Saint John Baptist de La Salle (1651-1719)
Founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools
Patron of Christian Teachers.
John was born in Reims, France on April 30, 1651. He was the eldest of ten children of noble and wealthy parents.
John wanted to become a priest while still very young, dedicating himself to the religious life at the age of eleven. He became canon of Reims Cathedral when only sixteen years old. He was finally ordained a priest on April 9, 1678. By then he was twenty seven years old.
Two years after his ordination, John received his doctorate in theology.
Meanwhile, he started helping a group of teachers who were looking after poor children in the city.
At that time only few people lived in luxury. 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 and most children had little hope for the future.
John was moved by the plight of these poor people. He determined to put his own talents and advanced education at the service of the children who were often left to themselves and were badly brought up.
To answer to this call which he saw as coming from God, he gave up everything; abandoning his family home, he moved in with the teachers. He renounced his position as Canon and his wealth and inheritance, becoming as poor as the children attending his schools. The schools depended for survival on God’s Providence.
This was the beginning of the community that became known as the Brothers of the Christian Schools. From this beginning,
the Institute of the “Brothers of the Christian Schools” gradually evolved.
This congregation was unique in that its members, though belonging to a religious order, were laymen, who spent all their energy and the whole of their lives in educating children, especially those who were very poor.
As always, difficulties arose. Certain priests began to interfere in his work in the schools, not really comprehending the Saints purpose.
Teachers in rival establishments took him to court because their
students had moved over to John Baptist’s Christian schools, where studies were free of charge. Despite all the opposition to his work, John
resolutely kept his vision on just one goal: the Will of God
His method of teaching revolutionized the teaching technique of the time, including the use of the vernacular instead of Latin and he became famous across much of Europe. King James II asked him to go to England and teach the young boys in the royal court. In 1698, he opened a college for Irish teachers.
Due to opposition to his work, John was deposed in 1702 at the instigation of the Archbishop of Paris. The members of his congregation however saved him with their support. He remained in active control of the congregation until 1717 when he resigned.
John died at Saint Yon near Rouen early in 1719 on Good Friday, only weeks before his sixty-eighth birthday.
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God’s Will was indeed accomplished in the end, for at the time Our Lord called John Baptist to himself, the Brothers’ Institute had spread throughout France, and the schools were performing excellent work.
• John Baptist’s last words were:
" I adore in everything God’s Will in my regard"
John was beatified on February 19, 1888. He was
canonized on May 24, 1900 and
proclaimed Patron of Christian Teachers May 15, 1950 by
Pope Pius XII.
Saint John Baptist de La Salle.
Pray for us!