Showing posts with label EV: Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EV: Leadership. Show all posts

Monday, 2 June 2008

Alvarez

"Latin American Pentecostals are large, self-supporting, self-governed and self-multiplying churches." 1(140)

"twenty-first century Pentecostals face problems of leadership, education, division and social alienation." 2(140)

refers to the significance of background knowledge acquired through Roman Catholicism3 (141)

refers to the acceptance of the supernatural 4(141)

For Pentecostals "the Catholic Church also represents, in their mind, an agent of alienation, oppression and compromise with the demonic powers of the world." 5(142)

refers to the importance of lay participation in the structures of the church 6(143)

"the problem of numerical growth without proper biblical teaching and discipleship. In some ares, they also tend to center too much power in authoritarian leaders." 7(145) danger of an "artificial spirituality"8 (145)

perceives the dangers of a growing secularism and materialism 9(146) danger of North American imports 10(146)

fears the danger of a new and triumphalist Pentecostal subculture 11(146)

Escobar's reasons for growth in Latin America:

(1) Spiritual facts (2) Anthropological reasons--hunger for God (3) Sociological elements, providing identity, shelter, security and community (4) Pastoral methodology: lay participation

(5) Psychologican and cultural factors --freedom of worship, use of folk music 12(148)

refers to an estimate of 3000 Pentecostal Missionaries sent from Latin America 13(149)

links prosperity theology with the process of secularization 14(152-153)

1M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 140.

2M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 140.

3M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 141.

4M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 141.

5M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 142.

6M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 143.

7M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 145.

8M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 145.

9M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 146.

10M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 146.

11M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 146.

12M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 148.

13M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 149.

14M Alvarez, 'The South and the Latin American Paradigm of the Pentecostal Movement', Asia Journal of Pentecostal Studies 5:1 (2002), 135153, 152153.

Macchia...

" A spirit of tolerance for other religions in Brazil, Guatemala, and Chile, may have aided in this reception and growtH"1 (134)
o
"Pentecostalism...expresses something of the soul of Latin America"2 (134)
"many Latin Americans have a Christian soul, one of the expressions of which is Pentecostalism."3 (134-135)
Pentecostal churches almost immediately embraced local leadership4 (135)
Pentecostalism linked with Catholic resurgence5 (135)

"In three countries [Guatemala, Chile, Brazil] where Pentecostal growth is most prominent, Catholic seminary students increased dramatically...Also in Brazil, sales of Bibles have explodeD In the last four years 4.5 million complete Bibles were sold, 36 per cent by Catholic publishers."6 (135)
claims that in many deprivation studies "Often overlooked were key Pentecostals active in society as shopkeepers, small entrepreneurs and school teachers. Many key persons became upper-lower and lower-middle classes, a creative strata whose aspirations helped to give leadership."7 (136)
both poor Pentecostals ascended socially and the recruitment of converts from the middle class 8(136)
"A major element in the advancement to middle social status has been education. Pentecostals stay in school longer."9 (136)
"Holiness, humility, and a strict moral code stand out as characteristics of Pentecostalism throughout countries studied in Latin America." 10(137)
"Part of the perfectionist ideal is sacrificial giving....The fundamental source of financial support for Pentecostal churches in Latin America is the generosity of individual members." 11(137)
Women: although Pentecostals reinforce traditional male dominance "the combination of emphasis on religious equality, new roles open to women in the life of the church" undermine machismo whilst within the church women see themselves as individuals responsible for their own lives before God and become "active, responsible agents in their own and family lives."12 (138)
o
On the job training of Pentecostal pastors.13 (138-139)
Social ascension causes problems of lack of pastors with formal academic training 14(139)
decline of effect of street preaching, especially amongst the middle class15 (139-140)
questions whether Neo-Pentecostals who emphasise health and wealth are to be considered part of Pentecostalism 16(142)

Wednesday, 21 May 2008

Neto

No caso do neopentecostalismo, mesmo com a presença maciça de setores de baixa renda, é visível que esse movimento religioso não se reduz a essa esfera social.”1


Emphasises significance of centralization of IURD in comparison to other decentralised religions2


makes an interesting point but does not apply it to this context of how in ABR religions it is common for their to be “spiritual” conflict between pais de santos. 3(73)

1F Pereira Neto, “Lugar Afro Brasileiro na Guerra: Sincretismo e Religiosidade” Debates do NER 1:1 (1997), 6976, 70.

2F Pereira Neto, “Lugar Afro Brasileiro na Guerra: Sincretismo e Religiosidade” Debates do NER 1:1 (1997), 6976, 70.

3F Pereira Neto, “Lugar Afro Brasileiro na Guerra: Sincretismo e Religiosidade” Debates do NER 1:1 (1997), 6976, 73.

Martin

points to the origin of the use of the market metaphor in Peter Berger's work 1(62) claims that in the work of D. Martin the use of the market metaphor was as a metaphor, alongside other ones2 (62)

claims that in her work with D. Martin:

"have found the market metaphor useful, even self-evident, though we have no systematic theoretical market model in mind and certainly do not mean to imply that the dynamic of religious growth can be comprehensively understood in economic terms alone." 3(63)

market as a normative aspect in modern society affecting religious institutions4 (63)

"In a world in which the creeping process of commodification affects all spheres of life, from finding a sexual partner to preserving physical fitness, religion is unlikely to escape the imposition of certain market disciplines and the infiltration of explicit market criteria.." 5(63)

"rather than regarding religion as always and everywhere a marketed commodity, perhaps we should be problematising its commodification in the contemporary world and making it a subject of our enquiries in its own right as Birgit Meyer suggests." 6(64)

problem of adopting rational choice theory from economics when in fact "Paradoxically,the way modern, or post-modern, consumer markets actually operate, may have more in common with the way religious (and other) identities are currently promoted than the model of economically rational choice in itself would suggest." 7(65)

"the main problem with rational choice theory as applied to the phenomenon of religious conversion is its privileging of the cognitive and the calculable in a sphere —Pentecostalism in the

present case—where quite other human values are in fact ontologically privileged."8 (65)

"it is a model that cannot help but carry a secular utilitarian and therefore reductionist implication that researchers in the field of religion should be explicitly aware of."9 (66)

criticizes Chesnut for doing a further reduction and bringing in Freud "to fill the gap left by the rational choice assumptions"10 (66) claims that this disrespects the accounts provided by religious practicioners themselves 11(66)

"The use of the market metaphor in relation to the pattern of recent Pentecostal growth reinforces the apparent plausibility of certain politically negative and even openly hostile images of Pentecostalism as the ideological agent of global, that is American, capitalism in the developing world."12 (67)

"the growth of Pentecostalism pre-dates the emergence of Catholic liberation theology which may have been promoted, in part at least, as a way of neutralising the appeal of Pentecostalism among the ‘popular classes’," 13(67)

"To employ the market model, especially in so literal a fashion as Chesnut and Gill do, is to give added weight to the ideological distaste which so many among the educated elites in Latin America and elsewhere express for Pentecostalism as just a function and symptom of the triumph of global capitalism; a ‘market faith’"14 (67)

"Nor should it be assumed that Neo-Pentecostal groups are uniquely ‘marketised’; yet the market metaphor tends to perpetuate such assumptions." 15(68)

"To argue that Pentecostalism, like Methodism before it, has the at-least-partly-unintended consequence of delivering economic betterment in conditions set by global capitalism is not the same as to argue that Pentecostalism is a kind of ideological fifth column for global capitalism and it is important to keep the distinction clear." 16(68)

"An important key to the appeal of Pentecostalism is its ability to take seriously the indigenous spiritist and shamanic traditions,"17 (69)

refers to a fusing of the black spiritual element in Pentecostal spirituality with indigenous and black elements of Latin American culture not wiped out by colonialization 18(69)

o

nonetheless market metaphor, like all metaphors useful for providing organizing categories as long as reification does not occur 19(69-70)

o

"This, of course, is the un-resolvable problem faced by pluralist polities; however much the state wants to separate itself from the religious sphere, it cannot give religious bodies carte blanche to do anything they believe their doctrines demand in any and all circumstances." 20(70)

"My point is that the structures of the religious market, like those of the economic market, are seldom fully free. In most cases some religious bodies have more legal privileges than the others. Pentecostals ar every seldom found among the most privileged groups."21 (71)

suggests that Pentecostalism was in fact a force for the end of monopoly and the emergence of pluralism22. (71)

emphasises that culture also affects the way that religious pluralism emerges or is constrained, and that the American voluntarist culture is not a necessary outcome of the establishing of a legal framework for pluralism."23 (72-73)

o

reflects on the usefulness of describing pastors as "entrepreneurs". Captures their ingenuity, creativity and multi-tasking. However, if taken economically may provide a distorted picture as in fact many pastors earn very little and often supplement their income with secular employment24 (74-76)

o

against seeing practitioners as clients/customers argues:

(1) conversion is not a product offered by a pastor, but a process/experience managed by the convert him/herself25 (77)

(2) no evidence that a convert pays the church for their conversion in fact financial contribution becomes more prominent after conversion26(77-78)

(3) the crucial entity within a Pentecostal conversion story is not the atomised individual, but "the responsible member of a network of relationships." 27(78)

(4) "The convert becomes an individual in a novel and liberating sense, named and claimed by God, rather than converting because he or, more often, she is already an individualised ‘consumer’ in the modern mould." 28(79)

(5) Does violence to the converts self-understanding29 (80)

(6) better explanations exist 30(80-81)

(7) is dependent on American voluntarism 31(81-82)

o

points to the limitations of thinking in terms of marketing and market niches 3282-86)

indicates certain areas of Pentecostal influence:

"a. The underclass and those attempting to survive in the ‘informal economy’...found and join the storefront churches...b. The respectable poor, characteristically found in the older and more established Pentecostal denominations....c. A new business class...The later 1980s and 1990s added a new layer of service sector entrepreneurs, especially in the media, entertainment

and information technology...d. A new post-industrial middle class employed in high-tech and service occupations... This sector is mobile, cosmopolitan, prosperous and confident. It is also very often concerned about the evident disintegration of family life and the destructive effects of drug and alcohol addiction...This sector is particularly found in the glossier mega-churches. e. An unknown, but probably large, population of second- and third generation Pentecostals who have experienced social and/or educational mobility that has partially estranged them from those features of their original church that reflect its lowly and (relatively) unlettered class assumptions and style. They are in search of people like themselves who are committed Pentecostals but who want to worship in an intellectual and aesthetic style consistent with their educational and professional modern identities." 33(85-86)

factors influencing Pentecostal growth:

"a. Spiritual Culture; A still ‘enchanted’ or enspirited world;

The existence of popular spirit possession cults and practices;

A historically rooted tendency not to separate the dimensions of spiritual,

material and physical well-being;

The presence of some form of institutional Christianity.

b. Socio-Economic Conditions

A global economic system and global communications media;

Fast socio-economic change, including both the disintegration of traditional

frameworks and the emergence of new opportunities, often in

a paradoxical combination;

Mass movement of populations, both from rural to urban areas, notably

to the new mega-cities of the developing world, and from the developing

to the developed world, and back again;

The aftermath of war and civil war;

The existence of ethnically and/or economically and/or socially marginalized

groups and/or peripheries.

c. Individual and Personal Needs

Family problems, which tend to be the primary concern of women,

who constitute around two thirds of Pentecostals;

Health problems, including women’s traditional responsibility for the

health problems of the other family members;

Addictions, also seen as health problems;

Unemployment or irregular work;

Corruption, in society at large as well as in the workplace and community;

The violence and wastefulness of the culture of machismo;

The experience of marginalisation."34 (88)

1B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 62.

2B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 62.

3B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 63.

4B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 63.

5B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 63.

6B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 64.

7B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 65.

8B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 65.

9B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 66.

10B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 66.

11B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 66.

12B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 67.

13B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 67.

14B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 67.

15B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 68.

16B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 68.

17B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 69.

18B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 69.

19B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 6970.

20B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 70.

21B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 71.

22B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 71.

23B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 7273.

24B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 7476.

25B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 77.

26B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 7778.

27B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 78.

28B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 79.

29B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 80.

30B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 8081.

31B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 8182.

32B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 8286.

33B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 8586.

34B Martin, 'Pentecostal Conversion And The Limits Of The Market Metaphor', Exchange 35:1 (2006), 6191, 88.

Mariano 1

"Revela que, entre tais efeitos, destacam-se a adoção de modelos de gestão de cunho empresarial, a centralização da gestão administrativa e financeira, a concentração do poder eclesiástico, a profissionalização dos quadros ministeriais, o uso de estratégias de marketing e de métodos heterodoxos de arrecadação, a fixação de metas de produtividade para pastores e bispos, a minimização e o abandono de práticas ascéticas e sectárias, a adaptação dos serviços mágicoreligiosos aos interesses materiais e ideais dos fiéis e virtuais adeptos."1 (111-112)


"A secularização do aparato jurídico-político constitui processo histórico decisivo na formação das sociedades modernas ocidentais. A separação Estado–Igreja, que no Brasil ocorre concomitantemente com o advento do regime republicano, não só faz parte desse processo de secularização como o impulsiona."2 (112)


In Brazil, break of the monopoly of the Catholic Church; increase of the competition between religions, pluralism 3(112)


"Com efeito, há maior liberdade religiosa no Brasil do que na França. Que o digam as “seitas” do país de Voltaire."4 (113)


"No caso brasileiro, a situação pluralista e concorrencial consolidou-se tão-somente na segunda metade do século XX, mais de meio século depois da separação Igreja-Estado. Desde então a lógica de mercado passou a orientar as ações organizacionais, religiosas e proselitistas de vários grupos religiosos, sobretudo de certas denominações pentecostais. O que não significa que essa lógica predomine atualmente sobre o conjunto das igrejas pentecostais.....observa-se que diversas igrejas desse movimento religioso –muito diversificado internamente nos planos institucional, organizacional e teológico, na composição social de seus membros e na sua relação com a cultura e a sociedade abrangente – se baseiam em princípios, tradições, doutrinas e práticas dissociados, em boa medida, dos imperativos do mercado religioso. Apesar disso, várias igrejas pentecostais, no afã de superar a concorrência religiosa e de atingir metas evangelísticas as mais ambiciosas, vêm perseguindo essa lógica. Algo que pode ser observado já na adoção que, nas últimas décadas, elas vêm fazendo de um modelo de organização e gestão denominacional de molde empresarial, cujo efeito é acentuar ainda mais a concentração e verticalização do poder eclesiástico e a centralização administrativa e financeira. Organização e gestão pouco compatíveis com governos eclesiásticos congregacionais, que, além de descentralizados e, em teoria, democráticos, costumam facultar grande autonomia religiosa e administrativa às lideranças e comunidades locais."5 (115)


, a Universal, não só adota governo eclesiástico episcopal como é comandada com mão de ferro por Edir Macedo. Um de seus bispos e fundadores, deputado federal Carlos Rodrigues (PL/RJ), admite tranqüilamente que o governo eclesiástico da Universal “é uma ditadura”. O que não o constrange nenhum pouco. Pois, para ele, “democracia dentro da igreja não funciona”" "6(116)


"Embora líderes da Assembléia de Deus definam seu governo eclesiástico como congregacional, na prática os pastores presidentes de ministérios concentram enorme poder clerical e centralizam a administração e os recursos das congregações sob sua jurisdição" 7(116)


denies that Pentecostal churches involve democratization; e.g. restricted role of women; yet accepts that they are less elitist in their leadership structure 8(116-117)


sees the Renascer em Cristo church as an example of the use of business models, and quotes Hernandes description of the church as "uma empresa no mercado" and his background and wide use of marketing9 (117-118)


commenting on R. Alves' critique of Pentecostalism in the 1970s "A despeito das críticas de Alves a esse grupo religioso, tal como Monteiro, ele aponta a emergência de algo até então absolutamente inédito no campo religioso brasileiro: o início da transformação de pequenas seitas pentecostais, mal organizadas e desprovidas de corpo burocrático, em empresas produtoras de bens de salvação, administradas segundo a lógica do mercado. Fenômeno que Monteiro associa à difusa influência da expansão capitalista sobre o próprio funcionamento e organização dessas instituições religiosas."10 (118)


quotes various authors who describe the Universal using business metaphors 11(119-120) "Como se pôde observar, os pesquisadores referem-se à Universal como empresa e holding, cujas atividades empresariais7, mercantilistas e de marketing, além de objetivarem a defesa de seus interesses organizacionais e religiosos, visam ao lucro e, para alguns, resultam em exploração financeira e, na esteira disso, proporcionam enriquecimento ilícito dos responsáveis pela gestão e comercialização dos serviços e produtos mágico-religiosos." 12(120)


"No caso específico da Igreja Universal, pode-se afirmar, resumidamente, que sua organização empresarial, liderada por um governo episcopal centralizado em seu fundador e bispo primaz, se baseia na concentração da gestão administrativa, financeira e patrimonial, na formação de quadros eclesiástico e administrativo profissionalizados, na adoção de estratégias de marketing, na fixação de metas de produtividade para os pastores locais, num eficiente e agressivo mecanismo de arrecadação de recursos, num pesado investimento em evangelismo eletrônico, empresas de comunicação e noutros negócios que orbitam em torno de atividades da denominação, na abertura de grandes templos e na provisão diária, metódica e sistemática de elevada quantidade de serviços mágico-religiosos." 13(121)


links prosperity theology in many churches to the need to finance teleevangelism14 (121-122) link to questionable money making methods15 (122)

1R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 111112.

2R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 112.

3R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 112.

4R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 113.

5R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 115.

6R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 116.

7R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 116.

8R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 116117.

9R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 117118.

10R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 118.

11R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 119120.

12R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 120.

13R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 121,

14R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 121122.

15R Mariano, 'Efeitos da secularização do Estado, do pluralismo e do mercado religiosos sobre as

igrejas pentecostais', Civitas 3:1 (2003), 111–125, 122.

Marcharg

introduces the growth of evangelicalism in Brazil. Makes the interesting point that accurate statistics are difficult to find because Brazilian families spread across more than one faith group.1 (70)

*

reasons for growth:

(1) focus on evangelism and church planting (2) search for an expressive spirituality

(3) fervour of Pentecostal churches in line with culture2 (70)

*

controversy over worship and renewal 3(71)

*

problems and challenges

(1) leadership training (2) discipline, some churches permissive towards immorality

(3) issue of asking for money (4) syncretism; Brazilians in general very open to all forms of spirituality 4(71-72)

points out the difference between Umbanda style spiritism and the more kardecist and New Age style 5(72)

*

outlines briefly the emergence of the IURD and some of the controversies6 (71)

1K Macharg, 'Brazil's Surging Spirituality', Christianity Today December 04 2000, 7072, 70.

2K Macharg, 'Brazil's Surging Spirituality', Christianity Today December 04 2000, 7072, 70.

3K Macharg, 'Brazil's Surging Spirituality', Christianity Today December 04 2000, 7072, 71.

4K Macharg, 'Brazil's Surging Spirituality', Christianity Today December 04 2000, 7072, 7172.

5K Macharg, 'Brazil's Surging Spirituality', Christianity Today December 04 2000, 7072, 72.

6K Macharg, 'Brazil's Surging Spirituality', Christianity Today December 04 2000, 7072, 71.

Lehmann 3

political influence of Latin American pastors 1(279) lack of an evangelical line on most issues 2(279) churches need support of politicians 3(279)lack of Pentecostal engagement with the intelligentsia 4(279) reliance on Methodist and Baptist Seminaries 5(279)

1D Lehmann ' Secularism and the Public and Private Divide: Europe Can Learn from Latin America', Political Theology 7:3 (2006), 273293, 279.

2D Lehmann ' Secularism and the Public and Private Divide: Europe Can Learn from Latin America', Political Theology 7:3 (2006), 273293, 279.

3D Lehmann ' Secularism and the Public and Private Divide: Europe Can Learn from Latin America', Political Theology 7:3 (2006), 273293, 279.

4D Lehmann ' Secularism and the Public and Private Divide: Europe Can Learn from Latin America', Political Theology 7:3 (2006), 273293, 279.

5D Lehmann ' Secularism and the Public and Private Divide: Europe Can Learn from Latin America', Political Theology 7:3 (2006), 273293, 279.

Lehmann 2

sobre as favelas no Rio de Janeiro, onde os gangsters inspiram medo e as únicas figuras respeitadas são os pastores, muitos deles antigos traficantes: até os pistoleiros os respeitam.” 1


Reflects on social capital within religious institutions and the ambivalent role of greater internal participation (raising SC) and hierarchical structures and isolation from the outside (reducing SC)2


e os evangélicos têm uma tendência a se fechar e reforçar suas comunidades, mas a não envolver-se com o resto da sociedade,”3

as igrejas evangélicas são organizadas diferentemente de outros tipos de igreja, como nota Putnam, e diferentemente também do modelo padronizado de associação cívica. A autoridade tende a estar concentrada em um indivíduo que não está sujeito às decisões tomadas pela participação: ele, ou ocasionalmente ela, é, afinal de contas, um líder carismático no sentido forte, ou ao menos literal, do termo, e se o pastor perde a confiança dos fiéis, estes fecham as carteiras e vão embora. Os fiéis pagam seus dízimos, mas eles não designam o pastor.”4

Todavia, entre evangélicos e fundamentalistas, embora as bases locais da lealdade possam dar uma aparência de democracia, o pastor centraliza a liderança religiosa e administrativa e nele repousa toda a importância da autoridade financeira. Os pastores pentecostais das pequenas igrejas retêm o

controle e, freqüentemente, a posse dos estabelecimentos, e as doações são feitas direta ou indiretamente a eles, para pagar seus salários. Até mesmo na vasta Igreja Universal do Reino de Deus, de origem brasileira, com seus milhões de fiéis em todo o mundo e seu gerenciamento altamente centralizado, não está ainda claro se a posse do seu canal de televisão, TV Record, é da igreja ou de ser líder, Edir Macedo”5


As igrejas oferecem redes sociais enquanto amarram seus conversos em uma rede de obrigações e submetem-nos à autoridade pessoal dos pastores.”6

As igrejas evangélicas podem criar capital social para seus seguidores, mas o estilo de autoridade e a importância das igrejas na consolidação das barreiras sociais entre seus membros e “o mundo”, ou “o mundo das trevas”, como costumavam dizer meus entrevistados brasileiros, agem contra suas chances de criar capital social para os outros. De fato, é possível que exista algum tipo de teto quantitativo para a expansão desses movimentos em coletividades dadas: vale a pena notar que em nenhum lugar na América Latina os evangélicos ultrapassaram a marca dos 20%, embora o teriam feito houvessem eles mantido as taxas de expansão que estavam conseguindo nas décadas de 1980 e 1990.”7

1D Lehmann, 'A Milagrosa Economia da Religião um Ensaio sobre Capital Social.' Horizontes Antropológicos 13:27 (2007), 6998, 71.

2D Lehmann, 'A Milagrosa Economia da Religião um Ensaio sobre Capital Social.' Horizontes Antropológicos 13:27 (2007), 6998, 7279.

3D Lehmann, 'A Milagrosa Economia da Religião um Ensaio sobre Capital Social.' Horizontes Antropológicos 13:27 (2007), 6998, 73.

4D Lehmann, 'A Milagrosa Economia da Religião um Ensaio sobre Capital Social.' Horizontes Antropológicos 13:27 (2007), 6998, 73.

5D Lehmann, 'A Milagrosa Economia da Religião um Ensaio sobre Capital Social.' Horizontes Antropológicos 13:27 (2007), 6998, 74.

6D Lehmann, 'A Milagrosa Economia da Religião um Ensaio sobre Capital Social.' Horizontes Antropológicos 13:27 (2007), 6998, 94.

7D Lehmann, 'A Milagrosa Economia da Religião um Ensaio sobre Capital Social.' Horizontes Antropológicos 13:27 (2007), 6998, 9495.

Friday, 16 May 2008

Guilherme

NE as the area with the lowest number of evangelicals in Brazil but where they are growing fastest1 (79)

problem of leadership development in all denominations including Catholics2 (80-81)

60% of churches in the NE involved in some kind of social work 3

1G Guilherme, ' Inheriting the Cracked Earth', Christianity Today 47:4 (2003), 7484, 79.

2G Guilherme, ' Inheriting the Cracked Earth', Christianity Today 47:4 (2003), 7484, 8081.

3G Guilherme, ' Inheriting the Cracked Earth', Christianity Today 47:4 (2003), 7484, 8182.

Wednesday, 14 May 2008

Espinosa ctd

reasons for indiginization: (1) self-governing policy of mission leaders (2) indigenous latino leaders affected by Azuza revival (3) division and fragmentation1 (275-276)

"This fragmentation thesis hypothesizes that Pentecostal leaders invoke direct unmediated experiences with God as a pretext or basis for splitting off from an existing denomination to form another in an effort to restore Christianity back to its apostolic roots as described in the Acts of the Apostles."2

1G Espinosa ' The Pentecostal of Latin American and U.S. Latino Christianity', Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies 26:2 (2004), 262292, 275276.

2G Espinosa ' The Pentecostal of Latin American and U.S. Latino Christianity', Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies 26:2 (2004), 262292, 276.

Saturday, 10 May 2008

Byasse

interviews Ary Velloso and presbyterian Almeida on evangelicalism in Brazil1 (8)

"Both men view the tremendous church growth in Latin America as a two-edged sword."2 (8)

complain about lack of commitment to the church as a body and the lack of deep teaching3 (8)

"The two contend that Brazilian churches have imported some of the worst aspects of American evangelicalism: individualistic piety, superficial catechesis and a competitive spirit among churches. Velloso sees the rise of evangelicals as a case of converts going "from superficial Catholicism to superficial evangelicalism." 4(8)

Velloso--follower of Warren and Hybels: "Velloso has seen church-growth methods work to change lives, heal addictions, patch up families and mobilize Christians to serve the poor." 5(8)

Almeida, Warren and Hybels part of the problem in encouraging a focus on numbers6 (8)

belief that a reduction in corruption would mean that evangelicalism had taken roots in the country 7(9)

"South American evangelicals are more like their counterparts around the world than like many of their counterparts in the U.S. They support stewardship of the environment, multilateral approaches to international politics, and governmental provision for the poor. For them one's political party is far less important than one's allegiance to Christ's church. And evangelicals like Almeida and Velloso want to avoid any potential stumbling block to evangelism." 8

1 J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 8.

2 J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 8.

3J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 8.

4J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 8.

5J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 8.

6J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 8.

7J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 9.

8J Byassee, ' Purpose-driven in Brazil', Christian Century 123:7 (2006) 89, 9.

Friday, 9 May 2008

Bohn ctd

after research on (a) exposure to media (b) political sophistication concludes that (1) low evangelical expositon to media and (2) high exposition to religious leaders would suggest a higher ability for evangelicasl leaders to influence them 1(312)

tests, over a range of issues the hypothesis that evangelicals form a "new right" in Brazil uniting a moral traditionalism with a political conservatism 2(312-322)

"os fiéis evangélicos são realmente mais tradicionalistas...defensores...da moral social...esse tradicionalismo não se traduz diretamente num conservadorismo político: seu grau de oposição em relação a greves contra o governo é similar ao encontrado entre os católicos. Seu posicionamento frente a tópicos relativos à participação da iniciativa privada e à intervenção direta do Estado no funcionamento da economia mostra...os evangélicos não podem ser categorizados inequivocamente como pertencendo a um dos pólos do eixo esquerda-direita." 3(322)

o

lack of any pattern of party sympathy amongst Brazilian evangelicals4 (329-336)

religious leaders exert a greater influence than amongst other groups 5(

1SR Bohn, 'Evangélicos no Brasil. Perfil sócio-econômico, afinidades ideológicas e determinantes do comportamento eleitoral', Opinião Pública 10:2 (2004), 288338, 312.

2SR Bohn, 'Evangélicos no Brasil. Perfil sócio-econômico, afinidades ideológicas e determinantes do comportamento eleitoral', Opinião Pública 10:2 (2004), 288338, 312322.

3SR Bohn, 'Evangélicos no Brasil. Perfil sócio-econômico, afinidades ideológicas e determinantes do comportamento eleitoral', Opinião Pública 10:2 (2004), 288338, 322.

4SR Bohn, 'Evangélicos no Brasil. Perfil sócio-econômico, afinidades ideológicas e determinantes do comportamento eleitoral', Opinião Pública 10:2 (2004), 288388, 329336.

5SR Bohn, 'Evangélicos no Brasil. Perfil sócio-econômico, afinidades ideológicas e determinantes do comportamento eleitoral', Opinião Pública 10:2 (2004), 288388, 336.

bohn ctd

sees in evangelicals a tension re: central control and pastoral interference (i) competition minimizes control of churches over members (ii) greater involvement of members increases chances of pastors to influence them 1

1SR Bohn, 'Evangélicos no Brasil. Perfil sócio-econômico, afinidades ideológicas e determinantes do comportamento eleitoral', Opinião Pública 10:2 (2004), 288338, 294.

Saturday, 3 May 2008

Allen 6

quotes Escobar as saying that if evangelicals copy the Catholic mistake of ignoring education, they may face the same problems in the future.1

1J. Allen Jr., 'Evangelical Strength in Latin America is Homegrown', National Catholic Reporter August 25, 2006, 1213, 13.

Allen 2

"evangelical Christianity in Latin America is largely a movement of laypeople."1

1J. Allen Jr., 'Evangelical Strength in Latin America is Homegrown', National Catholic Reporter August 25, 2006, 1213, 12.