St. Martin de Porres (7 of 9)

Called To Be Saints

  1. Once or twice in your lifetime you will get a particular urge. Rarely it will happen more than twice, but it can be powerful, almost overwhelming. That urge is a profound thrust to change everything in you and around you, like a heartfelt longing for being born again. Who has not experienced, at least once in his lifetime, that it would be only wonderful if a fresh start could happen?
  2. I would like to mention at this point two great Irish men: Frank Duff, the founder of the Legion of Mary, and Matt Talbot, who left among us a so beautiful example of conversion through prayer and family life. Both heard the loud voice of God calling them to left behind what they were, or even more, calling them to embrace wholeheartedly a life of holiness.
  3. Holiness should not be regarded as a strange field some people choose to build up their dwelling. We all have been called to be holy, we all have received the Spirit that we name Holy, we all belong to a Holy Body which is Christ’s same Body. Therefore, what we see in the Saints is not extraterrestrial life but the natural development of God’s life when is not from a human heart.

Saint Martin, Man of God

  1. Brother Martin de Porres never accepted to be regarded as a saint. Though he was so humble, his refusal was not only a matter of humility. Holy people like him have got plenty of light from Heaven, and they can see what other people do not see. An example: if we switch off the lights in a room at nighttime, everybody would say no dirt is apparent, and some would go as far as to affirm that the room is “more or less” clean. If we switch again the lights on, we immediately realize how much work should be done to leave that room truly clean and tidy! Martin was not lying when he assured he was not spotless. God’s penetrating light was showing him the relatively small imperfections that nobody among us could ever have discovered.
  2. There is a beautiful mixture of simplicity and profundity in St. Martin’s holy life. Amazing things and most wonderful miracles happened to him, or to people he prayed for, so that what used to seem difficult would not be so for the bounteous Lay Brother. On the other hand, very simple and ordinary things, like the song of a bird at the dawn could take him to deep contemplation of God’s Providence and his fatherly tenderness to everybody.
  3. In St. Martin’s life, holiness is clearly related to three things: union with God, self-control and true service of his neighbor. Regarding God, he  strove to be united to Him through prayer, sacramental life and getting fitting education on the divine doctrine. Regarding his neighbor, Martin strove to be patient, kind, understanding, charitable and to practice all sort of corporal and spiritual works of mercy. Regarding himself, he kept his own nature under control by means of penance, discipline and self-denial. The central knot in all this net of human and theological virtues was always the same, namely Christ Crucified.

What We Can Learn from St. Martin To-day

  1. Christ’s Passion is actual and present in every Mass. And in the Mass we give glory to God the Father “Through Christ, With Christ, In Christ.” “Through Christ” can be referred to the union to God. “With Christ” is related to serving our neighbor, for we are not alone in helping others, and also, because the Lord promised He would be beside us whenever we go out to announce His gospel. “In Christ,” finally, can be referred to the way we endure the struggles, pains and sufferings in our own flesh while we bear our Lord’s yoke.
  2. Holiness is not something that springs spontaneously from our own nature. Everybody has his or her own spiritual battle. That is why we all have to know ourselves. In that regard it is good to take every opportunity for knowing a little more about who we truly are. From our failures we can learn a lot, in particular. From the practice of the sacrament of penance we learn a lot, as well. From the corrections and comments other people do about us, even if they are not as charitable as we would like, we also can learn many things. That attitude of continuous discipleship keeps us on guard, ever ready to move forward and to admit that there is always room for improvement.
  3. This world needs Saints. Those holy men and women, those unselfish witnesses to Christ offer to the world the only message that can bring hope to people in despair. Love is the medicine for every human heart, for, as St. Catherine of Siena put it, our souls were made up of love itself. What the Saints offer, on behalf of Christ, is the nourishment that reassures everybody that life is worth living, and that through the darkness of bewilderment the dawn is just waiting for us.