Christianity is, according to the 2021 census, the fifth most practiced religion in Nepal, with 512,313 adherents or 1.8%,[1] up from 2011 when there were 375,699 adherents or 1.4% of the population.[2]
Many[3] informed observers have estimated that there are at least 1 million Nepali Christians.[4] According to some Christian groups, there may be as many as 3 million Christians in Nepal, constituting up to 10% of the country's population.[5] A report by Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary identified the Nepali church the fastest growing in the world.[6] The vast majority of Nepali Christians are evangelicalProtestants (if evangelical is defined broadly to include charismatics and Pentecostals);[7] there is also a small Catholic population of roughly 10,000.[8]
The expansion of Christianity is a controversial subject in Nepal,[17] and Nepali Christians have been subject to sporadic violence[18] and widespread social exclusion.[19] It is frequently reported in Nepali media and political discourse that missionaries offer the poor material incentives to convert, like what's happening in India,[20] but research has indicated that most Nepali Christians convert for reasons other than contact with missionaries.[21]
Nepal's constitution-writing process of 2006–15, and the 2007 designation of the country as a secular state,[22] intensified controversies surrounding Christianity.[23] The constitution of 2015 re-affirmed secularism but also prohibited proselytism and 'disturbing the religion of other people'.[24] In 2017, Nepal's parliament passed a bill which prohibited 'hurting the religious sentiment of any caste, ethnic community or class by writing, through voice/talk or by a shape or symbol or in any other such manner'.[25]
Historical Christianity population in Nepal[26][27]
Hangen, Susan & Mahendra Lawoti (2013) "Introduction: Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict in Nepal". in Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict in Nepal: Identities and Mobilization after 1990, ed. Mahendra Lawoti & Susan Hangen. Abingdon: Routledge. p. 15.
Shrestha, Ram Prasad (2012) 'A Historical Analytical Account of Mission Development of Churches of Nepal from 1990 to 2010.' Thesis submitted for MA Intercultural Studies in Asian Context, Redcliffe College. p. 3.
^Gaborieau, Marc (2002). ‘Christian Minorities in the Hindu Kingdom of Nepal.’ In Religious minorities in South Asia: selected essays on post-colonial situations, edited by Monirul Hussain and Lipi Ghosh. New Delhi: Manak Publications. p. 96.
Coday, Dennis (2003) ‘Maoists torch Catholic mission.’ National Catholic Reporter, 10 October 2003. Retrieved 15 September 2017. Archived on 21 November 2018. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
Hagen, Paul Kenneth. 1998. 'The Nepali Brahman Response to the Gospel of Jesus Christ in the Context of the Hindu Nepali Brahman Worldview.' Dissertation submitted for degree of Doctor of Missiology, Concordia Theological Seminary. pp. 415–89.