  
   Complete dedication to what he saw as God's will for him dominated
 the life of John Baptist de la Salle. In 1950, Pope Pius XII named him 
patron of schoolteachers for his efforts in upgrading school 
instruction. As a young 17th-century Frenchman, John had everything 
going for him: scholarly bent, good looks, noble family background, 
money, refined upbringing. At the early age of 11, he received the 
tonsure and started preparation for the priesthood, to which he was 
ordained at 27. He seemed assured then of a life of dignified ease and a
 high position in the Church. 
 
But God had other plans for John, which were gradually revealed 
to him in the next several years. During a chance meeting with M. Nyel 
of Raven, he became interested in the creation of schools for poor boys 
in Raven, where he was stationed. Though the work was extremely 
distasteful to him at first, he became more involved in working with the
 deprived youths.  
Once convinced that this was his divinely 
appointed mission, John threw himself wholeheartedly into the work, left
 home and family, abandoned his position as canon at Rheims, gave away 
his fortune and reduced himself to the level of the poor to whom he 
devoted his entire life.  
The remainder of his life was closely 
entwined with the community of religious men he founded, the Brothers of
 the Christian School (Christian Brothers, or De La Salle Brothers). 
This community grew rapidly and was successful in educating boys of poor
 families, using methods designed by John. It prepare teachers in the 
first training college for teachers and also set up homes and schools 
for young delinquents of wealthy families. The motivating element in all
 these endeavors was the desire to become a good Christian.  
Yet 
even in his success, John did not escape experiencing many trials: 
heartrending disappointment and defections among his disciples, bitter 
opposition from the secular schoolmasters who resented his new and 
fruitful methods, and persistent opposition from the Jansenists of his 
time, whose moral rigidity and pessimism abut the human condition John 
resisted vehemently all his life.  
Afflicted with asthma and rheumatism in his last years, he died on Good Friday at 68 and was canonized in 1900. 
   Comment:  Complete dedication to one's calling by God, whatever
 it may be, is a rare quality. Jesus asks us to "love the Lord your God 
with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all
 your strength" (Mark 12:30b, emphasis added). Paul gives similar 
advice: "Whatever you do, do from the heart..." (Colossians 3:23). 
            Quote:  "What is nobler than to mold the character of 
the young? I consider that he who knows how to form the youthful mind is
 truly greater than all painters, sculptors and all others of that sort"
 (St. John Chrysostom). | 
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