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Central America – evangelical majority

Evangelicalism is now the majority faith in Central America, a new survey shows. 42% now identify as Protestants (mostly evangelical) while under 40% identify as Roman Catholics.

The research was carried out in Nicaragua, Guatemeala, Costa Rica, Panama, El Salvador and Honduras by M&R Consultores. In Nicaragua, for example, the Catholic Church has lost 60% of its adherents since 1950 and currently only one person in three claims to be Catholic. Non-Catholics represented only 4% then, but by 2023 that number has risen to 65%.

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Uganda: wife killed for becoming a Christian

40-year-old Abudullah Waiswa, a Muslim in Bugiri, eastern Uganda has killed his wife for converting to Christianity. Amina Nanfuka, 31, had returned from a medical check-up in Kampala, where she also attended a worship service at a church.

A relative said ‘We went inside the bedroom and found Amina unconscious with blood coming out of her mouth. She was rushed to a nearby clinic, but the doctor pronounced her dead upon arrival. She had been strangled and hit with an object around her mouth’. The couple had three children, aged 3, 6 and 9.

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Kenya: 36,000 hear the gospel

The Message School of Evangelism (part of the Message Trust) has held an exciting week of mission in Nanyuki, Kenya, in partnership with The Global Network of Evangelists.

The initiative involved working in schools, visiting prisons, street evangelism and an evangelistic festival. During this time the students shared the gospel with 36,150 people and 6,230 responded. One man, initially hostile, eventually listened to the gospel. He changed from being loud and aggressive to apologising and feeling peaceful. The team prayed with him as he accepted Jesus into his life.

news in brief

Refugee call

Evangelical refugee campaigner and

en contributor, Dr Krish Kandiah, says

news in brief

Church disability support trebled

A charity’s support for disabled people in churches across the UK is being trebled, thanks to a £150,000 grant from Benefact Trust. It will mean that disability inclusion charity Through the Roof will be able to increase the number of disabled people it can support from 9,000 to 30,000 within just three years.

The additional funds will be used to recruit three regional co-ordinators to build up local Roofbreaker networks of volunteers across the UK; provide specialist resources and support; and help disabled Christians in leading training and organise events. According to the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization, just five to ten per cent of disabled people ever hear the gospel in their lifetime.

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Spain: becoming less religious

According to a new report, Spain is becoming less and less religious.

Secularism in Figures 2023, published by the Ferrer Guàrdia Foundation, reveals that 40% of the Spanish population identifies as atheist, agnostic or indifferent to religion. The figure rises to 58% among young adults aged 25 to 34, and to 60% among those aged 18 to 24. ‘Religious practice has declined considerably, especially after the pandemic’, the Foundation says. Only 19% of respondents consider themselves to be practising believers.

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FGM: campaigner honoured

Campaigner, humanitarian aid-worker and Church Mission Society mission partner Dr Ann-Marie Wilson received an MBE in King Charles’ first New Year’s Honours List. The citation reads that Dr Wilson is being recognised ‘for services to the prevention of Violence Against Women and Girls’, in particular her pioneering to end Female Genital Mutilation (FGM).

Ann-Marie’s charity 28 Too Many sought to end FGM in 28 African countries where it is prevalent. Building on more than 3,000 FGM survivors’ stories and mobilising grassroots organisations with advocacy tools, Dr Wilson has helped secure widespread change.

news in brief

Hatun Tash

The Metropolitan Police have apologised to evangelical street preacher Hatun Tash, paying her £10,000 compensation for wrongful arrest and unlawful imprisonment.

A former Muslim, Tash had asked the police for assistance on two occasions when she was being harassed by Muslim demonstrators – but they arrested her instead. In one case, she was held in custody for 24 hours before being released without charge. A police inspector wrote and apologised for the distress she suffered and acknowledged ‘that on these occasions the level of service did fall below the requisite standard’.

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