BY Michael Paulson, The New York Times
(Note:
“While Indian Catholics are supporting the
Fundamentalists -- and in the bargain losing their credibility and, most
importantly, their civility and decency -- this is what is happening. And anecdotally,
this is happening in India also. Just as the Portuguese tried to annihilate
authentic Indian Christianity for political and racist reasons, the
fundamentalists are trying to do the same in India -- and elsewhere,” writes an independent observer. In the light of
happenings in Latin America, we
understand better the all-inclusive or left leaning approach, as come call it, of Pope Francis to come to grips with harsh
realities of Catholic Family life everywhere.
James Kottoor)
These are heady days for Roman
Catholics in Latin America. For the first time, one of their own is serving as pope, providing a visible reminder of
the importance the region plays in the global church.
But after a century in which nearly
all Latin Americans identified as Catholic, the church’s claim on the region is
lessening.
A sweeping new survey, conducted by the Pew Research Center, finds that 69
percent of Latin American adults say they are Catholic, down from an estimated
90 percent for much of the 20th century. The decline appears to have
accelerated recently: Eight-four percent of those surveyed said they were
raised Catholic, meaning there has been a 15-percentage-point drop-off in one
generation.
The findings are not a total surprise — it has been evident
for some time that
evangelical, and particularly Pentecostal, churches are growing in Latin
America, generally at the expense of Catholicism. But the Pew study, which was
conducted by in-person interviews with 30,000 adults in 18 countries and Puerto
Rico, provides significant evidence for the trend, and shows that it is both
broad and rapid.
Latin America “in most people’s
minds is synonymous with Catholicism, but the strong association has eroded,”
said Neha Sahgal, a senior researcher at Pew. “And it’s a consistent trend
across the region — it’s not just a Central American phenomenon.”
Latin America remains home to an
estimated 40 percent of the planet’s Catholic population. But the survey finds
that 19 percent of Latin Americans now describe themselves as Protestants. And
Protestant churches in Latin America are filled with former Catholics — in
Colombia, 84 percent of Protestants say they were baptized as Catholics.
Latin Americans who converted from
Catholicism to Protestantism most often said they did so because they were
seeking a more personal connection with God.
The change has political and
religious implications. According to the survey, Protestants in Latin America
are more religious and more conservative than Catholics: The Protestants pray
more, go to services more often and are more likely to tithe. They are also
more strongly opposed to same-sex marriage.
The religiosity gap is especially
pronounced in Venezuela, where the leader Hugo Chávez, who died last year, was
long at odds with the Catholic bishops, and where the Catholic Church has been
upset with a version of the Lord’s Prayer modified
to praise him. In Venezuela, just 10 percent of
Catholics say they pray daily, attend services weekly and consider religion
very important, compared with 49 percent of Protestants.
The survey finds varying attitudes
across the region toward Catholic church teachings. In most countries, a
majority of Catholics say the church should allow contraceptive use and
divorce. A majority of Catholics in Brazil, Chile, Puerto Rico and Uruguay
support ordaining women as priests and allowing priests to marry, but there is
strong support for maintaining the all-male, celibate priesthood in other
areas, particularly in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.
The decline in Latin American
Catholics has parallels in the United States, where significant numbers of both Hispanic and
non-Hispanic residents were raised Catholic but have left the church. But in
the United States, 18 percent of American Hispanics say they are religiously
unaffiliated, compared with 8 percent of Latin Americans.
Among the other findings: The most
Catholic country among those measured in the region is Paraguay, where 89
percent of adults are Catholic, and the least is Uruguay, where 42 percent are
Catholic. Pew describes Uruguay as “far and away Latin America’s most secular
country,” with 37 percent of the population religiously unaffiliated, after
more than a century of secularization fueled by state policy.
Some
indigenous ideas, such as belief in the “evil eye,” are widespread (held by at
least one-third in each country). Throughout the region, practices like
communicating with spirits, consulting with traditional healers and
participating in spiritual cleansing ceremonies are more common among Catholics
than Protestants. In Panama, indigenous beliefs and practices are particularly
common.
The interviews were
conducted from October 2013 to February 2014, and covered every Spanish or
Portuguese-speaking country in Latin America and the Caribbean, with the
exception of Cuba, where, Pew said, “fieldwork constraints and sensitivities
related to polling about religion” precluded research. In each country, the
margin of sampling error is three or four percentage points.
The main findings are
unlikely to startle Pope Francis, who built strong relationships with
evangelicals in his native Argentina. But the study is a reminder that, even as
Europe and North America become more secular, the Catholic Church also faces
significant challenges in some of the regions of the developing world it has
long considered to be its future.
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