Wednesday, January 28, 2026

“THEY HAVE NO WINE”: CANA AS A SALESIAN CALL IN KOLKATA’S CENTENARY YEAR and BEYOND

 


Against the backdrop of the Salesian Strenna message 2026 by the Rector Major of the Salesians of Don Bosco, Fr. Attard with the theme: "Do what he tells you: Believers, free to serve", here is a new interpretation of the miracle narrative at the Wedding in Cana, Jn 2:2-11. From the Salesian perspective we provide with original biblical hermeneutics of the text and event as explained below, but applied to the Salesian mission to the young especially the most poor and needy youth, in the light of the present ongoing centenary year of the Province of Kolkata. We present  positive and concrete proposals towards witnessing to the first manifestation of the glory of the Incarnate Word. The Apostle John, writing under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, calls this event the beginning of miracles (Jn 2:11). But in the original Greek, the word is semeion meaning a sign. A sign is not an empty spectacle. It is a divine finger pointing to a greater reality. When Jesus Christ turns water into wine, He is not merely acting as a gracious guest saving a wedding from social embarrassment. He is acting as the Lord of all creation, the Redeemer, and the true Bridegroom of the Church. We shall examine this sign through the lens of God’s grace in emptiness. We will see how the Lord Jesus takes the empty vessels of the Old Covenant and fills them with the new wine of His atoning blood. We will elaborate on: the failing to understand the Salesian ‘Cana’ and the earthly ‘wedding’ with empty wine as a crisis; the source of true vine and vine-dresser; and the festive jars of ‘here and now’: a Salesian spirituality of the ever to the ‘brim’.

1. Cana re‑read from the oratory courtyard

The Gospel of John calls the wedding at Cana “the beginning of his signs.” It is not a magic show; it is a window into how God chooses to act. At Cana, Jesus does not preach a long sermon. He quietly takes what is empty, what is ordinary, and what is on the verge of shame, and fills it with unexpected joy.

Read from a Salesian perspective, especially in this centenary year of the Province of Kolkata, Cana becomes more than an ancient miracle. It becomes a mirror. It asks every Salesian community, school, parish and youth centre in our province a simple, uncomfortable question: in the lives of the young, especially the poorest, where has the wine already run out?

The Rector Major’s Strenna, “Do whatever he tells you – Believers, free to serve,” invites us to stand in the scene not as distant observers, but as those servants at the wedding who hear Mary’s whisper and Jesus’ surprising command. In Kolkata, Siliguri or Azimganj, the oratory courtyard, the tea‑stalls and the shops outside the campus, the school boardings or shelter for youth‑at‑risk are today’s Cana. The sign is still the same: God wants to begin again from our emptiness.

2. “They have no wine”: naming the crisis of our young

Mary’s sentence is painfully brief: “They have no wine.” She does not explain, moralise or blame. She simply names the lack. In our context, that line could be rewritten a hundred ways:

  • “They have no stable family.”
  • “They have no meaningful work.”
  • “They have no safe digital space.”
  • “They have no one who listens without judging.”

For many young people in our province, especially in the slums, brick kilns, tea gardens, rail platforms, and migrating families, the first party of life has already gone wrong. The wine of childhood – safety, acceptance, play, school – has often run out too soon. Others in our elite schools have full glasses of opportunity but find the taste strangely flat: anxiety, loneliness, performance pressure, addiction and social media fatigue leave them asking whether this is all there is.

John says the wedding feast was on “the third day”, a hint of resurrection. But before resurrection there is a crisis. Before any sign there is honesty. A Salesian rereading of Cana begins when we dare to say, in front of the Lord and one another: in this neighbourhood, in this school, in this hostel, our young have no wine.

That honesty is the first act of pastoral love. It is also the first movement of the Strenna’s discernment path: recognise. We cannot “do whatever he tells us” if we refuse to see what he is already pointing at.

3. Mary’s pedagogy: a listening presence, not a neutral guest

At Cana, Mary is not an anxious relative running about with a bucket. She is a calm, attentive presence. Nobody comes and formally informs her of the shortage. She notices. She “listens” with her eyes and heart. She reads the faces of the stewards, the half‑empty jars, the nervous whisper. Then she takes the lack straight to Jesus.

This is profoundly Salesian. Don Bosco’s Preventive System begins with presence: being in the courtyard, in the playground, in the workshop, at the bus stand after classes; seeing and sensing the unspoken needs of the young before they become scandals or statistics. Mary at Cana is the model of this type of pastoral intelligence.

In the centenary year, our province can look back on a hundred years of such Marian, Salesian presence – from the first boarding houses and schools to today’s Don Bosco Tech centres, youth‑at‑risk shelters, migrant desks and parishes. Yet the Strenna gently asks: have we become neutral guests at some of our “weddings”? Do we still see the new forms of emptiness – mental health struggles, toxic online culture, trafficking, silent loss of faith – or have we grown used to them?​

“Believers, free to serve” begins with the freedom to be disturbed by what we see. A Salesian Marian heart does not say, “It’s not my responsibility,” but quietly repeats, “They have no wine.”

4. The stone jars of our institutions

Now we see the vessels. John notes that there were six stone water jars “for the Jewish rites of purification.” They are large, expensive, culturally important – and at this moment, empty. Jesus does not throw them away. He asks that they be filled. Verse 6: “And there were set there six waterpots of stone, after the manner of the purifying of the Jews, containing two or three firkins apiece.” Note carefully: Waterpots of stone. Not wineskins of leather, which are flexible and living, but stone which is cold, hard, and rigid. These pots were used for "purifying." The Jews would wash their hands, their cups, and their tables, trying desperately to scrub away their defilement before a Holy God.

The jars can symbolise the Old Covenant, as your given reflection explains. They can also, in a Salesian rereading, stand for our own structures: schools, boarding houses, parishes, youth centres, degrees, syllabi, timetables, even our centenary programmes. They are not bad. They are needed. But they can become cold, rigid stone if they are no longer filled with the living water of the Gospel and the passion of the Preventive System.

One hundred years ago, the first Salesians in this region arrived with little more than a dream, a cassock and a football. Today, the Province of Kolkata is rich in institutions and achievements: thousands of students, a wide network of works across Bengal, the North‑East and beyond, and a recognised contribution to national priorities like skill development and youth rehabilitation. Yet

Cana asks a dangerous question: are our jars full or hollow?

  • Is there real accompaniment happening, or just efficient administration?
  • Are our hostels places of family spirit, or simply safe lodging?
  • Do our academic toppers also learn compassion and faith, or only competition?

Jesus does not despise the jars. He reclaims them. The Strenna invites our communities to let him refill every structure – old and new – with a passion for the poorest and most fragile youth around us.

5. “Fill them to the brim”: collaboration and co‑responsibility

The Mystery of Wine and Life Brethren, we must go deeper here. Why did Jesus choose wine? Why not milk? Why not honey? Because in the Scriptures, Wine speaks of Life through Blood. When you look at wine in a cup, what does it resemble? It is red. It is rich. It looks like blood.

The servants at Cana receive a very odd instruction: fill huge stone jars with water. It is heavy, repetitive work. The guests do not see it. Yet John notes that they “filled them up to the brim.” Obedience here is not passive; it is generous and creative. So, when Jesus turns the water into wine, He is signaling a change in the source of our life. This brings us to a profound insight from the wisdom of Solomon. Turn in your minds to Proverbs 31:6: “Give strong drink unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto those that be of heavy hearts.” On the surface, this sounds like a comfort for the dying. But look at it through the lens of the Gospel. Who is the man “ready to perish”? It is you. It is me.

The miracle at Cana is the Gospel in a picture: The Law gives water which is cold and judicial cleansing. The Gospel gives Wine which is warm and invigorating life.

In the Strenna, the Rector Major insists that we are “servants, mere servants,” and that the freedom of believers is precisely the freedom to respond without half‑measures to whatever Jesus asks. In the light of the 150th anniversary of the Salesian Cooperators, this scene takes on a special colour. The “servants” today are not only SDBs and FMAs, but lay collaborators, Cooperators, past pupils, parents, youth leaders – each carrying their bucket of water into the big jars of the mission. “Filling to the brim” in our Kolkata centenary context may mean:

  • A Cooperator who quietly tutors slum children after work.
  • A teacher who stays back to listen to a struggling student.
  • A past pupil who returns to mentor first‑generation college‑goers.
  • A community that opens its campus for skills training on Sundays.

No one of these actions is spectacular. Yet together they create the conditions for the sign. Jesus turns the water into wine; we are asked only to give him our labour, our time, our creative ideas – completely, not grudgingly.

6. The hidden moment of transformation

John does not describe the instant the water becomes wine. It happens somewhere between the filling of the jars and the steward’s first sip. That silence is very consoling for educators. Most of the time, we do not see when the “water” of daily efforts in the yard, classroom, confessionals or youth groups quietly becomes “wine” in a young person’s heart:

  • A boy who stops using violence because he was trusted with a responsibility.
  • A girl who rediscovers prayer because a sister listened without judging.
  • A street child who becomes an honest worker through patient years of accompaniment.

In its hundred years, the Kolkata Province has seen such transformations thousands of times: from railway platforms to college graduations, from shelter homes to leadership in Church and society. Cana invites us to believe that this mystery will continue, often invisibly, if we keep doing “whatever he tells you.”

The Strenna speaks of discernment in four verbs – recognise, interpret, choose, act. At Cana, the servants live all four: they recognise the lack, listen to Mary’s hint, choose to obey Jesus’ strange command, and act by carrying water and then wine. The transformation happens in God’s time, not theirs. Our task, as a centenary province, is to stay faithful to those verbs, not to demand instant results.

7. “You have kept the good wine until now”: hope for the second century

The steward’s comment to the bridegroom – “you have kept the good wine until now” – is not only about the past hours of that wedding. It is also a promise for us in this centenary year. It suggests that in God’s economy, the best is not behind us but ahead.

It is easy, in a province with a proud history, to slip into nostalgia: to think of the “golden days” of full boarding houses, abundant vocations, overflowing parishes. The Cana sign, read with the Strenna, tells us something else: if we stay close to Mary, listen to the voice of Jesus and the cries of our young, and dare to act together, the Lord is able to give a wine we have not yet tasted.

For Kolkata and her missions across Bengal, Sikkim, Nepal, Jharkhand and Bangladesh, this might mean:

  • New forms of presence among migrant youth and gig‑workers.
  • Bolder commitment to mental health, addictions and digital wounds.
  • Deeper collaboration with other charisms and Churches in serving youth‑at‑risk.
  • A humbler and poorer lifestyle that frees resources for the poorest families.

The Strenna calls these “counter‑cultural decisions,” where believers show their freedom by choosing the Gospel over comfort or prestige. In this sense, the centenary is not a closing ceremony but a threshold. The good wine of the second century will not simply be more of the same. It will be a renewed, perhaps more fragile, but more authentic richness born from listening, discernment and shared risk.​

8. “Believers, free to serve”: the Salesian vocation as Cana spirituality

Finally, Cana offers us a simple portrait of the Salesian vocation.

  • We stand with Mary, close to the needs of the young, seeing what others do not see.
  • We hear her quiet command: “Do whatever he tells you” – a call to personal and communal discernment.
  • We accept to be servants, not masters; collaborators, not saviours.
  • We bring water – the simple, daily gestures of presence, reason, religion and loving‑kindness – and let God decide when and how to make them wine.

We are heading to a wedding, Beloved! The earthly bridegroom at Cana ran out of supplies. He failed. But our Heavenly Bridegroom, the Lord Jesus, has an infinite supply. There were six waterpots. Twenty or thirty gallons each. That is over one hundred gallons of wine. An abundance that no wedding party could consume! This signifies the Superabundant Grace of God.

Are you still holding on to the empty stone waterpots of your own works? Are you trying to scrub your soul clean with the water of morality and religious duty? It is cold. It is empty. It has no life. Or are you intoxicated with the cheap wine of this world? Are you chasing money, fame, or lust, hoping it will make you glad? It will run out. And you will be left thirsty in eternity. I invite you to the True Vine.

To be “believers, free to serve” in this way is to live Cana every day in our courtyards, classrooms, hostels and streets. It is to trust that the Lord who began a good work in Kolkata in 1926 has not run out of wine in 2026.

As the province celebrates its centenary, perhaps our best prayer is simply Mary’s gaze and Mary’s sentence. To look once more at the faces of the young entrusted to us, especially the poorest and most wounded, and whisper to Jesus in the silence of our hearts: “Lord, they have no wine.”  The good Lord grant us to drink deeply of His grace, that our hearts may be made glad in God alone, until we sit down at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb (work and service; bread and heaven). Then, together, as Salesian Family, to listen for his voice and begin again to do whatever he tells us, free and joyful servants at the side of the true Bridegroom of our youth.

 

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“THEY HAVE NO WINE”: CANA AS A SALESIAN CALL IN KOLKATA’S CENTENARY YEAR and BEYOND

  Against the backdrop of the Salesian Strenna message 2026 by the Rector Major of the Salesians of Don Bosco, Fr. Attard with the theme...