Today,
the Church —through the liturgy of the Eucharist celebrating
the feast of St. Lawrence, the roman martyr— reminds us that
«there exists a testimony of coherence that all Christians must
be willing to give, even at the cost of great sacrifice and
suffering» (John Paul II).
Moral law is saint and
inviolable. This assertion, certainly contrasts with the relativistic
environment abounding now a days, whereas we tend to easily adapting
ethical demands to our personal comfort or to our own weaknesses. We
shall certainly not find anyone admitting: —I am immoral; —I
am unconscious; —I am a person without truth... Anyone
admitting these facts would automatically and immediately disqualify
himself.
The
definite question would therefore be: what moral, what conscience and
what truth are we talking about? It is evident that social peace and
healthy coexistence cannot be based on a “moral à la
carte”, where each one chooses his own way, without bearing in
mind the inclinations and aspirations the Creator has set out for our
nature. This “moral”, far from leading us trough the
«paths of righteousness» towards the «green
pastures» the Good Shepherd wants for us (cf. Ps
23:1-3), it would irremediably take us to the quicksand of the “moral
relativism”, where absolutely everything can be debated, agreed
upon and justified.
Martyrs are
unappealable testimonies of the saintliness of the moral law: there
are basic demands of love that accept neither exceptions nor
adaptations. In fact, «in the New Covenant we can find numerous
testimonies followers of Christ that (...) accepted persecutions and
death before making the idolatrous gesture of burning incense before
the statue of the Emperor» (John Paul II).
In
the Roman environment of emperor Valerian, the deacon «St.
Lawrence loved Christ in life, and imitated Christ unto death»
(St. Augustine). And, once again, we see confirmed that «the
man who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life»
(Jn 12:25). Luckily for us, the memory of St. Lawrence will
perpetually remain as a signal that to follow Christ is worth
offering our life rather than admitting frivolous interpretations of
his path.