On December 21, 1511, the fourth Sunday of
Advent, Montesinos preached an impassioned sermon. He criticized the practices of the Spanish colonial
encomienda system, and decried the abuse of the
Taíno Indian people on Hispaniola. Listing the injustices that the indigenous people were suffering at the hands of the Spanish colonists, Montesinos proclaimed that the Spanish on the island "are all in mortal sin and live and die in it, because of the cruelty and tyranny they practice among these innocent peoples.""During his sermon, Montesinos also proclaimed that neither he nor any of the other missionaries would allow these slaveholders to partake in confession." According to
Bartolomé de las Casas, who was a witness, Montesinos asked those in attendance: The sermon outraged the settlers and prominent citizens of Hispaniola, including the governor,
Diego Columbus, son of
Christopher Columbus, as well as other high-ranking representatives of the king. Montesinos's sermon had a formative impact upon Las Casas, who heard it firsthand. Las Casas became well known for his advocacy of the rights of indigenous peoples of the Americas. The primary goal of the Preaching Friars (Dominicans) in the New World was to aid and represent the aboriginal
American Indians under Spanish and Portuguese rules, for which they fought for over three centuries. ==Reactions==