Our Great Debt to Columbus
The events of 1492 and afterward could have transpired far differently. The richest nation in the world at the time was China, followed by the Islamic caliphates which stretched from Morocco to the edges of the Far East. Why didn’t the Chinese expand their empire to the east across the Pacific? Why was it not a Muslim who established lasting contact between the continents? For that matter, why was it not an Indian who discovered Europe?
The events of 1492 and afterward could have transpired far differently. The richest nation in the world at the time was China, followed by the Islamic caliphates which stretched from Morocco to the edges of the Far East. Why didn’t the Chinese expand their empire to the east across the Pacific? Why was it not a Muslim who established lasting contact between the continents? For that matter, why was it not an Indian who discovered Europe?
Modern historians are at a loss
to answer these questions, and conclude that it was simply by chance that
events unfolded as they did. This hardly explains the fact that Spain was the
poorest nation in Western Europe at the time, bankrupt from its completion of
the Reconquista. Yet not only did Spain successfully go about colonizing and
evangelizing the Americas, it also kept the Muslims out of the Americas. Had
Islam spread to the Americas in place of Christianity, what we know today as
the United States could very well have been the United Emirates.
Columbus believed he was
specially chosen by God to bring the Gospel to a people who were living in
darkness and the shadow of death. He believed his given name, Christopher,
signified the mission he was destined to carry out, as his son Fernando would later
explain: “Just as Saint Christopher bore Christ over the waters, so too was he
to bear the light of the Gospel over the vast oceans.”
In conclusion, spreading the
Catholic faith and acquiring riches so as to finance the retaking of Jerusalem
from the Muslims were at the heart of Columbus’ mission. Any
hopes of personal rewards or honors were secondary. In writing the royal
treasurer of Spain at the completion of the first journey, he gives the reason
all people, present and future, should celebrate what would come to be known as
Columbus Day:
“And now ought the King, Queen, Princes, and all their dominions, as well as the whole of Christians, to give thanks to our Savior Jesus Christ who has granted us such a victory and great success. Let processions be ordered, let solemn festivals be celebrated, let the temples be filled with boughs and flowers. Let Christ rejoice upon earth as he does in heaven, to witness the coming salvation of so many people, heretofore given over to perdition. Let us rejoice for the exaltation of our faith, as well as for the augmentation of our temporal prosperity, in which not only Spain but all Christendom shall participate.”
http://www.returntoorder.org/2014/09/catholic-spirit-christopher-columbus
“And now ought the King, Queen, Princes, and all their dominions, as well as the whole of Christians, to give thanks to our Savior Jesus Christ who has granted us such a victory and great success. Let processions be ordered, let solemn festivals be celebrated, let the temples be filled with boughs and flowers. Let Christ rejoice upon earth as he does in heaven, to witness the coming salvation of so many people, heretofore given over to perdition. Let us rejoice for the exaltation of our faith, as well as for the augmentation of our temporal prosperity, in which not only Spain but all Christendom shall participate.”
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