Argentina

Revival Without Reform: Argentina’s Warning to the Church

17 March 2026

2.3 MINS

Argentina’s great revival of the 1980s transformed churches but left the nation largely unchanged — a sobering lesson on why Christians must engage both the sanctuary and the ballot box.

In 1985, I returned to my native Argentina to witness a move of God that would change the nation’s spiritual landscape forever. Through the ministry of evangelists like Carlos Annacondia, thousands were swept into the Kingdom.

My father’s church in La Plata exploded from 300 members in one location to thousands of believers in 19 new preaching points. We saw miracles, healings, and a generation of new believers on fire for Christ.

It was glorious, but it left many with a haunting question: If the revival was so great, why was the nation not transformed?

Despite full and multiplying churches, Argentina’s economy remained broken, corruption stayed rampant, and in 2010, it became the first Latin American nation to legalise same-sex marriage.

We had focused so much on becoming “light” within our buildings that we forgot to be the “salt” that preserves a decaying culture. We dedicated ourselves to our churches, while the enemy dedicated himself to our cities.

The Myth of Political Detachment

A common argument against Christian political involvement is that Jesus never told us to vote. However, we must remember that democracy did not exist in His time; the Jews were subjects of Rome, not voters in a republic. Today, we live in a different reality where failing to vote is often a lack of gratitude for the freedoms we enjoy.

While the Gospel does not depend on who sits in the seat of government — and often spreads fastest under persecution — the laws of a land directly impact our quality of life and our ability to protect the vulnerable.

Proverbs 29:2 reminds us: “When the godly are in authority, the people rejoice. But when the wicked are in power, they groan.”

Duty Over Security

Too often, pastors remain silent about elections to “keep the peace” or protect their congregation’s size. But prioritising personal security over national well-being is an abandonment of duty. We are called to be known for declaring Christ, but that doesn’t mean we ignore the tools God has given us to promote righteousness.

As Daniel served in Babylon without being contaminated by its system, we can engage in politics without losing our personal holiness.

Like the builders in Nehemiah’s day, we must hold a tool for building the church in one hand and a weapon to defend our families and values in the other.

A New Chapter for Argentina

Today, 42 years after the revival began, we are finally seeing the fruit of “holy involvement.” In 2025, the Argentine government officially recognised evangelical churches as legal entities for the first time. That same year, six evangelical Christians won seats in the legislature. The church is finally finding its voice beyond the sanctuary walls.

Breaking the Silence

In 1 Kings 18, Elijah challenged the people of Israel to stop wavering between God and Baal. The Bible records a chilling detail: “But the people were completely silent.”

In a culture that often mirrors the sensuality and darkness of Baal worship, the church cannot afford to be silent. We must learn from the history of Argentina.

Revival is the engine, but reform is the vehicle. I urge you to be both salt and light — not just in your pews, but at the ballot box.

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Rev. Sergio Scataglini is an international speaker and author. He was born in Argentina and is president of Scataglini Ministries, Inc. He received his M.A. in Theology from Fuller Theological Seminary. He resides in the United States with his wife, Kathleen; they have three sons.

___

Republished with thanks to The Washington Stand. Image courtesy of Pexels.

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3 Comments

  1. Stephen Lewin
    Stephen Lewin 17 March 2026 at 10:17 am - Reply

    Excellent article … salt and light ww must be

  2. dddc64421c58a1078bb33c79b1c42a8d7acebdba22b98ce8e0fe4becd0f83aab?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Michael Thompson 17 March 2026 at 12:11 pm - Reply

    “We had focused so much on becoming ‘light’ within our buildings that we forgot to be the “salt” that preserves a decaying culture.” We don’t become light, we are light because Jesus is Light, and since we are in Him, we are light.
    And what is ‘salt’? Is it the law that we proclaim, or is it Love? Jesus is Life, Light and Love, and that should be our only proclamation. If we really believe in the Cross, then we confess our death when Christ died, and our resurrection when He rose from the grave, and sitting at the right hand of the Father in Christ in heaven (which is now). Jesus obeyed the law for us, and since we really love Him, as He loves us, as the Father Loves Jesus, so we obey the law in Jesus. John 17:26, John 14:20. The law leads to death, that’s why Argentina and every other nation that has had a similar revival has not experienced reformation. Signs and wonders, healings, and other manifestations occurred, but they never lasted or bore real fruit. The fruit was that from the tree of the ‘knowledge of good and evil’, that fruit being death. The real fruit is Love from the tree of Life.
    Saul, when he encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus, says that “But when it pleased God (which had separated me from my mother’s womb, and called me by his grace.) To reveal his Son in me …” From that day on Paul shared nothing else but the Love of Jesus, so much so he says “Because we thus judge, that if one be dead for all, then were all dead, and he died for all, that they which live, should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which died for them, and rose again.
    Wherefore, henceforth know we no man after the flesh, yea though we had known Christ after the flesh, yet not henceforth know we him no more.
    Therefore if any man be in Christ, let him be a new creature. Old things are passed away: behold, all things are become new.” (2 Corinthians 5:15,16)
    Wherefore, henceforth know we no man after the flesh – If we are living from the tree of Life, it is Jesus that is Living in me, and seeing Himself in every other person He meets. He has judged all on the cross.
    The ballot box, representative, democratic government will only prevail when we begin to see each other through Jesus’s eyes and recognise that He Loves all of us. Yes, ALL of us. At the Cross, Jesus uprooted sin from us, and that is why “all things are become new.”
    In your response, check first from which tree you are living from.

  3. 4a141a50b02916ae948ba579790845d9cfa2a99bbf345cf93dfce89ca24791f7?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Geoff 17 March 2026 at 1:22 pm - Reply

    AMEN!! the Kingdom influence in Aus society

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