INVESTIGADORES
ALTMAN Agustina
artículos
Título:
'A Nut too Tough to Crack'. Perceptions of Catholicism by Early Mennonite Missionaries to Argentina
Autor/es:
LÓPEZ, ALEJANDRO MARTÍN; ALTMAN, AGUSTINA
Revista:
The Mennonite Quarterly Review
Editorial:
Goshen College, the Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary and the Mennonite Historical Society
Referencias:
Año: 2021 vol. 95 p. 513 - 532
ISSN:
0025-9373
Resumen:
When Mennonite missionaries first arrived in Argentina in the early twentieth century the primary targets of their outreach were already Christian, that is, Catholics. Like most Protestant missionaries of the time, however, Mennonites regarded the religion they encountered as a "Catholic-pagan" syncretism, badly in need of the gospel. These prejudices were reinforced in the first half of the century as the Catholic Church in Argentina went through a process of institutional consolidation that aimed to strengthen its presence within the country. In the 1930s and 1940s, the Catholic Church centralized its church government, strengthened its political presence, and introduced new disciplines, rituals and devotions that unified its identity at the local level. This essay traces the rhetoric that Mennonite missionaries employed in their depictions of the Catholic Church, which emerged as the primary opponent to their evangelical presence. These negative portrayals of Catholicism were part of Mennonites´ own theological formation in the struggle for a distinctive identity within the emerging religious landscape.