Deseret News


Hamblin & Peterson: William Hamblin and Daniel Peterson: Christianity in India
By William Hamblin and Daniel Peterson 
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Published: December 21, 2018 10:42 am
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Saint Thomes Basilica is a Roman Catholic minor basilica in Chennai, India.

India is generally known as the land of Hinduism and Buddhism, and rightly so. 
But it is also home to a unique branch of Christianity, the Thomas Christians.





According to the “Acts of Thomas,” written in the third century, Jesus’ apostle 
Thomas — the Doubter (see John 
20:24-29<https://www.lds.org/scriptures/nt/john/20.24-29?lang=eng#p23>) — 
visited India around A.D. 52, probably to preach to the “Cochin Jews” — a 
Jewish merchant colony in Kerala that was participating in the lucrative 
Roman-Indian trade of the age. During his 20-year mission in India, Thomas is 
also said to have preached to Gondophares IV, a king of the Indo-Parthian 
dynasty in modern Pakistan and northwest India. More importantly, Thomas is 
said to have founded seven churches in Kerala — paralleling the seven churches 
of Asia Minor — before being martyred by the local king for his preaching.


Whatever the accuracy of these early legends, it is clear that Christianity 
could be found in Kerala by the second century A.D., when Christians in the 
west mention that the Christians of India read a now lost Hebrew (or Aramaic?) 
version of the Gospel of Matthew. Through the centuries, Indian Christianity 
has flourished in Kerala. Today, Christians in the state of Kerala number 6 
million, comprising 18 percent of the province’s population.

[https://media.deseretdigital.com/file/deb08d1397?crop=top:0|left:0|width:300&quality=100&resize=width:300&order=resize,crop&c=14&a=60159a39]
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St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Catholic Church, Palayoor, is unique in that the 
present church has continuous history of two millennia and stands on the same 
spot where the apostle Thomas first established it.
[ Note the Hindu style architecture  -BR comment]


In the Middle Ages, Christians — called Nasrani (Nazarenes) in India — centered 
mainly on the southeast Malabar coast. Though largely independent in most 
matters, they were part of the broader Syriac Nestorian Church of Iraq and Iran 
and used medieval Syriac in their liturgy. Although the details of their 
history are unknown, Indian Christians are briefly mentioned in a number of 
different medieval sources, including Marco Polo, who visited them on his 
return sea voyage from China to Italy. The oldest surviving Christian building 
in India is the St. Thomas Church at Palayoor (Kerala), which was built on the 
ruins of an earlier Hindu temple; the church was destroyed by fire and rebuilt 
on the old foundations in the 17th century.

The story of Indian Christianity was transformed by the arrival of Portuguese 
explorers in 1498. They established colonies in Indian ports such as Goa and 
made the integration of Indian Christians into Catholicism a central colonial 
policy. In this they were largely successful; today, 50-60 percent of Indian 
Christians are Roman Catholic. Most ancient church buildings in India were 
eventually occupied and rebuilt by the Portuguese during the 16th and 17th 
centuries. One of the most famous is the St. Thomas Cathedral in Chennai 
(Madras), said to be the tomb of the apostle. The church dates from at least 
the 10th century and was rebuilt by the Portuguese in 1602, then again by the 
British in 1893.


Along with Portuguese attempts to integrate Indian Christians into Catholicism, 
the Jesuits organized missionary efforts among both Muslims and Hindus. The 
most famous of these missionaries was St. Francis Xavier himself, co-founder of 
the Jesuits, whose tomb rests in the Basilica of Bom Jesus in Goa. These 
Jesuits made serious attempts to convert Akbar (1556-1605), the Muslim Mogul 
emperor of India. They were given permission to preach Christianity at Akbar’s 
court in Fatepur Sikri.

[https://media.deseretdigital.com/file/23e0396474?crop=top:0|left:0|width:1280&quality=100&resize=width:1280&order=resize,crop&c=14&a=06e55b86]
Shutterstock
Saint Thomes Basilica is a Roman Catholic minor basilica in Chennai, India. It 
was built in the 16th century by Portuguese explorers, over the tomb of St. 
Thomas, an apostle of Jesus.





But the Jesuits confused Akbar’s religious curiosity with the possibility of 
real conversion; Akbar remained an idiosyncratic Muslim who devised his own 
syncretistic, short-lived theology, called “Din-i-llahi” — “The religion of 
God” — with Akbar as its prophet.


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The final phase of the history of Christianity in India begins with the rise of 
the British Raj (reign) in the 18th and 19th centuries. Although they made no 
attempt to establish Christianity as the official religion of India, British 
rule encouraged Protestant missionaries to establish schools, hospitals and 
churches throughout India. St. James’ Anglican Church in Delhi, built in 1836, 
symbolized the triumph of the British colonial Christian ideology of India’s 
new rulers. Today, over 7 million Protestants, spread among numerous 
denominations, account for around 25 percent of India’s Christians.


Nonetheless, in contemporary India, Christianity ranks a distant demographic 
third, after Hinduism (80 percent) and Islam (14 percent). Although amounting 
to only 2.3 percent of the population of India, this still represents almost 30 
million Christians, three times more than are found in modern Portugal.


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In 1993, missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints opened 
a new Indian mission. Now, more than 13,000 Indian Latter-day Saints will soon 
celebrate Christmas with the subcontinent’s other Christians. And in April 2018 
the church announced plans to build a temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of 
Latter-day Saints in the ancient land of the Apostle Thomas.

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