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Churches of all stripes have been growing for decades, as have
the controversies and challenges facing evangelicals.
By Kenneth D. MacHarg
In some neighborhoods of Sao Paulo, there is a church on every block.
In the nation's capital, Christian bookstores advertise their products
on expensive billboards in the city center.
Christian radio and television broadcasts reach across the entire
nation. The nation's Congress now has an assertive political bloc
of evangelicals.
It sounds like a dream come true for evangelicals, but in Brazil,
where all this is taking place, the surge of interest in evangelical
Christianity also comes with huge challenges and not a few dangers.
Brazil's population of 170 million has seen a decades-long surge
in growth among Protestants. While many Brazilians are attracted
by the Pentecostal movement and its expressive worship, mainline
Protestant churches are also growing.
There are an estimated 1.1 million Baptists, 800,000 Lutherans,
and nearly every other traditional Protestant group imaginable.
But they are tiny compared to the estimated 15-to-30 million Brazilians
who belong to Pentecostal churches, making Pentecostalism the most
prominent feature of the Brazilian Protestant profile. (Accurate
numbers are nearly impossible to develop since many Brazilian Christian
families spread across more than one faith group.)
The Atlas of World Christianity estimates that the number of Pentecostal
Christians across South America grew 500 percent between 1960 and
1980. Growth has slowed since then; nevertheless, South America
today has "the strongest Christian community in the world,"
the Atlas reports.
40 new churches per week
Much of the growth surge is due to a year-round focus on evangelism
and church-planting. For example, in Campinas, a city of 1 million
in southern Brazil, teenagers from a 3,000-member Nazarene church
spend every Saturday in evangelistic outreach performing with puppets
in a marketplace. The Nazarene teens set a goal for themselves to
record 1,000 professions of faith this year, and are well on their
way to achieving that goal.
Analysts suggest many reasons for this nationwide attraction to
evangelicalism. But Walter Aiken, a career missionary in Brazil,
thinks at least some Brazilians have run out of options. "Brazilians
have tried everything," says Aiken, who teaches at a Baptist
seminary in the Rio de Janeiro suburb of Niteri. "They are
not satisfied with the system of their lives, so they are open to
a spiritual experience and expression."
In the view of many church leaders, this hunger for expressive spirituality
has been a driving force for growth in the number and size of Pentecostal
churches. "There are 40 churches opening in Rio every week,"
says Roberto Inacio, director of an Assemblies of God Bible institute
in Rio.
The fervor in Pentecostal churches is more reflective of Latin American
culture, according to Danny Rollins, a Southern Baptist missionary
in So Paulo. When Rollins arrived in Brazil, he found that Baptist
churches often have a distinctively North American profile, using
church bulletins, traditional hymns translated into Portuguese,
and-despite temperatures over 100 degrees-choirs vested in robes.
"When we came here, we were shocked," Rollins says. "We
expected a Latino spirit. But what we have doesn't match the personality
of the people."
Charismatic expression is a particularly touchy subject among Brazilian
Baptists since some Baptist groups have theological objections to
speaking in tongues and other gifts of the Spirit commonly found
in Pentecostal churches.
One Baptist convention developed a "do and don't" list
for its member churches. The guidelines permitted hand-clapping
and calling people to come forward for prayer but prohibited anointing
with oil.
Worship has become a point of contention even within the Assemblies
of God, Brazil's largest Protestant group with more than 12 million
members. Inacio says there are disagreements between those he calls
neo-Pentecostals, who are more emotional in worship and use contemporary
music, and Pentecostal traditionalists.
Anglicans, Presbyterians, Lutherans, and others are sorting out
how to embrace spiritual renewal and a fresh focus on the work of
the Holy Spirit while also maintaining their traditional identity.
"Of the 30 percent of our [Presbyterian] churches that are
growing, all of them are involved in one way or the other in a renewal
that involves a new experience of the Holy Spirit," reports
Dinho Pereira, a Brazilian Presbyterian pastor and Christian camp
director. "These churches are experiencing alive fellowship
and worship, not the kind where you sit down and go to sleep and
somebody kicks you when it's time to go." Some Presbyterians
are afraid that Pentecostal renewal will get out of hand. "Some
elders at a church where I used to pastor told me that they are
afraid it will get out of control," Pereira says. "We
want renewal to happen, but we don't quite know how to deal with
it."
Desperate for leaders
While more than 130 million Roman Catholics are organized into about
25,000 parish churches, 25 million Protestants have an estimated
160,000 congregations to choose from. Brazilian Protestants have
been quick to splinter in doctrinal or leadership disputes. Developing
new leaders, lay and ordained, is a perennial concern. Among Baptists
in the state of So Paulo, 900 relatively new congregations are looking
for ways to expand their outreach. They have traditionally worked
with lower and middle-class groups. But now they are reaching out
to more affluent, harder-to-reach urban residents. Such a ministry
takes time, says Southern Baptist Rollins. "You don't just
set up the Jesus film on the street corner like you do in a poor
community and think that they'll come, because they won't,"
he says.
Part of the challenge is training believers for church leadership.
"The Assemblies of God have a church in every neighborhood,"
Rollins says. "As soon as they can, they will get a man out
there. He might not have much training, but he will be there trying
to start a church."
Rollins says Baptists will not consider anyone a pastor without
seminary training. "Consequently, we have been very slow getting
people out where we need to have them."
"On the good side, many of [the new churches] open up and within
a year they have up to 1,000 new members who have come to know the
Lord," says Inacio. "On the bad side, many [leaders] are
uneducated and know very little." He says some students who
attend his Bible institute ask, "What is Matthew?" in
their first New Testament class.
Others, including Presbyterian Allan Mullins, fear Brazilians may
choose congregations that emphasize emotional expression rather
than obedience. "Many mainline churches are losing members
rapidly to Pentecostal churches," says Mullins, who has served
in Christian camping in Brazil for 30 years. "It's because
the Pentecostals are offering people the chance to live without
any stops. There are no more rules."
Unfettered growth can also lead to lack of direction or discipline.
"Many of the small Pentecostal groups are break-offs from a
larger church by people who aren't willing to obey all the rules
of the bishop," Mullins says. "Also, within many of these
groups there is no discipline if you are involved in immorality.
They think that your behavior is your business, and the church should
not be involved in it."
Other church leaders believe such churches are responding to the
needs of the people. "Their main appeal is that they present
a God that you can use," says Pereira. "Most Presbyterians
have a God that's so great, so big, that they cannot even talk with
him openly, because he is far away. The Pentecostal groups have
the kind of God that will solve my problems today and tomorrow.
People today are looking for solutions, not for eternity."
Asking for money
Offering solutions to problems of everyday life is a significant
reason why Brazil's most controversial Protestant group, the Universal
Church of the Kingdom of God, continues to expand. The Universal
Church provides a revealing study on how a rapidly growing church
group gains power and influence, and points out potential pitfalls
for highly independent churches.
Begun by Bishop Edir Macedo in 1977 with four members, the church
has spread to more than 40 countries, including the United States.
It is now a significant economic and spiritual force within Brazil
and South America.
The denomination owns a television network and dozens of radio stations
throughout the country, a publishing house, a newspaper, a bank,
and a recording company.
"I think they are a blessing for Brazil. Their preachers are
not the kind that are jumping or climbing the pulpit. They are intellectual,
clear, and powerful," says Pereira, a Presbyterian.
"The thing about the Universal Church that bothers many in
the Presbyterian Church is that they have two things that we always
wish we had," he says. "One is thousands of people, and
the other is millions of dollars."
The Universal Church's wealth has drawn attention and criticism.
"They are distinguished by asking for money," Inacio says.
"If you need prayer, you had better take an offering. If you
need help, you had better take an offering."
Terry Johnson, a third-generation Assemblies of God missionary in
Brazil, is also unsparing in his criticism of the Universal Church.
"They are rejected for the most part and considered to be radical.
They are basically Pentecostal and charismatic in doctrine and practice,
but they take it to the extreme."
While Johnson acknowledges that the Universal Church is dynamic
and growing, he questions its theology of "inviting people
to come to church but not to Jesus."
In 1997 the Universal Church experienced an enormous public setback
when the Brazilian government levied a multimillion dollar assessment
against it for avoiding taxes on business income.
But questions of finance and theology are not its only difficulties.
In 1995 the Universal Church created a worldwide scandal when Sergio
von Helde, a senior pastor of the church, called the likeness of
Our Lady of Aparecida, Brazil's highly revered patron saint, a "horrible,
disgraceful doll." He told viewers of a So Paulo-based television
program, "This image can't do anything for you." Then
he broke a ceramic image of the saint on camera, outraging millions
of Brazil's Roman Catholics. He was later tried and found guilty
of religious discrimination and desecration of a national sacred
treasure and sentenced to two years in prison.
Universal Church leaders have come to their own defense, and sometimes
in unexpected ways. Church supporter Edna Fernandes, Bishop Macedo's
sister, has compared the Universal Church to an omelet.
"The more they beat us, the more we grow," she said in
1995. Other Universal Church members point to miraculous healings
and deliverance from evil spirits as principal reasons the Universal
Church grows.
Receptive to spirituality
Jos Cabral, a Universal Church pastor, told Charisma magazine, "The
fast growth of our church can't be explained by factors such as
good administration, marketing, the intelligent use of media, or
good training techniques. We consider it a result of the Holy Ghost's
activity. It is a miracle."
There is no clear consensus about the Universal Church among evangelicals
in Brazil. They ac know l edge the church's robust growth with an
estimated 6 million followers worldwide. Nevertheless, they say,
the Universal Church's excesses are impossible to ignore and undermine
its credibility.
There is another dimension to rapid church growth in Brazil. "People
say that Brazil is real receptive to the gospel," says Rollins's
wife, Leann. "But what we have found is that they are really
just receptive to anything. That's why many people practice several
things. They will go to their Catholic Mass on Saturday and their
Spiritist meeting on Tuesday. Many of them have been part of a charismatic
church, and when you offer them the gospel, they will say yes to
that, and they will just add that to the other things they already
had."
Brazil is considered the largest Roman Catholic country in the world,
but "Brazil is a Spiritist country, not a Catholic country,"
Presbyterian pastor Pereira says. "If you ask people, they
say they are Catholic. But if you really start to analyze, they
are Spiritists, but they are ashamed to say that."
Operation World reports that there are over 14,000 Spiritist centers
throughout Brazil. Spiritist worship takes two forms, according
to Southern Baptist Rollins.
"One is lower Spiritism that came over with the African slaves,
involving black magic with what we consider voodoo, casting of spells
and witchcraft," Rollins says. "The other, which is popular
among the upper-class folks, has a New Age kind of emphasis involving
reincarnation, dealing with spirits, and talking with the dead."
Brazilians "are looking for something, and if we don't reach
them with the gospel, then somebody is going to reach them with
something else," says Leann Rollins.
Assemblies of God missionary Johnson strikes a more optimistic note,
saying a genuine spiritual interest is at the core. He sees a difference
in people.
He tells stories of his grandfather being harassed when he tried
to preach the gospel from street corners. Johnson's grandparents
were once stoned by a mob in Vanginha, fours hours outside So Paulo.
"Today the neighborhood where they lived is called The Good
Shepherd, in honor of my grandfather."
Kenneth D. MacHarg is a journalist based in Miami, Florida. |