Article 75 of the Constitution of Costa Rica


The article 75 of the Constitution of Costa Rica establishes Catholicism as the country's state religion making Costa Rica the only state in the Americas to do so. Current debate about the issue and the passing toward a full secular state are in the public and political debate. This article is also the only one in the Title VI, only chapter of the Constitution dealing with religion.

Text of the article

English translation according to the site CostaRicanLaw.com:

Controversy

Like other issues as same-sex marriage, marijuana legalization, in vitro fertilization and abortion, church-state separation is an issue that often splits conservative and progressive voters in Costa Rica.
Costa Rica like many Latin American countries has three main religious communities; Catholics, Evangelical Christians and non-religious including agnostics and atheists. Whilst Catholics are split on the issue, most non-religious citizens support the secular state whilst more Evangelical Christians oppose it, mostly because they see it as a gradual transition toward state atheism.
The National Liberation Party, Citizens' Action Party and Broad Front support church-state separation whilst the Social Christian Republican Party, Costa Rican Renewal Party, National Restoration Party and New Republic Party oppose it.
There is a constitutional reform bill under discussion in the Legislative Assembly in parliamentary committees, however as the Evangelical caucuses oppose it its advance have been null.

Public opinion

In 2011, 41% of ticos were in favor of elimination article 75 of the Constitution according to a Unimer poll. A National University's survey of 2014 shown only 25% of support for such reform. A survey made by the University of Costa Rica in 2017 found same results; 25% of support.
A sociological study made between 2013 and 2014 showed that most practicing Catholics support a secular state as they consider that the economical bond between church and state functions as a "gag" of the Church and support laicism, position also held by most non-practicing Catholics. Non-religious people vastly support laicism and argue that no church should receive state funding.
Neo-Pentecostals on the other hand fiercely oppose laicism as the homologate secular state with state atheism and consider that the current status of confessional state also protects the Evangelical Churches. Historical protestants on the other hand tend to understand better the difference between laicism and atheism and some support the secular state, however a large number of this non-Neo-Pentecostal Protestants argue that all churches should receive state funding and that Costa Rica's official religion should be Christianity and not Catholicism in particular.
Finally religious minorities like Muslims, Bahais, Zen, Tibetan and Nichiren Buddhists, Taoists, New Agers and Hindus vastly support the secular state and laicism, and consider that no religion should receive state funding.