Today's Station Church, the site of the deacon St.
Lawrence's martyrdom, speaks for itself. I leave you with an excerpt from the
North American College's Station Church Guide:
“St. Lawrence, though considered a minor saint by
many today, was once one of the most beloved saints both in Rome and throughout
Latin Christendom, and rightly so. A deacon of the Roman Church in the
mid-third century, he found himself faced with the task of administering the
Church after the arrest of Pope Sixtus II and four of his fellow deacons in the
Catacombs of Callixtus on 6 August 258. Meeting the pope while he was
being led away to prison and execution, Lawrence begged to be able to accompany
him. The pope turned this request down, giving the deacon charge of the
temporal goods of the church, while telling him that the deacon would follow
his bishop in four days time. Lawrence then went forth and gave away the
material goods of the church to the poor in the city. Soon he in turn was
arrested and brought before the magistrates, and when the treasures of the
Church were demanded of him he presented to the authorities the poor, saying
that these were the true treasures of the Church. The Romans, enraged by
this seeming insolence, cast the deacon into a dark prison cell near the site
of today’s church. There, he converted the jailer and his family.
With the authorities only further angered by his success, they condemned him to
be burnt alive over a gridiron set up on the site of today’s station. So
it was that on 10 August 258, that St. Lawrence was burnt alive for his
steadfast faith in Christ. As one final jab at his executioners, he is
said to have remarked to them as his torments neared their end, 'Turn me over,
I’m done on this side.' And so he passed from the sufferings of this
world to the glory of the next.”
St. Lawrence's martyrdom is depicted in a massive
painting behind the main altar. Notice the angel at the top coming almost from
outside the painting to crown Lawrence with the crown of martyrdom!
The site of his martyrdom is marked by this altar
in the crypt of the church:
Let's pray for the courage and zeal of St.
Lawrence! Let's be saints!


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