Thursday, September 13, 2018

Does the Faith of Christopher Columbus Matter?

Does The Faith of Columbus Matter?

What geopolitical events triggered the Spanish crown’s decision to fund Columbus to sail west? The largest underlying factor seems to have been events in the centuries-long struggle between Christianity and Islam. The fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Empire in 1453 closed the western entrance to the Silk Road first blazed by Marco Polo in 1271-95, pushing Europeans to seeks another trade route to the Far East. The second was the conquest of Grenada in 1492 by the Spanish monarchy, ending the Moorish and Islamic presence in Iberia. That presence went back to 711 AD when the Moors invaded the southern tip of Western Europe, and advanced until the battle of Tours in 732 A. D. when Charles Martel defeated them. They remained a presence in the Iberian peninsula until 1492. After they surrendered at Grenada, they went south to Africa. 

In the 15th century, multiple European nations and explorers were seeking the advantages that would come from finding the alternate route to the Far East. In 1488, the Portuguese reached the Cape of Good Hope which showed promise for a sea route. Columbus advocated a direct western route, which he believed would be shorter. He made several mistakes in his calculations such as the radius of the earth, the size of a degree of longitude on the ground, and the total longitudinal span of the Eurasian landmass. (Per Wikipedia article.) He never got to the Far East. The flip side of this is that Columbus discovered a whole new world!

Columbus’ character is much harder to determine. There are many markers to devout Catholicism, but also actions that suggest the world’s approach to life. Faith markers: one ship named for St. Mary, another for the “little one” (maybe like El Niño or maybe just a small ship); using 2 Esdras 6:42 (an apocryphal reference) as evidence of a smaller ocean; naming the Lesser Antilles for saints; a book on prophecy written near the end of his life. Worldly actions include taking a mistress, tyrannical control when he had authority over new world settlers, seeking wealth from the profits the Spanish crown made in the new world, and enslaving native Americans. 


We remember a gifted sailor, explorer, and entrepreneur on October 12th, the day he first sighted land in the Western Hemisphere. It would not be fair to judge him by the standards of our time. Modern geography is based on centuries of mapping, charting, and geodesy since 1492. Biblical standards of character have been well known for thousands of years. We are all sinners, some saved by grace. Columbus, for all his faults, set in motion the settlement of the Americas. Does his faith matter? Perhaps to the extent that his life demonstrates the profound impact that one person can have, acting in faith, even though flawed.

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