The Fire of Tongues: Antonio Vieira and the Missionary Church in Brazil and Portugal
The Fire of Tongues: Antonio Vieira and the Missionary Church in Brazil and Portugal
Synopsis
The author focuses on three periods in Vieira's career. The first is his mission to the Amazon (1653-61), which took place during an era marked by conflict between the Jesuit missionaries and their fellow Europeans. The latter resented the Jesuits' responsibility for administering the allocation of Indian workers, and Vieira exacerbated the conflict by bringing under Jesuit control the notorious slaving expeditions the Portuguese were conducting in the backlands.
After being forcibly returned to Portugal by his opponents, Vieira spent five years in the custody of the Inquisition (1663-67). The author argues that the Inquisition's persecution of Vieira was a result of his criticism of the church hierarchy in the Luso-Brazilian world, set forth in his preaching and prophetic writings. For Vieira, the New World was a locus of prophecies that the Portuguese had been providentially chosen to reveal. Every group that participated in the imperial project -- the crown and settlers, the missionaries and Indians, and the Inquisitors -- had a role to play in the schema of revelation that Vieira drew fromScripture and then read into Portuguese history and into the history of the missionary church.
When Vieira returned to Brazil for the last time (1681-97), he brought with him an interpretation of colonial society and of the mis