Province Treasurers Course Concludes
“A charismatic figure who carries out his
responsibilities in all the aspects of Salesian life and mission”
(ANS – Rome – May 13, 2024) – The 2024 formation course for newly appointed province treasurers ended on Friday, May 10. They were 5 days of intense work and deep commitment, not without, however, various moments of recreation and relaxation, cultural, spiritual, and fraternal enrichment during which all the participants were able to deepen the meaning of their service to the Congregation and to the young people in the office assigned to them as provincial treasurers.
“The province treasurer is not so much an administrator or a
technocrat, but rather a charismatic figure at all levels (house, province,
Congregation), who offers his services and carries out his responsibilities in
all the aspects of Salesian life and mission, especially whenever the decisions
made at province level produce inevitable economic and financial effects. It is
important to point out that the role of the treasurer within the [provincial] council
is a very special feature of ours not to be found in all other congregations
and religious orders,” Bro. Jean Paul Muller, treasurer general of the
Congregation, stressed. He was the one who organized this formation
course.
During the event attended by province treasurers from 21
circumscriptions across all 7 Salesian regions, a wide variety of topics
related to all the different dimensions of the treasurer’s work were discussed:
the ordinary management of provincial assets, the laws, norms, and procedures
governing his action, accounting, ethical criteria, and the tools available to
evaluate the different financial options, the management of solidarity,
collaboration with NGOs and other relevant offices and bodies, as well as the
aspects proper to the spirituality of those who through finances participate in
an eminently religious and social mission.
One of the participants was the new treasurer of the New Rochelle Province, Fr. Richard Alejunas.
To give structure and content to this quantity of topics, the treasurer
general’s office made use of a team of prominent and competent speakers and
experts who offered their contributions. “Given the complexity of economic and
financial issues, it is now almost impossible to do so without collaboration,”
Dr Janko Jochimsen, a collaborator in the treasurer’s office, said in his
address.
But he also reminded that “the ultimate responsibility for
administrative, economic, or financial decisions can never be handed over to
members of the laity or to those of other Institutes.”
Speaking in the part dedicated to canonical and institutional
regulations, economic offenses, and procedures, the Congregation’s procurator general,
Fr. Pier Fausto Frisoli, observed: “What regulations govern church property?
The assets of canonical public juridical persons are ecclesiastical assets and
are, as such, subject to canon law: universal law (CIC Book V "The
Temporal Goods of the Church" cc. 1254-1310); particular law (norms
established by episcopal conferences and individual dioceses); proper law (rules
laid down in the Constitutions and General Regulations and in the Provincial
Directory).”
Shedding light on the relationship between prayer and mission,
on the concluding morning the Rector Major emeritus, Fr. Pascual Chavez
Villanueva, explained: “Jesus immediately defines his life as an evangelizing
mission, as a mission to preach, to proclaim the Gospel, and to deliver from
the evil one, from disease, from everything that makes human life a prisoner of
sin and death, incapable of good, of joy, of love. Certainly, Jesus gave himself
moments of solitude, of retreat, of prayer in the night and in the desert, but
for him they were not an alternative to the mission, nor were they times in
function of the mission. For him, praying and going out to preach, to heal, and
to deliver from the evil one were two aspects of a single reality. And this
unity was what Jesus wanted to draw his disciples to. To be a disciple of
Christ is precisely to enter the unity of prayer and mission that Jesus lived.
That is why it’s important to understand what this unity meant for him.”
Finally, in the closing words of the course, Bro. Muller offered
reassurance and a guideline to all participating treasurers: “Your service to
the Congregation is essential, and we at headquarters are here to assist you.
Do not hesitate to ask.… And remember: the texts of the Congregation and the doctrine
of the Church are of fundamental importance to be able to carry out your
service precisely and accurately.”
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