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Evangelicals and Pentecostals
Protestant missionaries arrived in Brazil during the nineteenth
century. Lutheran pastors accompanied the first waves of German
immigrants. Anglican ministers came to serve the English community.
Presbyterian, Methodist and Baptist missionaries ventured forth
preaching the Bible, despite legal restrictions on them. The separation
between Church and State, following the proclamation of the Republic,
facilitated the entry of new missions. Swedish missionaries and
Italian immigrants formed the earliest membership of the Assembléia
de Deus (Assembly of God) and the Congregação Cristã
do Brasil (Christian Congregation of Brazil).
It was in the 1920s, however, that the movement gained impetus.
A conference of American missionaries held in Panama in 1916 had
formally decided that Latin America should be evangelized. The Protestant
churches of Europe concentrated on Africa and Asia, considering
that Latin America was already Catholic and therefore Christian,
and did not need the efforts of missionaries. The Americans disagreed.
Catholicism, according to them, had distorted the message of the
Bible so much that a new process of evangelization was necessary.
So they came in considerable numbers, found fertile territory, and
the number of converts multiplied.
A new increase took place in the 1950s, following evangelist crusades
which gave birth to new pentecostal denominations with names like
"Brazil for Christ", "God is Love", "New
Life" etc. In the 1980s, evangelical and pentecostal growth
became a phenomenon of national importance, resulting now from internal
factors rather than missionary influence.
The evangelicals preach a radical break with the religious traditions
of Brazil. According to them, the images of the saints are idolatrous
objects and the orixás of Candomblé and the guides
of Umbanda are frankly demonic. One must leave them behind, empty
oneself of their influence and allow oneself to be guided solely
by Jesus Christ. Conversion represents a "new birth",
with profound changes to one's behaviour. One must distance oneself
from the festive, carnival character of the traditional culture
and adopt a more universal ethic, marked by coherent principles.
Commitment to family, work and Church distinguishes the evangelicals,
who follow an extremely puritanical life style. They gather together
in local congregations, which develop a social feeling among the
faithful. They attend church regularly, more than once a week, and
assume different responsibilities for its functioning. This happens
at all levels of society, but numerically they are more successful
among the poorer classes.
There are many strands of belief among the evangelicals, which are
organized into Denominations. These differ in their origins, their
style of worship, their forms of community organization and their
ecclesiastical structure. It is a mistake to lump them all under
the same label. What is certain, however, is that pentecostal trends
are the most important. The presence of the Holy Spirit, with its
charismatic manifestations, puts the evangelicals on a collision
course with the many spiritual manifestations of traditional religiosity.
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