Protestantism in Mexico


and Evangelicals are two of the most numerous religious associations in Mexico after the Roman Catholic majority. In Mexico, there are many denominations from virtually all doctrinal backgrounds, the largest of which are: Presbyterian, Baptist, Methodist, Pentecostals and a group of unaffiliated non-denominational charismatic congregations. In the census, some of these congregations and their followers are grouped as "Neo-Charismatic", others are grouped as "Evangelicals".
The charismatic movement in Mexico has been growing in the last several decades, particularly in the southern state of Chiapas, where the National Presbyterian Church in Mexico is the strongest denomination. Protestantism also has a large following in the Mexican states that border the U.S. state of Texas.
In 2010 those who declared themselves Catholics represented 83.9 percent of the population aged 5 and older, evangelical Protestants or 7.6 percent, and other religions 2.5 percent and 4.6 percent reported having no religion.
The National Institute of Statistics and Geography reported that the number of evangelicals or Protestants rose from 4.9% in 1990 to 5.2% in 2000, reaching 7.6% in 2010.

Denominations

A main category of the Protestant churches in Mexico are the so-called Historical denominations, which include the following churches: Presbyterian, Baptist, Lutheran, Methodist, Congregational and Anglican. These constitute the 10% of the Protestant/Evangelical category. After these branches, we have the "Pentecostal and Neo-Pentecostal" segment, which constitutes about 22% of the non-Catholic category. With a 39% we have "Other evangelical" members, a group called "Light of the World" makes 1%, and finally the "Non-Evangelical Biblical" categorization makes up the remaining 28% of this figure.

Growth and social interaction

Protestants/Evangelicals have had a respectful and often peaceful relationship with their overwhelmingly Catholic atmosphere. Conflict is however common in indigenous communities in the State of Mexico and the southern state of Chiapas. Despite their long-time status of minority, Mexican Protestants interact normally with the rest of Mexico.
Because of historical reasons and unlike many other countries, Mexican Protestants do not have many institutions such as day care centers, schools, universities, labor unions, political parties and hospitals. This forces Evangelicals to interact with the rest of society using the same services and attending the same educational institutions.
With the exception of Bible-based moral standards, Mexican Protestants are not alienated from the dominant culture around them and are used to be well acquainted with non-Protestant people. They often enjoy popular soccer games, TV shows and usually celebrate holidays as everyone else.
Regardless of regional variations, Protestants, often known simply as "Christians" in Mexico are becoming more relevant to the Catholic majority as many of these churches continue to grow greatly because many born-again Christians were once Catholics and converted later in life to this form of Christianity. Subsequently, they tend to share their new spiritual experiences with their Catholic relatives and neighbors, inciting curiosity because their life-changing testimony often ushers a new stage in their lives which changes their worldview and their personal behavior. Christians often invite people to their churches, which sometimes leads to further spiritual encounter and revivals. This is when more people become born-again Christians.

Regions and identity shift

The fact that more and more Mexicans no longer describe or define themselves as Catholic is significant issue amongst the country's Catholic population, many of whom consider Mexico a sacred Catholic land. This shows a society that tends to diversify into other paths regarding religious adherence. Nevertheless, the proportion or magnitude of this shift varies greatly and it is not the same throughout the country.
As a generalized interpretation, Protestants have grown to be a very relevant minority in Southern Mexico and to a lesser though still significant percentage in Northern Mexico, especially in border states. Places where Protestantism has not become such a big minority are the West and the central parts, which is known as a very Catholic region.
The following chart shows us the variations of religious affiliation of the Mexican population by state and doctrine to which inhabitants older than 5 adhere:
StatePopulation% Catholic% Evang./Protestant% Non-Evang. Biblical% Atheist% Other% Unspecified
Aguascalientes822,03796.071.790.660.100.890.49
Baja California2,181,17982.437.792.590.305.891.00
Baja California Sur372,46689.613.682.050.193.331.14
Campeche609,64875.0411.944.270.178.090.49
Coahuila2,031,77387.236.791.550.113.700.62
Colima479,14992.963.101.450.101.860.53
Chiapas3,393,57364.4614.508.090.062.950.57
Chihuahua2,683,95685.406.521.940.155.380.61
Distrito Federal7,787,68890.573.611.371.022.950.48
Durango1,266,52190.723.791.910.062.950.57
Guanajuato4,064,43196.071.390.770.18.930.66
Guerrero2,656,18789.424.582.040.403.080.48
Hidalgo1,974,00490.635.411.380.401.690.49
Jalisco5,567,95795.392.060.890.131.040.49
Michoacán3,487,15195.121.701.020.161.430.57
Morelos1,373,24383.227.963.080.634.280.83
Nayarit809,05092.852.671.470.132.540.34
Nuevo León3,405,82388.196.281.960.142.960.47
Oaxaca3,006,49785.157.732.430.253.930.51
Puebla4,440,64291.544.331.690.421.380.64
Querétaro1,230,27895.371.890.960.200.970.61
Quintana Roo762,86671.7612.524.740.429.810.75
San Luis Potosí2,011,82891.534.951.010.171.820.52
Sinaloa2,239,35787.672.862.120.126.720.51
Sonora1,945,69288.624.681.860.104.110.63
Tabasco1,660,81372.2613.015.340.158.860.38
Tamaulipas2,428,82883.148.782.520.214.710.64
Tlaxcala844,87893.203.051.390.550.980.83
Veracruz6,121,83382.906.883.670.215.880.46
Yucatán1,476,22384.738.202.970.153.420.53
Zacatecas1,184,73595.052.120.890.071.320.55
State of México11,611,42691.263.781.580.871.940.57

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