Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The slow death of liberation theology in Brazil
The slow death of liberation theology in Brazil
Dec 24, 2025 5:02 AM

The Sandinista Revolution (1979 – 1990), which sought to transform Nicaragua into a new Cuba, was well-known for many things, including the way in which it highlighted the new alliance between the Latin American Communist movements and liberation theologians. Among the Sandinista leaders was Father Ernesto Cardenal. He was the perfect prototype of the “guerrilla priest”: a Rosary in his pocket, Marx’s Das Capital in one hand and an AR-15 in the other.

In 1983, Nicaragua was also the scene of one of the very few disastrous trips of Pope John Paul II in 1983. The pope found himself having to deal with popular hostility encouraged by regime officials and liberationist priests. Upon his arrival in Managua, the world witnessed Pope John Paul II giving a lecture to Father Cardinal, telling him to regularize his situation with the Church. Perhaps it was at that moment that the Vatican and millions of Catholic outside Latin America realized the sheer chaos that Liberation Theology was provoking in the Catholic Church across the region.

In a number of subsequent official documents, Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, the future Pope Benedict XVI, systematically refuted the many theological aspects of liberation theology. It marked the beginnings of a strong intellectual push back against liberation theology, which, it is fair to say, liberationists struggled to provide a coherent response.

Orthodoxy seemed to have prevailed. Many people thought the victory was so clear that the conservative Catholic historian Ricardo de la Cierva proclaimed the death of Liberation Theology in 1996.

More than three decades after the refutation made by Cardinal Ratzinger, however, liberation theology and its offshoots are still alive and active in the Latin American Catholic Church.

Every political movement has two dimensions: the discursive and the political action. The discourse is a theoretical justification of the political movement; it stands, as the intellectual tradition which the movement claims for itself as a way to establish intellectual legitimacy.

The dimension of political action is where the struggle for power occurs once the intellectual foundations have been established. In Marxism, praxis (action) and thesis (theory) function according to a dialectical logic in which one shapes the other.

According to Marxist logic, it is the praxis that really matters. The theory functions as an icebreaker, as an instrument of domination. The theory is shaped to condition the intellectual environment to allow the success of the political action. According to the Austrian conservative philosopher Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihin, a coherent intellectual structure is thus ultimately unnecessary in Marxist-inspired movements, in particular, and leftist movements, in general; what matters to them is the seizure of power. The whole theoretical framework is submitted to the imperatives of political action.

Hence, when Cardinal Ratzinger refuted the discursive dimension of liberation theology, it effectively meant nothing to liberation theologians. They did not really prehensive rebuttals of Ratzinger’s criticism. Why? Because theological issues are not very important to them. Praxis is what counts for the liberationists.

Thus as the theoretical dimension of liberation theology was being discredited, its adherents responded by (1) trying to stifle criticism of their theological beliefs and (2) seeking to take control of all centers of power in the Catholic Church in Latin America.

Brazil is an excellent example of this process. Ratzinger’s critique of liberation theology did not change the behavior of the progressive clergy. As early as 1980, liberation theologians joined groups of unionists and ex-Marxist terrorists to create the Workers’ Party: the political party which two decades later elected Lula da Silva President of Brazil.

One of the fathers of liberation theology, the former priest Leonardo Boff stated in his 1988 book, “The Church Made People,” that it was all a “bold plan,” conceived along the lines of the strategy of the slow and subtle “occupation of spaces” advocated by the Italian Communist theoretician Antonio Gramsci. For Boff and others, it was a matter of gradually filling all the decisive posts in the seminaries and universities religious orders, Catholic media, and the ecclesiastical hierarchy, without much fanfare, until the time when the great revolution could appear in public.

But liberation theology’s intellectual sterility and heavy reliance upon specific individuals who were focused on political action are some of the reasons it has lost so much traction in the Catholic Church in Brazil. People like the Brazilian Dominican Alberto Libanio Christo, more widely known as Friar Betto, and Leonardo Boff are still the leaders of the movement and failed to create successors. They are also quite elderly.

The popularity of their ideas also began to decline in the face of the undeniable evidence that it was causing the Catholic Church in Brazil to lose adherents to the Protestant Churches. As the saying goes, “The Church opted for the poor, and the poor opted for the Evangelicals.” Significantly, Clodovis Boff – Leonardo Boff’s brother and also a priest – not only left liberation theology circles but became one of liberation theology’s greatest critics. He noted that the liberationists simply did not respond to major criticisms of liberation theology that Clodovis Boff found convincing (such as the error of transforming people in material poverty into the touchstone of theological truth)

Liberation theology has thus lost strength because of the weakness in theory that, ultimately, they thought were not so important turned to be very important. The internal contradictions associated with Christian Marxism were unsustainable. It also had the problem of being unable to offer any deep spirituality. It is also worth noting that millions of Catholic laity throughout Latin America forthrightly rejected liberation theology. In Brazil, it was not only the obvious problems associated with trying to transfer Christ into a Lenin-like being. It was also the extreme politicization of the clergy advocated by liberation theologians which led many lay Catholics to reject not just liberation theology but also leftism more generally. The association of liberationist clergy the very corrupt Workers’ Party proved to be very damaging for the liberationist cause.

Intellectually speaking, liberation theology has largely disappeared from much of the Church in Brazil. Few if any books are published on this revolutionary ideology. The Archbishop of Sao Paulo, Don Odilo Scherer, explained this way in an interview with a Sao Paulo newspaper in 2012: “It was a moment in the history of theology. It has lost its own motivations because of Marxist background ideology – atheistic materialism, class struggle, use of violence to achieve goals – that are patible with Christian theology. ”

That said, liberation theology is still present, though moribund, both in some universities, in certain faculties of theology, and populist preaching. It is still possible to note a Marxist outlook on the part of some older members of the clergy. It will, therefore, take a little more time for the effects of liberation theology to disappear from these spheres.

In the last decade, new Catholic movements such as the Charismatic Renewal and the return of conservative Catholicism among the laity and much of the clergy have helped to push liberation theology to the periphery of Brazilian Catholic life. More generally, significant changes have been taking place in the Brazilian Catholic Church which are leading to a better understanding of the Church’s teachings. Hopefully, we are witnessing a process of rebuilding the Catholic Church in Brazil.

Homepage photo credit: Українська: Пам’ятник Леніну в момент падіння. Хмельницький, парк культури і відпочинку імені Чекмана.Author Volodymyr D-k. Wiki Commons.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Will Think Tanks Replace Universities?
Alejandro Chafuen, board member of the Acton Institute and a contributor to , has recently written an op/ed asking, “Will think tanks e the universities of the 21st century?” He says that “think tanks and the academy in all likelihood, were united at birth.” and that “Massive Online Open Courses, or MOOCs, are affecting universities as few other developments in the history of education. [He] would not be surprised if taking advantage of this technology some of the major think...
Nostalgia for Mid-Twentieth Century Middle Class Isn’t All It’s Cracked Up To Be
Don Boudreaux and Mark J. Perry at Cafe Hayek are here to tell you: life in the 1950s for America’s middle class is not the wonderland we might like to think. A favorite “progressive” trope is that America’s middle class has stagnated economically since the 1970s. One version of this claim, made by Robert Reich, President Clinton’s labor secretary, is typical: “After three decades of flat wages during which almost all the gains of growth have gone to the very...
Study: Entrepreneurs Pray More Frequently Than Non-Entrepreneurs
About a decade ago I joined a couple of other semi-clueless entrepreneurs in starting a regional newspaper in East Texas. Although I had always been a praying man, I found a lot more to pray about while starting a business: praying we’d make payroll, praying we’d find advertisers, praying the newspaper industry wouldn’t collapse before our next edition, etc. Apparently, I wasn’t alone. According to information recently published by the Association of Religion Data Services, U.S. entrepreneurs pray more, meditate...
America: Current Threats To Your Religious Liberty
As part of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) “Fortnight For Freedom” campaign, the USCCB has enumerated a number of threats to Americans’ religious liberty. Besides the on-going battle with the Obama Administration regarding the HHS mandate and the gutting of funding to Catholic programs that fight human trafficking, the bishops want us to be aware of these perils to religious liberty: Catholic foster care and adoption services. Boston, San Francisco, the District of Columbia, and the State...
Desperate Entrepreneur Atop St. Peter’s Pleads to Pope
What a sweet spectacle it is to observe Rome’s pastel-colored cityscape and glowing white marble churches from above St. Peter’s Basilica just before sunset.But this is not what one Italian entrepreneur had in mind late Monday evening and years since experiencing any kind of dolce vita in his native land. According to local press reports, around 6:00 pm on May 20, Vatican police and tourists discovered a businessman from Trieste, Marcello Finizio, atop the massive dome of St. Peter’s, the...
Tim Keller: 5 Ways the Bible Shapes Our Work
At The Gospel Coalition’s 2013 National Conference, Tim Keller kicked off a Faith at Work post-conference by exploring what itmeans to be a Christian in the marketplace. Keller argues that we have to view our work through the larger Biblical story ofCreation > Fall > Redemption > Restoration. IfGod is the creator of all things, and if through Christall things are made new, that process of restoration must include our work. Keller proceeds to offer five ways that the theology...
The Failing Success of Population Control in the Developing World
published a press release from the Guttmacher Institute, the research division of Planned Parenthood, summarizing a new study that “the poorest countries are lagging far behind e developing countries in meeting the demand for modern contraception. Between 2003 and 2012, the total number of women wanting to avoid pregnancy and in need of contraception increased from 716 million to 867 million, with growth concentrated among women in the 69 poorest countries where modern method use was already very low.”...
IRS Audited 69% of Filers Who Claimed Adoption Tax Credit
Adopting a child can be a laborious, time-consuming, and expensive process. So why is the IRS trying to make it even more laborious, time-consuming, and expensive? As David French notes, in 2012, the IRS requested additional information from 90 percent of returns claiming the adoption tax credit and went on to actually audit 69 percent: So Congress implemented a tax credit to facilitate adoption – a process that is so extraordinarily expensive that it is out of reach for many...
Entrepreneurs Find People With Autism Employable
People with autism frequently have a difficult time socially: they don’t always pick up on social “cues” most of us take for granted such as vocal inflections, facial expressions, gestures and maintaining eye contact. In terms of finding suitable jobs, this can be an obstacle. However, there are entrepreneurs who actively seek out the autistic as employees. Thorkil Sonne of Denmark is the founder of a software pany, Specialisterne. pany uses their special skills to out-perform the market and offer...
Supreme Court Will Re-Examine Prayer at Government Meetings
Even before America became a republic, Americans have opened public meetings with prayer. The Supreme Court even acknowledged this fact thirty years ago in the case of Marsh v. Chambers. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice Burger said, “From colonial times through the founding of the Republic and ever since, the practice of legislative prayer has coexisted with the principles of disestablishment and religious freedom.” But the “ever since” may soon ing to an end. After two residents Greece, New...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved