From St Joseph de Calasanz to Cardinal M.A. Tonti
Let us strive to cling to Christ and please him alone |
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Everybody realizes the great dignity and merit of that ministry in which men
devote themselves to the education of boys, especially poor boys, so
that they may learn the way to eternal life. When, in the interests of
soul and body, knowledge is imparted, piety cultivated, Christian
doctrine inculcated, their teachers share in a certain manner in the
work of their guardian angels.
Help of the most excellent kind is given to young
people, whatever their origin or station, so that not only are they
preserved from evil but they are more easily and gently drawn towards
good. It is universally accepted that when the young receive such aid,
they become so much changed for the better as to be no longer
recognizable for what they previously were. The young, like tender
plants, are easily trained in the desired direction, but if allowed to
toughen, we find that our best efforts may fail to correct their wills.
The education of youth, particularly of the poor,
while it assists them to grow in human dignity, also concerns all
members of Christian society. Parents rejoice to see their children
being led along the right path; civil authorities approve the formation
of good-living subjects and citizens. The Church especially has cause to
be glad, for, as lovers of Christ and defenders of the gospel, the
young are more speedily and efficaciously brought into her many and
varied fields of life and action.
Those who undertake this work of teaching, surely a
task to be carried out with the greatest care, must be endowed with
overflowing charity, inexhaustible patience, and, above all, profound
humility. So may they be found worthy for the Lord, in answer to their
humble entreaties, to make them fellow-workers with Truth itself; may he
strengthen them to carry out their noble office, and finally, may he
grant them a heavenly reward in accordance with the saying: ‘Those who
instruct many in virtue will shine like stars for all eternity.’
They will attain more easily to this, if, having made
profession of perpetual service, they strive wholeheartedly to cleave to
Christ and to please him only, who said: ‘Whatever you did to one of
the least of my little ones, you did it to me.’
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