Luis Sotelo tried to establish a Franciscan church in the area of Edo. The church was destroyed in 1612, following the interdiction of Christianity in the territories of the
Tokugawa shogunate on 21 April 1612. After a period of intense missionary activity by the Catholic Church,
Tokugawa Hidetada, the second
shōgun of the Tokugawa dynasty, issued a decree which banned the practice and teaching of the Christian faith, and under the threat of loss of life, all the missionaries had to leave Japan. This decree started the bloody persecution of Christians, which lasted several decades. Sotelo, fluent in Japanese, planned and acted as translator on a Japanese embassy sent by Date Masamune to
Madrid on 28 October 1613. The embassy was headed by
Hasekura Rokuemon Tsunenaga, and crossed the Pacific Ocean to
Acapulco on board the Japanese-built galleon
San Juan Bautista. The embassy continued to Veracruz and Sanlucar de Barrameda, Seville, and Madrid. Luis had the Japanese receive
baptism in Madrid, before accompanying them to an audience with
Pope Paul V in Rome. The embassy was a product of ambitions of Sotelo to increase the spread of the church in Japan and of Date Masamune to provide more priests for the churches of his Christian subjects and to establish trade between Sendai and New Spain, and it had the approval of the shogun, Ieyasu Tokugawa. == Seminary and priesthood ==