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Glossary›Liberation Theology

Glossary

Liberation Theology

A Christian theological movement originating in 1960s Latin America that emphasizes liberating the oppressed through social action, grounded in the belief that God acts in history on behalf of the poor.

What is Liberation Theology?

Liberation theology is a Christian theological approach that interprets the teachings of Jesus Christ from the perspective of the poor and oppressed, emphasizing direct engagement with social justice and structural inequality. Rather than treating theology as abstract doctrine, liberation theology insists that authentic faith requires concrete action—or “praxis”—to dismantle oppressive systems and liberate marginalized communities from poverty, violence, and injustice. The movement’s central claim is that God reveals Himself through the struggles of the poor and that Christian discipleship demands a “preferential option for the poor.”

Origins & Lineage

Liberation theology emerged in Latin America during the 1960s, shaped by the convergence of extreme poverty, political repression, and the reforms of the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). At the 1968 Conference of Latin American Bishops in Medellín, Colombia, church leaders declared poverty a form of “institutionalized violence” and called for Christians to “opt for the poor.” Peruvian priest Gustavo Gutiérrez coined the term “liberation theology” in a 1968 lecture titled “Hacia una teología de la liberación” (Towards a Theology of Liberation). His 1971 book A Theology of Liberation: History, Politics, and Salvation became the movement’s foundational text.

Key figures include Gutiérrez (1928–2024), Brazilian theologian Leonardo Boff, Jesuit scholars Jon Sobrino of El Salvador and Juan Luis Segundo of Uruguay, and Archbishop Óscar Romero of El Salvador, who was assassinated in 1980 while celebrating Mass. The movement was influenced by Vatican II’s call for the Church to engage with the poor, as well as Marxist social analysis—a point that generated significant controversy.

Liberation theology inspired parallel movements worldwide: James Hal Cone published A Black Theology of Liberation in 1970, applying liberationist principles to the African American experience of racial oppression. Feminist theology, womanist theology, Dalit theology in India, and other contextual theologies followed.

How It’s Practiced

Liberation theology is enacted primarily through Base Ecclesial Communities (Spanish: comunidades eclesiales de base, or CEBs)—small, grassroots gatherings of Christians who meet outside traditional church structures for Bible study, worship, mutual aid, and political consciousness-raising. These communities use a methodology known as “see, judge, act”: participants examine their social reality, interpret it through Scripture, and commit to collective action for systemic change.

In practice, this means organizing for land reform, labor rights, and democratic governance; accompanying campesinos and urban poor in direct advocacy; and reinterpreting Biblical narratives—especially Exodus and the prophets—as calls for concrete liberation. Clergy and laypeople alike participate in social movements, with some theologians serving in revolutionary governments (such as Ernesto Cardenal in Nicaragua’s Sandinista government). Liberation theology prioritizes orthopraxis (right action) over orthodoxy (right belief), viewing theology as critical reflection on lived commitment rather than abstract speculation.

Liberation Theology Today

While liberation theology’s prominence waned in the 1980s and 1990s under Vatican pressure and the appointment of conservative bishops, it continues to shape theological and social movements globally. Pope Francis—the first Latin American pope—has revived aspects of liberationist discourse, emphasizing economic justice and care for the marginalized in encyclicals like Laudato Si’ (2015). The movement’s critique of neoliberal capitalism and emphasis on solidarity among oppressed groups remain relevant in discussions of globalization, migration, and climate justice.

Contemporary seekers encounter liberation theology through academic programs in theology and religious studies, justice-oriented Christian communities, and activist organizations. Base Ecclesial Communities continue to operate in Latin America, though with less institutional support. Liberation theology’s methodology has been adapted by ecological theology, postcolonial theology, and queer theology. Recent scholarship explores its ongoing praxis in feminist collectives like Chile’s Con-spirando and in movements resisting state violence and environmental destruction.

Common Misconceptions

Liberation theology is not synonymous with Marxism, though it employs Marxist social analysis to understand class struggle and structural oppression. Most liberation theologians reject dialectical materialism and atheistic dimensions of Marxism, insisting their work is rooted in Christian theology and Biblical interpretation.

It is not primarily about armed revolution, though some theologians justified violence as self-defense against state terror. Figures like Óscar Romero were committed pacifists; others, like Colombian priest Camilo Torres, joined guerrilla movements. The movement’s relationship to violence was complex and contested.

Liberation theology is not anti-Church or purely political. While it critiques hierarchical structures and calls for a “Church of the poor,” it operates within Christian tradition and sacramental practice. The 1984 Vatican criticism led by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) focused on perceived Marxist influence and political reduction of the Gospel, but the 1986 Vatican instruction affirmed liberation as a valid theological concern when properly grounded in Church teaching.

Finally, liberation theology is not limited to Latin America. It names a broader family of contextual theologies addressing different forms of oppression—racism, sexism, colonialism, caste—across the Global South and beyond.

How to Begin

Read Gustavo Gutiérrez’s A Theology of Liberation (1971; 50th anniversary edition, Orbis Books, 2021) for the movement’s foundational vision. For Black liberation theology, begin with James H. Cone’s A Black Theology of Liberation (1970). Jon Sobrino’s Jesus in Latin America offers a Christology from the liberationist perspective. For accessible introductions, see Leonardo and Clodovis Boff’s Introducing Liberation Theology or Phillip Berryman’s Liberation Theology.

Engage with communities practicing liberationist principles: justice-focused parishes, Catholic Worker houses, or solidarity networks supporting Indigenous and immigrant rights. Explore resources from Orbis Books, the primary English-language publisher of liberation theology. For contemporary applications, investigate intersections with ecological theology, racial justice movements, and economic democracy initiatives. The methodology of “see, judge, act” can be practiced in small study groups examining local injustice through Scripture.

Related terms

praxissocial justiceprophetic traditioncontemplative activismsolidaritystructural sin
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