Christianity in India

Christians in India
Total population
28 million (2.3%) (2011)
Regions with significant populations
Kerala6,141,269
Tamil Nadu4,418,331
Meghalaya2,213,027
Nagaland1,739,651
Jharkhand1,418,608
Manipur1,179,043
Assam1,165,867
Odisha1,161,708
Karnataka1,142,647
Andhra Pradesh1,129,784
Religions
Protestant (59.22%), Roman Catholic (33.19%), Oriental Orthodox (7.44%), others (0.15%) etc.
Languages
Mizo, Malayalam, Syriac, Latin, Bengali, Punjabi, English, Tamil, Hindi-Urdu, Bodo, Khasi, Karbi, Rabha, Mushing, Naga, Kuki, Garo, Hmar, Nepali, Assamese, Odia, Gujarati, Marathi, Kokborok, Konkani, Kadodi, Kannada, Telugu, Bombay East Indian dialect & other Indian languages
Names in native languages include Isai, Kristhava, Masihi-Qaum & Nasrani

Christianity is India's third-largest religion with 28 million adherents, who make up 2.3 percent of the population, according to the 2011 census. Nearly two-thirds (65 percent) of India's Christians are found in South India, Goa & Mumbai (Bombay). Christianity is the major religion in parts of Northeast India, specifically in Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya. Christians are also a significant plurality in Manipur.

The written records of St Thomas Christians mention that Christianity was introduced to the Indian subcontinent by Thomas the Apostle, who sailed to the Malabar region (present-day Kerala) in 52 AD. The writings of Eusebius of Caesarea and of Jerome record that Bartholomew the Apostle evangelised India, particularly in the Konkan. The Acts of Thomas say that the early Christians were Malabar Jews who had settled in what is present-day Kerala before the birth of Christ. St Thomas, an Aramaic-speaking Jew from Galilee (present-day Israel) and one of the disciples of Jesus Christ, came to India in search of Indian Jews. After years of evangelism, Thomas was martyred and then buried at St Thomas Mount, in the Mylapore neighbourhood of Madras (Chennai). Ambrose of Milan, in his commentary on the Psalms, noted that Thomas the Apostle preached the Gospel to the Indian people. There is the scholarly consensus that a Christian community, had firmly established in the Malabar region by 600 AD at the latest; the community was composed of Nestorians or Eastern Christians, who belonged to the Church of the East & used the East Syriac Rite of worship.

Following the discovery of the sea route to India, by the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama in the 15th century AD, Western Christianity was established in the European colonies of Goa, Tranquebar, Bombay, Madras and Pondicherry; as in Catholicism (of Latin or Syriac Rites) and various kinds of Protestantism. The Church of North India and the Church of South India are a United Protestant denomination; which resulted from the evangelism/ ecumenism of Anglicans, Calvinists, Methodists and other Protestant groups who flourished in colonial India. Consequently, these churches are part of the worldwide Anglican Communion, World Communion of Reformed Churches, and World Methodist Council. Christian missionaries introduced the western educational system to the Indian subcontinent, to preach Christianity and to campaign for Hindu social reforms like the Channar revolt. The oldest known Christian group in North India are the Hindustani-speaking Bettiah Christians of Bihar, formed in the early 1700s through a Capuchin mission and under the patronage of the Bettiah Rajas during the Moghal Empire. Along with native Christians, small numbers of mixed Eurasian peoples, such as Anglo-Indian, Luso-Indian, Franco-Indian and Armenian Indian Christians also existed. Also, there is the Hindu Khrista Bhakta movement, who are unbaptised followers of Jesus Christ and St Mary, mainly among Shudras and Dalits.

Christians were involved in the Indian National Congress (INC), which led the Indian independence movement, the All India Conference of Indian Christians advocated for swaraj (self rule) and opposed the partition of India. There are reports of crypto-Christians who keep their faith in secret or hiding, due to the fear of persecution; especially Dalit (Outcaste) or Adivasi (Aboriginal) Christians resort to crypsis, because reservation & other rights are denied on conversion. Some Christians have gone through forced conversion to Hinduism by Hindu extremists, such as Shiv Sena (SS), the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Various groups of Hindu extremists have also attacked churches, or disrupted church services in certain states and territories of India. Convent schools and charities are being targeted under the Modi administration, particularly by banning missionaries from getting donations from abroad, while anti-Christian & pro-hindutva groups have been raising foreign funds.