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The Iberian voyages of discovery of the 14th and 15th centuries saw not only the opening
of new territories but also an unprecedented expansion of missionary activity. Promoted
by the Catholic Church its object was to convert the populations of these new territories
to Christianity.
This paper examines the extent to which the missionaries who came to Ceylon were
suited to the task of converting the people of this island. It argues that as regards the
fervour and zeal they brought to the task their commitment and dedication was
“exemplary”. Conversion, however, in the real sense of the word, it is maintained, means
a radical change of beliefs caused by intellectual conviction, spiritual motivation or
emotional insight. In that context it is argued that some of the method of recruitment, the
type of training provided to them, their continued lack of proficiency in language and the
consequent heavy reliance on interpreters did not match the requirements of conversion
in the real sense of the term. The actual methods adopted by the missionaries as well as
the instances of professed converts sliding back are cited to illustrate this point of view.
(All the various methods of conversion are not discussed in the paper.)These
circumstances, it is submitted, determined the direction that proselytization took in
Ceylon, which was an emphasis on baptism first, while any instruction, even if it
preceded baptism, was hasty, brief and, since done mostly through interpreters,
incomplete. Baptism occurred but not necessarily conversion.
The sources this paper will rely on are what the missionaries themselves have recorded
– the account of Paulo Trinidade for the Franciscans; the letters and reports of the
Jesuits extracted from Fr. V. Perniola’s “The Catholic Church – The Portuguese Period”;
the various writings of Portuguese historians; contemporary accounts of the Portuguese
apostolic mission by authorities such as Boxer, Sanjay Subramaniam, Russel-Wood,
Priolkar, Flores, Tikiri Abeysinghe and C.R. de Silva. |
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