Page:Vol 2 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/180

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APOSTOLIC LABORS.

Nevertheless a bull had been issued by Pope Leo X. as early as April 25, 1521, in favor of two Franciscan applicants, the prominent Francisco de los Ángeles[1] and Juan Clapion, the latter a Fleming and former confessor to the emperor, whereby they were permitted to preach, baptize, confess, administer the sacraments, decide matrimonial questions, administer extreme unction, consecrate churches, excommunicate and absolve from excommunication, without interference from any secular or ecclesiastic authority.[2] While suitable companions were sought for, and the necessary means, the death of the pope took place, followed by that of Clapion;[3] and other obstacles, chief among them the election of Ángeles as general of his order.[4]

The election of the cardinal-regent Adrian of Spain to the papacy, early in 1522, and the clearer accounts from New Spain, caused more energetic measures to be taken by the church, and on May 13, 1522,[5] a new bull was issued, authorizing all mendicant friars, especially the minorites designated by their superior, to freely undertake the conversion of natives in the Indies. Only those fitted by their life and knowledge for the position should be selected. The prelates of the orders and their delegates were invested with all power needed for the conversion of natives and the maintenance of the faith in the Indies, including the exercise of such episcopal acts as did not actually require the prerogative of a consecrated bishop, in places where no such prelate existed, or in places lying at a greater distance from the bishop's

  1. 'Por otro nombre, de Quiñones, hermano del conde de Luna.' Mendieta, Hist. Ecles., 187.
  2. Remesal, Hist. Chyapa, 41, seems rather nettled at these vast privileges to a rival order, and assumes with an 'of course' that they applied also to the later coming Dominicans.
  3. In 1522, at Valladolid, says Beaumont, Crón. Mich., ii. 501-2, who writes the name Glapion. Torquemada, iii. 6, 7, following Mendieta, attributes too much effect on the project to the demise of the pope. Yet the new pope may have objected to the privilege assigned so exclusively to two friars.
  4. In 1523, Mendieta. He afterward became cardinal. Vetancvrt, Chron., 1.
  5. So reads the Latin text, yet almost every author says either 9th or 10th.