Assim na terra como no céu. o evangelicalismo pós-cristão brasileiro e o protestantismo periférico na disputa pela dignidade humana
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Universidade Federal de Goiás
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This research investigates the role of Brazilian evangelicalism both as an instrument
for the maintenance of domination structures and, simultaneously, as a space of
resistance against modern hegemonies, situating modernity as a Eurocentric
civilisational project sustained by an exclusionary and hierarchical rationality. From
a decolonial standpoint, grounded in thinkers such as Aníbal Quijano and Enrique
Dussel, the study critically analyses the historical, political, and philosophical
processes that articulate post-Christian Brazilian evangelicalism with modernity,
neoliberalism, and conservatism as interconnected projects of global domination.
The research addresses the transformation in the relationship between human
beings and power in modernity, highlighting the contributions of modern
philosophers and sociologists in shaping the content of neoliberal and
neoconservative discourses. It is argued that, when universalised, principles such
as freedom and autonomy ultimately obscure structural inequalities, particularly in
the Global South. In this context, neoliberalism is examined as a pervasive
rationality that reinforces social hierarchies and disregards the cultural and political
resistances emanating from the Global South, while neoconservatism legitimises
these structures by articulating religious and moral values in defence of hegemonic
power models. In the Brazilian context, the recent impact of Olavo de Carvalho on
contemporary conservatism is discussed, highlighting how his critique of globalism
and cultural Marxism has shaped political and cultural discourses. This is the
sociocultural environment in which Brazilian post-Christian evangelicalism has
emerged. Conversely, counter-hegemonic messianic evangelicalism—rooted in
reinterpretations of primitive Christianity as developed by liberation, Black, feminist,
queer, and Latin American theologies—presents itself as a radical critique of
capitalist and Eurocentric structures, promoting epistemic plurality and social justice
within the theological field of Christianity. The analysis of decolonial theologies
foregrounds the body as a locus of resistance and emancipation, challenging the
Cartesian dichotomy between body and spirit. Racialised, feminine and queer
bodies—frequently subalternised by the coloniality of power—are re-signified as
bearers of transformative knowledges within a decolonial theology forged at the
intersection of liberation hermeneutics. The present work was undertaken through
the integrative literature review method for document selection. Content analysis
and discourse analysis techniques were employed in the first phase, followed by a
Dusselian hermeneutic analysis grounded in the liberation ethics of the Argentine
philosopher and theologian. Based on Dussel, Quijano and Panotto, it is argued that
these decolonial theologies foster emancipatory practices and contest structural
inequalities, contributing to the promotion of a new social consciousness in
contemporary Brazil.