Episode Details
Back to EpisodesFrancis Xavier: The Apostle of the East, The Goa Inquisition, and the Severed Arm
Description
In this episode of pplpod, we traverse the globe to examine the life of Francis Xavier (1506–1552), the Navarrese noble who co-founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) alongside Ignatius of Loyola. Join us as we track his journey from a student athlete in Paris to becoming the "Apostle of the Indies" and the first Jesuit missionary to enter Japan.
We explore Xavier’s complex legacy, including:
• The Mission: His accidental recruitment into missionary life and his massive evangelization efforts across India, Indonesia, and Japan.
• Cultural Adaptation: How he shifted tactics from ringing bells for children in Goa to dressing in fine silk robes to impress Japanese daimyos.
• Controversy: The darker side of his correspondence, specifically his 1546 letter to King John III of Portugal proposing the establishment of the Goa Inquisition.
• The Aftermath: His lonely death on an island off the coast of China and the bizarre, centuries-long journey of his "incorrupt" body—which was buried in lime, exhumed, and eventually dismembered to send relic parts around the world.
Tune in to learn how a man who once viewed Ignatius of Loyola as a "joke" became the patron saint of Catholic missions and one of the most prolific missionaries since the Apostle Paul.