David Smilde

David Smilde is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Georgia. The author of Reason to Believe: Cultural Agency in Latin American Evangelicalism (University of California, 2007), he is beginning a new project on religion and political conflict in Venezuela during the era of Hugo Chavez.

Posts by David Smilde:

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Evangelicals and the relational self in Venezuela

Anglophone scholars have long struggled to find a terminology with which to study non-Catholic Christianity in Latin America. We are used to studying Christianity in terms of Catholics versus Protestants, with “Evangelicals” being a subcategory of the latter. But Latin Americans tend to divide Christians into Catholics versus Evangelicals. To make matters worse, when scholars go to Latin America and start talking to those who call themselves Evangelical, they quickly realize that these are what would be called Pentecostals, as spirit baptism, faith healing and speaking in tongues all play a central role in their religious practice. [...]

Read the rest of Evangelicals and the relational self in Venezuela.

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