St. Martin de Porres (6 of 9)

A New Kind of Justice

  1. During these last days we have mentioned several times the challenging circumstances in which Martin de Porres grew up. The society of his time was deeply crossed by the plagues of discrimination, poverty and mutual distrust. Life, though, and we have also said it before, is not what happens to you, but what you do with what happens to you. In the case of Martin de Porres his response to so numerous inequalities and forms of injustice brings plenty lessons to us.
  2. The one Christian issue related to getting justice is that it can easily be transformed into seeking revenge. It often happens that we are looking for a way of pleasing our hurt egos, so that eventually we see the other person’s good as our lost, and the other way around.
  3. Yet there is a new kind of justice, the justice that is related to the biblical expression “justification through God’s grace.” In this new model, my good is not increased by my neighbor’s lnor is his gain that I decrease.

Patron Saint of Social Justice

  1. Many people regard as an embellished anecdote that Martin is pictorially represented with three animals: a dog, a cat and a mouse, and all of them are eating from the same plate. There is more to that picture than it seems at a first glance. Dogs and cats are usually considered enemies, and it is meant that cats would be scared and flee from dogs. All the same, mice are frightened by cats, and flee from them. Yet nobody is fleeing from nobody in that picture. Nobody is scared. There is no dread. There is no chase. There is no hatred. There is plenty good for everybody.
  2. The same principle can be and should be applied to our society as a whole. Nobody should be scared or fleeing. Nobody should be dreadful or full of anger. Justice, reconciliation and charity mingle wonderfully in St. Martin’s life. Before his charitable heart, before his pacifying smile the differences of race, skin color or even religion fall apart, and it is only the essential good what emerges: we all are children of the same God, who is so loving and who deserves to be obeyed and adored so perfectly!
  3. Two guys were bitterly arguing once upon a time. They passed from verbal discussion to hateful gestures and promptly a terrible fight was in full display in some busy crossroads of Lima. People, making improvised tribune around them, were plainly enjoying the noisy quarrel, backing with his shouts the hits and kicks among the two strong men. Martin happened to walk down that road, and unable to endure such an spectacle, went right away to the midst of all the punches, where was violently hit himself by one of the two contenders. As soon as the man realized what he had done, stopped on his feet and payed real attention to the poor mulatto, then an elderly religious. The fight ended: an innocent man was hurt, a Saint was badly hit. Nobody would dare to continue quarreling. Yet Martin announced that justice had been made and feeble still stood up. This is the image of Christ’s passion: the Holy One has been hurt. If you see that, if you behold the Crucified Lord, if everybody realizes that the Innocent Lamb has been slayed, justice and peace come to the world.

What We Can Learn from St. Martin To-day

  1. St. Martin is a revolutionary in his own particular way. His revolution of social justice does not follow the lines of people like Marx, Lenin and others. His model of society is not the series of programmed results that people like Stalin would prefer. The human race is the object of God’s predilection. We only understand the human truth on the basis that human beings have been loved beyond any limit. The key to interpersonal relationships is not only respect but true love and genuine desire to serve and honor God in our neighbor.
  2. People do mistakes. Martin is anything but an idealist, on this regard. He does not love the idea of humanity but real human beings, for God has loved them not as they could be but as they are.
  3. Prayer to God and service to people are interlocked. Charity, alike true justice, is not the work of sheer willpower. More often than we would prefer, we will come across people we do not like. To be really loving is to go beyond what is lovable. We cannot wait for people to become charming to decide if we start to love them. Yet the only way of loving dull people is to love them from the source of love that is in God’s bosom.