Medallas de San Juan Bautista de La Salle
Los collares con medalla de San Juan Bautista de La Salle rinden homenaje al noble francés convertido en educador a quien el Papa Pío XII nombró oficialmente patrón de los maestros en 1950. Nacido en Reims, Francia, en 1651 en una rica familia aristocrática, De La Salle renunció a su fortuna heredada, a su prebenda de canónigo y a todas las ventajas sociales que poseía para dedicar su vida a educar a niños pobres que no tenían acceso a la escuela. Fundó los Hermanos de las Escuelas Cristianas —la primera congregación religiosa docente del mundo dedicada por completo a los educadores laicos— y revolucionó la instrucción en el aula al agrupar a los estudiantes por habilidad, enseñar en el francés vernáculo en lugar del latín y capacitar a los maestros en escuelas normales dedicadas. Fue canonizado por el Papa León XIII en 1900, y su día festivo se celebra el 7 de abril.
Los católicos que trabajan en aulas, oficinas escolares y ministerios juveniles usan una medalla de San Juan Bautista de La Salle como un recordatorio diario de que la enseñanza es una vocación sagrada, no meramente una profesión. La medalla es una expresión tangible de la creencia de que cada estudiante posee una dignidad dada por Dios y merece un guía dedicado. Maestros, directores de escuela, entrenadores instructores y catequistas encuentran una profunda resonancia en el testimonio de De La Salle. Esta medalla es un regalo verdaderamente considerado para la Semana de Aprecio al Maestro —que se celebra la primera semana completa de mayo— o como un reconocimiento de fin de año escolar católico para un maestro que ha moldeado la fe y el intelecto de un niño.
Cada medalla de San Juan Bautista de La Salle de nuestra colección está hecha en los EE. UU. por Bliss Manufacturing y cuenta con garantía de por vida. Elija entre plata esterlina, chapado en oro de 14 quilates u oro macizo de 14 quilates, cada uno disponible con una cadena de 18 o 24 pulgadas. Explore nuestra gama completa de medallas de santos patronos o explore colecciones relacionadas que incluyen medallas de Santo Tomás de Aquino para la tradición del teólogo-educador y medallas de San Juan Bosco para trabajadores juveniles y fundadores de escuelas.

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Frequently Asked Questions
Who is the patron saint of teachers and why?
St. John Baptist de la Salle is the patron saint of teachers, a title formally conferred by Pope Pius XII in 1950. De la Salle earned this distinction not through abstract theology but through direct, sacrificial action: he gave up a wealthy canon's position and his entire inherited fortune to found free schools for poor children in seventeenth-century France. He spent forty years developing teacher training methods, writing instructional guides, and defending the rights of lay educators — making him the most consequential figure in the history of Catholic education and the natural heavenly patron for everyone who teaches today.
What did St. John Baptist de la Salle found, and why does it matter?
St. John Baptist de la Salle founded the Brothers of the Christian Schools, known today as the De La Salle Brothers or Christian Brothers, in the 1680s in Reims, France. It was the first religious congregation in the Catholic Church composed entirely of laymen — no priests — whose sole mission was the free education of poor and working-class children. De la Salle pioneered group classroom instruction, teacher training colleges, and teaching in the vernacular rather than Latin, innovations that shaped modern education far beyond the Catholic world. The congregation he founded now operates more than 1,000 schools in 80 countries, making his legacy one of the most far-reaching in educational history.
When is St. John Baptist de la Salle's feast day, and how does it relate to Teacher Appreciation Week?
St. John Baptist de la Salle's feast day falls on April 7, the anniversary of his death in 1719 in Rouen, France. Teacher Appreciation Week is observed during the first full week of May, which means his feast day arrives just weeks before the most widely recognized secular celebration of educators — creating a natural, back-to-back season for honoring teachers with a medal that carries both devotional and professional meaning. Giving a de la Salle medal around his feast day or during Appreciation Week connects a timeless Catholic tradition to a contemporary moment of gratitude.
What is a meaningful Teacher Appreciation Week gift for a Catholic educator?
A St. John Baptist de la Salle patron saint medal necklace is one of the most distinctive Teacher Appreciation Week gifts available for a Catholic educator because it speaks directly to the spiritual dimension of their vocation. Unlike a gift card or a generic keepsake, this medal tells the teacher that their work is recognized as sacred — rooted in a tradition that stretches back to a French nobleman who gave everything he owned to make education possible for children who had nothing. Our medals are USA-made by Bliss Manufacturing in sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold, and every order over $40 ships free, making it easy to give something genuinely meaningful within a practical budget.
Who are the Christian Brothers, and are they the same as the De La Salle Brothers?
Yes — the Christian Brothers and the De La Salle Brothers refer to the same congregation: the Brothers of the Christian Schools, founded by St. John Baptist de la Salle in France in the 1680s. They are a lay religious congregation, meaning its members take vows but are not ordained priests, and their charism is entirely focused on education, particularly for students from disadvantaged backgrounds. The congregation is distinct from the Irish Christian Brothers, a separate teaching congregation founded by Edmund Rice in the early nineteenth century, though both trace their inspiration to de la Salle's model. Today the De La Salle Brothers operate universities, high schools, and primary schools across six continents.
Are the St. John Baptist de la Salle medals at rosarycard.net made in the USA?
Yes — every St. John Baptist de la Salle medal sold at rosarycard.net is made in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing, a trusted American producer of Catholic religious jewelry. Bliss crafts each medal to exacting standards in sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold, and every piece is backed by a lifetime guarantee so your investment in a meaningful gift is fully protected. American manufacturing means consistent quality, reliable sizing, and the assurance that the medal honoring a patron of education was itself made with the same care and craftsmanship that de la Salle brought to everything he built.
The Story of St. John Baptist de la Salle
John Baptist de la Salle was born on April 30, 1651, in Reims, France, the eldest son of a noble family of magistrates. Educated at the prestigious College des Bons Enfants, he was tonsured at age eleven and appointed a canon of the Reims Cathedral chapter at sixteen — a prestigious, income-bearing position in the Church. When his parents died young, he stepped away from his theological studies to raise his younger siblings, returning to complete his doctorate in theology and receiving ordination to the priesthood in 1678. His transformation into the patron saint of teachers began almost accidentally: a chance encounter with Adrien Nyel, a layman trying to open free schools for the destitute children of Reims, drew de la Salle in as a financial backer. Within two years he had moved the schoolmasters into his own home, resigned his canonry, distributed his entire fortune to the poor during a famine, and committed himself completely to the work of educating the poor. By 1680 he had established the Brothers of the Christian Schools — the first religious congregation composed entirely of laymen dedicated to teaching — and spent the rest of his life founding schools, training teachers, and defending his mission against fierce opposition from guild schoolmasters and Jansenist critics. He died on Good Friday, April 7, 1719, in Rouen, and that date remains his feast day.
Why Catholics Wear a St. John Baptist de la Salle Medal
The spiritual tradition of wearing a patron saint medal is rooted in the belief that the saint intercedes for the wearer before God, and that keeping the saint's image close is an act of ongoing devotion and trust. A St. John Baptist de la Salle medal typically depicts the saint in his clerical cassock, often holding a book — a symbol of the Scriptures and learning — with his name and sometimes the inscription "Patron of Teachers" on the reverse. For Catholic educators, wearing this medal is a daily prayer: a request for the patience, creativity, and charity that de la Salle himself modeled when he chose poor children over a comfortable canon's life. School principals carry it as a reminder that leadership in education is a form of servant ministry. Youth workers and catechists wear it as a sign that forming young people in faith and knowledge is work that stretches back through centuries of Catholic tradition. The medal is not merely decorative — it is a wearable commitment to the vocation de la Salle elevated to holiness.
Our St. John Baptist de la Salle Medal Collection
Every medal in this collection is made in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing, a family-owned producer with decades of experience crafting Catholic religious jewelry to the highest standards of quality. Each piece is backed by a lifetime guarantee, so the medal a teacher receives at a pinning ceremony or year-end celebration will endure as long as their vocation does. Our St. John Baptist de la Salle medals are available in sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold, in small, medium, and large sizes, on 18-inch or 24-inch chains. Orders over $40 ship free. If you are shopping for a specific educator in your life, our related collections can help you find exactly the right match: browse St. Elizabeth Ann Seton medals for Catholic school founders and women in education, St. Thomas Aquinas medals for theology teachers and academics, and St. John Bosco medals for youth ministers and school chaplains. You can also explore our patron saint of teachers landing page for a full guide to medals for educators.
Giving a St. John Baptist de la Salle Medal as a Gift
The single most natural moment to give a St. John Baptist de la Salle medal is Teacher Appreciation Week, observed during the first full week of May — just weeks after his April 7 feast day, making this a season of back-to-back opportunities to honor the educators in your life. A sterling silver medal presented in that window carries both cultural and liturgical resonance that a gift card simply cannot match. Catholic school families often give this medal at the end of the academic year as a parting gift to a beloved teacher, particularly one who has guided a child through First Communion preparation or confirmation class. It is equally meaningful as a gift from a diocese or Catholic school administration to a teacher receiving a formal teaching award or celebrating a career milestone anniversary. The buyer is typically a grateful parent, a school principal, or a department head; the recipient is a classroom teacher, a catechist, or a school administrator who will immediately understand the significance of de la Salle's story. All medals ship in gift-ready packaging, and orders over $40 qualify for free shipping — making it easy to honor multiple teachers at once.








