latinos & religion “catholics were 81% of latin america’s population in 1996, while...

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Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%, while Catholics dropped to 70%.” Source: Time Magazine , April 15, 2013

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Page 1: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

“Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%, while Catholics dropped to 70%.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 2: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

“…more than two-thirds of the 52 million-plus Latinos in the US are catholic; by 2030, that percentage could be closer to half.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 3: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“Only 15% of all new priests ordained [Catholic] in the US are Latinos.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 4: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“The Latino protestant boom

is transforming American religious practices and politics, Christianity Today, the country’s leading evangelical magazine, is preparing to publish in Spanish this year.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 5: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

Religion | Generation----------------|---------------|--------------|---------------

| 1st | 2nd | 3rd

----------------|---------------|--------------|---------------Catholic | 69% 59% 40%

|Evalgelical | 13% 10% 21%

|Unaffiliated | 9% 18% 24%

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 6: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“The evangelico boom is inextricably linked to the immigrant experience. Evangelicos are socially more conservative….”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 7: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

“Seeking a break with the past, a quicker assimilation into the middle class and a closer relationship with God, Latinos are pouring into Protestant churches across the US.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 8: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“They see the move to

Protestantism, particularly evangelism, as a form or upward mobility, and very often I think they associate Catholicism with what they left behind in Latin America.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 9: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & ReligionPercent attending services at

least once a week:Catholic = 47%

Evangelicals = 70%

General US Pop. = 36%Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 10: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

“More than 35% of Hispanics in America call themselves born-again, according to the Pew Forum, and 9 out-of-ten evangelicos say a spiritual search drove their conversion.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 11: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

“Wilfredo De Jesus leads the 17,000 strong New life Covenant Church in Chicago, the largest Assemblies of God church in the US.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 12: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,
Page 13: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,
Page 14: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,
Page 15: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & ReligionPercent saying religion is very

important in their lives:Catholic = 66%

Evangelicals = 92%

General US Pop. = 58%Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 16: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“Evalgelico churches are often de

facto healing centers for a population with limited health care benefits. They act as food banks for people with empty refrigerators. They house people avoiding street violence. There’s a lot more going on there than just saving souls.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 17: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“Latino evangelicals have

forced white evangelicals to own their own deepest convictions,…to embrace the neighbor, to embrace the other without regard to social, economic, or ethnic distintions.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 18: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“Charismatic cannotes a belief in miracles, healing, divine intervention, speaking in tongues and an active spirit world.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 19: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & ReligionPercent saying they oppose

abortion in all or most cases:Catholic = 52%

Evangelicals = 70%

General US Pop. = 41%Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 20: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & ReligionMember churches in the

National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference =

40,800Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 21: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

“…the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest evangelical denomination in the US,…setting a goal of 7,000 Baptist Hispanic churches by 2020.” Today they count for 3,000…”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 22: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion

“The Catholic Church now has 4,800 parishes with Latino programs of various kinds across the US,…up to half of Latino Catholics in America are expressing their faith much as the evangelicals community does.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 23: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Latinos & Religion“One attempt to keep those [Latinos] members in the fold has been the Catholic Charismatic Renewal movement, which has gathered steam over the past few decades.”

Source: Time Magazine, April 15, 2013

Page 24: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“...the Catholic church has

had to make some concessions. It has become more linguistically and culturally sensitive, and it allows its members to preserve their ethnic differences if they so choose.”

Page 25: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“As a result, the Catholic church today fosters segmented assimilation rather than the complete assimilation it encouraged in the past.”

Page 26: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God

“It [Catholic church] fosters “Americanization” through ethnicization.”

Page 27: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God

“Segmented assimilation in religious arenas can result in two possible outcomes….

Page 28: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“--Maintaining strong ethnic ties

may generate social and cultural capital that fosters social and economic advancement

--or, religious participation may further institutionalize incipient segregation and inequality.”

Page 29: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“The Second Vatican Council

of the 1960s created more space for ethnic diversity. ...Church policy became less focused on “Americanizing” new congregants and more focused on preserving Latino identity.”

Page 30: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“…Latino religious

resurgence. Latino Catholic leaders redefined their role as restoring and developing a distinct Latino religion that could not be absorbed into the Euro American religious experience.”

Page 31: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“Today, Latinos are the largest ethnic group in the Catholic church. In Florida, Texas & New Mexico, Latinos make up over 67% of the Catholic pop.”

Page 32: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God

“--25% of all Anglos claimed to have no religious preference

--13% of Latinos make the same claim. ”

Page 33: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God--% who are Catholics in the US:

--75% of Cubans--74% of Mexican--65% of Puerto Ricans--21% of Anglos

Page 34: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God-% who are Protestants in the US:

--54% of Anglos

--22% of Puerto Ricans

--15% of Mexican

--14% of Cubans

Page 35: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“The Bishops Committee for

the Spanish Speaking was elevated to a Secretariat of Hispanic Affairs and now oversees pastoral and social services to Latinos throughout the country.”

Page 36: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“They [Latinos] also rarely enjoy the same level or representation in parish governance as non-Hispanics.”

Page 37: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“What does it mean when civic

engagement is channeled through religious rather than political channels? If Latinos generally participate less in politics, but more at church, what are the consequences for their political and civic incorporation?”

Page 38: Latinos & Religion “Catholics were 81% of Latin America’s population in 1996, while Protestants made up only 4%. By 2010, protestants had jumped to 13%,

Two Nations Under God“This chapter suggests that America’s civil religious fabric is being rewoven in the process of incorporating new Latino immigrants.”