The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Portugal explained

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Portugal
Logocaption:(Logo in Portuguese)
Area:Europe North
Members:46,849 (2022)
Stakes:7
Districts:1
Wards:39
Branches:21
Missions:1
O:1
Fhc:24

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Portugal refers to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and its members in Portugal. As of 2022, the LDS Church reported 46,849 members in 60 congregations in Portugal, making it the third largest body of LDS Church members in Europe behind the United Kingdom and Spain. In 2019, Portugal had the most LDS Church members per capita in Europe.[1] Nearly all members are native Portuguese or permanent immigrants from former Portuguese territories.

History

The first meetings of the LDS Church in Portugal were among members of U.S. armed forces stationed in the country in early 1970. In April 1974, the mostly peaceful Carnation Revolution brought an end to decades of authoritarian rule that had formally promoted Roman Catholicism and had restricted other faiths from proselyting. Several weeks after the fall of this Estado Novo regime, church president Spencer W. Kimball visited Portugal and received confirmation that the LDS Church would be recognized and that the missionaries could start preaching in the country.

In November 1974, William Grant Bangerter of the Quorum of the Seventy came to Lisbon to preside over the newly created Portugal Lisbon Mission. Four Portuguese-speaking missionaries were transferred to the new mission from Brazil. The first official meetings of the LDS Church were held at the home of a member of the Canadian embassy who lived in Portugal.

By July 1975, there were already about 100 Portuguese Latter-day Saints, and by July 1978, membership reached 1,000. The church's growth has steadily progressed since that time; at year-end 2016, more than 38,000 Mormons live in Portugal, organized in dozens of local congregations known as wards and branches.

Relationship with the media

The LDS Church uses a religious programming space provided on channel RTP 2 in conjunction with other religious denominations. This opportunity is made possible under Portugal's religious freedom laws. It consists of two programs, the seven-minute "People of Faith" and the 30-minute "Paths". A number of radio programs are also provided on station RDP in formats similar to television programming.

Stakes

As of June 2024, the LDS Church has 7 stakes and a district in Portugal:

Stake/Districtdata-sort-type=dateOrganizedMission
Açores Portugal District28 Mar 1982Portugal Lisbon
Almada Portugal Stake28 Mar 2021Portugal Lisbon
Coimbra Portugal Stake14 Apr 2002Portugal Porto
Lisbon Portugal Stake10 Jun 1981Portugal Lisbon
Oeiras Portugal Stake25 Jun 1989Portugal Lisbon
Porto Portugal Stake2 Nov 1986Portugal Porto
Porto Portugal North Stake28 May 1989Portugal Porto
Setúbal Portugal Stake6 Sep 1987Portugal Lisbon

Mission

Temples

The Lisbon Portugal Temple was announced on 2 October 2010 by church president Thomas S. Monson.[2] A groundbreaking service, to signify beginning of construction, was held on 5 December 2015, with Patrick Kearon, president of the church's Europe Area, presiding. The temple was dedicated on 15 September 2019 by Neil L. Andersen.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. [The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints membership statistics#Countries|The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints membership statistics]
  2. https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/news-five-new-temples-october-2010-Monson The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Temples