Slavery And Protestant Missions In Imperial Brazil
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Translators’ Introduction
Preface
Introduction
Chapter I: “A Closed Garden Which Wild Animals Cannot Enter”: The Implantation Of Protestantism In Brazil
Chapter II: “Contrary To What Many Think, Brazil Is Not An Uncivilized And Barbarous Country”: Missionary Strategy
Chapter III: “Slavery Is Like A Thorn That Penetrates The Flesh And Causes Excruciating Pain But Which We Do Not Want To Pull Out, For Fear That The Operation Will Further Increase The Pain”: The Institutional Protestant Message And Slavery
Conclusion
Appendix: “The Christian Religion And Its Relation To Slavery”
Additional Info
“I confess: Great is my shame and great is the bewilderment of Christ’s Church in Brazil, upon seeing unbelievers release their slaves out of simple love for humanity, while those who profess faith in the Redeemer of captives fail to break the fetters of impiety nor set the oppressed free!” -Eduardo Carlos Pereira (1886)
In 1888, Brazil was the last nation in the modern west to abolish slavery. Slavery and Protestant Missions in Imperial Brazil is an enlightening look at the role Christianity played in the struggle to abolish slavery in Brazil. Author Jose Carlos Barbosa seeks to explain why Protestant missionaries stationed in Brazil during the nineteenth-century remained silent on the issue of abolition, even after the end of the American Civil War. Barbosa asserts that the missionaries’ first priority was to secure a toehold for Protestantism and that meant not alienating the political and landowning elites of Brazilian society. Also, dominant theological thinking placed spiritual matters over temporal: “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s, and give to God what is God’s.” Making abolition in Brazil a largely secular struggle.
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