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Saint John Bosco
b. 1815 d. 1888

What do dreams have to do with prayer? Aren't they
just random images of our mind?
In 1867 Pope Pius IX was upset with John Bosco because
he wouldn't take his dreams seriously enough. Nine years earlier
when Pope Pius IX met with the future saint who worked with neglected
boys, he learned of the dreams that John had been having since the
age of nine, dreams that had revealed God's will for John's life.
So Pius IX had made a request, "Write down these dreams and everything
else you have told me, minutely and in their natural sense." Pius
IX saw John's dreams as a legacy for those John worked with and
as an inspiration for those he ministered to.
Despite Scripture evidence and Church tradition respecting
dreams, John had encountered skepticism when he had his first dream
at the age of nine. The young Bosco dreamed that he was in a field
with a crowd of children. The children started cursing and misbehaving.
John jumped into the crowd to try to stop them -- by fighting and
shouting. Suddenly a man with a face filled with light appeared
dressed in a white flowing mantle. The man called John over and
made him leader of the boys. John was stunned at being put in charge
of these unruly gang. The man said, "You will have to win these
friends of yours not with blows but with gentleness and kindness."
As adults, most of us would be reluctant to take on such a mission
-- and nine year old John was even less pleased. "I'm just a boy,"
he argued, "how can you order me to do something that looks impossible."
The man answered, "What seems so impossible you must achieve by
being obedient and acquiring knowledge." Then the boys turned into
the wild animals they had been acting like. The man told John that
this is the field of John's life work. Once John changed and grew
in humility, faithfulness, and strength, he would see a change in
the children -- a change that the man now demonstrated. The wild
animals suddenly turned into gentle lambs.
When John told his family about his dream, his brothers
just laughed at him. Everyone had a different interpretation of
what it meant: he would become a shepherd, a priest, a gang leader.
His own grandmother echoed the sage advice we have heard through
the years, "You mustn't pay any attention to dreams." John said,
"I felt the same way about it, yet I could never get that dream
out of my head."
Eventually that first dream led him to minister to
poor and neglected boys, to use the love and guidance that seemed
so impossible at age nine to lead them to faithful and fulfilled
lives. He started out by learning how to juggle and do tricks to
catch the attention of the children. Once he had their attention
he would teach them and take them to Mass. It wasn't always easy
-- few people wanted a crowd of loud, bedraggled boys hanging around.
And he had so little money and help that people thought he was crazy.
Priests who promised to help would get frustrated and leave.
Two "friends" even tried to commit him to an institution
for the mentally ill. They brought a carriage and were planning
to trick him into coming with him. But instead of getting in, John
said, "After you" and politely let them go ahead. When his friends
were in the carriage he slammed the door and told the drive to take
off as fast as he could go!
Through it all he found encouragement and support
through his dreams. In one dream, Mary led him into a beautiful
garden. There were roses everywhere, crowding the ground with their
blooms and the air with their scent. He was told to take off his
shoes and walk along a path through a rose arbor. Before he had
walked more than a few steps, his naked feet were cut and bleeding
from the thorns. When he said he would have to wear shoes or turn
back, Mary told him to put on sturdy shoes. As he stepped forward
a second time, he was followed by helpers. But the walls of the
arbor closed on him, the roof sank lower and the roses crept onto
the path. Thorns caught at him from all around. When he pushed them
aside he only got more cuts, until he was tangled in thorns. Yet
those who watched said, "How lucky Don John is! His path is forever
strewn with roses! He hasn't a worry in the world. No troubles at
all!" Many of the helpers, who had been expecting an easy journey,
turned back, but some stayed with him. Finally he climbed through
the roses and thorns to find another incredible garden. A cool breeze
soothed his torn skin and healed his wounds.
In his interpretation, the path was his mission, the
roses were his charity to the boys, and the thorns were the distractions,
the obstacles, and frustrations that would stand in his way. The
message of the dream was clear to John: he must keep going, not
lose faith in God or his mission, and he would come through to the
place he belonged.
Often John acted on his dreams simply by sharing them,
sometimes repeating them to several different individuals or groups
he thought would be affected by the dream. "Let me tell you about
a dream that has absorbed my mind," he would say.
The groups he most often shared with were the boys
he helped -- because so many of the dreams involved them. For example,
he used several dreams to remind the boys to keep to a good and
moral life. In one dream he saw the boys eating bread of four kinds
-- tasty rolls, ordinary bread, coarse bread, and moldy bread, which
represented the state of the boys' souls. He said he would be glad
to talk to any boys who wanted to know which bread they were eating
and then proceeded to use the occasion to give them moral guidance.
He died in 1888, at the age of seventy-two. His work
lives on in the Salesian order he founded.
In His Footsteps:
John Bosco found God's message in his dreams. If you have some question
or problem in your life, ask God to send you an answer or help in
a dream. Then write down your dreams. Ask God to help you remember
and interpret the dreams that come from God.
Prayer:
Saint John Bosco, you reached out to children whom no one cared
for despite ridicule and insults. Help us to care less about the
laughter of the world and care more about the joy of the Lord. Amen
Copyright 1996 by Terry Matz. All Rights
Reserved.
Excerpted from Lost in God by Terry Matz. Available from Liguori
Publications, One Liguori Drive, Liguori, MO 63057. Quotations from
Dreams, Visions & Prophecies of Don Bosco. Edited by Rev. Eugene
M. Brown. Copyright (c) 1986 The Salesian Society, Inc.
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