Top Banner
LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY
14

LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

Dec 25, 2015

Download

Documents

Marjory Banks
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

LATI 50INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA

RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY

Page 2: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

CURRENT ASSIGNMENTS

Reading: Modern Latin America, chs. 7 and 14

Optional Paper: 6-10 pages on a topic of your choosing (approved by TA) Due in class Tuesday, March 11

Page 3: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

CONVENTIONAL WISDOMS

Role of CatholicismConservative politicsAuthority of priesthoodUnchanging doctrinesCultures of faith

Page 4: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

INCONVENIENT FACTS

60 % of world’s Catholics, and 90-95% born as Catholics, but: Only 71% describe selves as Catholic, but attendance at mass is

much less

Anti-clericalism and secularism significantIntense theological fermentCompetition from Protestantism and other religions

Page 5: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

POPE FRANCIS I

Page 6: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

AGAIN…

Page 7: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

… AND AGAIN

Page 8: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

HISTORICAL PATTERNS

Syncretism: blending of European (Catholic) and indigenous belief systems

Role of priest in village society: Preacher, teacher Arbiter, referee Path to upward mobility

Trinity of power: elite, military, and clergy Church as banker Doctrine of obedience

Page 9: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

LIBERATION THEOLOGY

Origins: Rerum novarum (1891) and Catholic social doctrine Marxist analysis Vatican II (1962-65) Conference of Latin American Bishops (Medellín, 1968)

Principal themes: Social justice on earth Poverty a consequence of sin “Preferential option for the poor” Need for “liberation” from oppression and from avarice,

selfishness, lack of compassion = thus a more perfect relationship with God

Page 10: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

MEANS TO LIBERATION

Christian Base CommunitiesReadings of the BiblePopular empowerment Support for revolutionary movements (in some cases),

resistance to authoritarian regimesOpposition from Vatican (Pope John Paul II and

Benedict XVI) and from institutional Church…less so from Francis I

Page 11: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

THE CHURCH AND POLITICS

Difference between institutional hierarchy and regular “orders” (e.g., Jesuits, Franciscans, Dominicans)

Open support for human rights: Brazil Chile Central America (Nicaragua, El Salvador)

Conservative/reactionary stances: Argentina Colombia

Page 12: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

RISE OF PROTESTANTISM

Key Doctrines Direct personal experience of God through baptism in the Holy Spirit

(thus, “born again”) Infallibility of Bible, personal healing

Brazil Assemblies of God Universal Church of Kingdom of God Estimates: 30+ million

Central America Guatemala

Factors Charismatic preachers + missionaries Appeal to migrants in urban slums, provision of practical support

systems No need for literacy (as in reading Bible)

Page 13: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

ROOTS, AFRICAN AND INDIGENOUS

African: Umbanda (Brazil) Candomblé Santería (Cuba)

Indigenous: Bolivia, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru

Page 14: LATI 50 INTRODUCTION TO LATIN AMERICA RELIGION, THE CHURCH, AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY.

AND SO…

Revision of conventional wisdomVariety and range of experience and rolesComplexity of Latin American society and institutions