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Chronicling more than a decade of war, revolution and social change, Phillip Berryman offers an up-to-date and comprehensive analysis of the interplay between religion and politics in Central America. Concentrating on Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala, Berryman shows how each country has become the setting for a profound drama of faith and oppression, revolution and entrenchment.
Explains what liberation theology is, how it arose, how it works in practice, and its implications. This book also examines how liberation theology functions at the village or barrio level, the political impact of liberation theology, and the major objections to it posed by critics.
Phillip Berryman has long been recognized as one of the most insightful interpreters of contemporary Latin American religion and culture. His works 'The Religious Roots of Rebellion' and 'Stubborn Hope' have provided the best analysis of the role of Christians in revolutionary struggles in Central America. In Religion in the Megacity Berryman surveys a wider and more complex phenomenon: the new face of religious reality in urban Latin America.Berryman writes against the background of the rise of megacities--the sprawling urban centers that are the home of most of Latin America's population. In that context he contrasts Sao Paulo and Caracas. The Catholic Archdiocese of Sao Paulo, under Cardinal Arns and progressive Catholics, was a major point of resistance to military dictatorship. It is also a city in which Protestant Pentecostal churches especially have enjoyed explosive growth. Berryman's sure-footed feel for what is happening gives the reader a concrete feel for what is happening in both Protestant and Catholic communities.Caracas, Berryman shows, is a very different kind of megacity, one that a Protestant missionary called the Secular City, a place where the relative wealth and consumer lifestyle make it hard for the Gospel to take hold. Catholic and Protestant churches in Caracas face challenges quite different from those of Sao Paulo. Religion in the Megacity explores those similarities and differences within the respective cities and between them. Berryman breaks new ground in showing the way in which Catholics and Protestants face similar situations, and he does so in a dynamic, readable style that gives the reader insights from knowledgeable men and women on the ground who show that facile stereotypes about what is happening in Latin America today need to be corrected.By far the most detailed and nuanced description of the dramatically new religious and political landscape in the enormous and growing cities of Latin America . . . Well-informed ad thorough.--Harvey Cox, Harvard Divinity SchoolAn important critical, readable, eye-opening work.--Lawrence S. Cunningham, University of Notre DameEssential reading for anyone who cares what the future holds for religion.--Daniel H. Levine, University of MichiganFascinating . . . Lays out a host of areas in which two communities can support one another in prayer and collaboration.--Brother Jeffrey Gros, FSC, National Conference of Catholic BishopsPhillip Berryman is the author of Liberation Theology, Stubborn Hope: Religion, Politics, and Revolution in Central America and other works dealing with religion and politics in Latin America. He lives in Philadelphia.
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