by young farm boys trying to make their way, and starts up his Oratory with Fr. Cafasso at his side. And it proceeds straightforwardly to the point where we started, and beyond, up to the firm establishment of the Salesians, who will continue the saint’s work.

            More than the earlier Alessandrini (1936) and Castellani (1987) films, Mission to Love brings home the great challenge that young Don Bosco must have faced in reality as he entered Turin’s jails or traveled the city streets to meet troubled or idle youngsters. There’s no “I want Don Bosco!” (Alessandrini) but plenty of “Get lost, priest!” Of course he eventually wins over many of these toughs, and the dramatic day’s outing from the Generala jail is recounted here as in both the older movies.

            This newest version does a much better job than Castellani’s film of showing why the Oratory faced opposition from some people in authority. On the part of the prefect of the city, there’s fear of revolution, very clear here. On the part of hard-driving employers, there’s the fear of awaking youngsters to workers’ rights. The anticlericalism of the late 1840s and 1850s also comes forth, with a strong emphasis on Don Bosco’s place at the side of “the people,” among the poor. None of that appears in the oldest movie, Alessandrini’s, which was purely celebratory in honor of the saint’s recent canonization. There are no assassination attempts, as in Castellani, and, alas!, no Grigio this time.

            The source of Don Bosco’s conflict with his religious superior, the archbishop, is presented a little more clearly than in the Castellani film. That, too, was entirely lacking in Alessandrini’s. We see here the early friendship between the saint and the archbishop as well as its breakdown. The archbishop is zealous to train priests, is anxious not to appear to be Don Bosco’s creation—Don Bosco having proposed to Pius IX his appointment—and an unfortunate anonymous pamphlet publicizes their dispute. Don Bosco accurately describes (to the Pope) the archbishop as “ardent,” and the archbishop describes (to his clergy) Don Bosco as “proud,” though Salesians would prefer to say “convinced he was right,” or perhaps “persistent.” We see Don Bosco abase himself, in obedience to the Pope, to end the conflict just moments after the archbishop has called him proud.

            Gasparini’s film, unlike the older ones, introduces Dominic Savio, portraying well his eagerness to practice holiness and the esteem he earned both among his peers and with his mentor. We also encounter as real characters and not just names thrown at cassocked figures (in the style of Alessandrini), a few of the early Salesians: Rua, Cagliero, Buzzetti, with some evidence of their varying personalities.

            Gasparini gives some prominence to St. Francis de Sales that was missing in the earlier movies, as patron of the work and, very evidently, the source of the name “Salesian.”

            One of the movie’s great strengths is the role of Mama Margaret: as teacher of young John, as strong mother in the family at Becchi, and as companion and mother of all at Valdocco.

            An even bigger strength is what one viewer calls the film’s use of the ipsissima verba of St. John Bosco, his very own words. We hear them in the dialog between the two saints, Bosco and Savio, and in numerous other dialogs, as well as in the priest’s catechism lessons. They concern the path of holiness, the means of educating the young, making oneself loved, forming good citizens of heaven and the nation, and more. One sees—or rather, hears—the influence of Salesian scholar Fr. Aldo Giraudo on the script.

            The telescoping of real history in this movie is not unlike what Castellani did in 1987. But here the story seems easier to follow. What’s telescoped: pretty much everything that happened in reality between 1844 and 1882. Did one not know the story—Vicar Cavour’s suspicions, revolution and war, Dominic Savio, the cholera, Mama Margaret, the long process of proposing and solidly founding the Salesians, the many dealings with Pius IX, and the whole Gastaldi affair—one might suppose all of this to have happened in, perhaps, a decade. As the current film ends, essentially, with ecclesiastical approval of the Congregation (1864, in fact, and long before Don Bosco’s battles with either Archbishop Riccardo di Netro or Archbishop Gastaldi), both Fr. Cafasso (†1860) and Mama Margaret (†1856) are there to beam with joy. We could also observe that the crucial roles of Fr. John Borel and Fr. Cafasso are rolled together into one. In the two earlier movies, Fr. Borel got all the credit for assisting our Founder; he doesn’t rate even a mention in this one.

            One understands of course that this telescoping is a valid and often necessary cinematic technique. The story is far too complex, the characters far too many, to portray “as it really happened,” especially in the limits of one movie.

            The conflicts that Don Bosco had with both civil and religious authorities were dramatic and real. One may well ask why Gasparini felt the need to fictionalize the names of his opponents. Vicar Michele Cavour becomes Prefect Clementi—who is diabolical, until his deathbed conversion, or at least until he observes Don Bosco weeping over Savio’s death—in a way that Cavour wasn’t. Then Clementi morphs into Urbano Rattazzi and arranges for Parliament to suppress monastic orders and, on his deathbed, advise Don Bosco about how to get around the law of suppression when he founds his own congregation. Archbishop Lorenzo Gastaldi becomes Cardinal Lorenzo Fassati—with the added risk of confusion with the Oratory’s great benefactors the noble Fassati family, as well as the actual Cardinal Archbishop of Turin Maurilio Fossati (1931-1965).

            There are a few minor quibbles: While it’s refreshing that throughout the movie the priests are anglicized as “Father So-and-so” (instead of “Don” Calosso, “Don” Cafasso, and “Don” Fassati), it’s disconcerting to hear “Father Bosco” over and over. And why, then, leave the personal names in Italian: Giovanni, Domenico, Lorenzo, Margherita…? One ought to be consistent in anglicizing or not. And one would think that someone would have taken the trouble to teach the English speakers (actors and dubbers) the correct pronunciation of Salesian. Although the Oratory is supposed to be within Turin—and in reality the Valdocco section certainly wasn’t densely settled in the 1840s and ’50s—one sees it here as miles out into the country.

            A good part of the film was originally spoken in English by English actors—playing Colosso, Cafasso, Clementi, Savio, most of the lads, for instance. The lines originating in Italian (John, Margaret, Fassati, Pius IX, the baker, the printer) seem, for the most part, to have been dubbed well into English. If one uses the version with English subtitles, though, one will find the script considerably condensed from torrential Italian to very pithy English.

            To sum up: Saint John Bosco: Mission to Love does a fine job presenting Don Bosco’s mission and personality and gives an adequate impression of the very difficult times. Even with the filmmaker’s literary license, one feels the authenticity. It’s worth the price of admission—or of the video.

            The viewer’s guide supplied by Ignatius Press includes a description of the film, a sketch of Don Bosco’s life and dreams, an interview with Flavio Insinna (the film’s Don Bosco) from ANS, discussion questions, and a very short list for further reading.

            Saint John Bosco: Mission to Love is available directly from Ignatius Press (http://www.ignatius.com).

March 16, 2007

Don Bosco's Charism Universalized thru Cinema

Don Bosco’s Charism Universalized thru Cinema


(ANS – Rome – January 29, 2026)
 – Don Bosco’s great appeal and his charisma have captivated millions of people around the world. His figure has permeated and still permeates the work of a great many artists who have traced his profile or drawn his portrait, making it even more universal thru various forms of art. Cinematography has certainly played an important role by bringing the Saint of the Young closer to the general public.

Don Bosco is an absolutely “international” saint, in that he is known all over the world and with particular cognizance in the 140 countries where the Salesians are widespread; thus, it is not impossible to come across films of various genres dedicated to him on the Web.

But among the many works produced, it’s undeniable that it was his own homeland, Italy, that paid him the most famous cinematic tributes. For this reason, in the work of selecting among the films dedicated to Don Bosco, the field has been narrowed down to 3 films that are still touchstones for anyone who wants to try their hand in the same artistic arena, that have marked their era, and that have been translated and dubbed or subtitled in several languages, to be disseminated thruout the world.

These are 3 productions simply titled “Don Bosco,” proving that Don Bosco’s name needs no further introduction.

The 1st one was made under the direction of Goffredo Alessandrini and is from 1935, thus a year after the canonization of the Saint of Youth. Starring Gian Paolo Rosmino, the film depicts the life of Don Bosco from his birth until his canonization in 1934. The film was restored from a negative preserved in the Salesian Fund deposited in 2016 in Ivrea.

Instead, on the centennial of the death of the Saint of the Young, in 1988, the film Don Bosco was released. The director was Leandro Castellani, and it featured Italian-American star Ben Gazzara, who played the role of an elderly Don Bosco, dedicated to retracing all the actions he took to achieve his greatest dream: to devote himself completely to the young.

Italian television was also captivated by Don Bosco’s charisma, so much that in 2004 it made a miniseries on RAI, the Italian public radio and TV network. It was directed by Lodovico Gasparini and starred Flavio Insinna. It’s the story of a vocation lived in the sign of joy and optimism, despite the difficulties that litter Don Bosco’s path.

Today we are introducing these 3 masterpieces in order to present them to our readers in view of the feastday of Don Bosco and to promote their viewing as a means of popularizing his figure.

On the 1935 movie, see From the Eastern Front: 1935 Don Bosco Film Returns to Light

What ANS posted last year: From the Eastern Front: Don Bosco at the Movies

Editor’s note: When the RAI film came out, I wrote a review of it. I’ll try to get that posted to the blog.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Homily for Thursday, Week 3 of Ordinary Time

Homily for Thursday
3d Week of Ordinary Time

2 Sam 7: 18-19, 24-29
Jan. 29, 2026
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

David at Prayer (Art Bible)
“Who am I, Lord God, and who are the members of my house, that you have brought me to this point?” (2 Sam 7: 18).

In yesterday’s reading from ch. 7 of 2 Samuel, David proposed to build a suitable house for the ark of the covenant.  God responded by telling him no, that would be for his heir to do; but God would, instead, build a house for David, i.e., assure him a lasting dynasty and a permanent, protected land for Israel.

Today we heard part of David’s prayerful response.  He’s humbly grateful for God’s graciousness toward him, his family, and his people.  He recognizes that it’s all God’s doing:  “you have made this generous promise to your servant” (7:28), and “by your blessing the house of your servant shall be blessed forever” (7:29).  Our psalm response repeats the Lord’s promise, conditionally:  “If your sons keep my covenant, … their sons, too, forever shall sit upon your throne” and “Zion is my resting place forever” (Ps 132:12,14).

As the Lord’s intentions for David differed from David’s own thoughts, likewise he’s fulfilled his commitment in a way different than David and the rest of Israel anticipated.  Altho David’s physical family is no more, the Son of David, God’s final Anointed One, lives and reigns over the universe forever.  As God chose Israel—a choice never revoked, as Vatican II and all the recent Popes have reminded us—he has chosen multitudes more to be his people.  “This is my blood of the new and eternal covenant, which will be poured out for you and for many” (Eucharistic Prayers).  The Lord God, thru Jesus Messiah, has incorporated all of his followers into David’s dynasty.

For this we’re grateful and make David’s prayer our own:  “Who am I, Lord God, … that you have brought me to this point,” and we, now members of David’s house, “stand firm before you.  You have made this generous promise to your servant,” and this house of David’s Son, our Christian house, “shall be blessed forever” (7:18,26,28,29).

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Homily for Tuesday, Week 3 of Ordinary Time

Homily for Tuesday
3d Week of Ordinary Time

Jan. 27, 2026
2 Sam 6: 12-19
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

David bringing the Ark into Jerusalem (Domenico Gargiulo)

“David went to bring up the ark of God … into the city of David amid festivities” (2 Sam 6: 12).

Having defeated Israel’s enemies and his personal foes, David acts to secure his throne as well as to honor God, who has delivered him and Israel, who has raised him from tending sheep to care for God’s human flock.

When we hear the phrase “city of David,” we think 1st of Bethlehem:  “Joseph went up from Galilee … to the city of David that is called Bethlehem, because he was of the house and family of David” (Luke 2:4).  But David is making Jerusalem his city, a wise political move as part of his efforts to unite the 12 tribes; it’s a city that hasn’t belonged to any one of the tribes, a neutral site as it were.  By bringing up the ark of the covenant, he also makes Jerusalem the religious capital of all the tribes; later, when the tribes divide the kingdom, Jeroboam’s 1st move will be to establish an alternative religious center for the northern tribes he governs, to keep them away from the 2 tribes that remained loyal to the line of David (1 Kgs 12:26-32).

David’s religious sentiments, tho, are sincere, not mere political calculation.  He assumes a priestly role in regard to the ark:  wearing priestly garb, dancing wildly, leading the people’s acclamations, offering abundant sacrifices to the Lord (2 Sam 6:13-15).

We’re praying today for Bro. Charles’s friend Winnie Lau.  Her little biography says she and her husband Walter loved ballroom dancing.  It they’d been break dancers instead, they might have resembled David.  But Winnie’s work at her parish food pantry resembles David’s gift of meat, bread, and raisins to the people in celebration of God’s presence among them.  Her rosary-making and prayer were sacrifices to the Lord.  Her participation in the Eucharist expressed her priestly dignity among the baptized.

David brought the ark of God to Jerusalem, close to his home, close to the heart of his nation.  The new ark of God rests in our home, to be the center of our lives.  We praise the Lord Jesus who saves us.  We can’t “dance before him with abandon”; we can only walk or shuffle, but we bring him our sincere and trusting hearts.  In our Eucharistic celebration we unite ourselves sacrificially with Christ to pray for our beloved friends and for all of humanity.

Monday, January 26, 2026

World Communications Day 2026

World Communications Day 2026

“Preserving Human Voices and Faces”

(ANS – Vatican City – January 26, 2026) – In his message for the World Communications Day, released on Saturday, January 24, the feast of St. Francis de Sales, patron saint of journalists, Pope Leo XIV stresses the need to ensure that technological innovation—especially Artificial Intelligence—serves the human person rather than replacing or diminishing human dignity.

The Sacred Value of Face and Voice

“The face and voice are unique and distinctive features of each person; they express an unrepeatable identity and are the foundation of every encounter,” the Pope writes at the beginning of his message. Reflecting on the challenges posed by Artificial Intelligence and new forms of communication, he describes face and voice as sacred gifts from God, who created humanity in His image and likeness and called each person to life through His Word.

Preserving human faces and voices, the Holy Father explains, means safeguarding the indelible reflection of God’s love within every person. “We are not a species made up of predefined biochemical algorithms. Each of us has an irreplaceable and inimitable vocation that unfolds in life and is expressed precisely through communication with others.”

An Anthropological, Not Merely Technological, Challenge

“The challenge,” Pope Leo writes, “is not technological but anthropological. Preserving faces and voices ultimately means protecting ourselves.”

He warns against algorithms that manipulate users by enclosing them in “bubbles of easy consensus and easy indignation,” systems designed mainly to maximize social media profits. He also cautions against the illusion of an “omniscient friend” in AI—tools to which people may uncritically entrust everyday decisions, complex questions, and even artistic creation.

His appeal is direct: “Do not give up your own thinking.”

Human Responsibility in the Age of AI

The Pope emphasizes that the central question is not what machines can do, but what human beings can do—growing in humanity and knowledge through the wise use of powerful tools placed at their service.

Those who seek to “appropriate the fruits of knowledge without the effort of personal involvement,” he says, risk “hiding their face and silencing their voice.”

Risks for Journalism

Pope Leo devotes special attention to the impact of AI and digital technologies on journalism. Systems that present statistical probability as if it were knowledge, he explains, offer at best only approximations of truth. Combined with the decline of field journalism—where information is gathered and verified directly at the source—this creates fertile ground for disinformation.

Hopeful Guidance for the Future

Despite these concerns, the Pope’s message is not alarmist. Instead, he looks to the future with hope and calls for active engagement. “The challenge before us is not to stop digital innovation, but to guide it, aware of its ambivalent nature. It is up to each of us to raise our voices in defense of human beings, so that these tools may truly become our allies.”

He outlines 3 essential paths forward:

  • Responsibility at every level—companies, developers, media professionals, public authorities, and individual citizens
  • Cooperation among all sectors of society
  • Education, especially in critical thinking, source evaluation, and awareness of the interests behind the information we receive

A Final Appeal

“We need the face and the voice to return to speaking for the person,” the Holy Father concludes, reaffirming that authentic communication must always remain rooted in human dignity. 

Reason, Religion, and Kindness

Reason, Religion, and Kindness

Three words that have educated generations


(ANS – Rome – January 26, 2026)
 – When Don Bosco presented his Preventive System, he summarized it in three simple yet powerful words: reason, religion, and (loving) kindness. On these 3 pillars, he educated thousands of young people in Valdocco and in many other houses, and on these same foundations, the Salesian world continues to build schools, oratories, and social works all over the world. This is not an educational slogan, but a real “grammar of education,” capable of holding together the minds, hearts, and souls of young people.

For Don Bosco, reason means first and foremost helping young people to understand the why behind rules and educational proposals. He does not limit himself to commanding or prohibiting: he explains, dialogs, argues, and tries to convince with human and spiritual motivations. Salesian texts emphasize that “reason” implies rationality, clarity, and respect for the intelligence of the young persons, accompanying their growth not with emotional pressure but with the light of truth. Educating with reason means having confidence in young persons’ ability to understand what is good and to freely choose it; for this reason, the Salesian environment values dialog, good explanations, and the search for the deep motivations behind choices.

Religion is at the heart of the Preventive System. Don Bosco is convinced that without reference to God, education remains incomplete. For this reason, he proposed a simple and accessible path of faith: age-appropriate catechism, participation in Mass, frequent reception of the sacraments encouraged but never imposed, devotion to Mary Help of Christians. It is a popular, concrete, and joyful religiosity that accompanies daily life. One text recalls his conviction that “frequent confession and Communion and daily Mass are the pillars that must support the educational edifice.” But Don Bosco insists that nothing should be forced: faith must be proposed in a way that makes it attractive, serene, and liberating, so that it becomes a source of peace, meaning, and hope on the path of growth.

Loving-kindness (amorevolezza) or simply “kindness” is perhaps the most characteristic word and, at the same time, the most difficult to translate. It does not refer to simple sentimental affection, but to an educational style made up of presence, trust, respect, and personal relationship. Don Bosco wants young people “not only to be loved, but to know they are loved.” The most recent studies emphasize that loving kindness also includes attention to emotional maturation, the building of healthy relationships, and the educator’s ability to make himself loved with authenticity. In this climate, correction does not humiliate but helps growth; discipline is not imposition but help, because it arises within a relationship in which young persons know they can trust.

Together, these 3 words explain why the Preventive System rejects violent punishment and tends to minimize even the harshest sanctions, focusing instead on inner responsibility. A young person placed in an environment where the rules are reasonable and explained (reason), where the presence of God is felt (religion), and where one feels sincerely loved (loving kindness) is less likely to fall into serious error and, if he does fall, is more willing to get back up.

For this reason, even today, those who educate in the Salesian style can start from these 3 words: few, simple, but capable of educating generations, because they speak to the minds, hearts, and souls of young people.