Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
El Salvador’s Prisons Have Never Been Fuller. But Ministry to the Incarcerated Has Never Been More Strapped
El Salvador’s Prisons Have Never Been Fuller. But Ministry to the Incarcerated Has Never Been More Strapped
Oct 27, 2025 12:03 PM

  In just over two years, El Salvadors government has sent 80,000 people to prison. With over 111,000 people incarcerated, the country has the worlds highest proportion of people behind barsone inmate for every 56 people.

  The current situation stems from a zero-tolerance policy toward the gangs that once proliferated in the country. Salvadoran gangs are considered transnational crime organizations responsible for taking murder rates to levels only seen during the 19791992 civil war.

  In March 2022, President Nayib Bukele decreed a rgimen de excepcin (state of exception), which suspends a significant number of civil rights, making it easier to arrest and prosecute suspected gang members. Though the administration initially promised the decree would last for a month, it has since been renewed 27 times by the Salvadoran congress, lasting nearly two and a half years.

  El Salvador has never had a significant prison ministry presence. But for those few that have worked in prisons, the rgimen de excepcin has both presented an opportunity and revealed a set of problems.

  On one hand, leaders say, theres a real chance for a substantial number of inmates to turn their lives around through the gospel. Most of them know they need a physical transformation. Evangelism may show them they need a spiritual transformation too, said Ral Orellana, a regional ministry leader who has served in El Salvadors prisons since 2008.

  On the other hand, for a variety of reasons, few Christians have shown interest in prison ministry, work that has only become more difficult as the government has increased restrictions on civilian visits in prison.

  All of El Salvadors detention centers in the country, except the maximum security penitentiary, have historically been open to ministers. The government is very open to evangelical Christian churches that want to preach in prisons, said Orellanabut the recent strong-arm policy against the gangs has also toughened access for churches and pastors.

  A dozen or so years ago, pastors could spend evenings sitting side by side with inmates, counseling them and sharing the gospel. When he visited the prison then, Orellena recalled, he knew about the availability of drugs and electronic devices for inmates, and sometimes saw questionable visitors.

  Now, greater government oversight of prisons has increased restrictions on evangelizing to the incarcerated. Many prisons have banned face-to-face interactions between pastors and inmates. Instead, pastors can only speak to groups for a maximum of one hour.

  I understand the authorities perspective, said Orellena. The inmates had total control and it shouldnt have been like that. Today, the authorities are in control.

  Prior to 2022, in some prisons, several ministries came to preach every week. Today, prison authorities allow Christian groups to enter once a week on a set schedule, with some exceptions for evangelistic events. For example, for Mothers Day this year, Kenton Moody, an American missionary who leads Vida Libre, a rehabilitation center for juvenile offenders, threw a big party in the Santa Ana womens prison.

  The ministry provided sodas, pan dulce, and Bibles for 10,000 people. Though authorities only allowed 2,800 women to attend, by the end of the service, 295 raised their hands in answer to a conversion call.

  Troubles with gangs and government Although leaders like Orellena and Moody say they have seen God at work in Salvadoran prisons, many Christians they meet are reluctant to participate in prison ministry, afraid of encountering dangerous criminals. For years, large parts of the country lived under violence and bloodshed caused by gangs like Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) and Barrio 18 (known also as 18).

  Historically, the country has had one of the highest homicide rates in the world; at its peak in 1995, there were 139 murders for every 100,000 inhabitants. Since the beginning of the 2000s, MS-13 and 18 have fought a long-lasting territorial battle with a massive death toll. In 2015, the gangs decreed a ban on all bus routes in the capital, San Salvador, and on the first day of the ban, five bus drivers were killed. In 2016, some estimated that the groups had extorted about 70 percent of all businesses in the country, and the extortion rates were so high that they ultimately led to an increase in consumer prices.

  Official numbers show a 70 percent decrease in the murder rate in 2023 in comparison to 2022, as a result of changes in the law and the application of the rgimen de excepcin. The government has edited the legal code to formally equate terrorism with local criminal associations, and a new law has criminalized tattoos, street graffiti, and any other mark that resembles gang symbols.

  But the decrease in homicide rates has also come with a cost. Human Rights Watch has described the changes as a we can arrest anyone we want policy that allows detentions based on the appearance and social background of detainees, anonymous calls, or even social media posts.

  In this environment, nearly anyone with any relationship to a gang member is at risk of being arrested and sent to prison. That includes former gang members that have served time and returned to civilian life, some of whom have converted to Christianity. Even pastors who minister to current gang members may be seen as collaborators or gang sympathizers and are at risk of incarceration.

  My work with the inmates and former prisoners used to be dangerous because of the gangs. Now its dangerous because of the government, said Moody. They can throw us in prison at any moment for allegedly helping the gangs.

  Local churches are afraid to risk getting into trouble with both the gangs and the government if they do ministry in prison, he said. The pastors tell us, How wonderful it is what you are doing, and God bless youbut they dont participate.

  The continuing work of witness Throughout Central America, evangelicals have nearly outpaced Catholics in numerical growth. In El Salvador, almost a third (30.9%) of the population now identifies as evangelical.

  The percentage of evangelicals is highest in the poorer strata of societythe very segments from which people join gangs and end up in the prison system, says Stephen Offutt, the author of Blood Entanglements: Evangelicals and Gangs in El Salvador.

  Between 50 and 70 percent of the people in El Salvadors prisons come from evangelical families. I would dare to say that everyone who is in prison has heard of Jesus Christ, says Orellana, but he adds that the number of true converts is probably small.

  For gang members tired of violence, Christianity offers one pathway out.

  Gangs allow people to get out if they show a real conversion, said Offutt. Its not as simple as declaring oneself a Christian and being free. Those gang members that allegedly convert to Christianity are kept under surveillance because there are also fake conversions and fake pastors who try to manipulate the gangs.

  Under the rgimen de excepcin, some genuinely converted gang members are being dragged back to prison, opening a door for evangelism to take place where the institutional church cannot go.

  A disciple in prison can bring the gospel to many others, says Lucas Suriano, Latin America coordinator at Prison Alliance, a North Carolinabased ministry that creates discipleship programs and distributes Bibles and Christian literature to inmates around the world.

  Although no one sees what happens inside prisons like the Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo, the maximum security detention center for 40,000 people that President Bukele opened last year, Offutt is certain that God continues to work there.

  Some years ago, he recounts, I had a pastor friend whose house was in the shadow of a prison in El Salvador. On Sunday evenings, we could hear Christian songs coming from the prison.

  People are trying to witness to the gospel in the best ways available. They are finding ways to worship thereits inconceivable to me that its not happening.

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
The Wise and the Hows
  Saturday, February 1, 2025   The Wise and the Hows   “If you need wisdom, ask our generous God, and he will give it to you. He will not rebuke you for asking.” (James 1:5 NLT)   Some people treat prayer like a Christmas list. They see the words “generous God” and launch into their wish list of materialistic items that they think...
A Prayer to Embrace Community When its Tempting to Isolate
  A Prayer to Embrace Community When It's Tempting to Isolate   By: Emma Danzey   Read or Listen Below:   Bible Reading: “For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others.” - Romans...
Why Our Spouses Get Our Leftover Prayers (And How to Change It)
  Why Our Spouses Get Our Leftover Prayers (And How to Change It)   By: Jennifer Waddle   “Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; forthis is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18   On a recent kayak trip with my husband, I paddled slowly across the lake, praying for my kids and grandkids. Naming them one by...
How to Increase Your Spiritual Endurance
  How to increase your spiritual endurance   He says, “Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.” -Psalm 46:10   Dick Wade, a sportswriter in Kansas City, wanted to find out how much “action” really occurred in a regular baseball game. So he took a stopwatch to a...
A Prayer for Embracing Gods Unexpected Plans
  A Prayer for Embracing God's Unexpected Plans   By Christine F. Perry   Bible Reading:If anyone serves Me, let him follow Me; and where I am, there My servant will be also. If anyone serves Me, him My Father will honor.- John 12:26 NKJV   Listen or Read Below:   Working as an executive assistant/production assistant, I quickly learned to have multiple plans. I'd...
How Differences Shape and Strengthen Your Marriage
  How Differences Shape and Strengthen Your Marriage   By: Rebecca Barlow Jordan   For You shaped me, inside and out.You knitted me together in my mother’s womb long before I took my first breath. I will offer You my grateful heart, for I am Your unique creation, filled with wonder and awe. You have approached even the smallest details with excellence; Your...
Removing the Ivy
  Many Americans are frustrated by elite private universities. We’ve seen their hostility to diversity of opinion and free speech, politically imbalanced faculty and administrators, galling instances of antisemitism, enormous costs, unfair admissions processes, and more. For such reasons, public approval of higher education had been low and falling for some time, particularly on America’s right. And that was before the...
Comparison Is a Trap (Hebrews 12:1)
  Comparison Is a Trap (Hebrews 12:1)   By: Betsy St. Amant Haddox   Hebrews 12:1 (ESV) Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us…   Comparison is an ugly manipulator, destined to destroy—and...
In Praise of Friends
  In Praise of Friends   By Aaron D’Anthony Brown   Bible Reading:   “One with many friends may be harmed, but there is a friend who stays closer than a brother.” - Proverbs 18:24, CSB   There’s nothing quite like the feeling of reconciliation, especially when that reconciliation involves two friends. There’s a certain euphoria that happens when misunderstandings get resolved, and you’re suddenly...
Australia’s Most Dangerous Export
  Many of the world’s worst ideas come from the United States. Critical race theory and affirmative action, for example, are all-American. Even when bad ideas lack American origins, US academics manage to execute hostile takeovers of (say) French nonsense like postmodernism or queer theory early on in proceedings. This is then exported in over-simplified form to the rest of the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved