RT Article T1 From Religious Diversity to Political Competition: The Differentiation Process of Pentecostalism in Brazil JF Religions VO 9 IS 1 SP 1 OP 11 A1 Moreira, Alberto da Silva 1955- LA English PB MDPI YR 2018 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1586321463 AB The growing religious diversity in Brazil has more to do with a differentiation process within Pentecostalism itself than with the presence of very diverse religious groups. Starting with the analysis of such differentiation process, the article aims to discuss the need of terminological improvement and eventually the necessity of Keynesian rules adopted by the State to regulate ultraliberal religious markets. In unequal societies and religious markets such as those in Brazil, Pentecostal leaders' greedy attitudes regarding their own adherents and aggressive intolerance against other religions' followers are coherent with a functionalist religious market conception. In this view, highly aggressive strategies of some Pentecostal churches vis-à-vis other adversaries are seen as belonging to the normal functioning of a (neo-liberal) self-regulated social subsystem. Therefore, reflections on religious diversity inspired on a market model assume neoliberal macro conditions (total deregulation and free competition) as granted or desirable. Religious diversity would appear as the “natural” consequence of religious competition. However, put in Beckford's terms, how can religious pluralism be achieved under terrible conditions of religious diversity? Intolerant attitudes of neo-Pentecostal leaders undermine the very bases of democracy and put the discussion on religious diversity and pluralism under new theoretical and political exigencies. K1 Brazil K1 Pentecostalism K1 Intolerance K1 Neoliberalism K1 Religious Diversity DO 10.3390/rel9010014