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Liberation theology is a theological approach emphasizing the "liberation of the oppressed". It engages in socio-economic analyses, with social concern for the poor and "political liberation for oppressed peoples" [1] and addresses other forms of perceived inequality.
25 paź 2024 · Liberation theology is a religious movement that arose in late 20th-century Roman Catholicism and was centered in Latin America. It seeks to apply religious faith by aiding the poor and oppressed through involvement in political and civic affairs.
The liberation theologians are acutely aware that any theology is conditioned by its social context, and they warn us against trying simply to transpose Latin American liberation theology to a North American or other localized context.
3 kwi 2023 · Liberation theology interprets this general principle and expands this universalist morality, stressing the special attention that the most vulnerable in our societies deserve, including non-human animals and the planet itself.
27 wrz 2007 · Liberation theology is an understanding of the faith from a commitment to the poor and the marginalized, an understanding of the faith from a point of departure in real, effective solidarity with the exploited and the vulnerable.
for liberation theology is the lived social experience of its practi tioners and of the poor and this is an experience of oppression, injustice and a gross lack of liberation.
18 lip 2000 · Liberation theology has two basic principles: first, it recognizes a need for liberation from any kind of oppression - political, economic, social, sexual, racial, religious; second, it asserts that the theology must grow out of the basic Christian communities and should not be imposed