Happy Feast Day of St.John Baptist de La Salle

Dear Friends,

Today we give thanks for the life of John Baptist de La Salle. We are grateful for the steps he took in his life that led to a life completely dedicated to the poor. We are also grateful for the thousands of Lasallians that have gone before us who brought De La Salle’s message of hope to millions of children and families. Today we pray for those students whom you have taught, and will teach, those colleagues with whom you have worked, and with whom you continue to work, and those family members and friends who are in need of mercy, justice, comfort, and peace. Today we invite the memory and life of De La Salle to inspire us and renew in us the gifts of faith and zeal.

In De La Salle,

Dave, Alisa, Jim & Seth

SAINT JOHN BAPTIST DE LA SALLE 1651-1719
Founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools Patron of Christian Teachers

John Baptist de La Salle was born into a world very different from our own. He was the first son of wealthy parents living in France over 300 years ago. Born at Reims, John Baptist de La Salle received the tonsure at age eleven and was named Canon of the Reims Cathedral at sixteen. Though he had to assume the administration of family affairs after his parents died, he completed his theological studies and was ordained a priest on April 9, 1678.Two years later he received a doctorate in theology. Meanwhile he became tentatively involved with a group of rough and barely literate young men in order to establish schools for poor boys.

At that time a few people lived in luxury, but most of the people were extremely poor: peasants in the country, and slum dwellers in the towns. Only, a few could send their children to school; most children had little hope for the future. Moved by the plight of the poor who seemed so “far from salvation” either in this world or the next, he determined to put his own talents and advanced education at the service of the children “often left to themselves and badly brought up.” To be more effective, he abandoned his family home, moved in with the teachers, renounced his position as Canon and his wealth, and so formed the community that became known as the Brothers of the Christian Schools.

His enterprise met opposition from the ecclesiastical authorities who resisted the creation of a new form of religious life, a community of consecrated laymen to conduct gratuitous schools “together and by association.” The educational establishment resented his innovative methods and his insistence on gratuity for all, regardless of whether they could afford to pay. Nevertheless De La Salle and his Brothers succeeded in creating a network of quality schools throughout France that featured instruction in the vernacular, students grouped according to ability and achievement, integration of religious instruction with secular subjects, well-prepared teachers with a sense of vocation and mission, and the involvement of parents. In addition, De La Salle pioneered in programs for training lay teachers, Sunday courses for working young men, and one of the first institutions in France for the care of delinquents. Worn out by austerities and exhausting labours, he died at Saint Yon near Rouen early in 1719 on Good Friday, only weeks before his sixty-eighth birthday.

John Baptist de La Salle was a pioneer in founding training colleges for teachers, reform schools for delinquents, technical schools, and secondary schools for modern languages, arts, and sciences. His work quickly spread through France and, after his death, continued to spread across the globe. In 1900 John Baptist de La Salle was declared a Saint. In 1950, because of his life and inspirational writings, he was made Patron Saint of all those who work in the field of education. John Baptist de La Salle inspired others how to teach and care for young people, how to meet failure and frailty with compassion, how to affirm, strengthen and heal. At the present time there are De La Salle schools in 80 different countries around the globe.

  • Born at Reims, France April 30, 1651
  • Ordained priest April 9, 1678
    Died April 7, 1719
  • Beatified February 19, 1888
  • Canonized May 24, 1900
  • Proclaimed Patron of Christian Teachers May 15, 1950

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