I would check out the Jesuits, and St. Ignatius, in Japan and other areas…reached the highly educated and cultured…
ETWN had the most fascinating history presented on the Catholics of Japan. A sizeable number were converted by the Jesuits in the 1500’s, and a number of them were persecuted and martyred, with the rest going underground. Those who apostacize were forced to be suspended on some kind of contraption and use their feet to walk over and over in insult over the face of Christ and Mary, His mother.
The Japanese Catholics had no priests. They built little cupboards in their homes with statues of Mary holding the Infant Jesus, but in the style similar to the image of Buddha.
When Japan opened trade with the West, they allowed the foreigners to build churches. A Catholic church, St. Mary’s was built. The priests wondered if any there were any Japanese Catholics who remained and were faithful.
Finally some Japanese came into the church. They asked the priest questions. Then they finally revealed themselves because the sign had been fulfilled. The tradition had been passed down for 200 years that they could finally reveal themselves on 3 conditions: that it was Rome who sent the missionaries, the priest would be celibate, and the church named in honor of Mary. The church was named St. Mary’s, and the priest was sent by Rome, who was celibate.
They began to openly worship and thrive. Then persecution happened again. They suffered persecution, lost their church, but were able to move to another location – Nagasaki. There they built a new church with stone from the side of the seas, taking 5 years to build.
St. Maximilian Kolbe worked there with the Japanese. But the atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, some say near or at the Catholic church…and in time after much reflection, the Japanese Catholics saw themselves as the sacrifice, because many of them died, to bring peace to their country.
(There were 7 or 8 Jesuit priests who lived there, surviving the atomic blast, and attributing their protection to living out the message of Fatima.)
The Japanese Catholics there were very intelligent and hard working with most beautiful devotion to Christ and living in His peace that could help direct many of us in the West who live in constant noise…I would say that intense activity has its own ‘noise’.
And going back now to Mexico, in spite of the poor relations between the descending families and kin of conquistadors, the church, under leadership of Dom Bispo Zumarraga, it is even unknown to modern Mexicans today how the Church in Mexico made it the center of learning in the New World. There were indigenous Indian professors who taught at the emerging universities built by the Spaniards, Holy Cross coming to mind. And Bishop Zumaragga gave women and girls the right to an education hundreds of years before North American women were, this being done in the early 1500’s.
So I think the Catholic missionary experience is unique unto its own, and here in the Northwest, the Catholic priests did a better job catechizing because they accepted the Indians at their level, worked within the means of communication they used…like the totem pole, to bring Christ to them. I have visited and did some early work with NW Indians, and there are many who have kept their faith up to today.