The 1979 rebellion in Nicaragua was the first in modern Latin
America to be carried out with the active participation and support
of Christians. Like all revolutions, the Nicaraguan Revolution has
provoked controversy and hostility, and the Christian presence has
been a focal point in the debate. In this work Michael Dodson and
Laura Nuzzi O'Shaughnessy offer a detailed study of the religious
sources of the revolution set against the backgound of the
revolutionary traditions of the United States.
Nicaragua's Other Revolution places the experience of the
Nicaraguan Revolution in a historical framework that extends back
to the Protestant Reformation and in an institutional framework
that encompasses the whole of Nicaraguan politics. Examining the
broad process of religious change, this work explores how that
process interacted with the political struggles that culminated in
the revolution. Dodson and O'Shaughnessy conclude that the
religious values and attitudes arising out of postconciliar renewal
in the church contributed powerfully to demands for revolutionary
change in Nicaragua.
In England and America the Protestant Reformation gave a tremendous
boost to demands for democratic changes in society and politics.
This work shows that something similar happened in Catholic Central
America in the post-Medellin period. Changes in religious thought
and action were part of, and served to reinforce and stimulate, a
wider movement for social and political change. Without denying the
importance of Marxism, the authors demonstrate that other important
influences are at work there.
Originally published in 1990.
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