Descripción
This dissertation aims to make a historical description of the Evangelical
Free Church of Brazil. To this end, it seeks the relation of the origin of this
denomination in Europe with the arising of independent religious movements
from the Protestant Reformation of the fourteenth century. After locating the
group in the Free Churches worldwide movement, this research seeks to
describe the emergence of its historical embryo since German and Swiss
immigrants coming to São Paulo, from Free Evangelical Churches in
Europe, and how they try to transplant their original religious identity to their
new homeland. In the meantime, the first German missionaries come to
Brazil, not to support the implementation of Churches for immigrants, but
with the firm intention of starting new Churches for Brazilians, among
Brazilians. For this, they choose the interior of Paraná, where they started
orphanages, day care centers and, later, other organs to strengthen the
achievement of this missionary initiative. But this distinct choice of the group
of immigrants from Sao Paulo will bring tension between the two groups.
Finally, this research describes the Free Evangelical Church in recent years,
after taking over the responsibility for this religious enterprise and seek to
understand how a structure with departments and institutions is created to
give plausibility to the process of institutionalization that was in progress. In
order to understand the whole historical plot from a non-theological
perspective of the events and their sequence, the theory of Peter L. Berger
and Thomas Luckmann was used in “The Social Construction of Reality”.