Analysis of discrepancies between Church numbers and government numbers in Brazil.

Date
Jul 16, 2012
Type
News (traditional)
Source
Matt Martinich
LDS
Hearsay
Scribed Verbatim
Direct
Reference

Stack, Peggy Fletcher. "Brazil mystery: Case of the missing Mormons (913,045 of them, to be exact)." Salt Lake Tribune,July 16, 2012. Accessed July 20, 2021

Scribe/Publisher
The Salt Lake Tribune
People
Peggy Fletcher Stack, Matt Martinich, Scott Trotter (LDS Spokesperson)
Audience
Reading Public
PDF
Transcription

The Brazilian government believes there are far fewer Mormons in the country than the LDS Church does.The 2010 Brazilian census found that 225,695 people identified as Latter-day Saints whereas the LDS Church reported 1,138,740 members in Brazil in 2010. "These findings indicate that self-identified Latter-day Saints on the census account for only 20 percent of total membership officially reported by the church in Brazil," writes Matt Martinich, an independent LDS researcher. "Furthermore, the percent of official LDS membership self-affiliating as Latter-day Saint on the census has declined over the past decade."In 2000, the census reported 199,645 Latter-day Saints, or 26 percent of Mormon membership reported for that year (775,822) by the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.To Martinich, who lives in Colorado Springs, the "most concerning finding" was about the LDS Church's growth rate.The church reported that Brazilian "membership increased by 362,918 members between 2000 and 2010 yet the censuses for these two years indicate a mere 26,050 increase in self-identified Latter-day Saints," Martinich wrote on his blog. "In other words, the increase in census-reported Latter-day Saints was only 7 percent of the membership increase reported by the church."The numbers were "surprising," Martinich said in a phone interview. "The church has experienced such steady congregational and stake growth over the last decade, especially the past five years."That's a trend the LDS Church noted as well."A good indicator for membership growth and activity in any area can be found in the construction of meetinghouses and temples," church spokesman Scott Trotter said Monday. "We only build them where members need them, not in anticipation of future growth. Our construction of both types of buildings in Brazil continues at a brisk pace."

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