A Family Theology for Latin American People? Radicalization of the Christian Family Movement in Argentina (1968-1974)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18441/ibam.18.2018.68.57-75Keywords:
Family, Radicalization, Catholic Theology, Sociocultural Modernization, ArgentinaAbstract
This article seeks to understand how the Catholic family model was disrupted by the climate of the Second Vatican Council, Liberation Theology, and sociocultural modernization. The analysis focuses on the Christian Family Movement in Argentina and allows an examination of the political and cultural radicalization of a conservative organization of the upper classes (created to strengthen the Catholic family) and the theological debates on the subject of the family that were sparked by the preferential option for the poor in Latin America. The analysis reveals that radicalization challenged the very foundations of the Catholic Church’s family doctrine, and, at the same time, the swift reaction of the Episcopate that restored order and defended the essentialist view of the family, an ideological cornerstone in the 1976 coup d’état.Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Publishing in IBEROAMERICANA is free of any charge for authors.
Authors retain the copyright. They transfer the right of first publication as well as the non-exclusive and unlimited right to reproduce and distribute their contribution in the accepted version to the journal.
All contents of this electronic edition under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.