In 1543 the first Christian missionaries arrived in
Japan—Portuguese Catholics. With a few decades the religion was thriving
in Japan, with hundreds of thousands of converts.
Fearful
of the growing influence of the faith, and of the perception that
Christians placed loyalty to Christ above loyalty to the Shogunate, in
1587 Shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi banned propagation of Christianity,
declaring that Shintoism and Buddhism were the only permissible
religions in Japan.
Enforcement of the degree
was lackadaisical, however, and Christian missionaries continued to
arrive and were generally tolerated—until an incident in 1596 sparked
severe persecution.
In late 1596 the Spanish
ship San Felipe was shipwrecked on the coast of Japan, carrying a cargo
worth over a million pesos. When the local Japanese authorities began
confiscating the ship’s cargo, the Spanish captain protested and the
matter was sent to Hideyoshi for resolution, in the capital city of
Kyoto. While the negotiations were ongoing, one of the Japanese
commissioners, Mashita Nagamori, befriended some of the Spanish crew.
When he asked one of the ship’s officers to tell him more about his
country, the officer pulled out a map of the world and proudly showed
Nagamori the extent of the Spanish empire.
He
also insinuated that the way Spain grew its empire was by first
infiltrating foreign populations and converting them to Christianity,
then later conquering them. Nagamori reported the conversation to
Hideyoshi, who interpreted it as confirmation of his fear that Christian
missionaries were part of plot to take over his country. He immediately
ordered that the immediate arrest of Christian leaders in Kyoto.
Twenty-six
Christians--four Spaniards, one Mexican, one Portuguese Indian, and
twenty Japanese, were arrested. To intimidate the Christian population,
the arrested men were forced to march from Kyoto to Nagasaki (600
miles). Once there, all twenty-six were tortured and crucified. They
were killed with lances while hanging on their crosses.
Following
the “San Felipe Incident” and the execution of the missionaries, all
Christian churches in Japan were destroyed, and practice of the
Christian faith was made punishable by death. For centuries, suspected
Christians were required to step on an image of Christ or the Virgin
Mary (something the Japanese authorities believed no believer would
do).
Over the next 250 years, hundreds more
Christians and missionaries were tortured and executed in Japan, many of
whom were subsequently canonized. The persecution of the Church finally
ended with the Meiji Restoration in 1868. During the time that
Christianity was illegal and Christians were being persecuted, the faith
survived in Japan, being kept alive by Kakure Kirishitan, “Hidden
Christians.” When the persecution ended, over 20,000 “Hidden Christians”
revealed themselves.
In 1862 the “26 Martyrs of
Japan” were canonized by Pope Pius IX. In Nagasaki today there is a
Twenty-Six Martyrs Museum and Monument, erected in 1962.
The “26 Martyrs of Japan” were crucified on February 5, 1597, four hundred twenty-seven years ago today.
The image is a 1628 engraving of the execution of the 26 Martyrs.

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