Ernie:
Re: Following article

Not sure what to think about this development; I'm not very well informed about
Latin American politics. But to say the least the rise of Evangelicalism, 
especially
the Prosperity Gospel,  has far reaching implications.

I mistrust the Prosperity Gospel, basically I think its basic premise, "believe 
in Jesus
and you will be successful in all of life and become rich" is a distortion of 
actual
Christian faith. However, there is another point to make, namely, that people 
who
deeply believe this false teaching can make a major difference in their 
societies
and, in the case of Brazil, just might swing a national election.

The Prosperity Gospel is also  a major phenomenon in West Africa where it 
sometimes
takes the form of 'Harrisism"  -named for its founder early in the 20th century-
especially in Nigeria, the largest population nation on the continent.

That is, among the poor and poorly educated this sort of thing has great appeal
and produces large scale results if, for no other reason, millions of people
are now motivated to make this religious system work, and, hence,
the rise of social organizations that actually help people in ways
no-one else is doing.  Which is bad news for 'mainline Christians'
and for Catholics but also for Muslims, who are being
out-competed by this form of Pentecostalism.

So, here is a form of Christianity that, by my lights, is theologically false
or no better than a distortion of Christian faith, yet which has good social 
effects
that, for one, I think are very helpful.

In America, however, this sort of thing is ridiculous and a sham. It also is
damaging to any kind of truthfulness about all kinds of basics of faith.
There is close to zero respect for truth, and that, as I see it, is damning.

Whatever form Christian faith might take in the future it simply must find
some way to make sense of all of this because, of course, the Third World
is the new center of gravity of Christianity



Billy


___________________________________________




 http://bit.ly/2IuZlmf

Evangelicals Represent the Greatest Conservative Force in the Brazilian 
Elections
By Julio Severo
After the U.S. Big Media, including the right-wing Fox News, said that 
Brazilian evangelicals are a powerful conservative influence in the elections 
(see the report: Evangelicals Can Put a Right-Wing Candidate in Brazil’s 
Presidency<https://lastdayswatchman.blogspot.com/2018/09/evangelicals-can-put-right-wing.html>),
 now is Europe’s turn. Reuters, a London-based service that was the first 
international news service in the world, has published the headline “Brazil’s 
evangelicals say far-right presidential candidate is answer to their 
prayers<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-election-evangelicals/brazils-evangelicals-say-far-right-presidential-candidate-is-answer-to-their-prayers-idUSKCN1M70D9>.”




Besides, the Brazilian service of Deutsche Welle, of Germany, said in a 
Portuguese headline “A força dos evangélicos na 
eleição<https://www.dw.com/pt-br/a-for%C3%A7a-dos-evang%C3%A9licos-na-elei%C3%A7%C3%A3o/a-45632150>”
 (The force of evangelicals in the election).
Why do evangelicals have huge conservative impact in the Brazilian elections, 
but not in the European elections?
The explanation may come from an uncommon source: Marilena Chaui, a Brazilian 
Marxist philosopher. She stated in 2016 that the main opposition to socialism 
in Brazil is the Prosperity Gospel, known in Brazil as Prosperity Theology. 
What is destroying the left-wing hegemony in Brazil is, as she said, a 
“day-to-day, meticulous operation that has been done in the ideological realm 
to convince people through the Prosperity Gospel…”<https://www.blogger.com/null>
So it is no wonder that the main leader leading evangelicals in the political 
conservative wave in Brazil is Silas 
Malafaia<https://lastdayswatchman.blogspot.com/2018/09/evangelicals-can-put-right-wing.html>,
 an Assemblies of God minister who has espoused important tenets of the 
Prosperity Gospel. The Assemblies of God is the major evangelical denomination 
in Brazil.
Neo-charismatics, or neo-Pentecostals, are the overwhelming majority of the 
conservative leaders among evangelicals in Brazil.
Because Europe has an overwhelming majority of Protestants who are Lutheran and 
Presbyterian, there is no such conservative force in elections or in their 
internal battles to halt socialism and other evil ideologies in their 
midst.<https://www.blogger.com/null>
In Brazil the traditional Protestant churches suffer the same spiritual malady. 
The Evangelical Church of Lutheran Confession in Brazil (ECLCB, the largest 
Lutheran denomination in Brazil) adheres to Liberation Theology and its 
Protestant version, Theology of Integral Mission, similar to the Social Gospel. 
The Presbyterian denominations in Brazil have for decades embraced, in a lesser 
or larger measure, Theology of Integral Mission, loved by many of their 
ministers, including Caio Fábio, a former minister who was a Presbyterian 
superstar who eventually got involved in sex and political scandals with 
powerful left-wing leaders.
While Pentecostals and mainly neo-Pentecostals are recognizing the evils of 
socialist administrations in Brazil, the Lutheran church remains recalcitrant. 
In fact, the president of ECLCB has sent a letter to all Lutheran ministers in 
Brazil threatening to sue any Lutheran member who shares my articles denouncing 
Liberation Theology in his denomination.
The Catholic Church in Brazil is not much different from the Lutheran 
denomination. Its most prominent leaders do not support conservative candidates.
By conservative I mean stances against the homosexual agenda, abortion and 
supportive of life and family. Socialist candidates, even when they are 
Catholic or Protestant, have a hard time to embrace such stances.
Over one year ago, The Nation, the oldest progressive magazine in the United 
States, had already recognized the conservative impact of Brazilian 
evangelicals in a headline titled “Amid Crisis in Brazil, the Evangelical Bloc 
Emerges as a Political 
Power<https://lastdayswatchman.blogspot.com/2017/08/amid-crisis-in-brazil-evangelicals.html>.”
The Prosperity Gospel is a neo-Pentecostal theology imported from the United 
States, the largest capitalist and Protestant nation in the world. Even though 
there may be some exaggerations in its teaching, its basic message is that the 
source of health, prosperity, job, marriage and happiness is God, while 
progressives, both Protestants and Catholics, tend to believe that government 
should be such source, and Christian Marxism (Liberation Theology, Theology of 
Integral Mission, Social Gospel, etc.) exerts its pressure to make the 
government to be a provider of people’s needs, despising God’s role as the 
ultimate Provider.<https://www.blogger.com/null><https://www.blogger.com/null>
Rodrigo Constantino, a Brazilian conservative writer, published an article 
titled “Democracy and the Prosperity Gospel,” written by Claudir Franciatto, 
who 
said<http://rodrigoconstantino.com/artigos/o-liberalismo-e-teologia-da-prosperidade/>,
“While the large part of the Brazilian society that is not evangelical 
restricts itself to call ministers, bishops and apostles of neo-Pentecostal 
(charismatic) churches ‘thieves’… [those ministers, bishops and apostles] are 
bringing to Brazil — secretly and imperceptibly — certain ‘Anglo-Saxon spirit’ 
of courage, pioneerism and positive individual attitude, which shaped a nation 
like the United States. This spirit was and is very necessary.”
Franciatto added,
“Neo-Pentecostal ministers do not stimulate members to pray and remain sitting 
on their pews, but to act — within and outside the church.”
This action outside the church is largely conservative and capitalist.
The Catholic Church, ECLCB and other traditional Protestant denominations in 
Brazil hate much more the Prosperity Gospel, which is not embraced by them, 
than they hate Liberation Theology and Theology of Integral Mission, which are 
embraced by them. They prefer any other option, including occultist, than 
facing an evangelical reality different from their particular “evangelical” 
delusion.
Yet, who is leading the conservative revolution in Brazil are not Catholics or 
traditional Protestants. Neo-charismatics, or neo-Pentecostals, are leading it.
Even though Brazil is the largest Catholic nation in the world, the Catholic 
Church has not the conservative force that neo-Pentecostals, who inherited such 
force from the United States, have to stem the socialist tide in Brazil.
Venezuela may be a hard lesson to Brazil. With a population 96% Catholic and a 
Catholic Church largely supportive of Liberation Theology, Venezuelans elected 
about 20 years ago socialist Hugo Chavez, who promised to take care of their 
needs. He promised to turn the Venezuelan government in the provider of the 
Venezuelans’ needs. Today, Venezuelans are starving. If Venezuela had a 
significant neo-Pentecostal population, they would resist the socialist 
revolution embraced by the Venezuelan Catholic Church.
The reality in Latin America is: the more Catholic a nation is, the more 
socialist or inclined to socialism it is. Cuba, Bolivia and Venezuela have all 
a common denominator: a massive Catholic population. In the Cuban case, they 
had a massive Catholic population during the communist revolution in the 1950s. 
Even today, Cuba is largely Catholic: 85% of its population is Catholic.
As the Latin American example shows, Catholicism seems naturally to facilitate 
socialism. So it is not hard to understand why in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s 
while the KGB supported the Catholic Church, the CIA supported Pentecostal 
movements<http://lastdayswatchman.blogspot.com/2016/05/the-religious-war-between-cia-and-kgb.html>.
In Brazil Catholics are now some 60% of the population and evangelicals, whose 
overwhelming majority is Pentecostal and neo-Pentecostal, are some 30%.
If Brazil were 96% Catholic as Venezuela is, the Brazilian people would be 
starving under socialism.
Other difference is sensitivity to pro-life and pro-family values. For decades, 
the Catholic Church, backed by the Lutheran and other traditional Protestant 
churches, has consistently supported socialism in Brazil. Pentecostal and 
neo-Pentecostal churches supported it — but much inconsistently —, because of 
the bad influence of former Rev. Fábio. Yet, when neo-Pentecostals saw 
socialists in the government advocating abortion and homosexuality, they 
changed course. Meanwhile, the Catholic Church, the Lutheran Church and many 
Presbyterians did not learn from their sins: They have largely kept their 
course loyal to socialism even after they saw their favorite socialists 
promoting abortion and homosexuality.
The Catholic Church and ECLCB have never learnt from their bad experiences with 
socialism. Meanwhile, neo-Pentecostal televangelists learnt the hard way. But 
they did.
In spite of the neo-Pentecostals’ weaknesses, especially in theology, 
Brazilians should praise God for neo-Pentecostals and the Prosperity Gospel 
they brought from the United States. They are saving Brazil from the socialism 
of Catholic Venezuela and the secularization of Europe, where its traditional 
churches, both Catholic and Protestant, are powerless to resist evil forces.
This is the difference of neo-Pentecostal churches: They seek power from God 
and use it to influence the society. They do it while antagonized by 
socialists, secularists, Catholics and traditional Protestants.
It is this power that the Big Media in Europe and in the United States is 
seeing in action right now in Brazil.
This power is in action even in the United States, where President Donald 
Trump, who was brought up as a Presbyterian, has as his advisers Paula White 
and other adherents of the Prosperity Gospel. In fact, the same evangelical 
power that helped Trump in the United 
States<http://lastdayswatchman.blogspot.com/2016/11/it-is-official-white-evangelicals-gave.html>
 is helping Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, even though he is a Catholic. 
Evangelicals are now the dominant conservative power in the United States and 
Brazil. And the same left-wing forces attacking in the U.S. elections are also 
attacking in the Brazilian 
elections<http://lastdayswatchman.blogspot.com/2018/09/facebook-is-building-fake-news-war-room.html>.
If Bolsonaro is going to win or not, I do not know. But I know for sure that in 
the next elections, in the next years, the evangelical power will be 
increasingly bigger, including in politics. Brazil is going to have, sooner or 
later, a neo-Pentecostal president.
Where traditional Protestants and Catholics are failing badly and even losing 
to socialism, secularism and occultism, charismatics are advancing and 
conquering, even in politics. I do not agree with everything of their theology, 
but I cannot deny that they are impacting positively where no one else is 
having similar impact.
Thank God for charismatics, Pentecostals and neo-Pentecostals and their love to 
seek God’s power and spiritual 
gifts!<https://www.blogger.com/null><https://www.blogger.com/null><https://www.blogger.com/null><https://www.blogger.com/null>

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