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Is Catholicism dying out among U.S. Hispanics? Latino Catholics weigh in

Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller of San Antonio blesses matachine dancers during a celebration on the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. He believes that Hispanics — immigrants especially — will help bring new life into the Church. | Credit: Archdiocese of San Antonio

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 15, 2024 / 06:00 am (CNA).

It’s Dec. 12 in San Antonio. Despite the cold outside, the inside of San Fernando Cathedral is packed with thousands of people of all ages: young, old, and in between.

By the altar is a brightly lit image of Our Lady of Guadalupe surrounded by roses of all colors. It’s a peaceful scene.

But that peace is suddenly broken by the loud, quick thumping of drums and the rattling of maracas as two lines of brightly colored dancers process in from the back doors. In unison, the dancers approach the image of the Virgin and after dancing before Our Lady for a few moments, the drums cease just as suddenly as they began. All say a silent prayer and then the drums resume as the group exits the church.

Hispanic Catholics of varying ages perform the traditional Mexican "danza de matachines" in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary on her Dec. 12 feast day at Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish in the Archdiocese of San Antonio. Credit: Archdiocese of San Antonio
Hispanic Catholics of varying ages perform the traditional Mexican “danza de matachines” in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary on her Dec. 12 feast day at Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish in the Archdiocese of San Antonio. Credit: Archdiocese of San Antonio

This is the “danza de matachines,” a Mexican tradition practiced in parishes and cities across Mexico and the U.S. to honor the Blessed Mother’s feast day. The lively matachines performance will often be accompanied by special prayers, Mass, and parties that gather entire parish communities.

Since Our Lady of Guadalupe’s apparition in 1531, Catholicism has been a mainstay in the life and culture of Hispanics across Latin America and the United States.

But today the future of the Hispanic Catholic Church is being called into question as new reports and data indicate that Latinos, especially those under 30, are leaving the Church in significant numbers, leading some to ask: Is Catholicism dying out in the country’s Hispanic communities?

Is the Catholic Church being replaced?

A recent study by the Pew Research Center found that 43% of Hispanics in America are Catholic, a major decline from 67% in 2010.

Some chalk up this trend to Hispanics converting to evangelicalism or other Protestant denominations. A recent article in The Free Press touted that narrative, claiming: “Latinos are flocking to evangelical Christianity.” But while The Free Press foresees an evangelical boom, available data as well as Hispanic leaders in the Catholic Church paint a different picture.

According to Pew, Christianity in the U.S. across all demographics has been waning. The Catholic decline among Latinos is being led by young Hispanics, ages 18–29, a demographic in which evangelicalism is also declining.

Today, 30% of Hispanics ages 18–29 identify as Catholic. Meanwhile, 11% of Hispanics in this age group identify as evangelical, 6% below the next two older age brackets, 30–49 and 50–64.

The largest religious group — 49% — of Hispanics ages 18–29 is religiously unaffiliated, a category often referred to as the “nones.” Thus, the average young Hispanic in America today is more likely to identify as a “none” than as either a Catholic or an evangelical.

“Young Hispanics are following the same trend as non-Hispanics,” said José Manuel De Urquidi, founder of the Juan Diego Network, a Latino media ministry. “By 25, most are leaving the Church. And contrary to what other people believe, they’re mostly going to the nones. Some are going to other Christian denominations, but most are not.”

Why are they leaving?

In an interview with CNA, De Urquidi explained that since the COVID lockdowns many Hispanics, especially younger Latinos, are neglecting to participate in basic aspects of the life of the Church such as Mass, confession, and other sacraments.

"We're not doing enough to welcome young Hispanics, so they feel it is their abuelita’s [grandmother’s] Church or their parents' Church, but not theirs,” says José Manuel De Urquidi of the Juan Diego Network. Credit: "EWTN News in Depth:/Screenshot
“We’re not doing enough to welcome young Hispanics, so they feel it is their abuelita’s [grandmother’s] Church or their parents’ Church, but not theirs,” says José Manuel De Urquidi of the Juan Diego Network. Credit: “EWTN News in Depth:/Screenshot

For De Urquidi and others who are deeply engaged in Hispanic ministry, it comes down to a crisis of communion and community. Oftentimes young people simply feel that they don’t belong in the pews.

“We’re not doing enough to welcome young Hispanics, so they feel it is their abuelita’s [grandmother’s] Church or their parents’ Church, but not theirs,” De Urquidi said.

Father Allen Deck, a professor of theology who also works in campus ministry at Los Angeles’ Loyola Marymount University, said that the trend among Hispanics is also “part of a much bigger phenomenon within a growing secular environment.”

“It’s not only about what is happening in the Hispanic-Latino context, but it’s what’s happening with institutional religions across the board,” he explained.

Though worrying, Deck said that the Church should use this as an opportunity to take young people’s concerns to heart, especially when it comes to their need for community and a sense of belonging.

“We need to be part of a living group of faith, whether that be family, parish, diocese, or society,” he explained. “So liturgical prayer that stresses active participation, particularly in the Eucharist, is very important for people to develop a sense of belonging to something bigger.”

What do America’s bishops have to say?

In 2021, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) reported that the country’s Hispanic Catholic population, estimated at 30 million, comprises 40% of all U.S. Catholics.

Even dioceses in cities that are not traditionally associated with Hispanics are now seeing the fruits of the Latino Church.

“Faith is alive in the Hispanic communities,” Edmundo Reyes of the Archdiocese of Detroit told CNA.

“Yes, there are some challenges, especially among Latinos born in the United States, as part of the larger secularization of the American people,” he admitted. “However, faith is still a significant part of Latinos’ lives and worldview.”

Archbishop Nelson Perez of Philadelphia told CNA the country’s leading bishops understand the Church has been losing young Hispanics in significant numbers and is aware of the danger this reality poses.

Addressing the problem was the subject of extensive discussion at a national “encuentro” (encounter) organized by the USCCB in 2018. The event saw extensive discussions on how the Church can better minister to Hispanics and involved the input and participation of some 300,000 Latino Catholics from more than 3,000 parishes.

From these discussions, the country’s bishops drew up a National Pastoral Plan for Hispanic Ministry that was released in 2023. Titled “Missionary Disciples Going Forth With Joy,” the document outlines the bishops’ recommendations and priorities for U.S. dioceses, parishes, and Catholic institutions ministering to Hispanic Catholics.

"Where Hispanic ministry is present it's strong and vibrant," says Philadelphia Archbishop Nelson Perez. Credit: "EWTN News in Depth"/Screenshot
“Where Hispanic ministry is present it’s strong and vibrant,” says Philadelphia Archbishop Nelson Perez. Credit: “EWTN News in Depth”/Screenshot

Perez, who was lead bishop for the 2018 Encuentro, shared that one of the most powerful fruits of the initiative was that Hispanic lay leaders have begun to “take their place in the Church.”

This development, Perez believes, will be a boon to the Catholic Church in the U.S. “I find that Hispanics are very much within their comfort zones to reach out with their faith. Their faith is worn on their sleeve,” he said, adding: “Where Hispanic ministry is present it’s strong and vibrant.”

Pointing to his Philadelphia Archdiocese where he has seen previously emptying parishes now being filled with Hispanics, he concluded: “I don’t just think Hispanics are the future. They’re the present.”

Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller of San Antonio, who first came to the U.S. from Mexico in 1980, told CNA that despite the challenges and losses, “in many ways there has been change for the better” because the Hispanic population in the Catholic Church “has been more organized and has mobilized more and in that sense they’re more prepared for ministry in the Church.”

He believes that Hispanics, immigrants especially, will help bring new life into the Church.

“The newcomers nowadays, they bring with them their faith, which here we have been losing,” he said.

New life for the Church

Cristofer Pereyra, an immigrant from Peru who founded the Tepeyac Leadership Initiative, told CNA “the influence that Latinos have in the Church and society is only going to continue to increase.”

Phoenix-based Cristofer Pereyra is CEO at Tepeyac Leadership, Inc. Credit: "The Hour of the Laity"/EWTN Screenshot
Phoenix-based Cristofer Pereyra is CEO at Tepeyac Leadership, Inc. Credit: “The Hour of the Laity”/EWTN Screenshot

“Yes, we’re losing so many,” he granted. “But what I find is that the ones that stick around are more committed. They are very secure in who they are and in their faith.”

Though a painful process, Pereyra believes the result will be an even stronger Hispanic presence in the Church that will eventually lead to a resurgence of the faith.

“The ones who are staying are staying to lead, to lead within the Church and to lead outside,” he said.

Natalia Ramírez, a 23-year-old Hispanic Catholic who attends San Francisco de Asís Parish in Chicago and is a member of the Hispanic young adult ministry “Iskali,” put it simply: The Hispanic Church is facing a crisis because many Latinos were not taught the “beautiful gifts” of their Catholic faith.

Iskali, a ministry that serves young Hispanic Catholics in the United States, seeks to form active missionary disciples. Credit: Iskali
Iskali, a ministry that serves young Hispanic Catholics in the United States, seeks to form active missionary disciples. Credit: Iskali

Born in Mexico City and raised in a heavily Catholic Hispanic community in Chicago, Ramírez said that many of her family members and childhood friends no longer practice any faith at all.

But this doesn’t have to be the end of the story. She knows this from personal experience.

“The more I’m learning about the faith, the more I fall in love with it,” she said. “Before I had no idea of what the holy Eucharist was. But after learning about the holy Eucharist, I realized that Jesus is closer to me than I ever thought before.”


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12 Comments

  1. My observations:
    1. Language and tradition. Hispanics in the US who moved with plenty of memory of the old country want the look and feel of the liturgy of their home country. Having a Hispanic priest for Hispanic Masses had a huge impact in the vigor in their community. In my parish they have a lot more parish events and adoration than the Anglo community (same parish). When the native Spanish speaker was here, someone even told me “they began to feel like they had what they used to have in Mexico”.
    2. Anglo Masses. It’s really no secret the Anglo Masses are a little more watered down in comparison. Our parish uses the Breaking Bread hymnal, which has 1/3 of the music from the 1970s and maybe 1/3 from 1980 onward. Meaning the music lacks a certain seriousness. Anglo Masses typically don’t like incense – which is much bigger in the Hispanic Masses. Without being told outright, reading between the lines the Anglo Masses lack the amount of zeal that many Hispanic Masses offer.
    3. Cultural. Again, from my observations (and willing to be wrong) Hispanic Catholics come to Mass to celebrate together. I see it in events, singing, and communication before/after Mass. That’s different from the Anglo world (sure – not everywhere). I saw the same attitude in Italy where ‘Mass’ has two parts: Mass itself, then some sort of event after Mass. I don’t see people peeling with tires burning out of the parking lot in the Hispanic community (sure – not everywhere).

    US parishes need community – both English and Spanish speakers. If a parish fails to inculcate a culture of sharing time together in and around Mass then the cultural difference between the Anglo and Hispanic cultures grows. People will seek the religious void they seek even if it means finding another church.

  2. NC above – Thanks for your comments.
    Yep. “Anglos” are generally cooler than Latinos.
    But plenty of “Anglos” would be happy to ditch the ’70s and ’80s lightweight hymns.
    We should get together!

  3. My personal experience: In Central and South American countries Evangelical Protestant are converting baptized Catholics out of the Catholic Church and into their plethora of protestant sects. I witnessed this first-hand. How many young Catholics have been sent to these countries as missionaries in the past 100 years?

    • It would also be interesting to know the stats on those nominal Catholics who “found Christ “ in evangelical communities and later found the fullness in the Church as reverts !

  4. The discussion hinges on the definition of Catholic within the spectrum from RadTrad to conservative to the liberal to to Liberation Theology to progressive to Fr James Martin theology.

    • We have some Hispanic folks at our local TLM.
      When I was in Mexico City last year a gentleman at the NO Mass saw my mantilla & began telling me how much he appreciated the TLM.I know that the SSPX has built a beautiful new church in Puebla: Our Lady of the Angels.

    • The implied bottom line here is simply erroneous and counter factual. The feeling that the Vetus Ordo more than or in contrast to the Novus Ordo can stop the bleeding of Catholics living the Church is debunked by facts. Sociologists have long ago pointed out and described the social and cultural phenomenon called secularization or secularism. This is the loss of the sense of the supernatural or spiritual on the part of the people, mostly in the West that started after World War II. Oftentimes, this goes along with materialism, scientism, humanism, and consumerism. In the religious field this led to the decline of religious affiliation and membership not only among Catholics but also of other churches like that of Protestants, and of other religions like Judaism. For most anti-Vatican II and anti-Novus Ordo/pro-Vetus Ordo Catholics to project and declare that after Vatican II and with the Novus Ordo Catholic life has significantly declined showcases ignorance or unfamiliarity with secularization. It should be noted that outside of the highly secularized Five-Eyes-countries (U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, New Zealand) and Western Europe, the Catholic Church in countries not yet inflicted with secularization after Vatican II and with Novus Ordo dramatically grew in leaps and bounds. Viewed globally, it is counter factual to single out the Novus Ordo, or Vatican II for that matter, as the cause of the decline of Catholic Mass attendance.

  5. This makes sad reading. Strong Prayers for the nones.
    Sad, they know Not that hell exists and is eternal. I too knew not and was long out of the church. Now that I know I go for daily mass, regular Confession etc.

    Jesus have mercy on us sinners.

  6. The big elephant in the living room of Hispanic ministry is that, for more than forty years, the Hispanic population has been the first immigrant community in the Catholic Church of the US not to be served in a serious way by our Catholic schools. Hence, terrible attrition in general and a paucity of priestly and religious vocations.
    Proof of the problem is that in this entire article there was not a single mention of Catholic education.

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