THE JESUIT MANUEL FOYACA DE LA CONCHA AND THE SOCIAL APOSTOLATE IN LATIN AMERICA: A TRANSITION OF SOCIAL CATHOLICISM TO CHRISTIANITY OF LIBERATION
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Abstract
This article intends to analyze the action of the spanish-cuban Jesuit Manuel Foyaca de la Concha in the Latin American social apostolate throughout the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, a period in which he was one of the most important catholic intellectuals in Latin America, occupying prominent positions in Catholic Action, editing magazines, founding social centers and undertaking a wide dissemination of the Social Doctrine of the Church. The hypothesis defended is that the social apostolate promoted by him in this epoch configured a transition between Social Catholicism of the first half of the twentieth century and Liberation Christianity systematized from the 1970s.
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