 But as the Jesuits came in, they did not want to change the Indian culture, and this I think is one of the brilliant facts of Catholicism. As they encountered the Indian culture, they decided that that culture was fine in and of itself, but like the human person, when the human person encounters the salvation of Christ, encounters the redemption of Christ and the sanctification of Christ, we physically do not change, our bodies do not change, but the moment the turning of the soul makes us radically new people. And the Jesuits applied the same theory to a culture. A culture should not become European. That is not what God intended that culture to be, but it should be Catholic. And so the Jesuits did an excellent job of taking an Indian culture and sanctifying that culture with a soul of Christianity, without rechanging that culture and making the stamp of Europe upon it. And this is the story of the Jesuits throughout Canada, throughout much of North America, and then later into the 19th century West.