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High School Chapter: Different Types of Justice<br />

183<br />

Lives of Faith<br />

St. Martin de Porres<br />

Fifteen-year-old Martin de Porres arrived at the<br />

entrance to the Dominican Priory of the Holy<br />

Rosary in Lima, Peru. His greatest desire was to<br />

follow Christ through a life of service to the poor<br />

and sick in this religious community. But there was<br />

one major impediment to his dream of becoming a<br />

Dominican: he was of mixed race.<br />

Martin had grown up in extreme poverty. His<br />

father, a Spanish gentleman, had abandoned<br />

young Martin and his mother, a freed Panamanian<br />

slave of African or Native American descent. After<br />

a short time in primary school, Martin learned<br />

under a barber who taught him to cut hair and<br />

provide basic medical care. It was this medical<br />

training that Martin hoped to put to good use in<br />

the service of the poor.<br />

At the time, being of mixed race meant that<br />

Martin could not become a professed member of<br />

the Dominicans. But nothing would deter Martin<br />

from serving God. Regardless of the ridicule and<br />

derision that he experienced, he chose to volunteer<br />

as a servant in the priory. He used his medical<br />

training to help those who were sick and injured.<br />

He also cleaned, did laundry, and worked<br />

in the kitchen. He joyfully completed all of these<br />

humble tasks while suffering great injustice at the<br />

hands of many in the community. He was a man<br />

of deep prayer, which gave him the strength to<br />

endure all that God asked of<br />

him in his mission.<br />

The greater the struggle,<br />

the more abundant the<br />

graces that God pours out on<br />

those souls who cooperate<br />

in His plan. After eight<br />

years, Martin was granted<br />

the privilege of becoming<br />

a professed member of the<br />

Third Order of St. Dominic.<br />

After 10 years, he was placed<br />

in charge of the infirmary,<br />

where he served all peoples<br />

[N]othing<br />

would deter<br />

Martin from<br />

serving God.<br />

regardless of race or economic background.<br />

Rather than fall into bitterness, Martin instead<br />

always sought to serve Christ in love.<br />

It was St. Martin’s total surrender to God in<br />

love, and his great love for all people, that gave him<br />

the strength to endure the injustice he experienced<br />

during his life in the sixteenth century. He not only<br />

fulfi lled his dream of becoming a Dominican, but<br />

he also was said to have been given extraordinary<br />

supernatural gifts from God including: bilocation,<br />

aerial flights, instant cures, miraculous knowledge,<br />

spiritual knowledge, and a close relationship with<br />

animals. St. Martin understood that only the love<br />

of God conquers hate.<br />

Photo credit: Pitxiquin (January 4, 2017)<br />

© Sophia Institute for Teachers<br />

© Sophia Institute for Teachers<br />

High School Chapter: Different Types of Justice<br />

153

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