The Oxford Handbook of Latin American Christianity

The Oxford Handbook of Latin American Christianity
Title The Oxford Handbook of Latin American Christianity PDF eBook
Author David Thomas Orique
Publisher
Pages 626
Release 2020
Genre History
ISBN 0199860351

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Latin America, where 90% of the population is Christian and where nearly 40% of the world's Catholics reside, has its own unique brand of Christianity. The Oxford Handbook of Latin American Christianity offers a survey of Latin American Christianity from thirty-three leading scholars. The volume systematically introduces and examines dramatic shifts in Catholic and Protestant Christianity over the course of several centuries. Its four sections explore the emergence of colonial Christianity, its institutional and popular evolution, and its dynamic role the region's contemporary developments.

Protestant Missions in Latin America

Protestant Missions in Latin America
Title Protestant Missions in Latin America PDF eBook
Author Clyde Willis Taylor
Publisher
Pages 360
Release 1961
Genre Missions
ISBN

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Protestant Missions in South America

Protestant Missions in South America
Title Protestant Missions in South America PDF eBook
Author Harlan Page Beach
Publisher
Pages 272
Release 1900
Genre Missions
ISBN

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In Search of Christ in Latin America

In Search of Christ in Latin America
Title In Search of Christ in Latin America PDF eBook
Author Samuel Escobar
Publisher Langham Publishing
Pages 439
Release 2019-11-30
Genre Religion
ISBN 178368660X

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Noted theologian Samuel Escobar offers a magisterial survey and study of Christology in Latin America. In Search of Christ in Latin America examines the figure of Jesus Christ in the context of Latin American culture, starting with the first Spanish influence in the sixteenth century and moving through popular religiosity and liberationist themes in Catholic and Protestant thought of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, culminating in an important description of the work of the Fraternidad Teológica Latinoamericana (FTL). Escobar provides theological, historical, and cultural analysis of Latin American understandings of Christ and places liberation theology within its social and revolutionary context. This book is an important step toward a rich understanding of the spiritual reality and powerful message of Jesus.

A Gospel for the Poor

A Gospel for the Poor
Title A Gospel for the Poor PDF eBook
Author David C. Kirkpatrick
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages 256
Release 2019-07-12
Genre Religion
ISBN 081225094X

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In 1974, the International Congress on World Evangelization met in Lausanne, Switzerland. Gathering together nearly 2,500 Protestant evangelical leaders from more than 150 countries and 135 denominations, it rivaled Vatican II in terms of its influence. But as David C. Kirkpatrick argues in A Gospel for the Poor, the Lausanne Congress was most influential because, for the first time, theologians from the Global South gained a place at the table of the world's evangelical leadership—bringing their nascent brand of social Christianity with them. Leading up to this momentous occasion, after World War II, there emerged in various parts of the world an embryonic yet discernible progressive coalition of thinkers who were embedded in global evangelical organizations and educational institutions such as the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students, and the International Fellowship of Evangelical Mission Theologians. Within these groups, Latin Americans had an especially strong voice, for they had honed their theology as a religious minority, having defined it against two perceived ideological excesses: Marxist-inflected Catholic liberation theology and the conservative political loyalties of the U.S. Religious Right. In this context, transnational conversations provoked the rise of progressive evangelical politics, the explosion of Christian mission and relief organizations, and the infusion of social justice into the very mission of evangelicals around the world and across a broad spectrum of denominations. Drawing upon bilingual interviews and archives and personal papers from three continents, Kirkpatrick adopts a transnational perspective to tell the story of how a Cold War generation of progressive Latin Americans, including seminal figures such as Ecuadorian René Padilla and Peruvian Samuel Escobar, developed, named, and exported their version of social Christianity to an evolving coalition of global evangelicals.

The Rebirth of Latin American Christianity

The Rebirth of Latin American Christianity
Title The Rebirth of Latin American Christianity PDF eBook
Author Todd Hartch
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 297
Release 2014-04
Genre History
ISBN 0199844593

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Predominantly Catholic for centuries, Latin America is still largely Catholic today, but the religious continuity in the region masks great changes that have taken place in the past five decades. In fact, it would be fair to say that Latin American Christianity has been transformed definitively in the years since the Second Vatican Council. Religious change has not been obvious because its transformation has not been the sudden and massive growth of a new religion, as in Africa and Asia. It has been rather a simultaneous revitalization and fragmentation that threatened, awakened, and ultimately brought to a greater maturity a dormant and parochial Christianity. New challenges from modernity, especially in the form of Protestantism and Marxism, ultimately brought forth new life. In The Rebirth of Latin American Christianity, Todd Hartch examines the changes that have swept across Latin America in the last fifty years, and situates them in the context of the growth of Christianity in the global South.

Protestant Pentecostalism in Latin America

Protestant Pentecostalism in Latin America
Title Protestant Pentecostalism in Latin America PDF eBook
Author Karl-Wilhelm Westmeier
Publisher Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Pages 178
Release 1999
Genre History
ISBN 9780838638347

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This book is a theological-missiological study on the intercultural communication of Faith, drawing heavily from anthropological, sociological, and historical sources. The book is helpful to church workers in Latin America, to colleagues who teach both on college and seminary levels, to scholars who research the phenomenon of Latin American Protestantism, to students to Latin American studies, and in religion and culture in general.