Neoliberalism and Religion in Latin America
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Neoliberalism as the Rationality of the Homo Oeconomicus
Neo-liberalism is not merely destructive of rules, institutions and rights. It is also productive of certain kinds of social relations, certain ways of living, certain subjectivities. In other words, at stake in neo-liberalism is nothing more, nor less, than the form of our existence—the way in which we are led to conduct ourselves, to relate to others and to ourselves. Neo-liberalism defines a certain existential norm in western societies and, far beyond them, in all those societies that follow them on the path of ‘modernity’. This norm enjoins everyone to live in a world of generalized competition; it calls upon wage-earning classes and populations to engage in economic struggle against one another; it aligns social relations with the model of the market; it promotes the justification of ever greater inequalities; it even transforms the individual, now called on to conceive and conduct him- or herself as an Enterprise.
3. The Protestant–Pentecostal Turn in Latin America
4. The Religiosity of the Latin American Homo Neoliberalis
- (i)
- Prosperity Gospel as the Theology of the New and Successful Contemporary Religious Manifestations
- (ii)
- The Neoliberal Church-Firm as the Organizational Model for the Neoliberal Religiosity
- (iii)
- The Emotivity of the Expression of the Neoliberal Religiosities
- (iv)
- Neoliberal religiosity throughout all Latin American social classes
Homo economicus lives dangerously because they ignore what may happen to them tomorrow or the day after tomorrow; because they know that their actions depend on “accidents” against which they can do nothing. The only thing they knows they can do is to occupy themselves with the present, follow their own desires and remain faithful to their passionate nature.(151)
(...) its growth by dispersion without centralization or unique formats becomes the object of appropriations and recreations that do not form a religious segment clearly distinct from the others. By its own ideology, promoter of the most diverse forms of compatibilization, it operates by including other religious principles or by making it possible for other religious institutions to introduce New Age principles into their ideology and rituals.
5. Final Remarks
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | It should be noted that before Brown´s book, the French philosophers and sociologists Christian Laval and Pierre Dardot had already put forward a similar proposal in their book, La nouvelle raison du monde, albeit with a particular focus on Europe. In any case, they recognize in their book that Brown’s text, entitled Les habíts neufs de la politíque mondíale. Néolibéralísme et néoconservatísme, was an essential element in formulating their own understanding of neoliberalism (Dardot and Laval 2013, p. 23). |
2 | Gauthier (2020, 2021), and Gauthier and Martikainen (2013a, 2013b, 2018) are some of the key references in the scholarly discussion on the impacts of neoliberalism and religion. My text aims to expand this existing scholarship by adding a Latin American perspective based on the studies developed by Latin American sociologists of religion. A similar attempt can be seen in Burity (2013). |
3 | Raschke, for instance, unlike Brown, substantially links Keynesianism to neoliberalism (Raschke 2019, p. 25). |
4 | Raschke, on the other hand, draws attention to the danger that the acceptance of this economic language conceals precisely the values that lie behind it: “Neoliberalism is really not about economics, but about values, instantiating them in almost invisible routines of symbolic exchange that have profound economic effects (…) In short, homo neoliberalismus only wears the colorful costumes of classical homo economicus” (Raschke 2019, p. 17). Raschke also warns that focusing too much on the subjectivity produced by neoliberalism may imply ignoring the institutional mechanisms that sustain it and make it possible. That is, focusing too much on Homo Oeconomicus may lead us to remain in the description of the “sheep” and forget the “shepherding” system (Raschke 2019, p. 42). |
5 | This is why, in neoliberalism, as Castro-Gómez sees it, inequalities “are seen as ‘functional’ to the economy, since, allegedly, they trigger creativity and encourage competition” (Castro-Gómez 2010, p. 190). Hence, neoliberal rationality is not interested in eliminating inequality or combating it beyond trying to ensure that few people fall into the “absolute poverty threshold” in which it is no longer possible for them to “play as economic agents”. Thus, a policy of subsidies or even basic income may be compatible with neoliberal rationality because the “important thing here is not relative poverty, but to avoid the increase of absolute poverty, by establishing a “subsistence threshold”, that is, by distinguishing between “entrepreneur-citizens” (situated above the threshold) and “potentially entrepreneur–citizens” (situated below the threshold, but who will leave it through subsidies). This “threshold”, then, functions as a “safety floor”. If a citizen is above the threshold, then she does not require help of any kind: she must play according to the rules of the game valid for the whole society and guaranteed by the State” (Castro-Gómez 2010, p. 189). |
6 | For Foucault, the development of neoliberalism, in connection with classical liberalism, can be seen as the triumph of Homo Oeconomicus over Homo Juridicus. Brown’s proposal, and an aspect in which she differentiates her thought from that of Foucault, consists in rescuing a third subject that Foucault does not sufficiently note, namely, Homo Politicus. |
7 | In the words of Castro-Gómez: “with the emergence of neoliberalism in the twentieth century, being a citizen will no longer be a matter of “rights”, but a matter of “entrepreneurship”...” (Castro-Gómez 2010, p. 146). |
8 | It is generally accepted that the first stage of neoliberalism in Latin America began with the Chilean dictatorship of Pinochet and his incorporation of the economic policies recommended by the so-called “Chicago Boys”. |
9 | The “Religion in Latin America” survey conducted by the Pew Forum in 2014 showed that 19% of Latin Americans consider themselves Protestant. Likewise, the survey showed that there are important variations in the different countries (for example: Honduras 41%, Guatemala 41%, El Salvador 36%, Brazil 26%, Chile 17%, Argentina 15%, Colombia 13%, Mexico 9%). |
10 | It is important to note, in any case, the usually unrecognized diversity among Latin American evangelical groups. The theological positions of the so-called “radical evangelicals” (Orlando Costas, Samuel Escobar, René Padilla, among others) would perhaps force us to nuance this description. In this regard, see Salinas (2007). |
11 | This feast, however, has Jewish origins: Pentecost, which comes from the Greek pentekostos (fiftieth), refers to the annual Jewish feast also known as “the Feast of Weeks” (Shavuot), which is celebrated fifty days after God’s appearance on the Mount Sinai and after the Passover. For this reason, Pentecost commemorates the giving of the commandments to the People of Israel and marks and celebrates the time when the first fruits of the harvest begin to be harvested. The biblical source of this feast is found in Leviticus 23:15–22. |
12 | |
13 | Within the context of the coup d’état that occurred in Bolivia in 2019, Latin American philosopher Enrique Dussel stated, in an interview with Carmen Aristegui in 2019, that “Evangelical” groups were the new weapon of the United States to carry out coups d’état in Latin American countries. Dussel uses the term “Evangelicals” to refer, in Bonino’s terminology, to both Evangelical and Pentecostal Protestantism. See https://www.aporrea.org/internacionales/n349023.html (Last Accessed: 10 November 2021). Bonino, for his part, points out that this hypothesis, called by some the “conspiracy hypothesis”, has been proposed many times by “Roman Catholic polemicists” and “Marxist thinkers” (Bonino 1995, p. 12). |
14 | For this reason, it has been affirmed that Latin American Pentecostals are closer to Latin American popular and eclectic religiosity than to Protestantism itself (Beltrán 2007). |
15 | These studies are numerous and vary in their approaches, assumptions, scope, delimitations, and methodologies. For my arguments I will rely, in particular, on the following texts: Marzal (2002), Chestnut (2003), Espinosa (2004), Algranti (2007), Bergunder (2009), Parker (2013), Beltrán (2013), Lindhardt (2016), Freston (2016), Morello et al. (2017), Somma et al. (2017), Baptista and Ospina (2017), pp. 11–106 in Guadalupe and Grundberger (2018), Moreira (2018), Muñoz and Fernández-Mostaza (2018), Semán (2019), and Frigerio (2019), as well as in the study conducted by the Pew Research Center (2014). Among all these, I will highlight the study by Beltrán (2013) for its systematicity, its deep empirical component, and the detailed description of its sources and objects of study. |
16 | See for example, Campos (2000), Gago (2013), García-Ruiz and Michel (2014), Pérez (2016), and Spadaro and Figueroa (2017). In any case, it should be noted that the texts that emphasize this element are usually the most critical of Pentecostalism and, in many cases, their empirical foundations are very limited. |
17 | This is the translation of an excerpt from an interview with pastor Hernando Zapata published in Baptista and Ospina (2017, p. 223). |
18 | |
19 | The same can be seen in African Pentecostalism. Frahm-Arp (2018) shows that three types of prosperity theology can be found in South Africa, namely, “abilities prosperity”, “progress prosperity”, and “miracle prosperity”. Each of these places different emphases on the material achievements of believers. Despite the different sociological studies that exist in Latin America on Pentecostalism, studies that, as I have pointed out, are part of the basis of my reflections in this text, I did not find in them any analyses oriented to evidence the different nuances of this theological framework in Latin American Pentecostal communities. |
20 | It is worth noting, as Beltrán points out, that the “sowing is in continuity with traditional Catholic customs of rural origin, such as the tithe and the first fruits, rituals through which Catholics ensured good harvests and fertility of the fields. It is also in continuity with rituals that Catholics still use today to attract divine favors, such as penances, sacrifices, and promises, rituals according to which no blessing is free” (Beltrán 2013, p. 146). |
21 | According to Bartel, one of her interviewees, Remedios, states that “‘Credit is necessary for prosperity´, she continued, ‘and I know my God wants prosperity for my family. You have to have faith´. The faith in prosperity Remedios held was based in the many microcredits she has cultivated over the years, covering one debt with another, demonstrating her debt-worthiness to as many different organizations and institutions as she could manage. ‘Prosperity is impossible without debt, and I believe in credit, yo creo en el credito´, Remedios shared with me that same afternoon, illustrating once again the deeply embedded conviction that debt, in the realm of Christian microfinance, is intimately entangled with faith” (34). These microcredits are generally offered at very high interest rates. According to Bartel, while the 2019 usury limit for Colombia’s commercial credit card interest rates sat at 28.98%, Remedios´ microcredit had an interest rate of 54.83% (35). |
22 | In this text, Semán correctly points out that the notion of secularization should be at the center of the debate on the meaning of the expansion of Pentecostalism in Latin America. I consider this to be completely correct, although, in this text, for reasons of space, I do not address this issue. |
23 | According to Semán, prosperity theology is the “unfolding of a formation that crosses the whole of Pentecostal (and evangelical in general) denominations” (Semán 2005, p. 73). However, it would be necessary to be more radical and indicate that this formation has crossed in the last decades the whole set of contemporary religiosities and spiritualities; something that, in any case, is suggested by Semán himself when he shows the similarities between this theology and the New Age movements. |
24 | Some studies have attempted to compare the horizontal and popular functioning of the Pentecostal churches with the Catholic Church´s Basic Ecclesial Communities (BEC) created largely as a product of Liberation Theology in Latin America. These communities were organizations oriented especially to the populations of the urban and economic peripheries in order to make possible the gathering of believers without the direct mediation of priests. Nevertheless, the Basic Ecclesial Communities have not had a success comparable to that of the Pentecostal churches. One of the reasons for this is the noticeable difference that has always existed between the Catholic officials who promote and accompany them, inspired by Liberation Theology, and the believers who participate in them (Bergunder 2009, p. 13). |
25 | As Moreira found for the Brazilian case, “Some well-established middle class Pentecostal churches, such as Videira, Fountain of Life, Heal our Land, and others, besides their services and worship, offer technical capacitation courses, psychological and financial orientation, workshops on conflict resolution, initiatives on garbage recycling, and seminaries on administration techniques. They also have job and incubator agencies and develop and sell church managing material and even computer programs” (Moreira 2018, p. 6). |
26 | According to Moreira: “Religious services have turned into planned spectacles, even in the minimal details. Especially in urban peripheries, where the State doesn´t establish pleasant green parks and embellishment measures, people seek religious Pentecostal services that are beautiful, cheerful, happy, funny, and in both senses sensational. This corresponds perfectly to the need for joyful, energetic, strong emotional and delightful experiences sought by the youth” (7). |
27 | Other surveys (Thorsen 2016) indicate that this number is closer to 16%. It is worth noting that, despite this also very interesting change experienced in the Latin American religious landscape, the magnifying glass of social research has come less close to it compared to the interest raised by the growth of Pentecostalism. |
28 | In any case, a profound difference between the CCR and the Pentecostal Churches is that the former maintain the hierarchy of the Magisterium, that is, the valid teachings of the Catholic Church backed by the authority and orthodoxy of the bishops and the Pope. This includes, for example, the request made by Pope John Paul II to place at the center of this movement the Virgin Mary as its patroness to distinguish the CCR from the Pentecostal Churches (Thorsen 2016, p. 465). |
29 | This is especially the case in some Central American countries. |
30 | |
31 | Compared to research on the growth of Pentecostalism, academic studies on New Age movements in Latin America are relatively scarce. In addition to those I will cite below, the most recognized and referenced social studies in the Latin American debate may include Carozzi (2000), Sarrazín (2012, 2017), De la Torre et al. (2013), Viotti and Funes (2016), Funes (2016), Steil et al. (2018), and Gracia (2020). |
32 | In the context of New Age practices, it is common to prefer the use of the term “spirituality” instead of “religiosity”. On this distinction and its connections with New Age movements, see Frigerio (2016). It is worth noting how some Pentecostal believers identify “religion” with Catholicism and its institutionalism and bureaucratic hierarchy. Hence, for many of them, their belief is not really a religion but a direct relationship with God (Sarrazin and Arango 2017, p. 44). |
33 | According to Beltrán’s study (Beltrán 2013), 48% of people who commonly engage in these practices conceive themselves as agnostic. |
34 | Renée de la Torre presents an excerpt from an interview with a Mexican catholic close to New Age practices who states: “I consider myself a catholic, I enjoy mass very much, but now I see it differently, with more knowledge. For example, when it comes to giving us peace, we are closing energy, and what is the amen if not a mantra” (De la Torre 2012, p. 202). |
35 | Cf. Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo, Informe regional sobre desarrollo humano para América Latina y el Caribe (Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo 2010): Actuar sobre el futuro: romper la transmisión intergeneracional de la desigualdad, Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo (2010, p. 16). |
36 | Mansilla and Urtubia (2019), for example, propose to distinguish between “Pentecostalism” and “the Pentecostal”. The former refers, in general terms, to what is described in this text, the latter, on the other hand, refers to a spontaneous, oral, emotional, and local religiosity oriented towards the dignification of the oppressed, exploited, and excluded. |
37 | As Gutiérrez points out, in Latin America the New Age movement also has a strong strand “oriented towards the recovery of the continent’s original indigenous cultures, whose civilization is imagined and reinvented—as the East once was—in light of the need for alternatives to a Western modernity that is predatory, materialistic and excluding of otherness and that is not only devoid of promise but threatens self-annihilation” (Gutiérrez 2018, p. 425). |
38 | For a critical account of the use of the notion of “market” in academic discussions of religion, see Moberg and Martikainen (2018). |
39 | For the Colombian case, we could cite, as examples, the research by Beltrán and Cuervo (2016) and Plata (2018), both referring to the role of Pentecostalism in a rural context of violence. Plata’s study shows the case of a Pentecostal Church, the Evangelical Foursquare Church, which, faced with the arrival of drug trafficking and paramilitary groups in its region, oriented its preaching of individual conversion towards a community faith practice of social organization and peaceful resistance. In Aguirre (2021), I propose some academic parameters to carry out decolonial discussions of religions and theologies. |
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Aguirre, J. Neoliberalism and Religion in Latin America. Religions 2022, 13, 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010003
Aguirre J. Neoliberalism and Religion in Latin America. Religions. 2022; 13(1):3. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010003
Chicago/Turabian StyleAguirre, Javier. 2022. "Neoliberalism and Religion in Latin America" Religions 13, no. 1: 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010003
APA StyleAguirre, J. (2022). Neoliberalism and Religion in Latin America. Religions, 13(1), 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010003