STUDY: Percentage of Catholic US Latinos Plummets

STUDY: Percentage of Catholic US Latinos Plummets

Most Latinos in the United States still adhere to the Roman Catholic Church, but a growing number are becoming Protestants or eschewing organized religion altogether, says a study published Wednesday.

Fifty-five percent of the 35.4 million Latinos in the United States identify themselves as Catholics, down from 67 percent just four years ago, according to the Pew Research Center report.

The change may reflect what’s happening in historically Catholic Latin America, where evangelical churches have been gaining ground and the proportion of those with no religious affiliation has been rising, Pew said.

Of the 22 percent of all US Latinos who identify as Protestant, the vast majority regard themselves as evangelicals. Meanwhile, 18 percent of all Latinos consider themselves unaffiliated with any faith group.

Hispanics are, after non-Hispanic whites, the biggest race or ethnic group in the United States, according to the US Census Bureau — and, after Asians, they are the fastest-growing as well.

Pew, which used the terms Hispanic and Latino interchangeably, based its research on a survey it conducted among 5,103 adults between May 24 and July 28 last year, giving a margin of error of 2.1 percentage points.

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