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    Home » Nobody became Catholic during Pope Francis
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    Nobody became Catholic during Pope Francis

    HotspotorlandoNewsBy HotspotorlandoNews7 de June de 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Renascer Praise performs as Evangelicals take part in the "March for Jesus", considered to be the biggest event of the Evangelical Church, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil May 24, 2025. REUTERS/Lucas Landau/File Photo
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    Renascer Praise performs as Evangelicals take part in the “March for Jesus”, considered to be the biggest event of the Evangelical Church, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil May 24, 2025. REUTERS/Lucas Landau/File Photo

     

    Brazil’s Catholic Decline, Evangelical Rise, and the Pope’s Missed Argentina Visit

    Brazil, once a Catholic stronghold, is witnessing a dramatic religious shift as evangelical Christianity surges and Catholicism wanes. This transformation, driven by social, cultural, and political forces, is reshaping Latin America’s religious landscape. Pope Francis’s failure to visit his native Argentina underscores the Catholic Church’s challenges in regaining ground in a region where it once held unrivaled influence.

     Catholicism’s Fading Grip in Brazil

    In 2022, Brazil’s Catholic population fell to 56.7% (100.2 million), down from 65.1% in 2010 and over 90% in 1970, per the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE). The decline, averaging 1.2% annually, could see evangelicals overtake Catholics by 2032, though some demographers project 2050 due to evangelical growth slowing. Evangelicals now account for 26.9% (47.4 million), up from 21.6% in 2010, while 9.3% (16.4 million) identify as nonreligious, and Afro-Brazilian faiths like Umbanda have doubled to 1%.

    Urbanization, which outpaced rural populations by 1970, weakened Catholic community ties. Evangelical churches, especially Pentecostal and neo-Pentecostal, filled the gap with practical services—daycare, addiction recovery—and a prosperity gospel appealing to the urban poor and middle class. Their 110,000 churches, growing by 17 daily in 2019, dwarf the Catholic Church’s 11,000 parishes. A priest shortage, particularly in the Amazon, leaves some areas without Mass for a year, while evangelical pastors offer dynamic worship and personal engagement.

    Evangelicalism’s intense faith experience—featuring healing services and moral clarity—contrasts with Catholicism’s perceived rigidity. Politically, evangelicals wield significant power, with over 30% of Brazil’s lawmakers identifying as evangelical and 69% backing Jair Bolsonaro in 2022. The Catholic Church, once a political force, struggles to mobilize, with only 45% of Catholics approving of President Lula that year.

    Evangelical Ascendancy and Social Impact

    Megachurches like the Universal Church’s $300 million Templo de Salomão in São Paulo, seating 10,000, symbolize evangelical ambition. Their media empire, including Brazil’s second-largest TV network, amplifies their reach. Pastors like Silas Malafaia, rallying 40,000 against progressive policies, shape a conservative agenda opposing abortion and LGBTQ rights. However, evangelical intolerance, especially toward Afro-Brazilian religions (83% of evangelicals in a survey called Umbanda “demonic”), threatens Brazil’s pluralistic tradition.

    The growth of secularism and Afro-Brazilian faiths points to a more diverse religious future. Analyst Juliano Spyer notes evangelicals’ role in filling state and Catholic voids, offering legal aid and rehab. José Eustáquio Diniz Alves sees pluralism as a democratic strength, though tensions persist.

    Pope Francis and the Argentina Snub

    Elected in 2013 as the first Latin American pope, Francis aimed to revitalize Catholicism in a region housing 40% of the world’s Catholics. His 2013 World Youth Day in Brazil drew 3.5 million, but the “Francis effect” failed to stem Catholic decline. “Nobody became Catholic because of Francis,” said anthropologist Rodrigo Toniol. His unfulfilled promise to visit Argentina, despite invitations from every president since 2013, has deepened regional disillusionment.

    Francis’s absence from Argentina reflects caution about politicization amid the country’s polarized climate. His strained ties with leaders like Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and criticism over his role during the 1976-83 dictatorship—where he covertly aided the persecuted but remained publicly silent—complicated a potential visit. Argentines like Laura Aguirre lament that their “native son” never returned, despite 96% of Catholics initially praising his papacy in 2014. Argentina mirrors Brazil’s trends, with secularism and evangelicalism eroding Catholic dominance, fueled by distrust in the Church’s historical ties to power.

    The Catholic Church’s Struggle

    The Catholic Church has tried to adapt. Francis embraced liberation theology, reversing its marginalization, and the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, with figures like singing priest Marcelo Rossi, mimics evangelical energy. Yet, rigid stances on women’s roles and celibacy, a centralized structure, and the post-Vatican II loss of grassroots appeal hinder progress. Evangelicals’ decentralized, community-focused model better meets modern needs.

    Brazil’s religious shift, with secularism at 15% and growing acceptance of progressive values (e.g., 58% support divorce), challenges Catholic relevance. The Church must innovate or face further decline in a region where evangelicalism and pluralism are redefining faith.

    Hooded Catholic faithful participate in the Torch Procession, known as Fogareu, during the Holy Week in Goias, State of Goias, Brazil April 17, 2025. REUTERS/Adriano Machado

    A New Religious Landscape

    Brazil’s transformation reflects Latin America’s broader drift from Catholic hegemony. Pope Francis’s missed Argentina visit symbolizes the Church’s struggle to reconnect with a changing region. As evangelicals near a potential majority, their political and social influence grows, but so do risks of intolerance. Brazil’s pluralistic future, enriched by secular and Afro-Brazilian voices, demands balance to preserve its diverse heritage. The Catholic Church, once Brazil’s spiritual anchor, must find new ways to inspire—or risk fading into the background.

    Sources IBGE (2022 Census), Pew Research Center (2013), The Washington Post, Reuters, National Catholic Reporter.

     

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