El Salvador The Role of Religion
Church of the Virgin of Guadalupe, San Salvador
As a Hispanic country, El Salvador has always had a strong
Roman Catholic identity. The majority of Salvadorans in the late
1980s were at least nominal Roman Catholics, and church rituals
permeated the nation's culture and society. Church attendance,
especially for women, remained important, church sacraments and
ceremonies such as baptism and confirmation were observed, and
fiestas were held to celebrate patron saints of villages, towns,
and cities. Nevertheless, El Salvador tended to be somewhat more
secular than its Central American neighbors. Birth control
programs introduced in the late 1960s met with less opposition
than elsewhere in Latin America. Marriage--in a religious or
civil ceremony--was not as prevalent in El Salvador as in many
other Latin American countries (this situation also reflected the
strain exerted on social institutions by persistent poverty);
many Salvadoran couples, especially in rural areas, lived
together in common-law or free unions, many families were headed
by women, and many children were born out of wedlock. Lastly, the
ritual kinship practice of compadrazgo (selecting
godparents for children) was becoming less widespread and less
important in El Salvador.
Although the Roman Catholic Church, as typified by its
hierarchy, was conservative in its approach to doctrine, a strain
of reformist Catholicism called "social Christianity" emerged in
El Salvador, as elsewhere in Latin America, in the 1930s in
response to the hardships, uprisings, and repressions of that
period. Social Christianity, which continued to have some appeal
until the early 1960s, stressed the duty of lay persons to remedy
social ills without waiting for the religious hierarchy,
represented by its priests, to act. Although this movement did
not advocate change in the basic social and political structure
of the country, it called for improvements by working within the
existing political order.
At least one influential individual at the top of the social
and religious pyramid recognized and encouraged the need for
improvements in the lives of those in the lower sector--the
archbishop of San Salvador, Luis Chavez y Gonzalez, who held this
position from 1939 to 1977. Archbishop Chavez encouraged the
priesthood as a vocation; built a seminary in San Salvador;
established the Pius XII Institute, organized particularly to
teach the Roman Catholic Church's social doctrine; and sent
priests to study in Europe. It is also noteworthy that these
Salvadoran priests came mainly from rural families, albeit fairly
well-to-do ones, rather than from the urban middle class, and
hence had closer ties to the peasantry. It is significant too
that even in the early 1950s Chavez encouraged cooperatives as
alternatives for peasants' losing land to agribusiness expansion
and that he sent priests to Canada to study cooperatives. In this
sense, he presaged the communitarianism later advocated by the
Salvadoran Christian Democratic Party (Partido Democrata
Cristiano--PDC).
In the late 1960s, the social attitudes of the Roman Catholic
Church in El Salvador, as elsewhere, were deeply influenced by
Vatican Council II (in 1965) and the social encyclicals of Pope
John XXIII, as well as by the Second Latin American Bishops'
Conference held in Medellin, Colombia, in 1968, which addressed
the issues of Vatican II from a distinctly Latin American
perspective. These gatherings, particularly the Medellin
conference, emphasized the need for a more worldly involvement by
the Roman Catholic clergy with the lives and problems of
parishioners and advocated activist programs to improve the
living conditions of the lower class. This "preferential option
for the poor" was the germ of what later came to be known as
"liberation theology." The church increased and encouraged
involvement in programs for change after the Medellin conference,
even if this involvement entailed secular political advocacy.
Toward this end, activist clergy and laity created grass-
roots Christian Base Communities (Comunidades Eclesiasticas de
Base--CEBs) to work toward their conception of social justice;
these groups encouraged church members to take the initiative in
seeking social and political change and to act more independently
of the church hierarchy, if necessary, to achieve their goals. In
short, in contrast to the earlier social Christianity, where
change was to be effected within the existing social and
political order, liberation theology called for changes in social
and political structures and encouraged the laity to take an
active role in bringing them about. In El Salvador, the social
concerns of Archbishop Chavez helped pave the way for later
advocates of liberation theology and, in a way, linked this broad
Latin American movement of the 1970s with the social Christian
movements of the prior decades.
A number of rural communities were receptive to the teachings
and methods of the base communities. Generally, the organization
of the CEBs involved a priest or a trained religious worker who
met with twenty to thirty local parishioners for a few weeks. As
this group met to study and discuss selected passages from the
Bible and plan community activities, lay leaders were encouraged
to emerge, and the group was taught to appreciate and emphasize
the role of laypersons like themselves in social change. They
discussed the earthly social, economic, and political reasons for
their plight as poor peasants and laborers and were taught by
priests and lay workers that the poor were equal before God with
the rich landowners. During the 1970s, some 15,000 local lay
leaders, catechists or delegates, underwent further training at
seven centers set up throughout the country, studying the Bible,
liturgy, agriculture, cooperativism, leadership, and health, all
in preparation for their roles as religious, social, and
political leaders in community development efforts. The role of
local lay preachers and leaders also reflected the high ratio of
laity to priests in El Salvador, which at that time was
approximately 10,000 to one.
The CEBs soon encountered harassment and hostility,
apparently emanating from the economic and political elite. By
the late 1970s, violence by right-wing groups was directed
against members of the priesthood and other church workers known
to be sympathetic to the CEBs on the grounds that assisting the
poor constituted subversive activity. As civil unrest in general
increased in the late 1970s, the church as a whole became
increasingly polarized. The majority of the bishops supported the
traditional role of the church, the traditional authority of the
hierarchy, and the overriding authority of the government. Allied
against this view was a faction of parish priests who favored the
development of the CEBs and advocated expanded aid for the poor.
Once again, the position of the archbishop became crucial. In
1977 Archbishop Chavez resigned and was replaced by Monsignor
Oscar Arnulfo Romero y Galdamez. Like his predecessor, Archbishop
Romero spoke out publicly in favor of social justice for the
general populace. He increasingly assumed the role of the leading
advocate on behalf of the poor; his primary vehicles for
expressing these views were his weekly Sunday morning homilies,
broadcast throughout the nation and eagerly listened to on
portable radios or the ubiquitous village loudspeakers in the
plazas. As political tensions rose, the influential position and
strong impact of the outspoken archbishop became intolerable to
the Salvadoran right, and Romero was assassinated one Monday in
March 1980 while saying mass.
Violence against grass-roots church activities continued
during the early 1980s, with telling effect. The number of active
priests declined, so that 40 percent of rural parishes lacked
priests, and many CEBs were dismantled or forced underground. Of
the 15,000 lay leaders active in CEBs, some joined the
guerrillas, while others withdrew from church activities
altogether. Monsignor Arturo Rivera y Damas, appointed archbishop
after Romero's murder, found it appropriate to take a more
distant or ambivalent position with respect to the question of
the proper role of the church in Salvadoran national life, a
position that also accorded more closely with the conservative
attitude of the Vatican under Pope John Paul II. Meanwhile,
although the church proper now lowered its public profile, a
small, quasi-independent "people's church" emerged from the
remnants of the CEB movement. Some priests, mainly Jesuits,
continued to work in guerrilla-controlled areas, where the social
and political importance of organized communities among the poor
continued to be emphasized.
Protestant missionaries were quite active in El Salvador, the
majority representing the evangelical branch of North American
Protestantism. Evangelical activity was a multinational,
multimillion-dollar enterprise developed and packaged in the
United States, translated into Spanish, and exported not only to
El Salvador but also to the other countries of Central America.
Missionaries working for scores of organizations used crusades,
door-to-door proselytizing, radio programs, food aid, and health
care to advance their fundamentalist message of personal
salvation through belief in Jesus, a salvation not to be gained
in this world but in the afterlife. To these theologically
conservative evangelicals, Roman Catholics were not Christians;
only the "born-again" were God's chosen people, and efforts to
achieve social gains by working for change in this life were
inappropriate. Although "mainline" Protestant denominations
encouraged expressions of concern over social problems, the brand
of evangelical Protestantism that swept Central America in the
1970s and 1980s sought to remove its adherents from social
action, to place the onus on God rather than on humans to act,
and to inculcate passive, apathetic, and submissive resignation
while waiting for the second coming of Christ. Put more bluntly,
the thought of future salvation would cushion the impact of
current suffering.
Protestantism was by no means new to Central America or to El
Salvador. In the late nineteenth century, the majority of British
and German immigrants, including coffee traders and financiers,
were Protestants. In 1896 the aggressive Central American Mission
(CAM), headquartered in North America and financed by North
Americans, was established in El Salvador and Guatemala. The
primary message of the CAM was that the sad state of the world
was a necessary and predestined situation heralding the imminence
of the second coming. In later years, the Seventh-Day Adventists,
the Assemblies of God, and others joined the growing missionary
movement in Central America.
Protestantism continued to grow steadily in El Salvador,
particularly during the economic depression and political
repression of the 1930s. The annual growth rate of the Protestant
community in the country stood at 9 percent between 1930 and 1945
but dropped to 7 percent between 1945 and 1960. A dramatic
resurgence appeared in the 1970s with an average annual rate of
Protestant conversion of 11 percent. Some observers have
attributed this impressive growth to a rejection of politicized
social activism as exemplified by liberation theology. Others
have interpreted the high rate of Protestant conversion as a
withdrawal from the violence and instability of Salvadoran life
in the late 1970s and 1980s.
Furthermore, the popularity of evangelical Protestantism
seems to have correlated with the intensity and nature of
population displacement. As the number of land-poor laborers grew
and migrant labor increased, and as the bonds of community,
extended family, and tradition were broken for many, traditional
Catholicism was unable to fill the personal sense of emotional
loss and lack of direction. This was particularly true because
the number of priests and clerics was small. Protestantism,
however, offered a personalistic message of Jesus' acceptance of
the individual, emphasized each individual's direct relationship
to God unmediated by a hierarchical clergy, and held out hope
that sustained even desperately poor people with a sense of self-
worth in the face of violence, displacement, and misery.
The elite found an ideological ally in this brand of
Protestantism, not only for its apolitical approach but also for
its laissez-faire, entrepreneurial, work-oriented values and its
willingness to minimize the responsibility of the existing system
for the nation's ills. Elites thus gladly supported evangelizing
efforts on their landed estates, and significant numbers of
upper-class Salvadorans converted to Protestantism.
* * *
The political events of the late 1970s and 1980s have given
rise to a considerable number of readily available books,
articles, and newspaper accounts detailing the conditions of life
in El Salvador. An excellent introduction to both historical and
current economic, political, and especially social conditions in
El Salvador can be found in Philip L. Russell's El Salvador in
Crisis and in Alastair White's El Salvador. El
Salvador: The Face of Revolution by Robert Armstrong and
Janet Shenk also provides an impassioned and readable account of
the social and economic conditions underlying the civil war.
Margin of Life by Cornell Capa and J. Mayone Stycos
presents evocative photography and text illustrating the often
harsh reality of everyday life for the impoverished majority
living in both urban and rural settings in El Salvador and
Honduras.
On more specific issues, Phillip Berryman's The Religious
Roots of Rebellion discusses the background to liberation
theology in Latin America and the specific role of the Roman
Catholic Church in El Salvador. Articles in NACLA Report on
the Americas by the North American Congress on Latin America
present an overview of the activities and theology of Protestant
missions in Central America. Also recommended for general reading
is Part I of Enrique A. Baloyra's El Salvador in
Transition, which contains a helpful overview of the nature
of the military government and the oligarchical elite within a
socioeconomic context. A. Douglas Kincaid's, "Peasants into
Rebels: Community and Class in Rural El Salvador" analyzes the
significance of community solidarity as a factor in the history
of social unrest in El Salvador. "Agrarian Reform in El Salvador"
by David Browning provides an excellent overview of the social,
political, and economic contexts of agrarian reform, and Robert
G. Williams's Export Agriculture and the Crisis in Central
America is highly recommended as a very readable account of
the economic and social conditions underlying political
instability in Central America in general. (For further
information and complete citations,
see
Bibliography.)
Data as of November 1988
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