Will Latin America Follow the Decline of European Catholicism?

The death of Pope Francis—the first Latin American pontiff—marks the end of an era, but the fractures in Latin America’s religious landscape long predate him. Once the stronghold of global Catholicism, the region is no longer solely shaped by Rome. Instead, a vibrant, yet fragmented mix of evangelicals, folk saints, and political spirituality is redefining faith across social and cultural lines.

This shift is not only a theological realignment but also a social reckoning. Faith now thrives outside traditional institutions—in evangelical megachurches, street altars, and popular shrines. Driven by class divides, political tensions, and the lasting influence of symbols and saints beyond the Vatican’s authority, this evolution is reshaping the religious landscape.

The New Kids on the Block

Protestantism, particularly evangelical and Pentecostal movements, is spearheading Latin America's religious shift. According to a 2023 Statista survey on religious affiliation shares in Latin America, 23,4 % of Latin Americans identify as Evangelical, reaching as high as over half the population in countries like Guatemala and Panamá, and over a quarter in the formerly Catholic stronghold of Brazil. Pentecostal megachurches in São Paulo and small, fervent congregations in Central America attract millions with their promises of personal prosperity, spiritual healing, and being part of a tight-knit community.

These churches fill the void left by an aloof Catholic hierarchy. Their appeal lies in their easy access, while they offer everything, from food aid to marriage counseling. Sermons emphasise self-empowerment and moral clarity, which resonates deeply with middle and working class communities seeking both spiritual and material security.

Meanwhile, ‘folk’ Catholicism has broken through institutional boundaries, often thriving among those in the fringes of society. Devotees flock to shrines honoring Santa Muerte in Mexico—a favorite of members of criminal cartels and maras—, or San Ernesto de la Higuera—Che Guevara as a folk saint—in Bolivia; symbols of a mystical, yet political faith that defies ecclesiastical authority. Together, Protestantism and folk Catholicism carve out spiritual spaces outside the Church’s purview, denuding it of its once-universal authority.

The Reformer Who Couldn’t Reunite

Pope Francis, whose worldview had been profoundly shaped by the Marxist liberation theology which first sprung from his region, sought to bring the Church closer to the poor and marginalised. While his papacy garnered admiration for its humility, Francis however left a Church more divided than unified.

His policies meant confronting conservative movements within the Catholic Church that had an important presence in Latin America; in that pursuit he dissolved Peru’s Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, investigated Brazil’s Heralds of the Gospel, known for their authoritarian structures and militaristic rituals, and cracked down on wealthier groups like Opus Dei. Rather than examples of spiritual renewal, these actions far more resembled power struggles,which did much in alienating conservative elites. Meanwhile, his populist rhetoric failed to bring the disillusioned faithful back to Catholicism.

Francis’ reforms, which targeted high-level corruption and doctrinal rigidity, rarely reached the diocesan level. Bishops clung to their long-held power, more resembling bureaucrats than shepherds.The failure of local leadership to address these shifts compounded, and still do, the Church’s decline. Bishops, mired in Vatican politics while neglecting pastoral care, have become symbols of institutional drift. Scandals—like the Archbishop of Lima calling the police on activists praying outside his residence in protest over his silence on pro-abortion events promoted by the Catholic University—only further the laity’s perception of its clergy’s aloofness and moral inconsistency.

The Church’s Fading Influence

Latin America’s religious realignment mirrors its class divides; despite his populist bent, Francis’ reforms only deepened these divisions.

The wealthy and highly educated aligned more with the institutional and conservative enclaves which  Pope Francis sought to suppress. Looking to preserve a more traditional Catholicism, these viewed his papacy as a rebuke of their values and subsequently withdrew their support.

The rest meanwhile felt alienated from the Church’s hierarchy and have found solace in Pentecostal revivalism or folk devotion—both immediate, intimate, and free from formality, but most importantly, addressing their struggles directly.

This leaves the Church estranged from both its wealthy patrons and its traditional flock. As a result, Catholicism becomes less a unifying force and more a contested space in a fractured spiritual landscape.

A Unique Decline

Though comparisons with Europe’s secularisation are tempting, Latin America’s trajectory is distinct. Europe’s churches have become museums, symbols of its cultural heritage rather than centers of faith. In Latin America, belief has not eroded—rather, it has escaped institutional bounds, surging through Pentecostal communities and folk devotions.

This is then not a drift towards secularism but a crisis of authority. Folk Catholicism, with its blending of indigenous tradition and Christian mysticism, remains vibrant, yet free from the Vatican’s aegis. Evangelicals, meanwhile, translate the strong faith they built through their services into political activism, reshaping national debate and policy.

Latin America’s divergence from Europe reveals that its decline is not about belief but about belonging. The faithful have abandoned the institution, but they have not abandoned faith itself.

A Faith Reborn Outside the Cathedral

Latin America’s religious transformation is then not a decline—it is a redistribution of belief beyond the walls of the Catholic Church. Catholicism may have lost its monopoly, but it has not lost its relevance. Its symbols, saints, and rituals are still central to popular devotion—albeit in hybrid forms that defy Vatican orthodoxy. Folk Catholicism, blending indigenous and Christian traditions, and the explosive growth of evangelical Protestantism both illustrate a continuing hunger for spiritual connection.

Pope Francis’s death closes the chapter of a papacy that sought to bridge these divides but ultimately revealed the limits of institutional power. The Church remains a player in Latin America’s religious narrative—but no longer the only one. 

Faith in Latin America is now diverse, dynamic, and no longer confined to a single institution. Belief hasn’t disappeared; it has simply extended beyond the cathedral, establishing new altars in the hearts of its people.

Statement

In the late Pope’s region of origin, the religious landscape has fractured. Protestant movements, fueled by the prosperity gospel and community outreach, have surged, attracting millions, while Folk Catholicism, blending indigenous traditions with political symbolism, thrives outside Vatican authority. Pope Francis’s reforms, rooted in liberation theology, sparked internal conflicts but failed to halt the region’s spiritual drift. Class divides deepened, but unlike Europe’s secularisation, Latin America’s transformation during the pontificate of the first of one of its own signals not a loss of belief but an increasing variety in how it is expressed.