Super Saints Podcast

Saint Martin’s de Porres Roadmap Of Charity

Brother Joseph Freyaldenhoven

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We trace the life of Saint Martin de Porres from Lima’s barrios to the Dominican convent, exploring how his humility, Eucharistic devotion, and radical charity forged a path of healing and unity. We share practical steps to imitate his service and invite you to walk with us.

• Early life, Afro‑Peruvian roots, and apprenticeship
• Dominican lay brother vocation and hidden work
• Miracles of healing and multiplication
• Charity to the poor, sick, and abandoned
• Humility as strength and path to sanctity
• Eucharistic and Marian devotion as fuel for service
• Lessons for racial reconciliation and human dignity
• Patronage of healthcare workers and social justice
• Canonization by Pope John XXIII and legacy
• Prayers, novena, and practical devotions today
• Invitation to explore resources and pilgrimages

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Hello, family. Welcome to Journeys of Faith Super Saints Podcast. Brother Joseph Fry Aldenhoven here at your service. Be sure to look at the description for special information of interest to you. And also there is more to this article. Saint Martin de Poris, Apostle of Charity and Humility for the Modern Catholic in a world often consumed by self-interest and division. The life of St. Martin de Poris shines as a beacon of radical charity and profound humility, a call to every Catholic to live out the gospel with unwavering devotion. Born in 1579 in Lima, Peru, to a Spanish nobleman and a freed African slave, Martin faced the sting of rejection and prejudice from his earliest days. Yet through a life steeped in prayer, penance, and service, he became a towering figure of compassion, earning the title Apostle of Charity. His story isn't just a relic of the past, it's a living challenge for us today, urging modern Catholics to embrace the Church's timeless teachings and embody Christ's love in a hurting world. At Journeys of Faith, we are committed to bringing the transformative stories of saints like Martin de Porez to life, inspiring you to deepen your faith and walk closer with Christ, founded by Bob and Penny Lord, our ministry, rooted in loyalty to the magisterium and supported by the Augustinian Secular Institute, has spent decades uncovering the hidden gems of Catholic history through books, DVDs, podcasts, and pilgrimages. With our motto, One Heart, One Mind, One Spirit with One Vision, we strive to unite the faithful in authentic Catholic teaching and spiritual enrichment. St. Martin's journey, marked by Eucharistic devotion and an unshakable trust in God's will, resonates deeply with our mission to evangelize and build up the body of Christ. Martin Deporis didn't just live a life of quiet piety. He rolled up his sleeves and got to work, tending to the sick, feeding the hungry, and even founding an orphanage and hospital for the poorest of the poor. His miracles from healing the incurable to by location were not mere spectacles but signs of God's mercy flowing through a humble servant. For today's Catholics, grappling with the noise of secularism and the challenge of living out the faith, Martin offers a roadmap, cling to the sacraments, serve without counting the cost, and trust in the Church's wisdom. As we dive into his life, let's not just admire him from afar. Let's ask how we too can and can become apostles of charity in our own corners of the world. Join us on this pilgrimage of the heart with journeys of faith as we uncover the timeless lessons of Saint Martin de Poros. Early life and Afro-Peruvian heritage. In the dusty, sun-scorched streets of Lima, Peru, during the late 16th century, a child was born into a world that would both reject and shape him into a vessel of divine grace. Saint Martin de Porras came into this life on December 9, 1579, the son of a Spanish nobleman, Don Juan de Poros and Ana Velasquez, a freed African slave from Panama. This mixed heritage placed young Martin at the jagged intersection of privilege and prejudice, a tension that would define much of his early existence in a rigidly stratified colonial society. Martin's father, though initially acknowledging him, was often absent, leaving Anna to raise her son and his younger sister in the shadow of poverty. The stigma of being mulatto, a term laden with the era's racial worse rare as racial disdain, followed Martin like a persistent shadow. Yet in the eo a in the crucible of hardship, his mother's faith became his first teacher. Anna, a woman of deep Catholic devotion, instilled in her son a love for prayer and a tender compassion for the suffering seed that would later bloom into his extraordinary vocation. You can almost picture the young boy kneeling beside his mother in a humble home, the flicker of a candle casting light on their fervent petitions to the Blessed Virgin. Growing up in the Barrios Altos, a poorer district of Lima, Martin learned early on the sting of exclusion. Legally classified as illegitimate and of mixed race, he was barred from many of the opportunities afforded to those of pure Spanish descent, but grace often works through the cracks of human brokenness. At the age of twelve, he was apprenticed to a barber surgeon, a trade that, while humble, equipped him with skills in healing, both physical and, as we'll see, spiritual. This was no mere coincidence. It was as if Providence was already stitching together the threads of a life destined to mend the wounds of a fractured world. His Afro-Peruvian heritage, far from being a mere footnote, was a cornerstone of Martin's identity and mission. In a society that often scorned those of African descent, he embraced his roots with a quiet dignity, becoming a beacon for the marginalized. He understood their pain, their invisibility because he had lived it. This deep empathy would later drive him to serve the poorest of the poor, slaves, indigenous peoples, and outcasts, seeing in each face the image of Christ Himself. It's a powerful reminder for us modern Catholics, the struggles of our origins, when offered to God, can become the very tools he uses to build his kingdom. A lay brother's vocation in the Dominican Order. Dive into the gritty humble reality of Saint Martin de Pura's life, and you'll find a story that's less about heavenly fanfare and more about the quiet grind of daily sacrifice, born in 1579 in Lima, Peru, to a Spanish nobleman and a freed African slave. Martin's mixed race heritage branded him an outcast from the start. In a society obsessed with status, he was barred from full membership in the Dominican Order due to his uh background. Instead, he entered as a uh as a lay brother a role often relegated to manual labor and menial tasks, but Martin didn't just accept this, he weaponized it as a path to holiness. And as a lay brother, Martin wasn't preaching from a pulpit or pinning theological treatises. His battlefield was the monastery's kitchen, the infirmary, and the dusty streets of Lima. He swept floors, cooked meals, and tended to the sick with a precision and care that would rival any modern day craftsman. This wasn't glamorous work, but for Martin it was a sacred mission. He saw Christ in every feverish patient, every beggar at the door, and every chore that others deemed beneath them. His life challenges the modern Catholic to rethink what vocation really means. It's not always about grand gestures or public acclaim, but about the hidden, grueling work of love. Martin's fidelity to the Dominican charism of preaching and service, even from the margins, mirrors the church's call to humility and obedience. He didn't rail against the restrictions placed on him. He embraced them, turning his status as a lay brother into a living sermon on charity. His example cuts through the noise of today's self-promotion culture, reminding us that true evangelization often happens in the shadows. For those of us navigating faith in a world that prizes visibility over virtue, Martin's story is a gut check. Are we willing to serve without recognition, to find God in the mundane, to live out the magisterium's teachings, not with words, but with our hands and hearts. Join us on a journey of faith with Saint Martin de Pores. Hey there, fellow seekers of the sacred at Journeys of Faith, we're not just about reading or watching, we're about walking the path of the saints like Saint Martin de Pores with you. Inspired by the grit and grace of this apostle of charity, we invite you to dive deeper into your Catholic faith with resources and experiences that resonate with his spirit of humility and love. Let's build that unbreakable bond with Christ and His Church together with one heart, one mind, one spirit with one vision. Here's how you can start this pilgrimage with us. Explore our catalog, discover books, DVDs, and podcasts on Saint Martin and other saints crafted with decades of expertise for your spiritual growth. Join a pilgrimage. Walk in the footsteps of holy figures through our curated journeys, connecting faith with real world wonder, deepen your devotion, access resources on Eucharistic miracles and Marian spirituality to fuel your prayer life. Support our mission. As a 501c3 nonprofit, every purchase or donation helps us spread authentic Catholic teaching worldwide. Connect with journeys of faith today. Let's uncover the miracles waiting in your own story. Miracles of healing and multiplication. In the hallowed streets of Lima, Peru, where the dust of the seventeenth century mingled with the cries of the poor, Saint Martin de Poris emerged as a quiet force of divine intervention. His life, a testament to the raw, unfiltered power of faith, was marked by miracles that defy the cold logic of the skeptical mind. These weren't parlor tricks or sleight of hand illusions. They were gritty, real, and often messy displays of God's grace, working through a humble mulatto barber surgeon who dared to love the least of these. Take the stories of healing, for instance. Martin, armed with little more than prayer and a heart ablaze with charity, walked into the hovels of the sick and forgotten. Historical accounts passed down through the rigorous scrutiny of church tradition, tell of fevers breaking at his touch, of wounds closing under his gentle hands, and of the dying rising to embrace life once more. He didn't just patch up bodies, he mended souls, often tending to those shunned by society, slaves, indigenous peoples, and the destitute. His biographers, rooted in the orthodoxy of the magisterium, note how he saw Christ in every suffering face, embodying the gospel call to serve the least of these with a radical humility that shames our modern self-absorption. Then there's the jaw-dropping phenomenon of multiplication, a miracle straight out of the biblical playbook. Martin ran a makeshift shelter for the poor out of his sister's home, feeding dozens daily on scraps and charity. Yet, when the hungry multiplied, so did the food. Witnesses whose testimonies were vetted by the church during his canonization process swore that meager loaves and sparse pots of stew stretched impossibly to feed all who came. It wasn't just sustenance, it was a sign, a living parable of God's providence echoing Christ's feeding of the five thousand. Martin didn't hoard a ration, he gave trusting in a divine economy where love multiplies what the world deems scarce. These miracles weren't just flashy displays for a saintly highlight real, they were raw, urgent acts of mercy in a broken world grounded in a faith that clung to the church's teachings like a lifeline. They challenge us as modern Catholics to look beyond our comfortable pews and ask, where are we called to heal? Where are we called to multiply what little we have for the sake of others? Saint Martin de Poris didn't wait for permission or resources. He acted fueled by a devotion to Christ and his church that burned brighter than the Peruvian sun. Charity to the poor, sick, and abandoned. Let's peel back the layers of history and step into the dusty streets of seventeenth century Lima, Peru, where Saint Martin de Poris walked as a living testament to Christ's love for the least among us, born into poverty himself, the illegitimate son of a Spanish nobleman and a freed African slave, Martin knew the sting of rejection and the weight of societal scorn, yet instead of bitterness, he chose a radical path of charity, one that challenges us modern Catholics to rethink how we live out the gospel. Martin's life was a master class in seeing Christ in every suffering soul. As a lay brother in the Dominican Order, he didn't just offer prayers from a safe distance, he got his hands dirty. He tended to the sick, no matter their status, whether they were Spanish elites or enslaved Africans dying in anonymity. He founded an orphanage and a hospital for the poor, scraping together resources through sheer grit and trust in Providence. Stories abound of him sneaking food from the monastery to feed the hungry, even using his own cloak to warm a shivering beggar. This wasn't performative piety, it was raw, unfiltered love. But here's the kicker. Martin didn't just help people, he saw their dignity when no one else did. He treated slaves as brothers, the abandoned as family, and the diseased as bearers of Christ's image. In an era when the poor were often dismissed as burdens, Martin flipped the script. He once said, I would like to be a broom in the hands of God to sweep away the miseries of the world. That's not just humility, it's a battle cry for us today. How often do we walk past the homeless on our streets, avert our eyes from the struggling single parent, or ignore the quiet loneliness of the elderly in our parishes? Martin's example stings because it's so tangible. He didn't have wealth or power, just a heart aligned with the church's call to mercy, rooted in the teachings of Christ and the magisterium. His charity wasn't a feel-good gesture, it was a Eucharistic act, an extension of the self-giving love he encountered in the Blessed Sacrament. For us, his life is a pilgrimage of the heart, urging us to step out of our comfort zones and into the messiness of human suffering. Where are we called to be brooms in God's hands? Whose misery are we meant to sweep away? Humility as the path to sanctity. Let's get real about humility. It's not a buzzword or a trendy hashtag for spiritual influencers. It's the gritty, unglamorous foundation of a life like Saint Martin de Porras, a man who didn't just talk the talk but walked it barefoot through the slums of seventeenth century Lima. Born into poverty and racial prejudice as the illegitimate son of a Spanish nobleman and a freed African slave, Martin faced a world that constantly reminded him of his place. Yet he didn't let bitterness or resentment define him. Instead, he chose humility not as a weakness but as a radical act of strength, a quiet rebellion against pride and privileging. Humility for Martin wasn't about self-deprecation or groveling, it was about seeing himself as God saw him, a beloved child, no better or worse than anyone else. As a lay brother in the Dominican order, he was often relegant relegated to to menial tasks, sweeping floors, tending to the sick, even cutting hair for his fellow friars. But he didn't just do these jobs, he transformed them into acts of worship. He saw Christ in every suffering face, in every dirty bandage he changed, in every hungry mouth he fed. This wasn't performative piety, it was the real deal, a heart so attuned to God's will that even the smallest act became a prayer. For modern Catholics, Martin's humility is a gut check. We live in an age of self promotion where likes and follows can subtly warp our sense of worth. Are we serving others to be seen or because we truly see Christ in them? Martin's life challenges us to strip away the ego to embrace the hidden, thankless work of love. He reminds us that sanctity isn't found on a pedestal but in the dirt and dust of daily sacrifice. His example, rooted in fidelity to the church and the teachings of the magisterium, shows that true holiness comes from bowing low, not to the world, but to God. And let's not forget the supernatural edge to his humility. Stories abound of Martin's bilocation, miraculous healings, and even his ability to communicate with animals, gifts that didn't puff him up but deepened his service. He didn't chase these charisms, they flowed from a heart emptied of self. For us, the lesson is clear. When we let go of our need to be the hero of our own story, God can write something far greater through us. Humility isn't the end game, it's the starting point, the narrow gate through which grace floods in. Devotion to the Holy Eucharist and to our Lady. In the life of Saint Martin de Poor, we find a profound connection to the twin pillars of Catholic spirituality, devotion to the Holy Eucharist and to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Martin, often seen with a broom in hand, sweeping the floors of the Dunnock Dominican Priory in Lima, was no mere servant in the eyes of God. His heart burned with a love for the blessed sacrament that rivaled the intensity of the greatest mystics. He spent countless hours in adoration before the tabernacle, finding in the real presence of Christ the strength to serve the poorest of the poor. This wasn't just piety for show, it was the quiet, gritty kind of faith that transforms lives. Martin knew that the Eucharist wasn't a symbol or a nice idea. It was the living Christ, the source of all charity, and he lived that truth in every act of mercy. His devotion to our lady was equally unshakable. Martin turned to Mary as his mother and intercessor, entrusting to her the burdens of those he served, the sick, the enslaved, the forgotten. He understood her role as the mediatrix of all graces, a core teaching of the church, and leaned on her maternal care to guide him through the hardships of his ministry. Tradition holds that he often prayed the rosary, meditating on the mysteries of Christ's life through Mary's eyes, a practice that grounded him in humility and obedience to God's will. For modern Catholics, Martin's example cuts through the noise of a distracted world. His life reminds us that true devotion isn't flashy or self-serving. It's a daily grind of prayer, sacrifice, and surrender rooted in the sacraments and in Mary's guiding hand. Lessons in racial reconciliation for today. Let's cut through the noise of our modern culture wars for a moment and look at Saint Martin de Poros, a man who lived in a time of stark racial divides and systemic prejudice, yet became a beacon of unity through sheer stubborn humility. Born in 1579 in Lima, Peru, to a Spanish nobleman and a freed African slave, Martin was labeled a mulatto from day one, a term that carried heavy stigma in colonial society. He wasn't just marginalized, he was outright rejected by his own father for years due to his mixed heritage. If anyone had a reason to harbor bitterness, it was Martin, but he didn't. Instead, he turned his pain into purpose, and there's a raw, unfiltered lesson here for us in 2023 when racial tensions still simmer beneath every headline. Martin's life as a Dominican lay brother wasn't a cushy gig. He was relegated to the lowest task, sweeping floors, cutting hair, tending to the sick because of his race, even within the walls of the monastery. Yet he didn't just accept this. He embraced it, seeing his servitude as a path to sanctity, a way to mirror Christ's own humility. He didn't demand recognition or rail against the injustice, though he had every right to. He simply loved, he healed, he served everyone, rich, poor, Spanish, indigenous, African, without a shred of discrimination. This wasn't performative, it was visceral. Stories abound of Martin sneaking food to the poor, nursing plague victims no one else would touch, even miraculously passing through locked doors to bring aid. His charity didn't see color or class, and that's a gut punch to our current obsession with identity politics. Today we're we're quick to weaponize differences to build walls around us versus them. Social media amplifies every slight into a battle cry. But Martin's example forces us to ask, what if we stopped shouting and started serving? But about washing the feet of those we're we're conditioned to resent. His life reminds us that true unity isn't legislated or tweeted into existence. It's forged in in in quiet uh sacrificial acts of love. As as Catholics rooted in the magisterium's call to see Christ in every person, we're challenged to live this out, not just in theory, but in the messy everyday grind. Martin didn't wait for society to change, he became the change, one act of mercy at a time. Patronage of health care workers and social justice. In a world often fractured by inequality and suffering, Saint Martin de Poris emerges as a beacon of hope, a saint whose life was a relentless quest to heal and uplift the marginalized. Born in 1579 in Lima, Peru, to a Spanish nobleman and a freed African slave, Martin faced the sting of racial prejudice from his earliest days, yet he turned that pain into purpose, becoming a Dominican lay brother whose ministry to the sick and poor would echo through centuries. His patronage of healthcare workers and social justice isn't just a title, it's a call to action for every Catholic today, a reminder that charity and humility are not abstract ideals, but gritty hands-on work. Martin's days in the Dominican monastery were anything but cloistered in the passive sense. He was a whirlwind of compassion, tending to the sick with a skill that bordered on the miraculous. Stories abound of his ability to heal, whether through herbal remedies he learned from his mother or through prayers that seemed to summon divine intervention. He didn't just treat the body, he saw the soul offering dignity to those society had cast aside, slaves, the poor, even animals neglected by their owners. Healthcare workers today, battling burnout and systemic challenges, can look to Martin as a model of perseverance, a saint who understood that caring for others is a sacred act of defiance against a world that often devalues human life. But Martin's mission went beyond bandages and broth. He was a warrior for social justice before the term even existed, challenging the racial and class divides of colonial Peru with quiet, stubborn love. He founded orphanages and hospitals, ensuring that the most vulnerable had a place to turn. He begged for alms not for himself but for those who had nothing, redistributing wealth in a way that mirrored the early Christian communities. For modern Catholics, Martin's example is a gut punch, a reminder that fidelity to church teaching means standing with the oppressed, advocating for systemic change and embodying the magisterium's call to uphold the dignity of every person, no exceptions. His life wasn't easy. Martin faced discrimination even within the walls of his own religious community, yet he responded with humility, taking on the lowliest task without complaint. This wasn't weakness, it was strength, a radical trust in God's plan that turned societal rejection into spiritual triumph. As we reflect on his patronage, let's ask ourselves, are we willing to get our hands dirty for justice? Are we ready to serve as Martin did, with a heart that sees Christ in every suffering face? His intercession is powerful, but it demands our action, urging us to build a church and a world where no one is left behind. Saint Martin's canonization and papal praise. Let's hit pause on the sweeping tail of Saint Martin de Pore's life and zoom in on a pivotal moment, his canonization. On May 6, 1962, Pope John the Thring elevated Martin to sainthood in a ceremony that reverberated through the Catholic world like a thunderclap of divine affirmation. This wasn't just a formality, it was the Church's resounding stamp of approval on a man who lived humility and charity with such raw, unfiltered intensity that his story still grips us centuries later. Pope John XXIII didn't hold back, calling Martin the apostle of charity and a model for social justice, an accolade that cuts through the noise of history with piercing relevance. Dig into the Pope's words, and you'll find a blueprint for what the church holds dear. He praised Martin's tireless service to the poor, his interracial background as a bridge in a divided world, and his unyielding devotion to prayer and penance. This wasn't just about honoring a saint, it was a challenge to the faithful then and now to step up to see Christ and the marginalized and to act with the same radical love. Pope John the XXIII saw in Martin a reflection of the gospel's hard edges, the kind of faith that doesn't just comfort but transforms. Then let's not gloss over the context. The 1960s were a pressure cooker of social change with racial tensions and inequality boiling over globally, elevating a mixed-race saint born to a Spanish father and a free freed African, you know, African slave mother in the 16th century Peru sent a message louder than any encyclical. Martin's life, his very existence, stood as a rebuke to division, a living testament to the church's teaching on the dignity of every human soul. His canonization wasn't just a celebration, it was a call to arms for a world in desperate need of his example. Let's get into the heart of devotion to Saint Martin de Porras, where the rubber meets the road for any Catholic looking to deepen their spiritual life. This isn't just about reading up on a saint story, it's about inviting his intercession into your daily grind, letting his humility and charity shape your your own walk with Christ. Saint Martin, often called the Apostle of Charity, has inspired countless prayers and practices that align us with his radical love for the poor and marginalized a love that mirrors the gospel itself. Start with a simple prayer to Saint Martin de Poros, one you can whisper in the quiet of your morning or amid the chaos of your day. A traditional invocation goes like this Saint Martin de Poros, humble servant of the Lord, pray for us that we may imitate your charity and humility in serving others, especially the least among us. Help us to see Christ in every face as you did. Amen. Short, direct, and cuts to the core of what Martin stood for, seeing Jesus in everyone, no exceptions. Then there's the novena, a nine-day journey of prayer that's been a staple of Catholic devotion for centuries. The novena to Saint Martin de Poris often focuses on his virtues, humility, compassion, and tireless service. Each day you refer reflect on a different aspect of his life, from his care for the sick to his quiet acceptance of racial prejudice. In 17th century Peru, pair it with a specific intention, maybe for healing in your family or strength to serve in your community, and you got a spiritual discipline that's both personal and powerful. Many devotees recite the novena leading up to his feast day on November 3rd, turning it into a pilgrimage of the heart. Don't overlook the smaller devotional practices, either carry a medal or holy card of Saint Martin, keep it in your pocket or on your desk as a tangible reminder of his presence. Some Catholics dedicate a corner of their home to a small shrine with a statue of Martin surrounded by candles, maybe a few flowers as a nod to his love of creation. It's not flashy, but it's real. Light that candle when you pray for the needs of others, especially those society overlooks, and you're stepping into Martin's mission. And here's the thing, these practices aren't just rituals, they're a way to internalize the orthodoxy of the church, to live out the magisterium's call to love as Christ loved. Saint Martin's life was a testament to that. Whether he was sweeping floors in the Dominican monastery or performing miracles for the destitute, when you pray through him, you're not just asking for help, you're aligning yourself with the church's timeless teaching on charity and humility, a teaching that's as urgent now as it was in his time. Embracing the legacy of Saint Martin de Poros with journeys of faith. As we reflect on the life of Saint Martin de Poros, the apostle of charity and humility, we're called to action in our modern Catholic journey. His unwavering commitment to the poor, his deep humility, and his fidelity to the Church's teachings challenge us to live out our faith with courage and compassion. At Journeys of Faith, we're inspired by saints like Martin to guide you deeper into the heart of Catholic tradition. Our mission, rooted in the vision of Bob and Penny Lord, is to equip you with resources, books, DVDs, podcasts, and pilgrimage experiences that illuminate the lives of the saints and the power of the Eucharist. Let Saint Martin's example ignite a fire within you to serve others and embrace the magisterium's wisdom. Join us on this sacred path, whether through exploring our extensive catalog of spiritual formation materials or embarking on a transformative pilgrimage. With journeys of faith, you're part of a community united in one heart, one mind, one spirit with one vision. Together, let's honor Saint Martin de Poras by living out authentic Catholic teaching and spreading the gospel with every step we take. Visit our website today and start your journey with journeys of faith. Thanks for listening to Super Saints Podcast. Be sure to click the link in the description for special news items.

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