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Protestantism and Politics in Chile and Brazil
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
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- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1970
References
1 Willems, Emilio, Followers of the New Faith: Culture Change and the Rise of Protestantism in Brazil and Chile (Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1967), p. v.Google Scholar
2 Vergara, I., El protestantismo en Chile (Santiago: Editorial del Pacifico, S.A., 1962)Google Scholar; Read, William R., New Patterns of Church Growth in Brazil (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1965)Google Scholar; Read, William R., Monterroso, Victor M., and Johnson, Harmon A., Latin American Church Growth (Grand Rapids; William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1969)Google Scholar; Kessler, Jean Baptiste August Jr., A Study of the Older Protestant Missions and Churches in Peru and Chile, With Special Reference to the Problems of Division, Nationalism and Native Ministry (Goes, Netherlands: Oosterbaan & Le Cointre, 1967)Google Scholar. For a terse summary of the historical growth and present status of Pentecostal Protestantism in Chile and Brazil, see Walker, Alan, ‘Where Pentecostalism Is Mushrooming’, Christian Century, Vol. 85, No. 3 (January 17, 1968), 81–2.Google Scholar
3 d'Epinay, Christian Lalive, El refugio de las masas: Estudio socioldgico del protestantismo chileno (Santiago: Editorial del Paciflco, 1968), pp. 18–20.Google Scholar
4 Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, p. 103.Google Scholar
5 Kessler, , A Study of the Older Protestant Missions and Churches in Peru and Chile, p. 352.Google Scholar
6 Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, p. 154.Google Scholar
7 Ibid., pp. 154–9.
8 Nida, Eugene A., ‘The Indigenous Churches in Latin America’, Practical Anthropology, Vol. 8, No. 3 (May–June, 1961), 100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
9 Lalive, , El refugio de las masas, p. 71.Google Scholar
10 On the growth of Pentecostalism, see the useful graphs, tables, and references in Read, , New Patterns of Church Growth in Brazil, pp. 120, 176–7Google Scholar; and Lalive, , El refugio de las masas, pp. 48–55.Google Scholar
11 Goslin, Tomás S., Los evangilicos en la America Latina: Sigh XIX, los comienzos (Buenos Aires: Editorial ‘La Aurora’, 1956), especially pp. 119–21.Google Scholar
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13 Nida, Eugene A., ‘The Relationship of Social Structure to the Problem of Evangelism in Latin America’, Practical Anthropology, Vol. 5, No. 3 (May–June, 1958), 101, 116.Google Scholar
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19 ‘Brazil, : The Church in Process of Renewal’, Pro Mundi Vita, No. 24 (1968), 29.Google Scholar
20 Read, , New Patterns of Church Growth in Brazil, p. 162.Google Scholar
21 Damboriena, Prudencio, ‘El protestantismo en Chile’, Mensaje, Vol. 6, No. 59 (junio, 1957), 150.Google Scholar
22 ‘Brazil, : The Church in Process of Renewal’, Pro Mundi Vita, 28.Google Scholar
23 Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, p. 248.Google Scholar
24 Damboriena, , ‘El protestantismo en Chile’, 150–1.Google Scholar The Pentecostals have established a series of regular rural schools in addition to their Sunday school programs, but the extent of their programs in regular education has by no means matched those of the Catholics or the historical churches. See Ignacio, Vergara T., ‘Avance de los “Evangelicos” en Chile’, Mensaje, Vol. 3, No. 41 (agosto, 1955).Google Scholar
25 Interview with Christian Lalive d'Epinay, in Santiago, Chile, August 2, 1968.
26 Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, p. 62.Google Scholar
27 Ibid., p. 105.
28 See ibid., p. 15; and Lalive, , El refugio de las masas, pp. 181–94.Google Scholar
29 See Schumpeter, Joseph A., The Theory of Economic Development, Redvers Opie, trans. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1934)Google Scholar; and Hagen, Everett E., On the Theory of Social Change: How Economic Growth Begins (Homewood: Dorsey Press, 1962), especially pp. 141–3, 150–2.Google Scholar
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32 Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, pp. 247–9.Google Scholar
33 Ibid., p. 252.
34 Veliz, Claudio, ed., Obstacles to Change in Latin America (London: Oxford University Press, 1965), pp. 1–8.Google Scholar
35 Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, pp. 236, 252.Google Scholar
36 Ibid., p. 220.
37 Ibid., pp. 86–93.
38 Table XVIa, in ibid., p. 272. See d'Epinay, also Cristián Lalive, ‘La expansión protestante en Chile’, Cristianismo y Sociedad, Año 3–4, No. 9–10 (1965–1966), especially pp. 33, 35, 40–3. Willems follows a practice of citation which could prove confusing to persons unfamiliar with the authors in question. He refers to Christian Lalive d'Epinay and Isidoro Vasquez de Acufia as ‘d'Epinay’ and ‘Acufla’ in his notes. To obtain the full citation, however, readers must look under ‘Lalive’ and ‘Vasquez’, rather than under ‘d'Epinay’ or ‘Acufia’, because no bibliographic references appear to the parts of the names given in the references in the text. Proofreaders have also let Willems down, allowing such errors to slip through as the mis- spelling of ‘Chilo6’ in the title of Vasquez de Acuna's book.Google Scholar
39 Nida, , ‘The Indigenous Churches in Latin America’, 98–102.Google Scholar
40 In his comparative study of Protestantism in Latin America, Father Damboriena points out that Pentecostalism has expanded most rapidly in Chile. See Damboriena, Prudencio, Elprotestantismo en Amirica Latina (2 vols.; Bogota: FERES, 1962, 1963), Vol. 2, p. 246.Google Scholar
41 Vergara, , El protestantismo en Chile, p. 127.Google Scholar For more direct criticism of Chilean Pentecostalism's exclusive concern with moralistic purity, see ibid., pp. 238–43.
42 Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, pp. 45–6, 170.Google Scholar
43 deSouza, Beatriz Muniz, ‘Aspectos do protestantismo pentecostal em S~ao Paulo’, in Cesar, Waldo A., and others, Protestantismo e imperialismo na América Latina (Petrdpólis: Editora Vôzes, 1968), p. 110.Google Scholar
44 Lalive, , El refugio de las masas, p. 180.Google Scholar
45 Ibid., pp. 91–2.
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49 Read, , New Patterns of Church Growth in Brazil, pp. 212–13Google Scholar. In contrast, see Willems, , Followers of the New Faith, pp. 169–73.Google Scholar
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51 Kessler, , A Study of the Older Protestant Missions and Churches in Peru and Chile, p. 13.Google Scholar
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54 Lalive, , El refugio de las masas, p. 226.Google Scholar Pointing out that Protestant pastors work easily under regimes of the ‘far right’ like that of Francois Duvalier in Haiti, but that the pastors cannot relate to ‘really revolutionary’ regimes like that of Fidel Castro in Cuba, Lalive advocates that Evangelicals in Latin America give up their ‘reactionary role’ and accept a more ‘radical’ position. d'Epinay, Christian Lalive, ‘La Iglesia Evangé1ica y la revolución latinoamericana’, Cristianismoy Sociedad, Año 6, Nos. 16, 17 (diciembre, 1968), 21–2, 29–30.Google Scholar
55 Houtart, François and Pin, Emile, The Church and the Latin American Revolution, Barth, Gilbert, trans. (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1965)Google Scholar; and Pin, Émile, Elementos para una sociologia del catolicismo latinoamericano (Bogotá: FERES, 1963).Google Scholar
56 Bonino, José Miguez, Polémica, diálogo y misión: Catolicismo romano y protestantismo en la America Latina (n.p.: Centro de Estudios Cristianos del Rio de la Plata de la Federation de Iglesias Evangé1icas del Uruguay y de la Federatión Argentina de Iglesias Evangélicas, 1966), pp. 26–31.Google Scholar
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