Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Nicaragua Taxes Tithes After Closing 1,500 Churches and Nonprofits
Nicaragua Taxes Tithes After Closing 1,500 Churches and Nonprofits
Feb 11, 2026 6:11 AM

  A series of policies recently enacted by the Nicaraguan government will significantly impact the activities of churches and ministries operating in the country.

  Viewed by religious freedom specialists as an effort to increase the states control over religious institutions, the measures impose taxes on tithes and offerings while mandating that organizations create formal partnerships with the Nicaraguan government to carry out in-country projects. Local newspaper La Prensa estimates that taxes on tithes may reach 30 percent.

  President Daniel Ortega introduced the bill that was unanimously approved on August 20 by the Asamblea Nacional. Ortegas party, the Frente Sandinista de Liberacin Nacional, which started in the 1970s as a guerrilla group, controls the legislature.

  The changes in the law will favor the development of projects of interest to families and communities within a framework of solidarity and adherence to national laws, said Vice President Rosario Murillo, who is married to Ortega.

  The scope of the new regulations has been vague. Both Murillo and an Asamblea Nacional statement on the bill described the laws as strengthening transparency, legal security, respect, and harmony. One likely consequence is that churches receiving foreign moneyincluding funding from their own denominationswill be forced to enter into an alianza de asociacin (partnership alliance) to access their funds.

  The same day the legislation passed, the government canceled the legal status of 1,500 organizations, citing their failure to submit proper financial statements. For the first time since the Ortega administration began cracking down on nonprofits, nearly half of those affected include those with evangelical connections.

  That includes a large number of Pentecostal ministries and churches, as well as those run by Baptists, Methodists, Lutherans, and Presbyterians. While a few of the institutions that were affected worked nationally, many were neighborhood churches of less than 100 congregants.

  The majority of the other groups affected were connected to the Catholic church. (The rest focused on sports or culture.) As part of the governments decree, these organizations assets will be transferred to the Nicaraguan government.

  Churches, especially the smaller ones, are places where the sense of community and participation is very strong, said a spokesperson for the Netherland-based Observatory of Religious Freedom in Latin America (ORFLA), who asked to remain anonymous for security reasons. The government wants to diminish the importance of this contribution so that only the state stands out.

  Article continues below Free NewslettersGet the best from CT editors, delivered straight to your inbox! More Newsletters Last year, these financial reporting requirements led to the closure of ten churches belonging to a Texas-based ministry, Mountain Gateway, and the arrest of 11 of its pastors operating in Nicaragua. Weeks earlier, the group had led a two-day evangelistic and relief event that brought together more than 300,000 people.

  However, several laws passed in recent years have created complex financial reporting standards for nongovernmental organizations, resulting in compliance difficulties, according to The New York Times. Even the Catholic church has struggled.

  Since 2018, the government has closed 3,390 organizations (10% of them foreign) for money laundering, according to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. In 2022, the government shut down 20 evangelical churches on similar grounds.

  CT reached out to representatives of various Christian organizations in Nicaragua, including some of those whose status had been canceled. Nearly all declined to comment. One source described the situation as very sensitive.

  We can even go to prison or lose our citizenship for critical comments, the person said.

  Last year, the Nicaraguan government banned processions and outdoor worship services, citing security concerns after the 2018 protests that resulted in riots and arrests. The government also prohibited the display of symbols such as crosses or the Star of David in front of private homes.

  Evangelicals comprise nearly 40 percent of Nicaraguas 7 million people, making it the third-most evangelical country in Latin America. Many have no issue with Ortegas actions.

  This is not exactly persecution, said Ismael Jara, who pastors Iglesia Bautista Sendero de Luz in Ciudad Sandino. We arent banned from going out into the streets and doing evangelism. ... Only mass gatherings are not allowed due to the [political instability that followed the 2018 protests].

  Jara explained that stricter rules for events outside of churches will force congregations to be more organized when planning events. He also suggested that the loss of organization registrations might even be a positive for some churches, pushing them to become more financially transparent to meet the governments reporting demands.

  Article continues below Additionally, Jara believes it will be healthy for believers to maintain a greater distance from politics. We have to learn to be neutral and respect the authorities, he said.

  In April, after a group of experts presented a report on religious rights violations at the United Nations, six evangelical organizationsincluding three church associations, two denominational groups, and a theological studies centerpublished open letters affirming the existence of freedom of worship in the country. Bishop Aldolfo Sequeira, president at Centro Intereclesial de Estudios Teolgicos y Sociales, signed one of the letters, declaring that the government is respectful of the freedom of worship and expressions of faith of the Christian people, allowing each person to practice the religion of their choice throughout the country.

  Around the same time, the Baptist Convention of Nicaragua published a statement of support for Ortega and Murillo, who have always supported our evangelistic work and have favored all our activities.

  But those outside the country are less convinced.

  Because these shutdowns are backed by a legislative framework, the governments threat to religious freedom is more evident and more scandalous than the 1980s crackdown on religious groups by the Sandinistas, or members of Ortegas political party, the ORFLA spokesperson said.

  By revoking registrations and confiscating the assets of religious organizations, the government is forcing these ministries to align themselves with larger groups that are willing to submit to the conditions imposed by the government, explained the representative, who asked to remain anonymous for security reasons. Without a legal registry, they cant buy land or build a church.

  Additionally, the government imposes its goals and policies on Christian organizations in an attempt to eliminate any presence of institutions that do not share the same political orientation, according to ORFLA.

  In its justification of the legislation passed on Monday, Ortega argued that activities of nongovernmental organizations have resulted in a discretionary use of [programs and projects] that is not linked to the national plans, strategies, and policies promoted by our good government in the fight against poverty and the security of our population.

  In June, the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) published a report highlighting severely deteriorating religious freedom conditions in Nicaragua. President Daniel Ortega and Vice President Rosario Murillo are using laws on cybercrimes, financial crimes, legal registration for not-for-profit organizations, and sovereignty and self-determination to persecute religious communities and advocates of religious freedom, it stated.

  Article continues below USCIRF recommended that the US designate Nicaragua as a country of particular concern for engaging in systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom and suggested imposing sanctions on Nicaraguan government agencies and officials.

  Up until now, the primary source of tension between the Sandinistas and the religious sector has been with the Catholic church. In February of last year, the bishop of Matagalpa, Rolando lvarez, was arrested on charges of conspiracy and had his Nicaraguan citizenship revoked due to sermons deemed anti-government.

  lvarez was detained until January this year when the government exiled him to the Vatican. Brazilian president Luiz Incio Lula da Silvas attempt to negotiate his release led to cooler relations between Brazil and Nicaragua, culminating in both countries expelling the others ambassador earlier this month.

  In August 2023, a Nicaraguan court ordered the closure and confiscation of the assets of Universidad Centroamericana, a higher education institution in Managua run by Jesuits, at the governments request. Authorities accused the university of harboring criminal activities during the 2018 protests. The action sparked protests within the academic community and at the Vatican.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
A Prayer for Protection and Safety during Winter Storms
  A Prayer for Protection and Safety during Winter Storms   By: Emma Danzey   Bible Reading:“Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the LORD, ‘He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.’”- Psalm 91:1-2   Read or Listen Below:   It is difficult to know...
3 Lessons We Learn Following God (Genesis 12:1)
  3 Lessons We Learn Following God   By: Jennifer Heeren   The Lord had said to Abram, “Leave your native country, your relatives, and your father’s family, and go to the land that I will show you” (Genesis 12:1).   God didn’t give Abram (later to be called Abraham) a detailed map or even show him the exact final destination. He basically said,...
America’s Free Press Tradition
  This week British Prime Minister Keir Starmer publicly ranted against “lies and misinformation” being spread by Elon Musk. The billionaire took to social media through X to post about the well-documented and notorious Rotherham child sexual exploitation scandal. From the late 1980s to 2013, Pakistani-immigrant men groomed and abused working-class British girls, often but not always white. Police botched the...
The Historical Challenge to Originalism
  Stanford historian Jonathan Gienapps new book, Against Constitutional Originalism: A Historical Critique, is an important shot across the bow of a venerable legal tradition. Using the tools of a historian, Gienapp aims to draw the methods of public meaning originalism into question. In this symposium, Law Liberty contributors offer responses from both legal and historical perspectives.      Jan 16, 2025...
When You Feel Like Giving Up in Prayer
  When You Feel Like Giving Up in Prayer   By Lynette Kittle   Bible Reading:   “Pray continually.” – 1 Thessalonians 5:17   Have you ever faced a situation that looked hopeless, like things just weren’t going to change or work out, yet against all the odds, you kept praying? Despite the critics and obstacles faced, did you believe the impossible to happen?   Let’s...
Lazarus Lives Again
  Friday, January 17, 2025   Lazarus Lives Again   “Then he said, ‘Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep, but now I will go and wake him up.’” (John 11:11 NLT)   John 11:1-44   Jesus left Judea because the Jewish religious leaders there were plotting to kill Him. He wasn’t afraid of death; He just knew that the time for it had not yet...
Modern Martyrdom
  Once when I was walking through Cambridge with a friend, we saw a church dedicated to English martyrs. My friend asked, “Mary’s or Elizabeth’s?”—Protestant or Catholic martyrs, in other words. It made me think that one difference between Protestantism and the older confessions or churches is that martyrs feature much less in modern Christianity, whereas it would almost be trivial...
Secure in Shifting Sand
  Secure in Shifting Sand   By Megan Conner   Bible Reading:   “For I am God, and there is no other;   I am God, and there is none like Me,   Declaring the end from the beginning,   And from ancient times things that are not yet done.” – Isaiah 46:9-10 (NKJV)   Anyone else feel like the only thing certain in this world is the...
The Trouble with Aggregates
  Politicians and economists promise higher standards of living. Are there reliable, objective measures to help determine when theirpolicies are achieving this goal?   At present, most analyses of the question draw primarily on aggregate numbers computed regularly in every country, offered with little commentary on their reliability, either conceptual or in measurement. The numbers draw on a roughly century-old academic field of...
A Habit of Gratitude
  A Habit of Gratitude   Your Nightly Prayer for Jan. 20, 2025   by Sophia Bricker   TONIGHT'S SCRIPTUREGive thanks to the LORD, for he is good; his love endures forever. - 1 Chronicles 16:34   SOMETHING TO PONDERLooking forward to the next thing in life is a habit most of us follow. The next day, a fresh season, the latest trend, a new...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved