Libera chiesa in libero stato è utopia. Meglio libera concorrenza tra religioni in libero stato
Note | Location: 43
Per la religione la neutralità politica (dare a Cesare quel che è suo) è pressochè impossibileChiesa e stato, cooperare o confliggere?Ipotesi teradizionale (teo liberazione) e ipotesi innovativa (concorrenza)Metodo: teoria + storia1@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
Yellow highlight | Location: 47
Conflict between church and state is nothing new.
Note:BUSINESS AS USUAL
Yellow highlight | Location: 48
draws its fundamental authority from a different source-religion
Note:RAGIONI
Yellow highlight | Location: 49
two realms
Yellow highlight | Location: 49
makes separation difficult to obtain in practice.
Note:OPERAZIONE IMPOSSIBILE
Yellow highlight | Location: 51
citizens frequently rely upon trusted public figures
Note:AUTORITÀ EFFETTIVA
Yellow highlight | Location: 52
Even under "normal" political situations containing considerable uncertainty and imperfect information (e.g., voting),
Note:ANCHE NELLE STABILI DEMOCR
Yellow highlight | Location: 55
significantly influence the public's perception of any given policy,
Note:IL SANTONE
Yellow highlight | Location: 56
public may interpret their silence as implying acceptance
Note:ANCHE IL SILENZIO
Yellow highlight | Location: 57
whether the individual choice be neutrality or activism, the result is equally political:
Note:DAN LEVINE
Yellow highlight | Location: 58
For this reason, "rendering unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's" is not resolved easily for many religious elite.
Note:ROVELLO
Yellow highlight | Location: 60
the civil rights movement of the 1960s
Note:UN ESEMPIO DI COMMISTIONE
Yellow highlight | Location: 61
even more pronounced in Latin America-the
Note:L INTRECCIO TRA I DUE REGNI
Yellow highlight | Location: 62
Iran-religious authority served to justify political regimes.
Note:DA DAVIDE ALL IRAN DI OGGI
Yellow highlight | Location: 63
religious institutions would maintain a fair degree of autonomy
Note:DI SOLITO...ALMENO ALL APPARENZA
Yellow highlight | Location: 64
legitimation of a regime would be traded for financial assistance or other special privileges.
Note:DO UT DES
Yellow highlight | Location: 65
The teachings of Jewish prophets and early Christian communities challenged Roman hegemony
Note:SCONTRO
Yellow highlight | Location: 66
Taiping Rebellion in China;
Note:ALTRO SCONTRO
Yellow highlight | Location: 66
Ayatollah Khomeini orchestrated the collapse of a secular dictator
Note:ALTRO ES
Yellow highlight | Location: 66
Christian base communities throughout Latin America frustrated the attempts of military regimes
Note:ALTRO ES
Yellow highlight | Location: 67
how and why religious leaders choose strategies of cooperation or conflict with secular authorities is an important topic
Note:IL TEMA
Yellow highlight | Location: 69
as society modernized, religion would fade eventually into the background,
Note:LA TESI CHE HA MARGINALIZZATO QS STUDI
Yellow highlight | Location: 71
Religion wreaked savage revenge on the "inevitable" march of secularization.
Note:RITORNO IMPREVISTO
Yellow highlight | Location: 73
Why do religious authorities, at any given time, choose to oppose
Note:LA DOMANDA
Yellow highlight | Location: 75
Since the late 1960s, Latin America has become a major focus for the study of these questions,
Note:LABORATORIO
Yellow highlight | Location: 77
Traditionally, Catholic Church officials forged tight links with the antidemocratic elite
Note:COLLABORAZIONISMO
Yellow highlight | Location: 79
However, beginning with Brazil in the late 1960s, several national episcopacies began actively opposing
Note:BRASILE TARDI SESSANTA
Yellow highlight | Location: 82
the most recent wave of Church-state conflictwas initiated by the clergy.
Note:CASO UNICA
Yellow highlight | Location: 83
"preferential option for the poor"
Note:TEOLOGIA
Yellow highlight | Location: 84
(roughly 1964-89).
Note:IL XIODO CRUCIALE
Yellow highlight | Location: 86
many bishops, clergy, and lay activists suffered at the hands of the state (see Lernoux 1980).
Note:MARTIRI
Yellow highlight | Location: 86
Oscar Romero in 1979
Note:ES
Yellow highlight | Location: 88
Church, actively endorsed military regimes (as in Argentina) or remained silent (as in Uruguay, Bolivia, and Honduras).
Note:CASI DIFFORMI
Yellow highlight | Location: 90
In other countries, such as Paraguay, the right of the regime to exist was never seriously questioned
Note:UN CASO A METÀ
Yellow highlight | Location: 92
The Question at Hand
Note:ttttttttttt
Yellow highlight | Location: 92
Why did some national Catholic episcopacies in Latin America actively oppose dictatorial rule, while others did not?
Note:LA DOMANDA CHIAVE
Yellow highlight | Location: 101
Christian base communities
Note:NN CI SONO SOLO I VESCOVI
Yellow highlight | Location: 103
I define "opposition" as sustained public denunciations of the regime by a majority of the bishops within the country.
Note:QUANDO LA CC SI OPPONE
Yellow highlight | Location: 104
national bishops' conferences since the mid-1950s as a vehicle for enunciating Church policy
Note:LO STRUMENTO
Yellow highlight | Location: 105
we are looking for the Church's "center of gravity"
Note:IL NOCCIOLO
Yellow highlight | Location: 106
maintained over a substantial period
Note:ALTRO REQUISITO X PARLARE D CONDANA
Yellow highlight | Location: 106
Even the most antidemocratic bishops must occasionally question blatant disregard for human rights.
Note:NN CONSIDRATI
Yellow highlight | Location: 108
silence is more akin to a "wait-and-see"
Note:NEL PRIMO ANNO
Yellow highlight | Location: 112
strong community values, such as trust, are a necessary, though not sufficient, condition for democratic stability
Note:RUOLO DELLA CHIESA X LA DEMO
Yellow highlight | Location: 113
Religious organizations serve as one primary source for generating such values.
Note:Ccccccccc
Yellow highlight | Location: 125
research addresses itself to the consequences of the Church's new orientation toward serving the poor, there has been ample speculation about the causes for this change.
Note:STUDI SUI FINI E SULLE CAUSE
Yellow highlight | Location: 127
awareness on the part of the Church of the increasing "structural" poverty
Note:PRIMA CAUSA...INDUSTRIALIZZAZIONE
Yellow highlight | Location: 127
awakening to the rise in repression associated
Note:SECONDA...REAZIONE ALLE REPRESSIONI
Yellow highlight | Location: 128
reform within the international Church.
Note:TERZO...ONDA LUNGA VATICANO II
Yellow highlight | Location: 130
manifestations-the 1968 Medellin Conference, the 1979 Puebla Conference, and the advent of liberation theology.
Note:CAUSA PRIVILEGIATA...IL VII
Yellow highlight | Location: 131
This hypothesis concerns the effects religious competition
Note:LA NUOVA IPOTESI AVANZATA
Yellow highlight | Location: 132
Protestants, Spiritist movements, and Marxist organizations.
Note:I COMPETITORI IN AMERICA LATINA
Yellow highlight | Location: 132
competition increases the importance of obtaining active followers among nominal Catholics. Such Catholics are found predominantly among the rural and urban poor,
Note:BACINO DI UTENZA
Yellow highlight | Location: 135
Where the Church faces greater competition for members, bishops will be under pressure to defend the interests of the poor,
Note:TESI
Yellow highlight | Location: 136
Not doing so would lead to a greater loss of poor parishioners to competing groups
Note:NON FALO...
Yellow highlight | Location: 137
Wherecompetition is weak or nonexistent, bishops can continue an alliance
Note:ALTRIMENTI
Note | Location: 257
Storia Sudamerica: Chiesa sempre vicina al govrnoSorprese degli ultimi anni dal S.: 1. smentita la teoria della secolarizzazione 2. la Chiesa diviene sempre + innovativaLa Chiesa si è sempre affidata allo Stato x la raccolta delle decime ma ha pagato con una xdita di autonomi