Church and State: Religious Conflict and Reform in Mexican History
MTA
A study of secularization, clerical power, and anticlericalism from colonial missions to the Cristero War
2nd Edition
In *Church and State: Religious Conflict and Reform in Mexican History*, the complex and often violent evolution of Mexican nationhood is explored through the lens of its most enduring struggle: the tug-of-war between spiritual authority and secular power. Spanning from the early colonial missions and the vast landholdings of the New Spain era to the explosive anticlericalism of the Mexican Revolution, this comprehensive study traces how the Catholic Church was transformed from an all-encompassing pillar of colonial governance into a target of radical state reform. By examining the dismantling of clerical property, the secularization of education, and the legal assaults of the 1917 Constitution, the narrative provides essential context for the Cristero Warโa bloody popular uprising that remains one of the most significant religious conflicts in modern history.
Moving beyond top-down political history, this volume utilizes microhistorical case studies from regions like Puebla, Jalisco, and Oaxaca to show how national reforms were reimagined, resisted, or adapted at the local level. It captures the lived reality of "sacred land" disputes, the political agency of parish priests, and the persistent power of popular religiosity and syncretism in the countryside. The book concludes by analyzing the long-term legacies of this conflict, from the "managed coexistence" of the 20th century to the constitutional reforms of 1992. *Church and State* offers a nuanced, essential perspective on how the entanglement of religion and statecraft continues to shape the identity, moral framework, and political landscape of modern Mexico.
This book is intended for academic researchers, historians, and students of Latin American studies who are interested in the complex evolution of secularization and institutional power. It is particularly beneficial for those seeking to understand the deep-seated ideological roots of Mexican national identity and the historical friction between religious authority and state sovereignty. Additionally, readers interested in the sociology of religion and the impact of legal reform on grassroots communities will find the regional case studies and microhistorical analyses highly valuable.
December 27, 2025
67,981 words
4 hours 46 minutes
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