2019
DOI: 10.1080/00141844.2019.1696860
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Brajisalem: Biblical Cosmology, Power Dynamics and the Brazilian Political Imagination

Abstract: Based on fieldwork with Brazilian neo-Pentecostal pilgrims to the Holy Land and ongoing survey of social media in this article I argue that Brazilian neo-Pentecostals increasingly imagine Brazil as a Promised Land and the Brazilian People as the People of God. Here, different substances associated with the Holy Land, the Jewish People and Jesus Christ are used to disperse in Brazil divine power, which is seen to emanate from God. This imaginary seeks to replace the hegemony of the democratic ethos of power in … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…As pointed out by de Abreu (2020), this characteristic of Pentecostal and Charismatic movements not only anticipated but also mirrored the current political mood. When it was decided that the Raabe Project would shift "the focus to the spiritual part by the guidance of the Holy Spirit" (Mrs. Lucia, 65), the transition from the language of "political rights" to that of "religious power" (Shapiro, 2021) was evident. This reflects a gradual change that began in Brazil a few years before, reaching the wider population as well as members of Pentecostal churches.…”
Section: "Moved" By the Holy Spiritmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As pointed out by de Abreu (2020), this characteristic of Pentecostal and Charismatic movements not only anticipated but also mirrored the current political mood. When it was decided that the Raabe Project would shift "the focus to the spiritual part by the guidance of the Holy Spirit" (Mrs. Lucia, 65), the transition from the language of "political rights" to that of "religious power" (Shapiro, 2021) was evident. This reflects a gradual change that began in Brazil a few years before, reaching the wider population as well as members of Pentecostal churches.…”
Section: "Moved" By the Holy Spiritmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The notion of covenantal identity, expressed in an affinity for, and even an analogic identification with, biblical Israel, has indeed been an animating force in numerous nationalist projects (Kaell 2020). Examples here include colonial New England (Miller 1956), Afrikaner South Africa (Tamarkin 2020), contemporary Brazil (Shapiro 2021), and independent South Sudan (Tounsel 2021). However, in contrast to Smith's scepticism about the possibility of Christian nationalism, it is clear that in at least some of these cases the covenantal ideals of the Old Testament have been mobilized by Christian communities not despite the universalist ideals of their religion, but rather precisely because of them.…”
Section: Covenantal Christian Nationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This phenomenon awaits ethnographic research. 14 Whether Jewish ritual will continue to mark the border, given the tendency among some Evangelical congregations to adopt Jewish ritual (Dulin 2015;Shapiro 2019)-including the wearing of a tallit-remains to be seen.…”
Section: Jesus Wore Tefillin Like These Too: Bridging and Othering Th...mentioning
confidence: 99%