Listening to Educate
Consecrated
life at the service of the Church’s educational mission
(ANS – Vatican – May 4, 2026) – In the field of education, listening is an art that must be cultivated together in order to respond to the challenges of our time. This is the powerful and profound message that emerged from the international meeting, “A time for listening in the Church’s educational mission,” jointly promoted by the International Union of Superiors General (UISG), the Union of Superiors General (USG), and the Dicastery for Culture and Education. The event, hosted at the general curia of the Society of Jesus in Rome, represented a significant moment of fraternal and synodal dialog on the Church’s educational role in the contemporary global context.
Synodal
listening for the educational mission
Over 100 people
attended the meeting in person and around 150 joined online: superiors general,
together with those responsible for education in numerous religious
congregations.
The initiative
forms part of the journey begun over a decade ago by the UISG and USG
Commission for Education, in constant dialog with the Dicastery for Culture and
Education. It was a genuine synodal exercise of listening and discernment,
aimed at re-examining the educational mission of consecrated life in the light
of current challenges.
The Salesian
Congregation was represented by the Youth Ministry Department, thru the
presence of the general councilor, Fr. Rafael Bejarano, and Fr. Jerry
Matsoumbou, a member of the department and representative for Africa.
Cardinal José
Tolentino de Mendonça’s message: a prophetic school
The keynote
address of the meeting was delivered by Card. José Tolentino de Mendonça, prefect
of the dicastery. In his address, he emphasized the urgency of listening to the
culture of young people and of understanding consecrated life as a service to
the Church’s universal educational mission.
The school – he
stated – “must be a place of dialog in a secularized world. The Catholic school
is a meeting place for everyone, for cultures, generations, and traditions; it’s
a place of credibility and, above all, of prophecy.”
Hence the call to
open a new season of prophetic transformation to rediscover the ethos of
Catholic education. The prefect also urged the congregations not to betray
their fundamental promises: the Gospel of Jesus, love and openness to all, and
the acceptance of the person in their diversity. Listening, he reiterated, is a
demanding process that requires time and commitment. Only by breaking free from
stagnation and routine will it be possible to overcome the educational
challenge.
The congregations
are called to recognize themselves as a “plural constellation of hope”: diverse
in charisms, yet united in mission. He concluded his address with an evocative
image: to be “a sky full of stars for the new generations,” choosing the
“mysticism of the whole” in the art of education.
Revisiting the Global Educational Pact
The cardinal
invited the congregations engaged in education to make their own the 3 great
syntheses of the Global Educational Pact, recently relaunched by Pope Leo XIV:
- Cultivating the inner life. The sadness and restlessness of
young people cannot be cured solely by technical or pharmacological
solutions. Education must help to discover and nurture the inner dimension
of the person.
- Digital technology at the service of
humanity. Technology
can’t be an end in itself, but must remain a tool at the service of the
dignity and integral growth of the person.
- Educating for peace. Peace is not automatic: it’s a
culture that must be nurtured. We must “disarm” schools and, above all,
hearts, by forming young people into peacemakers.
Challenges and
prospects for renewal
During the time
devoted to communal discernment, some crucial questions emerged: How can we
educate for interiority? How can we accompany the most vulnerable young people
or those distant from the faith? How can we strengthen the identity of the
Catholic school in dialog with the contemporary world? How can we promote more
effective collaboration between congregations?
Among the
priorities identified for the renewal of the educational commitment, the
following were highlighted:
- strengthening
networking between congregations and dioceses;
- investing in the
formation of laypeople as educational leaders;
- promoting
synodality and inter-congregational collaboration;
- creating stable
spaces for listening and shared reflection;
- the active
involvement of families and educational communities.
A shared
mission
Set against the
backdrop of the Jubilee of the World of Education, the meeting strongly
reaffirmed that education today is a shared mission—a mission that demands
collaboration, creativity, and fidelity to the Gospel and to one’s own charism.
Only in this way
will it be possible to recognize and value the “immense good” that’s
accomplished every day in educational works thruout the world, even in the most
difficult contexts.
In this endeavor,
consecrated life is called to be truly a “sky filled with stars for the new
generations.”


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