Pentecostalism In Argentina

Pentecostalism In Argentina

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REVIEW ESSAY

Pentecostalism

David

95

in

Argentina

Bundy

Alejandro Frigerio, (Los

Fundamentos Centro Editor de América

ed. Ciencias sociales

y religión

en el Cono Sur de las ciencias del

hombre;

Buenos Aires:

Latina, 1993).

151

pp.

Frigerio,

sociales,

Aires: Centro Editor de América

Alejandro

ed. Nuevos movimientos

I

(Los

Fundamentos de las ciencias del

hombre;

Alejandro

Frigerio,

religiosos y

ciencias

Buenos Latina, 1993).

97

pp.

ed. Nuevos movimientos

sociales,

II

(Los

Fundamentos de las ciencias del

hombre;

Aires: Centro Editor de América

Alejandro Frigerio, compilador, (Biblioteca

Politica

Argentina, de America

Latina, 1944).

127

pp.

459;

religiosos y

ciencias

Buenos Latina, 1993).

98 pp.

El Pentecostalismo en la Argentina

Buenos Aires: Centro Editor

Louise Jeter de

Walker, histórica

Paraguay,

Perú

y Uruguay 1992).

264

pp.

Siembre

y

consecha. Tomo 2: de las Asambleas de Dios en

Argentina,

(Deerfield,

Norberto

Saracco, Argentine Theology (Ph.D. diss.; Birmingham, 1989).

Birmingham, England;

Pablo

FL,

USA:

Reseña Bolivia, Chile, Editorial

Vida,

Pentecostalism: Its

History

University

and of

Semán,

Mercedes de

Majo,

en

Argentina.

Un Estudio

Hilario H.

Wynarczyk, Panorama

sociológico

Teológica, 1995).

33

pp.

actual del

campo Evangélico

(Buenos

Aires: Facultad Internacional de Educación

Facultad

Hilario H.

Wynarczyk, Perfil sociológico

Pentecostal

de Educación

Internacional

(Buenos

Aires: Teológica, 1994).

11 pp.

1

96

Hilario H.

Wynarczyk,

Tres

evangelistas

carismáticos: Omar Cabrera, Annacondia, Giménez (Unpublished Polycopied Text, Buenos

Aires, 1989).

155

pp.

The

Beginnings of Pentecostalism

in Argentina

One of the earliest

published

references to Pentecostalism in Argentina

is found in correspondence between Willis Hoover of Chile and Thomas Ball Barratt of Norway in which Hoover refers to contacts with the

Norwegian missionary

to

Argentina, Berger

Johnson.1 Hoover’s letters had been translated into

Norwegian

and

published by Barratt in Korsets Seier. Johnson,

having

read these in

Argentina, wrote to Hoover

asking

about the

availability

of

Spanish language Pentecostal literature. Hoover commented, “Do

you

see how we

get bound

up together

with each other.”2 Italian Pentecostal missionaries arrived in Argentina on 9 October 1909 to found the

Iglesia

Asamblea Cristiana.3 Danish missionaries arrived in 1913.4

Alice

Woods,

a Canadian Methodist Holiness woman who had joined

the Christian and

Missionary Alliance,

after

serving

as a Holiness

Missionary

in Venezuela and Puerto

Rico, experienced

the Pentecostal

Baptism

in the

Holy Spirit

in a

Norwegian

Pentecostal church which she attended at the invitation of

Berger

Johnson. She went to Argentina with

Berger

Johnson and his

wife,

but was forced to become

independent

when Johnson came out

against

women

being

in

lOn Berger Johnson and early Norwegian missions to Argentina, see Ivar M. Witzoe,

De Aapene dore:

Norges Frie Evangeliske Hedningemissions arbeidere virke

og

gjennem 10 aar (Oslo, Norway:

NFEH, 1925); Per A. Pedersen,

in Til Jordens Ender: Norsk 50

“Argentina,”

pinsemisjon gjennom år,

ed. Kåre Juul (Oslo, Norway: Filadelfiaforlaget, 1960),

271-278; Oddvar Nilsen, Ut i all Verden: Pinsevennenes ytre misjon i 75 cir (Oslo, Norway:

Filadelfiaforlaget, 1984).

2Letter from Willis Hoover to T. B. Barratt, 5 December 1910, T. B. Barratt Collection, University of Oslo.

An edition of this letter is being prepared. For the

of Hoover in Chile, see D. Bundy, “Bishop William Taylor and Methodist Mission: A Study in Nineteenth Century Social History,” Methodist History 27 (July pre-history

1989): 197-210; 28 (October 1989): 2-21. Hoover was a

with the “Self- Supporting

Mission” related to the Methodist

Episcopal

Church founded missionary

by Taylor who was himself a missionary in Chile from 1878-1884.

3Louie B. Stokes, Historia del Movimiento Pentecostal en la Argentina (Buenos Aires, Argentina: n.p., 1968), 13-14.

4F. B. Petersen, Danmarks Frikirker (Kobenhavn: Evangelieforlaget, 1954), 565.

2

97

ministry.

Woods then united with the Assemblies of God

(1914)

and eventually

took over

(1917)

an

already existing

Pentecostal church which she

pastored

until her retirement.5 Swedish Pentecostal mis- sionaries

began

work in Argentina in 1920.6 Others came

among

the immigrants

from

Bulgaria,7 Poland,

Russia and the Ukraine.8 A mis- sion which

eventually joined

with the Church of God had

significant success

among

a Native American

tribe,

the Toba.9

Despite

the

long history,

the

diversity

of the traditions

represented in

Argentina

and the

significance

of the numbers of adherents to the various movements in Argentina, Pentecostalism in Argentina has not until

recently

been the

subject

of extensive research.10 Walter J. Hollenweger

made a serious and

exemplary

effort to catalogue the tra- ditions and indicate basic source material.l 1 His work is now more than three decades old and much has

changed, including

the

presence

of new Pentecostal and neo-Pentecostal denominations. Denominations and

groups

arise, merge

and/or dissolve with little consideration for the historians’ efforts to

catalogue

and

identify

them.

Despite

the draw- back of

being published

without

documentation,

the work of Louie B. Stokes was

perhaps

the most

complete

narrative of Pentecostal

history in

Argentina.

He traced the Pentecostal

developments

from 1909 to 1968 and discussed

thirty

denominations or

“groups.”12

Two other efforts were made to document trends in Argentina. The first,

under the

aegis

of the

(North American) Evangelical Foreign Missions Association,

attempted

a detailed census but

only

four Pentecostal denominations were noted.13 The second focused on the

.

5 Alice Wood Collection, Assemblies of God Archives, Springfield, MO.

6G. E. Soderholm, Den Svenska Pingstvdckelsens spridning utom och inom Sverige; Supplement

till de Svenska Pingstväckelsens Historia (Stockholm, Sweden: Forlaget Filadelfia, 1933),

97-109, et passim; and, Arthur Sundstedt, Pingstvackelsen 5 vols. (Stockholm, Sweden: Normans Forlag, 1969-1973), Vol. 3: 94-97, et pas- sim.

7Eugene

Nida, “The Indigenous Churches of Latin America,”

Practical Anthropology

8

8(1961):

97.

9 Stokes, Historia del Movimiento Pentecostal en la Argentina, 22-28. Elmer

Miller,

Pentecostalism

Among

the

Argentine Toba, (Ph.D. diss.; Pittsburgh, PA;, University of Pittsburgh, 1967).

1015avid Barrett, World Christian Encyclopedia (Nairobi: Oxford University Press, 1982),

147-151. At least 41 Pentecostal churches were identified by Barrett and his collaborators. 11

Walter J. Hollenweger, Handbuch der Pfingstbewegung (Ph.D. diss.; Zlrich, Switzerland; University of Zurich, 1967), 855-864 [paragraph 02b.01].

12Stokes, Historia del Movimiento Pentecostal en la Argentina.

13 protestant Missions in Latin America: A Statistical Survey (Washington, D.C.: Evangelical Foreign

Missions Association, 1961), 3-6. The denominations/missions noted were the Assemblies of God (USA) [3,298 adherents], Norske Pinsevenners

3

98

U.S.-related Assemblies of God,

despite

the fact that

according

to Enns’ own

numbers,

that

group

constituted fewer than five

percent

of Argentine

Pentecostals.14 The

history by

Stokes was not consulted and Hollenweger’s

work was

apparently

unknown to Enns.

Stokes has been

supplanted by

the

exemplary scholarly

achieve- ment of Norberto Saracco.15 Saracco’s dissertation combines

thorough historical, demographic

and

sociological analysis

with

theological reflection and evaluation. It is to be

hoped

that this work will eventu- ally

be

published.

Somewhat

disappointing

in terms of their research and

perspective were the volumes of David Stoll and David Martin,.16 Stoll failed to appreciate

the

significance

of the differences between various kinds of “evangelicals”

in Latin America and referred

only

in

passing

to Argentina.

For information about

Argentina,

Martin

depended

on the then two-decades old

publication

of Enns. Stoll and Martin did not cite the

analysis

found in

Hollenweger’s

dissertation or the work of schol- ars such as

Stokes,

and made no reference to the careful

sociology

of religion

research either in published or dissertation/thesis form written in

Argentina. They

also made no reference to the

writings

of Latin American Pentecostal scholars

(for example,

for Brazil: Emilio Conde and de

Almeida, among many others).

Interaction with these works would have

provided

a better

understanding

of the

phenomena

and remarkable

diversity

of Latin American Pentecostalism. While Martin and Stoll did make the

major

contribution of

calling

Latin American Pentecostalism to the attention of “Northern” scholars, one would

hope the

day

is past when scholars in the United States could discuss the rest of the world without

seriously consulting

the

scholarship produced by the traditions

being

studied. In addition, a more careful interaction with the sources would have

seriously

modified the

socio-political analysis proffered by

Stoll and Martin.

—– —-

Ytremisjon [9,027 adherents],

Svenska Fria Mission

[18,000 adherents] and the Pentecostal Holiness Church (USA) [460 adherents].

l4Arno W. Enns, Man, Milieu and Mission in Argentina: A Close Look at Church Growth (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 19?1), 83.

15Norberto Saracco, Argentine Pentecostalism: Its History and Theology (Ph. D.diss.; Birmingham, England; University of Birmingham, 1989).

16David Stoll, Is Latin America Turning Protestant: The Politics

Growth (Berkeley, CA: University of California

of Evangelical

Press, 1990); David Martin, Tongues of

Fire: The

Explosion of

Protestantism in Latin America

(Oxford, England: Blackwell, 1990).

4

99

Developing

Paradigm for Analysis

One of the difficulties scholars have in dealing with

religious phe- nomena outside the dominant social and economic classes is that the majority

of interpretative frameworks are devised within the context of the dominant culture. It has been

argued

that the

paradigms

for

analy- sis chosen

by

those outside a tradition have a significant influence on the

self-image

and

development

of the tradition The

Argentine scholars whose research is discussed here have

adopted

a phenomeno- logical approach

within the area of the

sociology

of religion. As

appro- priated by

the

scholars,

the

paradigms

are

non-judgmental,

attentive to the historical

development

of the

movements,

allow the voice of

Pentecostal

evangelists, clergy

and

laity

to be heard and are neutral in the

evolving

international Pentecostal

political landscapes.

The

scholarly

works discussed in this review

essay

are therefore an important departure

in the

historiography

of Pentecostalism in Argentina. They

are

primarily

the result of studies undertaken

by teams of Argentine scholars led

by Alejandro Frigerio,

Professor in the Department

of

Sociology

of the Catholic

University

of Argentina/CONICUT,

and Hilario H.

Wynarczyk,

Professor in the Department

of

Sociology

of the Universidad del Salvador and the Facultad Intemacional de Educacion

Teologica

at Buenos Aires. Together they

contribute

significantly

to a reappraisal of the profile and role of Pentecostalism in

Argentina.

Unlike

scholarly

efforts about which concerns were

justifiably

raised

by

Everett A.

Wilson,

several of the

participating

scholars and research assistants in this

Argentine research

project

are members of Pentecostal churches. 1 8

One

major

research

project

of

Wynarczyk

remains in

manuscript (polycopied)

form’9

although

some of the

findings

have been

published in other venues.20 It is a careful

analysis

of the lives and ministries of three

Argentine

Pentecostal/Charismatic

evangelists:

Omar Cabrera [Fondacion

Visi6n de

Futuro],

Hector Anibal Gimenez

[Ondas

de

l7David Bundy, “Paradigms of Analysis: Early European Scholarly Views 0-li Pentecostalism,” 18

EPTA Bulletin 5 (1986): 4-23.

(

Everett A. Wilson, “Who Speaks for Latin American Pentecostals?” MA : The Journal 19

of the Society for

Pentecostal Theology 16 (fall 1994): 143-150.

Hilario H. Wynarczyk, Tres evangelistas carismáticos: Omar Cabrera, Annacondia, Giminez (Polycopied text, Buenos Aires, 1989).

20For example, to be discussed below,: Hilario “Carlos Annacondia: Un estudio de caso en

neopentecostalismo,”

in Nuevos movimientos Wynarczyk,

religiosos y cien- cias sociales, II, ed. Alejandro Frigerio, Los Fundamentos de las ciencias del hombre (Buenos Aires, Argentina: Centro Editor de America Latina, 1993), 80-97. His work also served as a basis for work by Maria Isabel Tort, Leonor Pessina and A. Jorge Soneira, “El ministerio ‘Ondas de Amor y Paz’ del pastor Hector Animal Gim6nez,” in Frigerio,

Nuevos movimientos religiosos y ciencias sociales., II, 49-79.

5

100

Amor

y Paz]

and Carlos Annacondia

[Asociacion Evangelista Mensaje de

Salvacion]. Wynarczyk

demonstrates that these

evangelists

have a significant

influence in

Argentine religious

and cultural life. The method of research drew

upon

the tools of

sociologists

of

religion

and historians. Most of the information comes from an extensive series of oral

history

interviews, participant observation,

and

non-print

media.

The movement

resulting

from the

ministry

of Omar Cabrera

(bom 24 December

1936) began

in 1972 as the Ministerio de

Fe, becoming in 1986 the Fondacion Vision de Futuro which is juridically linked to the Asociacion

Iglesia

de Dios

Argentina,

but is know

widely

as Iglesia Visi6n de Futuro.

By 1989,

the

organization

had circa

85,000

adher- ents. The

theological

orientation of the

group

is toward a “gospel … of prosperity.”

Baptized Catholic,

Cabrera became a member of the Union de las Asambleas de Dios. He studied at Holmes Bible

College (North Carolina)

and at Franklin

Springs College (Georgia),

worked with Morris Cerullo in California and received a mail-order doctorate from an institution in Orlando. His wife serves as Latin American Coordinator for Women’s

Aglow

and his children have studied at Oral Roberts

University,

Christ for the Nations

(Dallas)

and Christ for All Nations

[Reinhard Bonnke]

in Wiesbaden.21 The ideas and individuals encountered in these contexts

provide

the

theological

basis for his work and the model for his

ministry.

Cabrera’s

theology

is

conservative, centered on a strict biblicism. The ethical structures of the tradition

emphasize personal

and social holiness. The

style

of

ministry

is dis- tinctly entrepreneurial

and the ideas of

“prosperity gospel” pervade

the preaching

and influence the

expectations

of the converts.

Wynarczyk provides

a careful

history

of the

movement,

with attention to the evo- lution of

relationships

with

major

Pentecostal and Charismatic theolo- gians.22

Attention is also

given

to the fiscal and

organizational

struc- tures of the church.23 It is clear from the data

provided

that the move- ment

surged

to a high of 145,000 in 1985 and declined

by nearly

40% by

1989 when the adherents numbered 85,000.24

21Wynarczyk, Tres evangelistas carismáticos, 5-9. Tres

22 Wynarczyk, evangelistas carismdticos,

14-43.

23Wynarczyk,

Tres evangelistas carismáticos, 45-69.

24Wynarczyk,

Tres evangelistas carismdticos, 45. The

high

numbers were reported by

Peter Wagner, and one would assume these may have been exaggerated by

as many as 50.000 although the trend toward numerical decline is clear the

Note that one of the for

during period. problems

research on revivalistic groups is deter- mining

adherence with any kind of accuracy. The social borders of the groups and the personal identities of those participating in activities of the group are both quite porous.

The groups went unnoticed by Barrett, et al. World Christian Encyclopedia.

6

101

The second

evangelist

studied was Hector Anibal Gim6nez

(bom 1957)

who is the founder and leader of the

organization

Ondas de Amor y

Paz

[Waves

of Love and

Peace].25 Having

been formed

among

the less than

privileged

of Buenos

Aires,

the

organization

chose sites for ministry

which make

persons

from those

backgrounds

more comfort- able while

attending

the vibrant

evangelistic meetings.

The services take

place

in cinemas and theaters with modem music. Gimenez also has a

significant

radio and television

ministry.

Most of the

ministry associates are his

age

or slightly

younger.26

His

wife, Irma, is a co-pas- tor and

plays

an important role in the

ministry.27

Because of his unusu- al style and socio-economic

background

he is not

accepted by the

other Pentecostal

organizationsz8 despite

the fact that his

theology

is certain- ly

Pentecostal.29 Ondas de Amor

y

Paz had 24

preaching

centers in Argentina

in 1989 and 70 in 1991.30 It has

spread

to

Uruguay,

31 Brazil,32 Chile,

and the United States

(Miami, Florida).33

The third

evangelist

studied

by Wynarczyk

is Carlos Annacondia [bom

12 March

1944]

who is the leader of La Asociacion

Evangelistica Mensaje

de Salvacion, a

para-church evangelistic

association. After two decades as a successful businessman,34 Annacondia in 1981 felt “called” to

ministry.35

He has

developed

a ministry of

carefully orga- nized

evangelistic campaigns

which

cooperate

with local

congrega- tions.

Campaigns

have also been held in Brazil,

Paraguay, Mexico,

the U.S.A., Russia, Finland, Russia, Switzerland, Spain

and

Singapore.36 Wynarczyk carefully

describes the financial and

ministry

structures of the Association as well as the

theological perspectives

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