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rug

(82,333 posts)
Sat Mar 17, 2012, 11:07 AM Mar 2012

Pope Benedict Will Encounter Diverse Religious Landscape in Mexico and Cuba

R. Andrew Chesnut
Posted: 03/17/2012 9:20 am

A sense of urgency propels aging Pope Benedict in his upcoming trip to Mexico and Cuba. In both countries the pope will encounter increasingly diverse religious landscapes. This is especially the case in Cuba, where both Pentecostalism and the two main Afro-Cuban religions, Santeria and Palo Monte, have been flourishing since the last papal visit, John Paul's in 1998. While the Catholic church in Cuba has played an important role in promoting humans rights and negotiating the release of political prisoners, it has been losing ground in the competition for the souls of Cuba. Fierce competition with Pentecostalism and other religions, to a lesser extent, is a Latin America-wide phenomenon, but Cuba joins Brazil, Guatemala and a few other countries of the region as nations where active Catholics no longer constitute the majority of the population. Brazil, home to the world's largest Catholic and Pentecostal populations, is the only Latin American country that Benedict has visited to date. Thus, the Americas, home to half the world's Catholics, are of utmost concern to the Vatican. The future of the global church lies here.

Of particular significance in Cuba, is the pope's participation in the commemoration of the quadricentennial of the Virgin of Cobre, the national patron saint. Along with the pope, the Virgin Mary, in her various national and regional advocations, is one of the two premier symbols of Latin American Catholicism and stands at the vanguard of current evangelization efforts targeting "soft Catholics" who are seen as vulnerable sheep to the "rapacious wolves of Protestantism," to use an oft-cited phrase of John Paul II. So the issue in Cuba isn't so much religious freedom per se, which has increased since the last papal visit, but concern over the proliferation of Pentecostalism and Afro-Cuban religion partly at the expense of the Catholic Church.

The pope will also find an increasingly pluralist religious landscape in Mexico, but not as diverse as in Cuba. Pentecostalism has grown impressively since the 1970s, especially among indigenous groups. At least a third of the population of Chiapas, the state with the largest percentage of indigenous residents, are Protestant, mostly Pentecostal. Benedict XVI, however, will visit the country's most Catholic state, Guanajuato, and its largest city Leon, the seat of conservative Catholicism, led by Archbishop José Guadalupe Martín Rábago, who has been one of the church's most outspoken opponents of the mushrooming cult of Santa Muerte (Saint Death). This is a church facing significant competition from Pentecostals, neo-Christians, such as Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses, and even "heretical" folks saints, such as Santa Muerte and Jesus Malverde. In addition, the Church has been rocked by the same type of sex-abuse scandals that have made headlines in Europe and here in the U.S.

On the political front, the timing of the pope's visit to Guanajuato is no coincidence. Both presidential and legislative elections will be held in July. The pro-Church political party, the PAN (National Action Party) has ruled the country for the past 12 years, and its presidential candidate Josefina Vasquez Mota trails PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party) nominee Enrique Peña Nieto in the latest polls by six percentage points. Vasquez Mota has been steadily gaining ground on the PRI candidate over the past few months, and her campaign could potentially benefit from the papal visit to the Mexican state that is the most Catholic and PANista. Beginning with former president Vicente Fox, the center-right party has held the governorship in this geographically central state since 1991.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/r-andrew-chesnut/pope-cuba-and-mexico-visit_b_1344781.html

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Pope Benedict Will Encounter Diverse Religious Landscape in Mexico and Cuba (Original Post) rug Mar 2012 OP
My hope would be that the pope finally finds god Angry Dragon Mar 2012 #1
Just to confuse matters, a lot of Cubans practice both Catholicism and Santerķa Lydia Leftcoast Mar 2012 #2
I hope he encounters the inside of a cell... cleanhippie Mar 2012 #3

Angry Dragon

(36,693 posts)
1. My hope would be that the pope finally finds god
Sat Mar 17, 2012, 11:21 AM
Mar 2012

and gives up his false god that he promotes now.
That he opens the doors of the church and uses all that
gold and silver to help people.
That he gives up his throne and really walks among the people that he
says he leads.

Lydia Leftcoast

(48,217 posts)
2. Just to confuse matters, a lot of Cubans practice both Catholicism and Santerķa
Sat Mar 17, 2012, 01:06 PM
Mar 2012

and identify La Virgen de la Caridad with one of the African goddesses. There are also mainline Protestant (Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Methodists) and Quaker communities, as well as a Jewish community that has undergone a remarkable revitalization in the past few years. (I traveled to Cuba in November 2011 with a group from my (Episcopal) church.)

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