Protestantism in Chile
Research in 2018 suggested that Protestants represent 11-13% of the population of Chile.[1][2] Figures in 2022 note that Protestants represented 2.5% of Chilean people in 2022.[3]
Protestants first arrived in Chile in 1812, when missionaries from the British and Foreign Bible Society travelled the country on foot.[4]
In 1848, the first Anglican Church was established in Valparaíso. This was three years after the arrival of the American Congregationalist (later, Presbyterian) missionary David Trumbull.[5] Lutheran German immigrants arrived at the same time. Later members of the Anglican, Presbyterian, Seventh-day Adventists, Methodist, Pentecostal, and other Protestant Churches also came to Chile.
The first Seventh-Day Adventist missionaries first arrived in 1895.[6] There are estimated to be 126,814 Adventists in Chile.
Changes in the Constitution in 1925 led to numbers of citizens falling away from the Catholic Church and becoming Protestants.[7]
References
- "Encuesta - 2015" (PDF) (in Spanish). Plaza Publica Cadem. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-02-07.
- Latinobarometro enero,2018.
- ARDA website, Retrieved 2023-07-14| Association of Religion Data Archieves website
- Encyclopedia.com website
- "The David and Jane Wales Trumbull Manuscript Collection, Douglas F. Denné". Archived from the original on 2012-02-27. Retrieved 2010-02-22.
- "Adventist Atlas". Archived from the original on 2013-09-23. Retrieved 2008-02-06.
- Encyclopedia.com website