To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Cor 9:6-10; Jn 12:24-26
The esteem in which the Church holds
Lawrence is seen in the fact that today’s celebration ranks as a feast. Lawrence
is one of those whose martyrdom made a deep and lasting impression on the early
Church. Celebration of his feast day spread rapidly.
He was a Roman deacon under Pope St. Sixtus II. Four
days after this pope was put to death, Lawrence and four clerics suffered
martyrdom, probably during the persecution of the Emperor Valerian. The
church built over his tomb became one of the seven principal churches in Rome
and a favorite place for Roman pilgrimages.
After the Pope was arrested, Lawrence knew that he
would be too. As soon as he could he gave all the money that he possessed to
the poor and even sold some of the Church’s treasures and gave the money he
received to the poor. Later, when asked to show the Emperor the treasures of
the Church, Lawrence gathered a great number of blind, lame, maimed, leprous,
orphaned and widowed persons and put them in rows. When the prefect arrived,
Lawrence simply said, “These are the treasure of the Church.”
The Emperor was so angry he told Lawrence that he
would indeed have his wish to die—but it would be by inches. He had a great
gridiron prepared, with coals beneath it, and had Lawrence’s body placed on it.
After the martyr had suffered the pain for a long time, the legend concludes,
he made his famous cheerful remark, “It is well done. Turn me over!”
The Gospel text for the feast of St. Lawrence is from
the Gospel of John. Jesus introduces teachings about his death with a brief
agricultural parable The seed imagery recalls the parables of sowing found in
the Synoptic Gospels (Mt 13:3-32; Mk 4:3-20, 26-32; Lk 8:5-15). Jesus uses the
imagery here to interpret his own death.
The significance of this parable for understanding
Jesus’ death lies in the contrast between remaining solitary and “bearing much
fruit”. In John, “fruit” is Jesus’ metaphor for the life of the community of
faith. Jesus thus uses the seed parable to show that the salvific power of his
death resides in the community that is gathered as a result of it (cf.
10:15-16; 11:51-52).
Jn 12:25 is one of the best-attested sayings of Jesus;
in addition to this verse, some form of the saying occurs five times in the
synoptic Gospels (Mt 10:39; 16:25; Mt 10:39; Lk 9:24; 17:33). While all of the
occurrences share the basic pattern of an antithetical parallelism that highlights
contrasting attitudes toward one’s life, there are also significant differences
among the sayings. The significant number of variations within the synoptic tradition
and between the Synoptic Gospels and John argues against any theory of literary
dependence and for multiple attestations of this saying in the oral tradition.
It also argues for the authenticity or historicity of the saying. The
differences point to the ways each evangelist adapted this Jesus saying to
serve his Gospel.
To love one’s life is the opposite of Jesus’ own
action; it places one outside of the community shaped by Jesus’ gift of his
life (psyche) and leads to the loss of that life To hate one’s life in “this
world” is to declare one’s allegiance to Jesus (cf. 15:18-19) and so to receive
his gift of eternal life (cf. 3:16; 6:40; 10:28; 17:2).
While the synoptic versions establish a condition for
following Jesus (“taking up one’s cross”), the Johannine version contains both
condition and promise. Since Jesus’ ultimate service is the gift of his life in
love, he calls the disciples to love as he loves and hence to serve as he
serves. What it means to be Jesus’ servant will be enacted in the foot washing
of 13:1-20.
The prime reason for the choice of the Gospel text is
that Lawrence became like the grain of wheat that was unafraid to fall into the
ground and die. In doing so, he became like his Lord and master Jesus.
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