Today is the feast of Don Bosco, one of the giants of Catholic education. In today’s episode I share a simple quote from him that reminds us of the very purpose and essence of all Catholic education.

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Transcript
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Well, hello everybody.

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Jonathan Doyle with you.

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Once again, welcome friends to the Catholic teacher daily podcast,

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wherever you are in the world.

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And you are everywhere in the world, wherever you're hearing this.

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There are so many interesting, different places and people.

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That are caught up in this great journey of Catholic education.

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Happy feast, stay friends.

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Today is the feast of one of the great saints of Catholic education.

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John Bosco often referred to was Don Bosco.

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The founder of the Salesians.

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We'll talk about him in a minute.

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Uh, yeah, I love being Catholic.

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I love praying the divine office in the morning because you get a, you get all

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the saints, you get sort of each day, you get to read about the different,

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incredible men and women that have.

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Um, paved the way for us that have, uh, shown by their heroic virtue.

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What's possible for us.

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I really love that.

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Often when I'm speaking on stage to teachers, I make the distinction that

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the Catholic church does not make saints.

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It's not as if there is a committee in the Vatican and they sit around and they go.

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Uh, I guess we better roll out a few new ones.

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Anybody got new ideas?

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In the beautiful language of the church, the church doesn't

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make saints or create saints.

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The Saint, the church ready for it.

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Recognizes saints, recognizes them.

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It's a, it's simply under grace, the church as the great mother that keeps

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the children together on the journey.

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She, she presents to us, the men and women.

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Who, uh, who have shown us sort of the path ahead.

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What's possible.

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Such an incredible diverse mix.

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So we're going to talk about Dom Basco in a second.

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What else?

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I'll tell you a couple of things.

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I've um, yesterday.

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I got really stressed.

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I don't know about you.

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I'm sure for you as a Catholic teacher, you don't get stressed.

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You know, burnout.

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Either sit around every day, drinking daiquiris, thinking to yourself, this

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is the greatest vacation in the world.

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It's just easy for you.

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But I've got to let you in on a secret for some of us.

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We get stressed.

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There's a lot going on.

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And yesterday in our three kids.

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Uh, back at school school started again today.

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And it's a mix of kids that are going to school and kids were homeschooling and.

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And I am.

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I just have a low threshold for complexity and stress.

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I just, I just don't have, you know, I just don't.

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It wasn't born with it.

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Does.

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As I get older, I'm learning about the distinct personality.

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The good Lord created me with.

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So what happened was I was feeling pretty frayed.

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And.

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Like you'd relate to this, right.

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Because a lot of the time you've got so much that you have to do.

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The classic.

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Engine of stress, the cause of stress.

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If you ever heard of the UX Dodson curve, it's like a.

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Stress happens because we perceive.

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Oncoming.

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Drawdowns oncoming drains upon our available resources.

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Basically stress happens because we believe that there is more

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coming at us than we can handle, and we get a stress response and.

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Sometimes to me, it feels like that's every day, but anyway, here's the

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point of this somewhat drawn out story.

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Is in my brain.

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I was like, okay, now I'm stressed.

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It was like 10 o'clock.

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I'm like, right.

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I'm stressed now.

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I got this, all this stuff on my plate.

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And I just kind of realized that I had to just get to work or stuff,

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but you don't want to actually did.

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Was that stressed?

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I jumped in the car.

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And I drove to the cathedral because I spent I'm usually there

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most days, I always pray best in churches, beautiful churches.

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So I sat in the back of the cathedral with my apple AirPods, max.

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Uh, playing rain sands.

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I have an app, the place, right?

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Sans course, this is a very.

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This is a very revolutionary podcast today.

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Isn't it.

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You're getting an insight into the complexity of my day.

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Because I love the silence and.

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I had this incredible time of prayer, just sort of sitting in silence and telling the

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Lord what I was experiencing and feeling.

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And.

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And I would say.

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A lot of us, I don't believe I hear God speaking to me a great deal, but

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I just had this strong sense of the beautiful scripture from Matthew's gospel.

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You know, come to me all you who labor and are heavy burdened.

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And I opened my Bible and I sat with that.

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And it was profound and, you know, I left there and all the challenges and

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complexity and problems were still there.

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But I was kind of different and the journey that I'm on at the moment.

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Which is the one I want to invite you all on is just this gradual ongoing.

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Descent into trust.

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Into slowly letting go of the belief that I have to know.

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How everything's going to turn out.

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That I can be sure of everything and also being purged of the belief

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that if I just try harder and work harder and push myself harder.

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Then everything will work out.

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So this ties into the second thing I wanted to share, which was we've

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been watching the chosen as a family.

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Each night and we've, you know, we've been watching it on and

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off for a couple of years.

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And recently the series C season three was on at the theater.

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So into the cinemas and what's that.

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And.

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I think we've got one episode left to watch tonight and just.

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You know, I just watched that, uh, Same with Jesus has commissioning

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the 12 shout out to my good friend, Michael Lind Costa Hercs.

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He put that in an email to me the other day reminded me of it.

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And there's just, this it's beautifully down.

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If you haven't seen it.

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It's Jesus actually sending the 12 out.

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And it's so human.

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I think what the chosen does really well is that.

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Is, it gives us that very human insight.

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You see these men and women basically.

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Trying to.

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I guess.

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In interpret what the presence and action of.

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Jesus and their life means.

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And some of them in that scene of worried about death, some of

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them are worried about rejection.

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Some of them are worried about, you know, being away from other

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priorities and commitments.

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It's very human and.

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All of it, both their journey.

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And also the way that Jesus has presented is this constant.

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Refrain around trust.

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You know, Pope Benedict used to say that that the ultimate identity of

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Jesus in his earthly journey was.

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He is revealed as the son of the father.

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And his identity was so utterly rooted in that reality.

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Which led to this profound trust.

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You know, which makes the agony of the cross itself so extraordinary.

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Right.

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And find out my God, my God, why have you forsaken me?

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If Jesus is complete, identity was rooted in sun ship.

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What it must've been like to, to feel that, um, That that break.

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Anyway, I digress, but my point is.

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The both in yesterday's stress.

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And in the lives of the greatest saints, the apostles.

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We're all on this journey of invitation to deeper and deeper trust.

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You got to catch yourself in the moment.

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You got to catch yourself in the moment.

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Constantly.

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Catch yourself in that moment of self-reliance and

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I'm just learning to do it.

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I'm just going, Lord.

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I trust you.

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I'm going to trust you.

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I trust you.

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This is hot.

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All right.

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So what I want it to do is just share with you a beautiful

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quote from, uh, Don Bosco now.

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Sorry.

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So John Bosco had Don Bosco as he was, uh, named.

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What makes him so interesting is I said to my son that I was driving him to school.

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He started the eighth grade this morning.

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And we're chatting away and I'll tell him, I said, you know what?

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My.

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And I jumped bus guy said different was.

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Education before that.

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At least formal structured education, the dominant form of pastoral care

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was basically beating students.

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Right.

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And I know there's a couple of you listening right now thinking, oh, I wonder

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if we could go back to that now you can.

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All right.

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Drop that you can't.

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Yes, it may be effective in the short term, but now you're not

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allowed to do that's terrible.

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Stubborn.

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Go to confession.

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Yeah.

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You know, really for.

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Before John Bosco and some of the other great sites of that

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educational revivals, such as say Marshall and chimpanzee as well.

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Children where we're really second class citizens in many way.

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They, they, you know, they could be beaten regularly.

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And so a lot of the times students were beaten into submission.

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Even my own father, who's been dead for a long time.

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He was left-handed in the 1950s and was constantly beaten.

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Bye.

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Um, by religious brothers at the, at the school he was at, he was

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beaten for the great sin of being left-handed because at that time

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they often thought it was demonic.

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So what makes Bosco so amazing is that he believed that the best

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thing you could possibly do was love your students, was to love.

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Students.

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And to act to them with great patience and kindness.

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And today in the divine office, I read this letter and it wasn't a great sort

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of theologian or writers, very simple what he writes, but he's like, we have

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to, you guys, we're going to sometimes we'll feel angry, but we need to

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moderate it and we need to love them.

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We need to be gentle and kind and friends.

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That's really revolutionary.

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So the simple quote that I found here, because there's not a lot of them,

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there's not a significant number of quotes attributed to him, but there's one here.

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That's quite beautiful where he says the school.

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Was not the end.

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It was rather the instrumental means for improving the way of life.

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You know, Marsalis champagne.

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You said that the purpose of a, of a Christian school was to create.

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Uh, good Christians and good citizens.

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It's a beautiful, simple concept.

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And you know, you can see Bosco.

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He is saying that.

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I didn't create schools because I wanted to be able to sit at dinner parties

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saying, Hey, I created the school.

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He asked what I do in the school, create a.

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He didn't do that.

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The school was simply what he says here.

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The instrumental means the vehicle for improving the way of life.

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So students trapped in poverty.

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Could improve the way of life through education, through learning,

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they might have more options.

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But also improving the moral character.

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The sense of justice and decency and the virtues, the theological virtues, the

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Cardinal virtues being formed in students.

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So friends in summary, that is what you are part of.

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Isn't it great to realize that you are.

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When you get to heaven, you are going to meet people like John Bosco.

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I mean, you know, I mean the mystical body of Christ.

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We will know each other and you know, you will meet these people, but you'll realize

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in many ways how similarly you were.

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That you, maybe you don't haven't started a school.

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Maybe you don't think you're going to be a great Saint.

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But the fact is that each day that you show up and try and care for young

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people and improve their way of life.

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Their kindness, their, their, their respect, the decency, the

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patients, their care for others, the love of Christ, the love of the

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sacraments, the love of the faith.

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Each of those things is improving their life in profound

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ways that you may never see.

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Amazing.

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Alright, that's it.

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I'm learning slowly to know when to stop.

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It's 11 minutes.

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God bless you.

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Uh, send me an email.

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If you want to say hi, Jonathan.

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One Catholic teacher.com.

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Look in the next few months.

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Oh, I'll get them start.

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Give me some access to a whole bunch of stuff that we're doing.

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In terms of curriculum resources for schools around the world, that's going

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to be really developing for us with.

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We doing some amazing work with many dioceses around the world.

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So.

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I should be more diligent in putting that on your radar.

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So I'll do that.

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But for now, God bless you.

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Thank you for listening to the daily podcast.

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If you like it, just subscribe to it and, and grab the link wherever you listening

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and send it to a few Catholic teachers.

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It's a huge blessing it's growing.

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It's just great to say it's touching.

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He Touches one more life one more teacher around the world that's called

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thing god bless everybody my name is jonathan doyle this has been the

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catholic teacher daily podcast and you and i are going to talk again tomorrow