A movement that sprang from late 20th-century Roman Catholicism and has found
a particularly welcoming environment in Latin America, liberation theology holds
that the church must stand on the side of the impoverished and the downtrodden,
and that it must, if necessary, support the overthrow of social systems that
contribute to their oppression. Its more extreme advocates believe that
capitalism is chief among the oppressive systems in causing social and material
inequities around the world.
This movement is usually held to have begun
with the second Latin American Bishops’ Conference, which was held in Colombia
in 1968. At that conference, the attending bishops proposed to combine the
teachings of Jesus Christ with those of Karl Marx as a way of justifying violent
revolution to overthrow the economics of capitalism. The bishops interpreted
every biblical criticism of the rich as a mandate to redistribute wealth from
the haves to the have-nots, and every expression of compassion for the poor as a
call for a social uprising by peasants and workers. At the end of the
conference, the bishops issued a document affirming the rights of the poor and
accusing industrialized nations of enriching themselves at the expense of Third
World countries.
The liberation theology movement's seminal text, A
Theology of Liberation, was written in 1971, three years after the Bishops’
Conference, by Gustavo GutiƩrrez, a Peruvian priest and theologian.
Prior
to liberation theology, Catholicism was unambiguously hostile to socialism and
communism, which it saw as “godless.” From the earliest centuries of the
Christian era, a long line of orthodox theologians had consistently rejected
collective ownership, embraced private property, and affirmed business
economies. In the first year of his papacy, Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903) devoted an
encyclical to criticizing socialism.
But in using the texts of the New
Testament to justify political activism, even violent activism (Jesus was often
portrayed as a revolutionary dressed in guerrilla fatigues and carrying a
rifle), liberation theology seemed to embrace socialist theory as well. Dressing
up Marxism as Christianity put it at odds with the Vatican, which, in the 1990s
under Pope John Paul II, began trying to slow the movement's momentum through
the appointment of more conservative prelates throughout Latin
America.
Ultimately, liberation theology was crippled by a convergence of
several factors: (a) oppsition by the Church hierarchy; (b) the defeat of the
Marxist Sandinistas in Nicaragua and the FMLN in El Salvador; and (c) the free
market economics boom that swept through Latin America soon after those
defeats. This boom demonstrated that economic growth was a far more efficient
way of fighting poverty than armed struggle.
Adapted from
"Catholics for Marx," by Father Robert Sirico (June
3, 2004)
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