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FEAST OF SAINT JOHN BAPTIST DE LA SALLE – 7th APRIL

FEAST OF SAINT JOHN BAPTIST DE LA SALLE
FEAST DAY – 7th APRIL

Jean-Baptiste de La Salle (April 30, 1651 – April 7, 1719) was a French priest, educational reformer, and founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools. He is a saint of the Catholic Church and the patron saint for teachers of youth. He is referred to both as La Salle and as De La Salle. He dedicated much of his life to the education of poor children in France and he started many educational practices.

Generations of schoolboys have been taught by the Christian Brothers, and their founder, St. John Baptist de la Salle, is familiar in their prayers and devotions. “Brothers Boys” are scattered all over the world and all of them have fond memories of their “De la Salle” days. John Baptist de la Salle was born at Rheims in 1651. He was the eldest child of Louis de La Salle and Nicolle Moet de Brouillet. Nicolle’s family was a noble one and ran a successful business.

La Salle “received the tonsure” at age eleven, in an official ceremony that marked a boy’s intention, and his parents’ offer of their young sons, to the service of God. He was named canon of Reims Cathedral when he was sixteen. He was sent to the College des Bons Enfants, where he pursued higher studies and, on July 10, 1669, he took the degree of Master of Arts.

When De La Salle had completed his classical, literary, and philosophical courses, he was sent to Paris to enter the Seminary of Saint-Sulpice on October 18, 1670. His mother died on July 19, 1671, and on April 9, 1672, his father died. This circumstance obliged him to leave Saint-Sulpice on April 19, 1672. He was now twenty-one, the head of the family, and as such had the responsibility of educating his four brothers and two sisters.

He completed his theological studies and was ordained to the priesthood at the age of 26 on April 9, 1678. Two years later he received a doctorate in theology. Soon after ordination he was put in charge of a girls’ school, and in 1679 he met Adrian Nyel, a layman who wanted to open a school for boys. Two schools were started, and De la Salle became interested in the work of education.

He took an interest in the teachers, eventually invited them to live in his own house, and tried to train them in the educational system that was forming in his mind. This first group ultimately left, unable to grasp what the saint had in mind. Others, however, joined him, and the beginnings of the Brothers of the Christian Schools were begun.

Seeing a unique opportunity for good, Canon de la Salle resigned his canonry, gave his inheritance to the poor, and began to organize his teachers into a religious congregation. Soon, boys from his schools began to ask for admission to the Brothers, and the founder set up a juniorate to prepare them for their life as religious teachers. The Sisters of the Child Jesus were a new religious congregation whose work was the care of the sick and education of poor girls.

The young priest had helped them in becoming established, and then served as their chaplain and confessor. It was through his work with the Sisters that in 1679 he met Adrian Nyel. With De La Salle’s help, a school was soon opened. Later, a wealthy woman in Rheims told Nyel she would endow a school, with La Salle’s help. What began as an effort to help Adrian Nyel establish a school for the poor in La Salle’s home town gradually became his life’s work.

At the request of many pastors, he also set up a training school for teachers, first at Rheims, then at Paris, and finally at St.-Denis. Realizing that he was breaking entirely new ground in the education of the young, John Baptist de la Salle wrote books on his system of education, opened schools for tradesmen, and even founded a school for the nobility, at the request of King James of England.

The congregation had a tumultuous history, and the setbacks that the founder had to face were many, but the work was begun, and he guided it with rare wisdom. In Lent of 1719, he grew weak, met with a serious accident, and died on Good Friday. He was canonized by Pope Leo XIII on May 24, 1900 and Pope Pius X inserted his feast in the General Roman Calendar in 1904 for celebration on 15 May.

Because of his inspirational writings, Pope Pius XII proclaimed him patron of All Teachers of Youth on May 15, 1950. In the 1969 revision of the Church calendar, Pope Paul VI moved his feast day to April 7, the day of his death or “birth to heaven”, his dies natalis. He is Patron of Teachers of Youth, of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, Lasallian Educational Institutions, Educators, School principals and Teachers.

La Salle was a pioneer in programs for training lay teachers. Of his writings on education, Matthew Arnold remarked: “Later works on the same subject have little improved the precepts, while they entirely lack the unction.” His educational innovations include Sunday courses for working young men, one of the first institutions in France for the care of delinquents, technical schools, and secondary schools for modern languages, arts, and sciences.

The LaSalle University says that his writings influenced educational practice, school management, and teacher preparation for more than 300 years. The Lasallian schools form a 300-year-old network following La Salle’s principles. Many of the schools are named after La Salle, and several streets, often near a Lasallian School, are named after him.

In 2021 the International Lasallian Mission Web site stated that the Lasallian order consists of about 3,000 Brothers, who help in running over 1,100 education centers in 80 countries with more than a million students, together with 90,000 teachers and lay associates. Asteroid 3002 Delasalle, discovered in 1982, was named after De La Salle.

CONTEMPLATING THE LIFE OF SAINT JOHN BAPTIST DE LA SALLE

St. John Baptist de La Salle is one of the great saints of education in the Church, known as the founder of modern Christian schooling for the poor and the patron saint of teachers. His life is a powerful witness to how education can be a path of salvation, dignity, and transformation. He is Patron of: Teachers and educators and Founder of: The Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (De La Salle Brothers)

THE CLASSROOM THAT BECAME A CALLING

A LIFE ALREADY PLANNED

Reims was a city of order, structure, and expectation. John Baptist de La Salle was born into it all – wealth, education, opportunity. His path seemed clear:
A respected priest.
A stable life.
A future of quiet dignity.

Everything was arranged. Everything made sense. Until God disrupted the plan, not with a vision, not with a miracle – but with a person.

THE INTERRUPTING ENCOUNTER

It began with a meeting. A man named Adrien Nyel approached him, speaking of poor children, without education, and without guidance or hope.

At first, De La Salle responded as anyone in his position might: He helped financially and offered advice. But the problem refused to stay “out there.”
It followed him. Disturbed him. Drew him in. What was once charity, was becoming a call.

STEPPING CLOSER THAN COMFORT

What begins as involvement soon demands commitment. De La Salle realized something uncomfortable:
He could not transform their lives while remaining distant from them.

So he crossed a line few expected him to cross. He left his home. Shared his resources. Lived with the teachers. Then, even more radically – He gave everything away. Comfort disappeared. Security vanished. And yet, something deeper emerged: Clarity.

THE BIRTH OF A NEW VISION

The classrooms were chaotic at first. Untrained teachers.
Unstructured methods.
Children with little discipline and less hope.

But De La Salle saw something others did not: Not just disorder but possibility. He began to shape a new way:
Students learning together, not individually. Lessons were in the language they understood. Teachers formed not just academically – but spiritually.

Slowly, order emerged from chaos. The classroom became, more than a place of instruction, a place of transformation.

A COMMUNITY IS FORGED

But he knew he could not do it alone. So he gathered men – not priests, but ordinary men – and formed them into something extraordinary: A community of educators living together, praying together, teaching together.

They would not simply teach. They would dedicate their lives to the education of the poor. This was new. Unusual. Even controversial. But it was real. And it was growing.

THE NIGHT OF TRIALS

Not everyone welcomed the change. Criticism came – from within and from outside. Church Authorities questioned him. Educators opposed him. Finances collapsed. At one point, he was pushed aside from his own work. The mission he built continued without him.

In silence, he stepped back. Not in defeat – but in surrender.

THE QUIET VICTORY

Years later, the truth became undeniable.
* The work endured.
* The schools flourished.
* The Brothers persevered.

And De La Salle – not through control, not through power but through fidelity, saw his mission take root.

SPIRITUAL VISION

At the heart of his mission was a deep conviction: “To teach is to touch souls.”

He saw education as: A work of salvation, a way to reveal God to the young and a mission rooted in faith. He emphasized prayer, gentleness and presence among students.

FINAL YEARS AND DEATH

On Good Friday, 1719, his life came to an end. Quietly, after a life of:
Sacrifice
Innovation
Faithfulness

Like a teacher finishing a lesson. But the classroom he began would never close. He was canonized in 1900 and declared Patron Saint of Teachers (1950)

LEGACY

Today, his influence continues worldwide:
* Thousands of schools
* Millions of students
* A lasting educational system

The De La Salle Brothers continue his mission globally.

SPIRITUAL SIGNIFICANCE

A Saint of the Classroom
He reminds us: Education is sacred.

A Saint of the Poor
He chose not just to serve the poor – but to become poor with them.

A Saint of Formation
He formed not just students – but teachers.

PRAYER

O God, you chose Saint John Baptist de la Salle for the educational upbringing of young Christians, we pray that teachers in your Church devote themselves wholeheartedly to the human, spiritual, Christian formation of youth around the world, that they may impart wisdom and knowledge, understanding and responsibility in all their undertakings.

Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen

Saint John Baptist de la Salle, pray for us.

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