Oh, no. There is blatantly no religion in Brazil. Owing to the massive statue of Jesus over Rio de Janeiro, I'd say that there is at least some religion in Brazil. The most prominent religion is a different question, but I will answer it anyway.
73.6% of Brazilians are Roman Catholic
15.4% are Protestant
1.3% are Spiritists (of all countries, Brazil has the most noteworthy proportion of Spiritists)
There are other denominations also, including Buddhism, Judaism and Islam.
Whatever your initial question was; take what you need.
Christianity, specifically Catholicism, is the predominant religion in Brazil.
Roman Catholicism is the most common religion in Brazil.
Brazil does not have an official national religion. The major religion practiced in Brazil is Christianity, which is the religion claimed by 91 percent of the population. The largest denomination is Roman Catholic with 122 million adherents.
Brazil is a Catholic country, so animals are not used in religion.
Like most of South America, the predominant religion in Brazil is Roman Catholic.
Brazil is predominantly Roman Catholic.
catholic
Christianity is the most practiced religion in Brazil
Of course not.Main religion of Brazil is Roman Catholism.
No. While there are some Muslims in Brazil (~36,000), the dominant religion in Brazil is Catholicism. Additionally, the Brazilian Constitution of 1891 made Brazil a secular state with no official religion; it had previously been Catholicism.
the main religion of Brazil is roman cathlic
Catholic