Indigenous apostles : Maya catholic catechists working the word in highland Chiapas
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Indigenous apostles : Maya catholic catechists working the word in highland Chiapas
(Studies in world Christianity and interreligious relations, no. 46)
Rodopi, 2010
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 191-202) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Indigenous Apostles tells the story of conversion to Catholicism and birth of new ecclesial community with the arrival of Vatican II mission in Santa Maria Magdalenas, a Tzotzil-speaking village in Mexico's Maya highlands. In the state of Chiapas, the nation's erratic advance into the global market beginning in the 1970s drove landless young Magdaleneros to search for alternatives to peasant peonage. A few became catechists in the Diocese of San Cristobal de Las Casas. Cognitive entailments of newly-acquired biblical literacy warranted the subsequent critique of local Tzotzil tradition - costumbre - through which they reclaimed their ancestral land. This ethnographic account of their dialectical passage from the way of the ancestors to communion with the world Catholic Church demonstrates local constraints on liberation mission strategy and the power of indigenous agency in their own evangelization. It also points to the salience of place and everyday productive practice for native construction of local theology in the context of the new globalization.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Orthographic Note
Introduction
Contexts and Conversion. Origins of an Ecclesial Cargo
Constructing Highland Mission. Proposals and Problematics
Position and Place. Church, State, and Mission on the Ground
Proclaiming Religion, Reclaiming Land. History, Cognition and Religious Change
Working the Word. Constructing a Tzotzil Maya Theology
Decolonizing the Saints. From Myth to History
Epilogue. Doing What the Apostles Did
Bibliography
Index of Names
by "Nielsen BookData"