Missionaries from other Christian denominations came to British India as well; Lutheran missionaries, for example, arrived in Calcutta in 1836 and by "the year 1880 there were over 31,200 Lutheran Christians spread out in 1,052 villages".[5]Methodists began arriving in India in 1783 and established missions with a focus on "education, health ministry, and evangelism".[8][9] In the 1790s, Christians from the London Missionary Society and Baptist Missionary Society, began doing missionary work in the Indian Empire.[10] In Neyoor, the London Missionary Society Hospital "pioneered improvements in the public health system for the treatment of diseases even before organized attempts were made by the colonial Madras Presidency, reducing the death rate substantially".[11]
After 1857, the establishment of schools and hospitals by British Christian missionaries became the "a pivotal feature of missionary work and the principal vehicles for conversion".[12][9]Christ Church College (1866) and St. Stephen's College (1881) are two examples of prominent church-affiliated educational institutions founded during the colonial period India.[13] Within educational institutions established during the British Raj in India, Christian texts, especially the Bible, were a part of the curricula.[12] During the colonial era in India, Christian missionaries developed writing systems for Indian languages that previously did not have one.[14][15] Christian missionaries in India also worked to increase literacy and also engaged in social activism, such as fighting against prostitution, championing the right of widowed women to remarry, and trying to stop early marriages for women.[16] Among British women, zenana missions became a popular method to win converts to Christianity.[12]
Many Protestant denominations are represented in India, the result of missionary activities throughout the country especially under British rule in India. The largest Protestant denomination in the country is the Church of South India, since 1947 a union of Presbyterian, Reformed, Congregational, Methodist, and Anglicancongregations with approximately 4 million members as of 2014. The broadly similar Church of North India had 1 million members. (Both churches are in full communion with the Anglican Communion.) There were about 1.3 million Lutherans, 473,000 Methodists, and 425,000 Baptists as of 1995.
Pentecostalism, one of the largest Protestant denominations worldwide, is also a rapidly growing denomination in India. It is spreading greatly in northern India and the southwestern areas, such as Kerala. The largest indigenous Pentecostal denominations in India are The Pentecostal Mission (TPM) and the India Pentecostal Church of God (IPC).
Protestant missionaries began to work throughout India, leading to the growth of different Christian communities. In 1793, William Carey, an English Baptist Minister, came to India as a missionary. He worked in Serampore, Calcutta and other cities founding churches. On the educational front, in addition to starting the Serampore College, he also translated the Bible into Bengali and Sanskrit, continuing with these labours until his death in 1834.Anthony Norris Groves, Plymouth Brethren missionary came to India in 1833. He worked in the Godavari delta area of then Madras Presidency, until his death in 1852.
According to the 2015 India Demographic and Health Survey, 2.6% of the population is Christian.[19] Other reports stated that Catholics make up 1.71% of the population, suggesting that less than 0.9% of the country has a Protestant background.[20]
A report in 2021 noted that many Indian Christians share Hindu beliefs, in particular in karma (54%), and reincarnation (29%);[21] it also noted that three-quarters of Indian Christians come from a lower-caste background.
^Tovey, Phillip (30 August 2017). Anglican Baptismal Liturgies. Canterbury Press. p. 197. ISBN9781786220202. The growth of the army in India also led to many army chaplains. After the change in the Charter in 1813, Anglican missionaries began to work across North India. The missionaries translated the Book of Common Prayer into various Indian languages. The first Anglican diocese was Calcutta in 1813, and bishops from India were at the first Lambeth conference. In 1930 the Church of India, Burma and Ceylon became an independent Province and created its own Book of Common Prayer, which was translated into several languages.
^The Indian Year Book. Bennett, Coleman & Company. 1940. p. 455. The three dioceses thus formed have been repeatedly subdivided, until in 1930 there were fourteen dioceses, the dates of their creation being as follows : Calcutta 1814; Madras 1835; Bombay 1837; Colombo 1845; Lahore 1877; Rangoon 1877; Travancore 1879; Chota Nagpur 1890; Lucknow 1893; Tinnevelly 1896; Nagpur 1903; Dornakal 1912; Assam 1915; Nasik 1929.
^ abYrigoyen, Charles Jr. (25 September 2014). T&T Clark Companion to Methodism. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 400. ISBN9780567662460.
^Frykenberg, Robert Eric; Low, Alaine M. (2003). Christians and Missionaries in India: Cross-cultural Communication Since 1500, with Special Reference to Caste, Conversion, and Colonialism. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. p. 127. ISBN9780802839565.
^Lucyk, Kelsey; Loewenau, Aleksandra; Stahnisch, Frank W. (6 January 2017). The Proceedings of the 21st Annual History of Medicine Days Conference 2012. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 237. ISBN9781443869287.
^ abcCrane, Ralph; Mohanram, Radhika (31 August 2013). Imperialism as Diaspora: Race, Sexuality, and History in Anglo-India. Oxford University Press. p. 86. ISBN9781781385630.
^Carpenter, Joel; Glanzer, Perry L.; Lantinga, Nicholas S. (7 March 2014). Christian Higher Education. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 103. ISBN9781467440394.
^Mullin, Robert Bruce (12 November 2014). A Short World History of Christianity. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 231. ISBN9781611645514.
^ abcThomas, Abraham Vazhayil (1974). Christians in Secular India. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. pp. 106–110. ISBN978-0-8386-1021-3.
^ abOddie, Geoffrey A. (2001). "Indian Christians and National Identity 1870-1947". The Journal of Religious History. 25 (3): 357, 361. doi:10.1111/1467-9809.00138.