ST.
LAWRENCE OF BRINDISI
Doctor of the Church, 1559-1619
Caesare de
Rossi was born at Brandisi, kingdom of Naples, on July
22nd. He was educated by the conventual Franciscans
there and by his uncle at St. Mark's in Venice. When
sixteen, he joined the Capuchins at Verona, taking the
name Lawrence. He pursued his higher studies in
theology, philosophy, the bible, Greek, Hebrew, and
several other languages at the University of Padua. He
was ordained and began to preach with great effect in
Northern Italy. He became definitor general of his Order
in Rome in 1596, a position he was to hold five times,
was assigned to conversion work with Jews, and was sent
to Germany, with Blessed Benedict of Urbino, to combat
Lutheranism. They founded friaries at Prague, Vienna,
and Gorizia, which were to develop into the provinces of
Bohemia, Austria, and Styria. At the request of Emperor
Rudolf II, Lawrence helped raise an army among the
German rulers to fight against the Turks, who were
threatening to conquer all of Hungary, became its
chaplain, and was among the leaders in the Battle of
Szekesfehevar in 1601; many attributed the ensuing
victory to him. In 1602, he was elected Vicar General of
the Capuchins but refused re-election in 1605. He was
sent to Spain by the emperor to persuade Philip III to
join the Catholic League, and while there, founded a
Capuchin house in Madrid. He was then sent as papal
nuncio to the court of Maximillian of Bavaria, served as
peacemaker in several royal disputes, and in 1618,
retired from worldly affairs to the friary at Caserta.
He was recalled at the request of the rulers of Naples
to go to Spain to intercede with King Philip for them
against the Duke of Osuna, Spanish envoy to naples and
convinced the King to recall the Duke to avert an
uprising. The trip in the sweltering heat of summer
exhausted him, and he died a few days after his meeting
with the King at Lisbon on July 22nd. Lawrence wrote a
commentary on Genesis and several treatises against
Luther, but Lawrence's main writings are in the nine
volumes of his sermons. He was canonized in 1881 and
proclaimed a Doctor of the Church by Pope John XXIII in
1959. His feast day is July 21st. |