Living Theology in a Pluralistic Latin America: An Exploration of Ecclesial Base Communities through the Lens of Social Imaginaries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Rejected by humanity and seeing themselves without shelter, Mary and Joseph left the inhospitable town and took refuge in a grotto by the hillside…. The Divine Child, unknown yet by His human creatures, had to turn to the aid of irrational beasts so that they could heat with their warm breath the icy air of that winter night, and they, in turn, showed Him with this humble act the respect and adoration that Bethlehem had denied Him…. The multitude of angels, who descended from heaven to contemplate that unparalleled wonder, broke out in joy, and made the air vibrate in the harmonies of the ‘Gloria in Excelsis,’ the same echo of adoration that takes place around the throne of the Almighty, made audible for an instant to the ears of the poor on earth.–Traditional Colombian, Novena de Aguinaldos, circa 17251
2. Liberation Theology: Utopia or Ideology?
3. From Ideology and Utopia to Social Imagination
4. Social Imagination at the Heart of Ecclesial Base Communities
This second birth has to do, as well, with being able to sense a capacity, a power, a mobilizing freedom to create on our own, to think on our own, to see, to attend, to open up on our own—a capacity that was not recognizable or given to us before. This is, in Cecilia’s words, recognizing for and giving to oneself, certain ‘dignity’. That is why in her testimonial Cecilia tells us that, if prior to her encounter she used to walk with her eyes closed, somewhat desensitized to the world and to what it really meant to share, the reading of the Bible in the Casitas group, as well as its members’ ways of relating to one another, made her feel her own capacity, her power to interrogate herself about her own life in relation to others, to resist the life she was living. She recognized then that her life could be transformed and that this meant assuming a different relationship to her community.–Manrique and Quintana, “Del ir a devenir entre el texto y la vida”32
5. Conclusions
Funding
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Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | See St. Benedict Parish (n.d.). Original Spanish: “Desechados por los hombres y viéndose sin abrigo, María y José han salido de la inhospitalaria población, y se han refugiado en una gruta que se encontraba al pie de la colina… El Divino Niño, desconocido por sus criaturas va a tener que acudir a los irracionales para que calienten con su tibio aliento la atmósfera helada de esa noche de invierno, y le manifiesten con esto su humilde actitud, el respeto y la adoración que le había negado Belén… La multitude de ángeles que descienden del cielo a contemplar esa maravilla sin par, deja estallar su alegría y hace vibrar en los aires las armonías de esa ‘Gloria in Excelsis,’ que el el eco de adoración que se produce en torno el trono del Altísimo hecha perceptible por un instante a los oídos de los pobres de la tierra.” |
2 | While Colombia’s liberation from Spanish control—and its evolution into the administrative space that it is today—is a long process that spans over several decades, it is possible to identify the Declaration of Independence (1810) and the surrender of the Spanish troops (1819) as seminal moments in this process. |
3 | Multiple examples of the relevance of the Latin American context to the emergence of liberation theology can be found in the compilation of the documents produced in the context of the 1968 CELAM meeting in Medellin. See (Consejo Episcopal Latinoamericano (CELAM) 1968; Colonnese 1970, pp. 21–22), in which the bishops welcome Latin Americans to the Conference with the following words: “[W]e welcome you with souls filled with gratitude and hearts filled with joy. We receive with elation the pilgrim of peace…; you, a pilgrim along the crucial road of Latin American history, whose light shines brightly in the current hour of darkness.” |
4 | The Second Vatican Council represented a renewal in Roman Catholicism. For an overview of such renewal, see Lavin (2012, pp. 1–12), see also Rush (2004, pp. 1–35). |
5 | |
6 | See Levine (1990a, pp. 604–5). |
7 | Levine (1988, pp. 241–46); Levine (1990b, pp. 229–46); McGovern (1989); Planas (1986); Rubenstein and Roth (1989); Yoder (1990, pp. 285–96). |
8 | See Levine (1990a, p. 618). |
9 | By foundational texts I mean the Christian scriptures, other traditional Christian texts, the concluding documents of the Second Vatican Council (Flannery 1995), and the summary of the 1968 Conference of Latin American Bishops in Medellín (CELAM, “Documento Conclusivo: Segunda Conferencia Consejo Episcopal Lationamericano” (Medellin, Colombia: Centro Bíblico Teológico Pastoral para América Latina y el Caribe)). While there are many other texts that would later on become seminal to the liberation theology tradition, these three are the sources from which the first articulations of Latin American liberation theology emerged. |
10 | According to Ricoeur, in its healthiest expressions, utopian subversion dialectically implies ideological integration in an exchange that sustains and propels social imagination. For a detailed description of this exchange, see Ricoeur (2007, p. 322). |
11 | |
12 | |
13 | See Boff (1986, pp. 6–9). |
14 | |
15 | This is particularly evident in the areas of pedagogy (Freire 1970); philosophy (Dussel 1985); social organization (Harnecker 2002); and economy (Marcos L. Linares’ Economy of Solidarity). |
16 | Religious leaders such as Camilo Torres (Colombia), Óscar Romero (El Salvador), and Ernesto Cardenal (Nicaragua) are salient examples of this connection. |
17 | |
18 | For a detailed articulation of the practice of rendering philosophically audible the testimonials of victims of oppression and violence, see Part 2 of Acosta López (2021, pp. 139–36). |
19 | |
20 | Ricoeur refers to his formulation of the ideology–utopia dialectic as a “theory of cultural imagination.” See Ricoeur (1986, p. 2). |
21 | Ricoeur recognizes that ideology and utopia, understood as the forces that drive and shape cultural imagination, can have healthy and unhealthy expressions. In their healthy expressions, ideology and utopia provide coherence and innovation, respectively, and in their unhealthy expressions they devolve into self-legitimation and endless subversion. For a concise articulation of this dynamic, see Ricoeur (1986, pp. 308–24). |
22 | |
23 | |
24 | Simagine Consortium Homepage, available online: https://simagineconsortium.com (accessed on 1 February 2023). |
25 | |
26 | |
27 | |
28 | Latré (2018, p. 49). |
29 | Some of the works of Simagine Consortium have been collected in the following two volumes: Alma and Vanheeswijck (2018); and ten Kate and van den Hemel (2019) (special edition under the title “Religion, Community, Borders: Social Imaginaries and the Challenge of Pluralism”). |
30 | |
31 | |
32 | Manrique and Quintana (2019, pp. 228–29, My Translation). Original Spanish: “Este segundo nacimiento tiene que ver asimismo con poder sentir una capacidad, un poder, una movilidad, una “libertad” de hacer por sí mismo, de pensar por sí mismo, de visión, de atención, de apertura, que antes no se reconocía o se otorgaba, y que es también, como lo afirma Cecilia, el reconocimiento para sí, el otorgarse a sí, una cierta “dignidad”. Por eso, en su testimonio Cecilia nos dice que si antes de su encuentro con el proceso caminaba con los ojos cerrados, inmunizada un poco al mundo y a lo que verdaderamente significa compartir, el impacto de cómo leían la Biblia en las Casitas, y de cómo se relacionaban allí los participantes, le hizo sentir su propia capacidad, su poder para interrogarse sobre su propia vida en su relación con los otros, y para darse cuenta, por ejemplo, de que no tenía que vivir como estaba viviendo, de que su vida podía ser transformada y de que esto implicaba también asumir de otra manera la experiencia en comunidad.” |
33 | |
34 | For a standard account of liberation theology’s emphasis on responses to the oppressive and violent practices, see Gutierrez (1987, pp. xv–xvii). |
35 | See Torres and Eagleson (1982). |
36 | For a philosophical analysis of the nature of these ethical assessments and calls to action in the context of a concrete base Community, see Manrique and Quintana (2019, pp. 224–34). |
37 | See Ricoeur (2011, pp. 55–60). |
38 | For Ricoeur, this process can be structured in three layers: first, biblical images enlarge the meaning ascribed to given terms through narratival or metaphorical tools, inviting the mind of the reader to move beyond the confines of the context at hand. Secondly, such images are linked with images contained in other biblical stories through strong intertextual connections (which can be seen both in unacknowledged references and in explicit quotes of other narratives in the text). Thirdly, the biblical text has been subject to and is the result of a long history of interpretation, appropriation, and re-interpretation in which aspects of diverse human contexts have become constitutive of the narrative’s interpretive history, at the same time that such history has become a referent for the reader’s imaginative life. |
39 | |
40 | For a helpful survey of a few of Ecclesial base communities and the ways in which they effectively mobilize their members to social action, see Nepstad (2019, pp. 95–12); and Azevedo (1987). |
41 | |
42 | |
43 | Boff (1986, p. 6), “when we say that the basic communities cannot hope to constitute a global alternative to the institutional church, we are not underestimating their genuine value for a renewal of the fabric of the church. We are merely seeking to situate their significance and meaning within the church globally. Without a doubt these communities can be a stimulus for mobilizing new strength in the institutional church, and they represent a call for a more thorough living of the authentically communitarian values of the Christian message.” |
44 | In this formulation I borrow Ricoeur’s understanding of imagination as formulated in his chapter “Imagination in Discourse and in Action”: “Imagination offers the common space for the comparison and mediation of terms as heterogeneous as the force that pushes as if from behind, the attraction that seduces as if from in front, and the reasons that legitimate and form ground as if from beneath.” Ricoeur (2007, pp. 177–78). |
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Acero Ferrer, H.A. Living Theology in a Pluralistic Latin America: An Exploration of Ecclesial Base Communities through the Lens of Social Imaginaries. Religions 2023, 14, 259. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020259
Acero Ferrer HA. Living Theology in a Pluralistic Latin America: An Exploration of Ecclesial Base Communities through the Lens of Social Imaginaries. Religions. 2023; 14(2):259. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020259
Chicago/Turabian StyleAcero Ferrer, Héctor A. 2023. "Living Theology in a Pluralistic Latin America: An Exploration of Ecclesial Base Communities through the Lens of Social Imaginaries" Religions 14, no. 2: 259. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020259
APA StyleAcero Ferrer, H. A. (2023). Living Theology in a Pluralistic Latin America: An Exploration of Ecclesial Base Communities through the Lens of Social Imaginaries. Religions, 14(2), 259. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020259