The spiritual evolution of Margarito Bautista: Mexican Mormon evangelizer, polygamist dissident, and utopian founder, 1878-1961

A Brief History of Indigenous Religious Authority in Mexico: 1519-1900 -- The Mormons in Mexico, 1875-1901 -- Bautista Embraces Mormonism, 1901-1910 -- North of the U.S./Mexico Border: From Refugee and Pilgrim to Mexican Cultural -- Nationalist, 1910-1922 -- Conflict with Euro-American Mormon Le...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pulido, Elisa (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Published: New York Oxford University Press 2020
In:Year: 2020
Further subjects:B Church and state (Mexico)
B Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Biography
B Bautista, Margarito (1878-1961)
B Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Political activity (Mexico)
Online Access: Inhaltsverzeichnis (Aggregator)
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Summary:A Brief History of Indigenous Religious Authority in Mexico: 1519-1900 -- The Mormons in Mexico, 1875-1901 -- Bautista Embraces Mormonism, 1901-1910 -- North of the U.S./Mexico Border: From Refugee and Pilgrim to Mexican Cultural -- Nationalist, 1910-1922 -- Conflict with Euro-American Mormon Leadership, 1922-1935 -- Bautista's Magnum Opus: La evolucien de Mexico, 1930-1935 -- Bautista's Repatriation to Mexico, 1935 -- The Third Convention, 1936 -- Creating Utopia: Colonia Industrial/Nueva Jerusalem: 1942-1961.
"In 1903, at the age of twenty-four, Margarito Bautista (1878-1961) left his childhood home on Mexico's Central Plateau and relocated to the Mormon Colonies in the northern Mexican wilderness. Enthused by his recent conversion to Mormonism, Bautista wanted to live in proximity to and learn from the Euro-Americans who had evangelized him. Nearly forty years later, as a Mormon excommunicate and religious entrepreneur, he returned permanently to the Central Plateau to establish his own indigenously-led polygamous utopia in the town of Ozumba. In this volume I have tried to answer two central questions concerning Bautista's journey: After dedicating so many years of his life to the evangelization of Mexicans on both sides of the U.S. border, what led to his separation from the Mormon Church? How did he become the founder of an indigenous movement which observed Mormonism's most difficult practices? My study of Bautista's spiritual trajectory has been an exercise in deep "listening" to the writings he left: a 564-page tome that employs an indigenous hermeneutic in its melding of Mormon theology and the history of Mexico, nearly sixteen years of diaries, numerous letters, and multiple pamphlets. Bautista is often represented as the sole creator of his Mexican-inspired improvisations on Mormon doctrine. The Mormon Church however played a major role in his spiritual education. Bautista took his life-long views on indigenous exceptionalism directly from Mormon scripture. In the two decades following his conversion Bautista thrived under the Mormon umbrella, moving through the ranks of Mormon priesthood, mastering Mormon doctrine and scripture in English, and becoming acquainted with esoteric temple rituals. But in 1924 his meteoric rise stalled. In this volume I will demonstrate that Bautista's insistence on independent Mexican ecclesiastical authority and his fundamentalist clinging to historical practices and doctrines, at a time when the mainstream Church was abandoning them, estranged him from both Euro-American and Mexican Mormons. Nevertheless, These same views propelled him on to his ultimate calling and mission, that of an independent religious entrepreneur and utopian founder. I will show that the roots of Bautista's uncompromising doctrine and religious activism are multiple and complex. They are found in the Mexican anarchism extant in the farmlands of central Mexico where he was raised, in the flourishing cultural nationalism of Mexico, in the transnati ...
Item Description:Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN:019094210X