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How Authentically Christian is Liberation Theology?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
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This is a friendly critique of the Liberation Theology being elaborated in Latin America. The preferential option for the poor constricts its attention to economic disadvantage, and ascribes virtually all impoverishment to purposeful oppression. The poor are, simply in virtue of their deprivation, said to be so morally exalted that the gospel has for them no call to conversion. Theirs is a salvation without further ado. Yet their salvation turns out to be predominantly, if not exclusively, economic and political. A predilection for the Exodus displaces the death and resurrection ofJesus as the dominant paradigm for liberation. It is maladapted to a Christian vision of liberation, which must aim at communion with the enemy, not mere triumph. By claiming justice as its goal and fulfillment, liberation theology seems to suffer from a loss of Christian nerve. Looking to the socialist state as the sure guarantor of justice, it seems politically naive, and barren of the Christian hope that both exploiter and victim must be transformed into more than just persons (because prepared to return good for evil) well before the society around them has become a fit home even for justice.
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1. Novak, Michael, Will It Liberate? Questions About Liberation Theology (New York: Paulist, 1986).Google Scholar
2. Boff claims on the contrary that the liberation theologians are speaking with one voice; yet he is himself an example of independence and dissent on some issues within that group. Boff, Leonardo, Salvation and Liberation: In Search of a Balance between Faith and Politics, trans. Barr, Robert B. (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1984), pp. 24–30.Google Scholar
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11. Galilea, Segundo, FollowingJesus, trans. Phillips, Helen (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1981), p. 3.Google Scholar
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14. Ibid., p. 142.
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18. Gutiérrez, , Theology of Liberation, p. 159Google Scholar; Segundo, Juan Luis, Theology and the Church: A Response to Cardinal Ratzinger and a Warning to the Whole Church, trans. Diercksmeier, John (Minneapolis: Winston [Seabury], 1985), pp. 44–49.Google Scholar
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20. Gutiérrez, , Theology of Liberation, pp. 165–66Google Scholar; Boff, , Salvation and Liberation, pp. 43–45Google Scholar, has a more balanced view.
21. Dussel, , History and the Theology of Liberation, p. 144.Google Scholar It is of interest that despite this insistence that “liberation” not be treated analogically, Dussel, does make “violence” into an analogy (Ethics and the Theology of Liberation, p. 48).Google Scholar
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26. Dussel, , History and the Theology of Liberation, pp. 126–27.Google Scholar What Dussel does not discuss is how the “second violence” leads, in its turn, to the third and thus to the eighty-third. Also, by presenting this use of force as a specifically Christian responsibility, he does not propose an agenda much beyond that of the civil state.
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30. Boff, calls appealingly for “political holiness,” which he describes as “loving within the class struggle.” Does this mean loving across the struggle, or does it only refer to solidarity with one’s allies? ("A Theological Examination of the Terms ‘People of God’ and ‘Popular Church,'” Concilium 176 [1984]: 95–96).Google Scholar
31. Metz, , Emergent Church, p. 27Google Scholar; Segundo, , Historical Jesus, p. 71ff.Google Scholar
32. Gutiérrez, , Theology of Liberation, p. 175.Google ScholarSegundo, Juan Luis, Faith and Ideologies, trans. Drury, John (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1984), p. 327Google Scholar, points out how this sort of individualized religion so easily plays into the hand of repressive governments. See also Sölle, , Choosing Life, trans. Kohl, Margaret (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1981), pp. 80–81.Google Scholar
33. Boff, , Church: Charism and Power, p. 25.Google Scholar
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