Lawrence was born on July 22, 1559, and died 60 years later on his birthday in 1619. His parents William and Elizabeth Russo gave him the name of Julius Caesar, Caesare in Italian. After the early death of his parents, he was educated by his uncle at the College of St. Mark in Venice. Lawrence’s sensitivity to the needs of people, a character trait, perhaps unexpected in such a talented scholar began to surface. Lawrence was appointed papal emissary and peacemaker, a job which took him to a number of foreign countries.
An effort to achieve peace in his native kingdom of Naples took him on a journey to Lisbon to visit the king of Spain. Serious illness in Lisbon took his life in 1619. In 1956, the Capuchins completed a 15-volume edition of Lawrence’s writings. Eleven of these 15 contain his sermons, each of which relies chiefly on scriptural quotations to illustrate his teaching.