The identity of the nation
Brazil is the largest country in South America and home to one of the largest Christian populations in the world. Faith arrived with Portuguese colonization in the sixteenth century, and for centuries Catholicism was the dominant religion. In recent decades, evangelical growth has transformed the religious landscape, and today the country combines a strong Christian presence with deep social contrasts.
It is, at the same time, a great field of need and one of the largest missionary sending forces in Latin America. Isolated indigenous peoples, urban outskirts, riverside communities, and Amazon border regions remain outreach challenges, while thousands of Brazilian missionaries are sent to other nations.
Religious diversity is growing: alongside Catholics and evangelicals, there is a strong presence of Spiritism, Afro-Brazilian religions, and a growing number of people with no religion. This scenario makes discipleship and clarity of the gospel as urgent as evangelism itself.
Pressure on Christians is low, with broad religious freedom. The greatest challenge is not persecution, but the blending of religions, shallow faith, and reaching peoples who still have no church in their own territory and language.
Social inequality, urban violence, and the vulnerability of children and youth in the outskirts open doors for the church to serve, welcome, and proclaim hope. Brazil has the potential to impact the world if its church matures in depth as much as in size.
Brazil is the largest country in South America and the fifth largest in the world, with biomes ranging from the Amazon Rainforest to the Pantanal wetlands, from the Cerrado savanna to the Atlantic Forest, along a coastline of more than 7,000 km.
Black bean stew with meats, the country's signature dish.
The everyday duo, the foundation of the Brazilian lunch.
A Minas Gerais treat made of tapioca starch and cheese.
Amazonian fruit served chilled, energizing.
Fried, chicken-filled snack, a bar-food classic.
Chocolate and condensed milk sweet, a must at every party.
Meats grilled over charcoal, a tradition of gatherings and of the South.
Fish stew with coconut milk and palm oil, a Bahian and Espírito Santo heritage.
Culture and spirituality
2a · The culture
Brazilians value personal contact, affection, and closeness. Relationships come before tasks.
Family is the center of social life, and community ties are strong, especially in the outskirts and the countryside.
Faith permeates public life, yet coexists with a strong blending of religions across diverse traditions.
Welcoming others is part of the national identity; foreigners are received with generosity.
Deep inequality, from urban abundance to hardship in the outskirts and remote regions.
A continent-sized country: each region has a very distinct culture, accent, and reality.
2b · The field
Areas of spiritual battle and cultural captivity to cover in prayer. Tap each point to understand:
The Christian faith blends with Spiritism, Afro-Brazilian religions, and folk beliefs, diluting the gospel.
The search for power and protection through spiritual practices draws people away from Christ.
The normalized "jeitinho" (finding a way around the rules) and dishonesty erode trust and justice.
A social chasm leaves millions on the margins and hardens hearts.
Crime, fear, and the normalization of violence mark the daily lives of many.
The eroticization and trivialization of sex wound families and human dignity.
The race for status and consumption occupies in the heart the place that belongs to God.
Alcohol, drugs, and gambling enslave people and destroy homes.
Rivalries, partisanship, and disputes weaken the church and the nation.
A sense of abandonment and lack of future imprison entire communities.
Native peoples remain forgotten, without full access to the gospel or to their rights.
Fame, football, and screens become objects of devotion and escape from reality.
Brazil has broad religious freedom, and Christianity is the majority faith, so persecution is low. Even so, there are localized tensions: leaders threatened by organized crime in some outskirts, conflicts in territories controlled by drug trafficking, and pressure on Christians of indigenous background or those who leave Afro-Brazilian religions.
The central challenge is less about persecution and more about healthy discipleship, religious syncretism, and reaching peoples who still have no church.
The persecution score runs from 0 to 100: the higher it is, the greater the pressure on Christians.
Brazil is home to 54 unreached people groups, 33 of which are classified as frontier people groups, the most isolated from the gospel. The vast majority are indigenous ethnic groups from the Amazon and the backlands, many living in hard-to-reach lands and speaking languages with no Bible translation. There are also communities of migrant origin, such as Jewish and Turkish groups, still little reached. Each of these peoples represents an entire culture still waiting to fully know the message of Christ in its own language.
Fonte dos dados de povos: Joshua Project (joshuaproject.net). Estimativas, podem variar.
Intercede for this nation
Every nation carries a redemptive purpose. Marks that seem woven into the identity God desires to restore:
Practical details for those who want to go
varies widely by region
Reference values (source: Numbeo). Confirm before traveling.
Not everyone goes, everyone takes part
Behind every worker among these peoples stands a network of people who pray without ceasing, care for the family left behind, and faithfully sustain the work. Sending is mission too.
Start with your church: introduce this nation, adopt it in ongoing prayer, and walk alongside those God is raising up to go.
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