Columbus: Religious Convictions Behind the Journey

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In the article “Why did Columbus Sail?”, Kevin Miller goes into great depth as to how religious Columbus really was or if he was truly religious at all. The first point he makes is that the stereotypical view of a mission to find a trade route is “misleading” (9) and that he “felt that Almighty God had directly brought about his journey” (9). In fact, Columbus was so religious that he was often mistaken to have been “a member of a religious order” (9) because of how strictly he felt about it. Something interesting that Miller presents is that Columbus held evangelical views before Martin Luther even wrote his excerpts against the Catholic church. For example, Columbus once said “I am only a most unworthy sinner, but ever since I have cried out for grace and mercy from the Lord, they have covered me …show more content…

It is this obedience that made him believe “They should be good and intelligent servants” (9) and that “they would become Christians very easily” (9), which when it comes down to it means Christian slaves. It is this divine mission that he was so determined to complete that gave him the nick name the “Christ-bearer” because he wouldn’t stop until every culture he encountered had learned about the story of Jesus Christ. His determination can be witnessed when his ship breaks during a terrible storm, forcing him to swim “six miles” (9) back to shore, and the first thing he does is relate it back to god’s plan for him to spread his message. Obviously, the other worldly reason for his success was the funding that he got from Spain to be able to “spread god’s message”, but the Spanish didn’t mind because in the end “A new country, militantly united behind Christianity, had arisen and would dominate the world for a hundred years” (9). This domination is what made Columbus believe “the purpose of all his travels and discoveries” was “the liberation of the Holy Land”

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