Preview

the mission

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
848 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
the mission
Ashley M. Gutierrez

November 25, 2014

Dr. Miller

SMC: God section J

The Mission

The mission is a 1986 film directed by Roland Joffe, which takes place during the 1750’s. In a more directional way, in the movie there is a conflict between Jesuits of Spain and Portugal. The Jesuits go on to extend ministry of Jesus to America Indians and create a village like environment in the woods. The king does not agree and wont allow it because it is under his opinion that the Native Americans are animal. So, the Portuguese go and destroy the entire village of monks and priests as well as the Native Americans. The film involves Spanish Jesuit priest Father Gabriel who is in the South American jungle to build a mission and convert a Guaraní community to Christianity. The community above the dangerous Iguazu Falls has tied a priest to a cross and sent him over the falls to his death. Father Gabriel then goes and climbs a waterfall and is captivated but miraculously is let go.

Mercenary and slaver Robert De Niro who plays Rodrigo Mendoza makes his living kidnapping natives and selling them to nearby plantations, including the plantation of the Spanish Governor Don Cabeza. Mendoza finds his fiancée and his younger half-brother Felipe sleeping together. With much anger, he kills Felipe in a fight. Although Cabeza acquits him of the killing, then Mendoza falls into depression. Father Gabriel visits and challenges Mendoza to make penance. Mendoza accompanies the Jesuits on their return journey, dragging a heavy bundle containing his armor and sword. When they reached the Natives territory, there are a few tense moments when the natives recognize him, but they soon embrace a weeping Mendoza and cut away his heavy bundle.

Father Gabriel's mission is portrayed as a place of sanctuary and education for the Guaraní. Mendoza wishes to help at the mission and Father Gabriel gives him a Bible. In time, Mendoza takes vows and becomes a Jesuit under Father Gabriel and his colleague

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Camphouse, M. Guidebook to the Missions of California. Los Angeles, CA: Anderson, Ritchie & Simon, 1974.…

    • 1448 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Mission

    • 685 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Sarikonda-Woitas, C., & Robinson, J.H. (2002). Ethical Health Care Policy: Nursing’s Voice in Allocation. Nurse Administration Quarterly, 26(4), 72-80.…

    • 685 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Analysis Essay Soto: 1996

    • 821 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Soto starts off his story with visual anecdote thinking about the actions between right and wrong doing and a greater sense of God within his daily life. However, Soto then internally struggles within himself in thinking about the pros and cons of sin. Gary Soto knows well “enough about hell to stop [himself] from stealing. [He is] holy in almost every bone,” as well as recounts his vision of angles in his backyard along with the sound messages of God within the plumbing underneath the house. Though sinning, Soto greatly portrays the significance of God within his life through his young innocence and youthfully clean life so far ahead. Near temptation soon wavers Soto’s integrity at a German Market where a rack of pies catches his eye and “boredom [makes him] sin” while sweating the “juice of guilt,” Soto cannot come “to decide which to steal.” Gary Soto comes to describe the process of how he came to sin such in a shameful tone of writing, his morals nearly thrown away and his first true sin is committed. Soon after stealing the pie, Soto begins to be filled with a growing guilt. Muttering that “No one saw” in reassurance to himself illustrates his growing anxiety and paranoia. Knowing that sinning equals wrong doing, Soto mentions the “shadow of angels” and “proximity of God howling” under the house as a distancing from his faith and deeper into the sin regardless of the guilty feeling.…

    • 821 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mission Trip

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages

    My name is and I am a senior this year at Monroe High School in Monroe, Michigan. After prayer and consideration, I have decided to take part in a mission trip to Jamaica for my senior spring break trip. The opportunity is offered though Church of God’s Mountain Assembly in Monroe. This will be a firsthand experience teaching and learning from God’s children in Jamaica.…

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mission Santa Ines

    • 1828 Words
    • 8 Pages

    In the early 1700's, the country of Spain sent many explorers to the western world to claim land and find riches. When California was founded by several Spanish explorers, like Cabrillo, and De Anza, Spain decided to send missionaries to build missions. There are a total of 21 missions built in California. Mission Santa Ines was the 19th mission and was built to share the European God with the Indians and how to eat and dress like Europeans. Father Tapis wanted to make the Indians Christians and civilize them as well as keep and claim land for Spain. The missions were built near harbors, bays or rivers so the towns could grow the needed crops to survive, and to bring more Europeans, and show the Indians more European ways. The Indians built the missions under the supervision of the padres along El Camino Real, the Royal Road, where there was a water supply for the mission gardens and crops. The first mission built along El Camino Real was built in 1769, and the mission period lasted 54 years with the last mission built in 1823.…

    • 1828 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Mission was released in 1986 by producers Fernando Ghia and David Puttnam assisted by director Roland Joffé. Some of the actors consisted of Robert De Niro as Rodrigo Mendoza, the main protagonist, and Jeremy Irons as Father Gabriel. The movie, as a whole, I enjoyed very much. The character development in the beginning caught my attention and didn’t leave me constantly drifting off as other films might have. In the movie, Jesuit missionaries are trying to protect a native tribe they had converted to Christianity from Portugal who wanted to enslave the natives for their own use. Rodrigo Mendoza had to go through trials before he accepted his position as a Jesuit priest after he was given the choice by Father Gabriel…

    • 739 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    1. Father juniper Serra was a controversial and significant figure in which he created nine missions…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mission Command

    • 2076 Words
    • 9 Pages

    With German forces on the run following the Allied success at Normandy and the breakout and pursuit across France, Allied forces were staged to enter Germany in late summer 1944. Both Field Marshal Montgomery and General Bradley clamored to be given the priority of effort. General Eisenhower chose Montgomery’s Operation MARKET GARDEN as the plan for action. It called for airborne forces to open the route for a ground force to move more than sixty miles up a single road, ending up north of the Rhine River near Arnhem, Netherlands. By accomplishing this task, the German Ruhr industrial heartland would be within easy grasp. But the operation failed. The ground force did not make it to the last bridge; it was six more months before Allied forces crossed the Lower Rhine River near Arnhem. Between 17 and 26 September 1944, there were 17,000 Allied casualties including eighty percent of the 1st Airborne Division (UK). The historical evidence overwhelmingly shows that the British 1st Airborne Division lost the Battle of Arnhem because of poor planning. This paper will prove the failure of The Battle of Arnhem was not solely the fault of MG Roy Urquhart. Although this was his first command of such a division (being an "outsider") could he have not completed his wartime mission any better despite having inexperienced leaders planning airborne operations, bad intelligence, allowing the Air Force to plan the DZs based off what was best for the air movement plan and poor execution. This paper examines MG Urquhart, the commander of 1st Airborne Division (UK).…

    • 2076 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Missions in California

    • 441 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the early days of the North American continent more than one different groups of people were trying to settle the land and claim it as their own. One group in particular was the Spanish. They built missions in California to make their presence in the area known and to convert the Native Americans into Christianity. They served as religious and military outposts.…

    • 441 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The indigenous Native Americans and the European explorers of the 16th and 17th century were two very different and distinct groups of people. The Native Americans were usually peaceful until threatened. Although they did not have much technology, they knew the land well and used their resources very efficiently. On the other hand, the European settlers, though more advanced as a civilization, proved a bit more violent and greedy. When the first arrived on the shores, they were poorly equipped and had to take advantage of the natives for resources. This pattern established the basic relationship between the two groups-one domineering and intent on materialistic gain at any cost, and the other, rather naive to the real impact of sharing their world with a culture based on absolute control. These factors played an important role in the collisions between the indigenous people and the European settlers. The many cultural differences between the Native Americans and the European settlers would be the primary cause of constant clashes, confrontations, and miscommunications.…

    • 2835 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    quarrel. Their frequent Sunday morning arguments about religion are a result of Gabriel’s Saturday night drinking. María is a devout Catholic, but Gabriel’s vaquero mindset causes him to distrust priests because to him they stand for order and civilization. Antonio knows that Gabriel’s father once dragged a priest from church and beat him after the priest preached against something that Antonio’s grandfather had done. At last Antonio goes downstairs, and María scolds Antonio for not being properly formal when greeting Ultima. Ultima requests that María not scold Antonio, as the night was hard on all the men in town. María protests that Antonio is still a baby. She says that she thinks it is a sin for boys to become men. Gabriel hotly declares that it is not a sin, only the way of the world, and María argues that life corrupts the innocence and purity that God bequeaths to children. She says bitterly that if Antonio becomes a priest, he will be spard Ultima are the only grown-ups he knows who eat or drink before taking Communion on Sundays.…

    • 757 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The origins of the missions were an instrument of joint Spanish and Catholic policy. The padres were intent on bettering the life of the native Californians by teaching trades and Catholic Doctrine. Many modern California Native Americans believe the missions were an enslaving institution that robbed their ancestors of their culture and lands. Both perspectives have evidence to support these beliefs.…

    • 494 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Lastly, at the end of the movie Gabriel in a way almost accepts John and tells him he will help John get through the hard mountains of being a saved man. This is a complete reverse turn from the book’s storyline. In the book, Gabriel never in any way accepts John when he is saved because he feels Roy, John’s half brother, was the one who should have been saved. Gabriel if…

    • 441 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Why Is Gabriel So Lonely

    • 427 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The first reason why Gabriel is always so lonely because in the story it said that “it was evening, and people sat outside,talking quietly among themselves”. “On the stoop of a tall building of crumbling bricks and rotting wood sat a boy”. That boy was named Gabriel…

    • 427 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    destiny manifest

    • 498 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the 19th century US, Manifest Destiny was a belief that was widely held that the destiny of American settlers was to expand and move across the continent to spread their traditions and their institutions, while at the same time enlightening more primitive nations. And the American settlers of the time considered Indians and Hispanics to be inferior and therefore deserving of cultivation. The settlers considered the United States to be the best possible way to organize a country so they felt the need to remake the world in the image of their own country.…

    • 498 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics