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St. Isaac Jogues and St. Francis Xavier Against Invincible Ignorance and on the Necessity of Baptism
1. Isaac Jogues against Invincible Ignorance
2. Francis Xavier against Invincible Ignorance
3. Isaac Jogues on the Necessity of Water Baptism
4. Amazing Baptisms
5. Other Quotes from Jogues and Xavier on Baptism
In this work on Outside the Catholic Church There is No Salvation and the necessity of the Sacrament of Baptism, I could not leave out a section on the incredible lives of two of the most illustrious missionaries in Church history, St. Isaac Jogues (17th century missionary to the North American Savages) and St. Francis Xavier (16th century missionary to the Far East). The trials of St. Isaac Jogues in bringing the Gospel to the North American heathen, and the incredible success of St. Francis Xavier in bringing the Gospel to India, Japan and the areas thereabout, are simply amazing. But what is most obvious about both of their lives is that the exact same sentiments and belief animated them in regard to the heathen to whom they journeyed. They were both absolutely convinced that all the heathen men and women without exception who died without knowledge of Jesus Christ would not be saved and would be lost forever. It is, in fact, impossible for a sincere person to read the lives of these missionaries and still believe in the idea of salvation for the “invincibly ignorant,” simply because their lives illustrate most profoundly the undeniable teaching of the whole of Catholic Tradition that all the souls who die ignorant of the Gospel and the principal mysteries of the Catholic Faith (the Trinity and the Incarnation) are lost. Any idea that these souls could be saved ignorant of Christ was a foreign world to them, a perverted and corrupted view of the supernatural world. If they had believed in “invincible ignorance” they never would have done what they did.
In their lives we also find remarkable occurrences relating to people receiving the Sacrament of Baptism, occurrences which demonstrate again the truth of the dogma received from Jesus Christ Himself: Unless a man is born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God (John 3:5). We will now look at some different occurrences and quotes from their lives.
ISAAC JOGUES AGAINST INVINCIBLE IGNORANCE
St. Isaac Jogues and his companions were preaching the Gospel to the most savage of the North American heathen in the areas of Canada and New York. In trying to bring the Gospel (the Catholic Faith) to this kind of heathen, Isaac Jogues and his companions braved incredible hardships and risked capture and mind-boggling tortures at the hands of the savages. And this is exactly what happened when St. Isaac Jogues, St. Rene Goupil and companions were captured by the Iroquois savages on a missionary journey in 1642:
But why did St. Isaac Jogues and his companions feel compelled to subject themselves to the possibility of falling into the hands of these savages? What was the point? The answer is that they knew that there was no such thing as “salvation for the invincibly ignorant.” They knew that if these savages didn’t come to know Jesus Christ and the Trinity (the Catholic Faith) and get baptized they would be eternally lost without any doubt.
St. Isaac Jogues and his companions were subjected to many other things, including mind-boggling cold:
Yet, after all this, St. Isaac Jogues still refused to escape from these savages when at first he had the opportunity! He wanted to stay and baptize infants who were dying, and instruct and baptize the heathen adults who would listen. Why? If he had left the people, surely those who were sincere would have been saved for being ignorant “through no fault of their own,” right? After all, it wouldn’t have been their fault if Isaac Jogues said that he couldn’t endure this any longer. No! St. Isaac knew that there was no salvation for them without the presence of the baptizing Church and knowledge of the Catholic Faith. The following quote is one of the most interesting that one will ever see against the heretical idea of salvation for the “invincibly ignorant.”
Could any statement from a Saint refute the heresy of salvation for the “invincibly ignorant” better? St. Isaac knew that those heathen who did not come to know the Catholic Faith and get baptized simply were not preordained for eternal life.
As Catholics, of course, we don’t believe as the heretic John Calvin, who held a predestination according to which no matter what one does he is either predestined for heaven or hell. That is a wicked heresy. Rather, as Catholics we believe in the true understanding of predestination, which is expressed by St. Isaac Jogues and Romans 8 above. This true understanding of predestination simply means that God’s foreknowledge from all eternity makes sure that those who are of good will and are sincere will be brought to the Catholic faith and come to know what they must – and that those who are not brought to the Catholic faith and don’t know what they must were not among the elect.
There is another interesting story in Jogues’ life which confirms this. After having much success in converting people in various places, he and his companions began to be shut out from all the villages in a certain section of the heathen savages. The Devil had convinced the heathen savages in this area – and the idea was spreading – that the presence of the missionaries was the reason why there were famine and disease among them. So, being totally exhausted and shut out from every hut in the area, and freezing from the cold and dying for a place to rest and warm themselves, we pick up the story:
As St. Isaac Jogues says, he knew that if he did not reach these people, instruct them and baptize them they would be “swallowed up in hell.” That is why he forced himself at the very moment he had just found a bit of rest and warmth to make the thirty-five mile trip, though he was starving, freezing and exhausted – a trip which almost killed him. There is another interesting story which illustrates the same truth.
FRANCIS XAVIER AGAINST INVINCIBLE IGNORANCE
St. Francis Xavier was arguably the greatest missionary in Church history after the apostle Paul. He was responsible for the baptism of millions in the Far East. Like St. Isaac Jogues, he was firmly convinced of the Catholic truth that there is no such thing as “salvation for the invincibly ignorant.”
Here we see that St. Francis Xavier is saying that these ignorant heathen in India would easily become Christians if there were someone to instruct them, and yet they are still going to go to Hell if they don’t hear about the Faith! This totally eliminates the idea of salvation for the “invincibly ignorant” or salvation by “implicit baptism of desire.”
Here again we see St. Francis Xavier eliminating any idea of salvation for “the invincibly ignorant,” excluding from salvation even those ignorant souls whom he thought would embrace the Faith if they were taught it!
In all of these quotes we again see that St. Francis Xavier, like St. Isaac Jogues and all of the saints, totally rejected the heretical idea that souls who are ignorant of the Gospel can be saved.
ISAAC JOGUES ON THE NECESSITY OF WATER BAPTISM
In the life of these extraordinary missionaries, we also find many quotes and instances which confirm the absolute necessity of water baptism for salvation. As in the life of the great missionary Fr. De Smet, both men saw the remarkable occurrence that many of the people that they would reach to baptize would die almost immediately after. They clearly saw this as a sign that God had preserved the lives of these people until they were able to receive that most necessary sacrament.
The missionaries were convinced that it was only because Peter had received the Sacrament of Baptism that he had the miraculous strength to undergo all of these incredible tortures, survive and still move against his persecutors.
AMAZING BAPTISMS
Especially in the life of St. Isaac Jogues, we find incredible stories about his baptizing people under amazing and/or miraculous circumstances. These stories also show the truth of the dogma, Unless a man is born again of water and the Holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdom of God (John 3:5).
This fascinating story shows us how the Almighty can and does get any soul that He wants to baptism. If the woman hadn’t fallen into the icy waters, St. Isaac wouldn’t have had the opportunity to baptize her baby. It’s quite obvious that God arranged it so that this little child received the sacrament just before He took it from the earth.
If the sheaths of corn had not been thrown at that very moment, Jogues wouldn’t have had the water with which to baptize the two Indians. And, as noted in his life, St. Isaac Jogues always instructed the heathen in the essentials they had to know for baptism (e.g., the Trinity and the Incarnation).
OTHER QUOTES FROM JOGUES AND XAVIER ON BAPTISM
In the life of St. Isaac Jogues, there is a fascinating account of his party’s capture by the Iroquois savages. In it we find the description of Jogues’ focus on baptizing an unbaptized Huron Indian who was accompanying them. Here is the account of when their party was suddenly and unexpectedly attacked by the Iroquois savages, who wanted to capture and torture them:
Below is another interesting account of an Indian named Ahatsistari, who was converted by St. Isaac Jogues and his companions. Ahatsistari addressed St. Isaac Jogues and St. John De Brebeuf as follows:
It is obvious that Ahatsistari hadn’t been taught “baptism of desire.” He understood that he would go to Hell if he died without the Sacrament of Baptism. Shortly after this speech, Ahatsistari was solemnly baptized.
Endnotes:
[1] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues (Original Edition: Harper and Brothers, New York and London, 1935), New Edition, San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2002, pp. 219, 221.
[2] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 197.
[3] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, pp. 267-268.
[4] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 300.
[5] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, pp. 145-146.
[6] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 141.
[7] The Life and Letters of St. Francis Xavier by Henry James Coleridge, Vol. 1, pp. 155-156.
[8] The Life and Letters of St. Francis Xavier by Henry James Coleridge, Vol. 1, p. 265.
[9] The Life and Letters of St. Francis Xavier by Henry James Coleridge, Vol. 1, p. 380.
[10] The Life and Letters of St. Francis Xavier by Henry James Coleridge, Vol. 2, p. 87.
[11] The Life and Letters of St. Francis Xavier by Henry James Coleridge, Vol. 2, p. 348.
[12] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 92.
[13] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 136.
[14] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, pp. 97-98.
[15] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 142.
[16] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 279.
[17] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 199.
[18] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, pp. 122-123.
[19] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, pp. 298-299.
[20] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 272.
[21] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 225.
[22] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 205.
[23] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 168.
[24] The Life and Letters of St. Francis Xavier by Henry James Coleridge, Vol. 1, p. 375.
[25] The Life and Letters of St. Francis Xavier by Henry James Coleridge, Vol. 2, p. 23.
[26] Francis Talbot, Saint Among Savages: The Life of St. Isaac Jogues, p. 94.
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