At this time I have seen and put in study to look into all the
Scriptures ...which our Lord opened to my understanding –
I could sense His hand upon me – so that it became clear
to me that it was feasible to navigate from here to the Indies,
and He gave me the will to execute the idea ...I have already
said that for the execution of the enterprise of the Indies, neither
reason nor mathematics, nor world maps were profitable to me:
rather the prophecy of Isaiah was completely fulfilled. And this
is what I wish to report here for the consideration of your Highnesses
(Book of Prophecies, Folos 4, 4 rvs., 5 rvs).
Most of the prophecies from Isaiah which Columbus quotes refer
to the restoration of Jerusalem and its future glory. Once again
Islam comes into the picture. Constantinople, the gateway to the
Far East fell into Moslem hands. By the year 1500 the Turks had
conquered all the territory up to the very edge of the republic
of Venice. It was not until the battle of Lepanto (October 7,
1571) that Christian forces stemmed the Moslem tide into Europe.
Ever since, October 7th is the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary
to whom the Pope credited the saving of Christendom.
What is not commonly known is that the growing power of the followers
of Mohammed had closed the normal pathway from Europe to the Orient.
In God's providence, this is what occasioned the search for another
way to the Indies. Most historians claim that this was the dominant
motive for Columbus going west so that the wealth of the East
might be found. The Book of Prophecies shows the opposite. Commercial
interests were certainly prominent in the minds of others. But
Columbus had deeper spiritual interests at heart. It was surely
part of God's mysterious design that Columbus should have planted
the true faith in the New World at the same time that Islam was
overrunning Africa, the Near East, and was being driven out of
Southern Europe.
As one reads the Book of Prophecies, the spirit of the Crusades
stands out. For centuries the Crusaders, under Papal inspiration,
sought to liberate the holy City of Jerusalem from Moslem domination.
This is the underlying theme of the Book of Prophecies, but with
one remarkable difference. Columbus sought not so much the physical
deliverance of the Holy Land. His aim was to extend the faith
which makes the Holy Land holy. As he told the Spanish sovereigns,
"If there is faith, you are bound to have victory from the
enterprise" (Ibidem). As a matter of fact, Columbus' son
Diego achieved exactly what his father had told him to do in his
last will and testament. "When your days are over,"
the prophet told King David, "and you go to be with your
fathers, I will raise up your offspring to succeed you, one of
your own sons ...he will be the one who will build a house for
me" quoted by Columbus from I Chronicles, 17: 11,12 (Book
of Prophecies folio 56). Diego Columbus fulfilled his father's
wish when he built the first Catholic Church in America (Hispaniola).
Columbus had no doubt that he was the servant of the Lord, but
in a very definite sense. He was the man who saw himself chosen
by God "to fulfill my purpose," as Isaiah had prophesied
(Isaiah 46:11). It was to be a "holy enterprise." This
vocation came from the Holy Spirit. It was nothing less than to
liberate the nations that walk in darkness and bring them to the
light of Christ. Columbus quotes from the Prophet Jeremiah who
saw himself as chosen by God: "I formed you in the womb.
I knew you before you were born. I set you apart. I set you as
a prophet to the nations" (Jeremiah 1:5). After giving this
quotation, Columbus speaks to the Lord, "This is what You
ordained beforehand according to Your good pleasure, such [prophesies]
as were written in Your book about me, in conformity with your
secret purpose (Book of Prophecies, Folio 15).
Many people, on reading this would accuse Columbus of either
a psychotic delusion or of consummate pride. But this would be
contrary to fact. Before God, Columbus saw himself as totally
subject to the will of God. This after all, is the essence of
humility.
What especially stands out in the Book of Prophecies is the principal
source of Columbus' motivation to convert the people of the Indies
to "our Holy Faith." It was his faith in the word of
God revealed in the Scriptures which inspired him to do what was
thought humanly impossible. Writing to Ferdinand and Isabella,
Columbus shared with them his trust in God as revealed in the
Bible.
The working out of all things was entrusted by our Lord to each
person, (but it happens] in conformity with His sovereign will,
even though He gives advice to many ...I found our Lord well-disposed
toward my heart's desire, and he gave me the spirit of intelligence
for the task...Who doubts that this illumination was from the
Holy Spirit? He [the Spirit], with marvelous rays of light, consoled
me through the holy and sacred Scriptures, a strong and clear
testimony ,...encouraging me to proceed and continually without
ceasing for a moment, they inflame me with a sense of great urgency.
(Book of Prophecies, Fols. 5 rvs., 4)
As early as 1493, Columbus wrote a letter to the Royal Treasurer
of Spain in which he speaks of the discovery of the New World
as a great victory. Yet, it was not a victory by force of arms
but a victory of bringing the truth to people who were sitting
in the darkness of unbelief. He wrote, "Since our Redeemer
gave this victory to our most illustrious King and Queen and to
their famous realms, in so great a manner, it is fitting for all
Christendom to rejoice and to make celebrations and give solemn
thanks to the Holy Trinity with many solemn prayers for the great
exultation which it will have and the turning of so many peoples
to our holy Faith."
As an afterthought, Columbus assured the Royal treasurer that
there would also be temporal benefits not only to Spain but to
all Christians. What must be emphasized, however, that this was
an afterthought. The primary reason for thanking God is because
so many people would come to know Jesus Christ and become members
of the One, True Church.
We get some idea of how literally Columbus saw his discovery
as a fulfillment of divine predilection. On Sunday, October 14th,
two days after he landed at San Salvador, he is describing the
people who stood on the shore as they watched Columbus and his
crew bring their ships to land.
By the signs they made, I think they were asking if we came from
heaven. One old man even climbed into the boat we were towing,
and others shouted in loud voices to everyone on the beach, saying,
"Come see the men from heaven, bring them food and drink."
Many men and women came, each one with something. They threw themselves
on the sand and raised their hands to the sky, shouting for us
to come ashore, while giving thanks to God. I kept going this
morning despite the pleas of the people to come ashore, for I
was alarmed at seeing that the entire island is surrounded by
a large reef. Between the reef and the island it remained deep,
and this port is large enough to hold all the ships of Christendom.
The next day Columbus reached another island where he hauled
in the sails. He adds the statement, "To this island I gave
the name Sancta Maria de la Concepcion." He had no doubt
that his Book of Prophecies was being fulfilled to the last detail.
Franciscan Tertiary
To understand the character of Christopher Columbus we must say
something of his association with St. Francis of Assisi. Almost
as soon as St. Francis formed the Franciscan Friars, he established
the Third Order Secular of his new community. The substance of
the original Rule of these tertiaries is contained in St. Francis'
Letter to All the Faithful. To read this letter is to see the
life and spirit of Christopher Columbus. St. Francis' directives
read like a catalogue of what Columbus sincerely tried to put
into practice.
We should confess all our sins to a priest and receive from him
the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ.
We must bring forth fruits befitting repentance and love our
neighbors as ourselves. Anyone who will not or can not love his
neighbor as himself should at least do him good and not do him
any harm.
Those who have been entrusted with the power of judging others
should pass judgment mercifully, just as they themselves hope
to obtain mercy.
We are also bound to fast and avoid vice and sin, taking care
not to give way to excess in food and drink, and we must be Catholics.
It is not for us to be wise and calculating in the world's fashion;
we should be guileless, lowly and pure.
All that we know about Columbus testifies to his having lived
up to his Franciscan Rule. We know that he would wear the Franciscan
habit, especially when he appeared before the Royalty or nobility.
Except for the Franciscans with whom he stayed before leaving
on his historic voyage, he would never had received the entree
to Ferdinand and Isabella which opened the door to the New World.
He went to confession to Franciscan priests. He would spend long
periods of time in worshiping before the Blessed Sacrament in
Franciscan chapels. When he left Palos, Spain on August 3, 1492
to cross the Atlantic, he left his son in the care of the Franciscans
at their monastery.
There was one feature of Columbus' Franciscan spirituality that
by now we have seen was dominant in his historic discovery. It
is the zeal of St. Francis, as expressed in his Rule of Life,
"To go among the Saracens or other unbelievers." As
we know, Francis himself did the incredible thing of personally
visiting the Moslem Sultan in the Near East to bring him the Gospel
of the Christian faith. To this day, Franciscans are the authorized
guardians of the sacred places in the Holy Land.
Throughout the eight centuries of Christian history before Columbus,
we find the three features that typify the life and work of the
discoverer of the New World.
A militant Islam which was bent on converting Christian idolaters
who worshiped Isa (Jesus) not only as the Ibn Maryam (Son of Mary)
but as Ibn Allah (Son of God). This militancy is part of the Islamic
faith.
A defensive Christianity which saw itself under the growing power
of a people whose religion was to remove idolatry from the face
of the earth.
An organized strategy among Christian believers to defend themselves,
even by the sword; But in the spirit of their founder to propagate
the Gospel among unbelievers who did not believe that God became
man to die for us on the Cross and to remain with us in His physical
humanity in the Holy Eucharist.
We have seen something of the first two aspects of what may be
called the Franciscanism of Christopher Columbus. What needs to
be stressed, however, is Columbus' faith in the Real Presence
of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament. St. Francis could not have
been more bluntly clear than what he wrote in his Admonitions
which were basic directives for his followers, whether religious
or the faithful in the world.
God the Son is equal to the Father and so He too can be seen
only in the same way as the Father and the Holy Spirit. That is
why all those were condemned who saw our Lord Jesus Christ in
His humanity but did not see or believe in spirit in His divinity,
that He was the true Son of God. In the same way now, all those
are damned who see the Sacrament of the Body of Christ which is
consecrated on the altar in the form of bread and wine by the
words of our Lord in the hands of the priest, and do not see or
believe in spirit and in God that this is really the most holy
Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ.
These words of the gentle St. Francis are a commentary on the
faith of Christopher Columbus. Like Francis, Columbus believed
that Jesus Christ was on earth in His living humanity. Not unlike
Francis, Columbus was rigidly adamant in extending this faith
to the farthest reaches of the globe.
Defense of Columbus' Character
The biographers of Columbus, as we have seen, range from ardent
admirers to virulent enemies. The hostility of his critics has
taken many forms. But one group of detractors should be answered
in any appraisal of Christopher Columbus the Catholic. They are
those who claim that Columbus lived with another woman than his
wife. In our day, this calumny is accepted even by otherwise believing
Catholics. They go so far as to say that this was the main reason
why Columbus was never canonized. All serious historians of Columbus
now recognize that this detraction goes back only to the late
seventeenth Century.
What are the facts? Within two years of his marriage to Phillipa,
she died shortly after giving birth to Columbus' first son, Diego.
At the time of his wife's death, Columbus was thirty years old.
It caused Columbus deep grief, so much so that his early biographers
say that the death of Phillipa occurred at the same time when
his hair turned suddenly gray.
Some ten years later, in the autumn of 1487, Columbus married
his second wife, Donna Beatrix Enriquez. She was a member of one
of the oldest aristocratic families in Spain. Fernando Columbus,
the only child of this union, was born in August of the next year.
What gave rise to the calumny? It was an obscure note made by
one Nicolao Antonion, librarian in Spain. He came across a copy
of Columbus' last will in which a pension was provided for Beatrix
Enriquez, "mother of his second son, Fernando." Columbus
noted in his will that he is making this provision "for the
relief of my conscience." Antonio reads into these words
of Columbus what almost two centuries of history simply deny,
namely that Beatrix was not Columbus' wife but only his concubine.
After Antonio, the illegitimacy of Fernando Columbus became the
target of all his father's hostile biographers. This has occasioned
what may be considered the single most researched defense of a
historic character. Only the main lines of this defense can be
given here.
Columbus was a man of deep religious faith which absolutely excluded
illicit love. In Columbus' own language this sin would consign
his soul to eternal punishment. His frequent reception of the
Sacrament of Confession testifies to his sensitivity of conscience.
Everything we know about the life of Columbus witnesses to his
life long practice of continence and chastity. This was in marked
contrast to the practice of his Spanish followers in Hispaniola.
Columbus was a man who knew the world and knew how to cope with
its temptations. None of his contemporaries, even those who envied
his achievements, ever accused him of giving in to impurity. Columbus'
life was pure in an atmosphere of impurity.
The family of Arana, to which Beatrix belonged, had the reputation
for extraordinary piety. As with Columbus, her religion was a
powerful protection against her fall.
During the voyages of Columbus, the members of both his first
and second family were brought together in frequent social relationship.
It is unthinkable that those who belonged to his first family
would have permitted or submitted to contact with Columbus and
Beatrix if the latter were living dishonestly.
From 1487 to 1494, Columbus left both his sons, Diego, the son
of his first wife and Fernando, the son of Beatrix, in the custody
of Beatrix. The very fame of Columbus after 1492 precluded the
possibility of Beatrix not being Columbus' lawful wedded wife.
Yet not a word of scandal among the contemporaries of Christopher
Columbus.
Bartholomew Columbus brought his two nephews, Diego and Fernando,
to Queen Isabella and presented them at court. Isabella immediately
received them with respect and honor and appointed them as pages
in her retinue. The Queen's delicate conscience and recognized
sanctity ruled out the possibility that Fernando was illegitimate.
All the foregoing might have been unnecessary except that the
English speaking world has been so critical of Christopher Columbus.
We must distinguish, however, between English biographers who
shared Columbus' Catholic faith and those, no matter how erudite,
whose religious ancestry did not exclude what Catholic Christianity
believes is a grave sin.
It is imperative for any objective study of the character of
Christopher Columbus to sift the chaff from the wheat in defending
the virtue of the discoverer of America.
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