Calvary Temple - India's Fastest Growing Megachurch
Calvary Temple - India's Fastest Growing Megachurch
Calvary Temple - India's Fastest Growing Megachurch
Jonathan D. James
1 Introduction
Satish Kumar, the founder and senior pastor of Calvary Temple in Andhra
Pradesh, India is primarily known for building a gigantic church in 52 days,
thus emulating the feat of the Old Testament priest Nehemiah who built the
walls of Jerusalem in 52 days (Nehemiah 6: 15). Calvary Temple was built in 2011
to seat 18,000 people (complete with overflow facilities); in 2018 it has close to
200,000 members who worship in four services in the Telugu language and one
in English, all on Sunday. In addition to the church, Kumar has a Bible School,
conference halls, and other state-of-the-art facilities at the 12-acre property in
Hyderabad.
In this chapter, I describe how Calvary Temple (hereafter CT) was created,
how it operates organisationally, and how the church undertakes its ministry
in a nation that is not favourably disposed to Christianity. I also contemplate
whether CT is navigating a new path, perhaps as a ‘trailblazer’ for the future of
the Christian community in India.
Having acquired the status of a megachurch, a phenomenon that emerged
in the latter half of the 20th century in the West (especially in the usa) (Thum-
ma, Travis and Bird 2005), CT’s size is regarded as an indicator of success. But
how did CT grow so big so quickly in a Hindu nation where there were and still
are increasing tensions between Hindutva forces and minority religious
groups?1 I use the theoretical underpinnings of Robertson (1995) to frame my
proposition that CT is a product of both globalisation and glocalisation – the
latter being the connection and interplay between the global megachurch
movement and the local forces at work in contemporary Indian society.
In my research, I use both primary and secondary sources: primarily, I inter-
viewed six senior Christian leaders in India who are familiar with CT and the
1 Hindutva literally means Hinduness and it is generally associated with the ideology that seeks
to relate and define Indian culture with Hindu religious values. The current bjp Party is the
main instigator of this ideology, which taken to its extreme would mean an ‘India for Hindus
only’ policy and practice.
© Jonathan D. James, 2020 | doi 10.1163/9789004412927_016
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC 4.0 license.
Jonathan D. James - 9789004412927
Downloaded from Brill.com04/24/2021 07:42:47PM
via free access
India’s Fastest Growing Megachurch 303
Britain colonised India for 250 years. Towards the end of this rule – from 1909–
1935 the British categorised the Indian population into a general electorate of
Hindus and electorates representing Dalits (the outcastes) and those from the
minority religions (Christians, Muslims and Sikhs) (Sharma and Varshney
2014). Dalit Christians were included in the Christian electorate.
In 1935, the famous Dalit leader B.R. Ambedkar urged Dalits to abandon
Hinduism for a more impartial faith.4 At the same time, the noted nationalist
leader Mahatma Gandhi strongly criticised the various Christian efforts to con-
vert the Dalits. He, however, proclaimed that Hinduism should be reformed so
that the status of untouchability of the Dalits was negated (Harper 2000). In
1936, Christian Dalits were not entitled to receive government benefits (Web-
ster 1992). And between the years 1936 and 1946, many states in northern India
introduced anti-conversion laws (Kim 2003). Following independence from
the British in 1948, debates raged on the issue of conversion. The main party in
power – Indian National Congress (inc) was sympathetic to the minority
religions – whereas the Bharatiya Janata Party (bjp) upheld a Hindu national-
ist agenda. In 1950, the inc ratified the Constitution to ensure rights for
Satish Kumar was born in 1971 within a poor family in Hyderabad, India. Unfor-
tunately, Kumar took to the streets at a young age and fell in with bad company.
5 A new party – The United Front party consisting of both non-Congress and non-BJP mem-
bers was formed and secured support from the 332 members out of the 545 seats in Parlia-
ment, with H.D. Deve Gowda being installed as the Prime Minister. Parliament produced
three Prime Ministers between 1996–1997 and forced the country back to the polls in 1998.
His parents were greatly concerned about his well-being and his future. One
day, Kumar heard a street preacher say that Jesus could change people. Kumar
contemplated that if Jesus could change him – that would be a miracle and it
would attest to the reality of Jesus. So, he went forward in the ‘altar call’ and
committed his life to Jesus Christ (Calvary Temple Website A; YouTube Kumar
2018).
Kumar joined a church and participated in various Christian activities, such
as doing manual work for the conferences sponsored by the Indian Evangelical
Mission (iem) – a well-known indigenous, evangelical missionary organisa-
tion. At the age of 21, Kumar started a vibrant youth fellowship group – the
Calvary Youth Mission (Field notes 2018).
In 1995, Kumar felt he received a call from God to build a very large church,
but nothing significant materialised for the next 10 years (Brown 2015). Kumar
also had a television ministry that he could not sustain financially. He there-
fore travelled to the usa to raise funds, but he was not successful in getting any
appreciable and ongoing donations (nrb 2018). In 2005, Kumar started CT
with 25 members. By 2015, the church grew to 130,000 members, adding 60,000
in the last three years alone (Brown 2015). The 2018 membership at CT stands
at 195,000 people (Calvary Temple Website A).
Despite opposition from various groups, including agencies of the local gov-
ernment, Kumar urged his team of followers to build the afore-mentioned
megachurch in a record time. One of my interview respondents, a Christian
leader from a local church revealed that it was remarkable that Kumar himself
participated in the building project, doing manual and other related work at
times even in the rain (Field notes 2018). This involvement was a vital ingredi-
ent for the success of the building programme at CT (Field notes 2018). It
should be noted that CT is a non-denominational, evangelical church, not as-
sociated with the classical Pentecostal or the recent neo-Pentecostal move-
ment as are most megachurches in India and worldwide. Anderson (2004: 123)
revealed that “at least a third” of Asia’s Christian population is now Pentecostal
or neo-Pentecostal, and that this figure is “steadily rising”.
4 Theoretical Underpinnings
and Fairbrother 1999). In a global world, Kinnvall (2004: 742) alluded, individu-
als may be more inclined to use religion as the integrating point in their lives
because people “search for constant time and space-bounded identities”.
In his analysis of globalisation, sociologist Robertson (1995) invoked the
subconcept of ‘glocalisation’ as the “simultaneous occurrence of both univer-
salizing and particularizing tendencies” in contemporary systems (Blatter 2013:
para 1). Robertson (1995) argued that globalisation on its own was an over in-
flated reality and that the boundaries between the local and the global were
connected. And Robertson conceived the local as a key facet of globalisation.
Therefore, while acknowledging that global cultural links may be strong
throughout the world, Robertson predicted that globalisation would not result
in the formation of a united human culture (Robertson 1995). He argued that
glocalisation has the impact of channelling global influences according to the
local culture’s needs, structure and taste. Thus, the local processes meld with
global processes and vice versa. In short, the term glocalisation means that
trends of homogenisation and heterogenisation coexist throughout the mod-
ern age. Furthermore, glocalisation means that it is local culture which assigns
meaning to global influences, and that the two are therefore interdependent
and enable each other (Cultural Reader 2012 para 4).
In a similar vein to Robertson (1995), Hexham and Poewe (1997) took this
concept into religion and argued that even though Pentecostal Christianity is a
global faith with a global framework, it is grounded in a variety of local forms
and logistics. In Asia, there is a long-held perception of Christians as ‘foreign’,
‘anti-national’ and ‘neo-colonial’, even more so than in Africa or Latin America
(Jenkins 2002: 175–177, 182–185). Hence, the growth of Pentecostalism, espe-
cially through megachurches in Asia, must be understood in the context of
these negative sentiments.
Considering the above, I assert that Christianity in India is more likely to see
real growth and be sustained if the global Christian elements and fused with
local components of language, culture, theology and the like (James 2010).
I examine CT from three strategic standpoints: global, glocal and local. The
global features refer to attributes that are linked to the fraternity of mega-
churches worldwide, especially in relation to the theological construct of Pen-
tecostalism and neo-Pentecostalism. The glocal features refer to global aspects
that have been fused with local issues to reflect unique sociocultural adapta-
tions. The local refers to the features that have resisted global constructs (not
become glocal) and remained unique to the Indian Christian context.
5.1 Global
As stated above, the term megachurch was popularised, especially in the usa
in the early 1980s (Schaller 1980). Scholarship undertaken in the late 1990s and
in early 2000 equated the term ‘mega’ with size – the number of attendees and,
by extension, the facilities to accommodate the large number in the congrega-
tions (Thumma and Travis 2007).
Megachurches in India certainly have large and relatively magnificent build-
ings. Seen in the context of India’s demographic, where poverty is rampant,
these buildings appear luxurious.6 For example, the Mark Buntain Memorial
Assembly of God Church in Kolkata is built as a large theatre where the seats
are cushioned (Sungjemmeren 2011). CT and two other megachurches located
in Bangalore – have chairs or pews for all who come to the worship service –
unlike some churches in India, where the congregation sits on the floor accord-
ing to gender, age, caste, or class7 (Sungjemmeren 2011). CT’s auditorium is
fully air-conditioned – therefore, this is a novelty for churches in India.
What is emphasised in CT’s website through the promotional videos on
YouTube and the interviews of Pastor Kumar, is the fact that the church was
built in 52 days – alluding to the similarity between Kumar and Nehemiah, the
Old Testament priest:
A book entitled 52 Day Miracle – written by usa author Peter Spencer, with a for-
ward by bestselling author and US megachurch leader, Rick Warren – chronicles
6 According to World Bank data in 2011, the world had 872.3 million people living below the
new poverty line, of whom 179.6 million people live in India. Therefore, India with 17.5 per
cent of the total world’s population, had 20.6 per cent share of the world’s poorest in 2011
(Donnan 2014).
7 The other two churches are: Full Gospel AoG Church – a megachurch started by an Indian
theological graduate in the 1980s and Bethel AoG Church which was started by Bible college
teachers as a house church in the 1950s.
8 Mark Chaves argues that spectacle is part of the megachurch movement in “All Creatures
Great and Small: Megachurches in Context,” Review of Religious Research (2006). Jeanne Kil-
de also raises this perspective with the penetrating question, “Is Christianity, at some level,
always about performance and spectacle?” See – When Church Became Theatre: The Transfor-
mation of Evangelical Architecture and Worship in Nineteenth-Century America (Oxford,
2005).
9 In Transnational Religious Movements: Faith’s Flows (Sage, 2017), I argue that transnational re-
ligious groups aspire to go to the West and especially to the usa to start branches or minister
Kumar claimed that he does not resort to ‘signs and wonders’ in attracting
people to his church (Day Star 52 Day Miracle 2018). People come to the church,
according to Kumar, for the Word of God (tbn YouTube). However, Spencer
(Day Star 52 Day Miracle, 2018), attested to healings, miracles and supernatural
phenomena when he visited CT. Signs, wonders and healings are part of the
teachings and manifestations of Pentecostal and neo-Pentecostal movements
across the world. The CT motto reflected in the changing banner on the web-
site says: “Be First, Be Best or Be Different” (Calvary website B). The church
motto clearly resembles the prosperity, success and wellness gospel of the
global Pentecostal movement. The motto appeals to the suburban, middle-
class people (presumably the younger demographic) who would hear similar
catch phrases from their workplaces and companies advertised on TV, radio
and social media.
In a sermon given in 2016 (YouTube Kumar 2018), Kumar alluded to the fact
that to fail examinations at school and college is a condition that brings shame
to families and people in the community. Presumably, this reference to shame
would gain traction in India where the culture puts a very high premium on
education and success in academia. Kumar’s comment is an indirect way of
espousing the prosperity gospel, an offshoot of Pentecostal teaching. Kumar’s
comment also displays a lack of sensitivity to the number of suicides by youth
in India after failing their examinations.10
CT follows the centripetal perspective of Christian ministry (with its em-
phasis on gathering adherents to the church), rather than the centrifugal per-
spective wherein Christians are encouraged in the New Testament to “go into
all the world and make disciples…. ” (Matthew 28: 18–19; Clowney 1995; Miller
1996). Missiologists call CT’s philosophy the ‘attractional church’ philosophy –
where the focus is on people coming to the church as opposed to the ‘missional
church’ philosophy where the focus lies in going out to the world to bring dis-
ciples into the faith:
to the diaspora population there. In this case, CT’s leader seems to travel to the West more
for the purposes of networking, publicity and political activism.
10 India has one of the world’s highest suicide rates for youth aged 15 to 29 and student sui-
cides are frequent enough that celebrities and policy makers have started to call for action
(Saha 2017).
He [Kumar] started the church from scratch. He had the vision and he
built the church in 52 days. This action therefore qualifies him to be the
sole leader, decision maker and final arbiter of the church. The subtext of
the promotions and public relations messages imply that the miraculous
emergence of the leader and his ability to grow a church constitutes spiri-
tual leadership and therefore demands the full allegiance of all the
members….
Field notes 2018
assistance and to ministries for youth and senior citizens. Besides the full-time
paid employees, called Calvary Army, Kumar has two types of volunteers –
Calvary Soldiers, who are semi-employed volunteers and Calvary Amateurs –
unpaid enthusiasts (Reddy 2015). In this way the whole congregation has the
potential of being transformed into voluntary semi-paid or unpaid ‘co-workers’
(Reddy 2015: 159).
Professionalism, the use of technology, and mediatisation are yet other fea-
tures of CT in line with the global megachurch movement. The worship ser-
vices at CT reflect a Western bias with the use of guitars, drums and wide-screen
projection facilities. The worship segment is performance-oriented; that is, the
focus is on the worship team and their professional singing and playing.
The congregational singing cannot be heard because it is overpowered by the
sound of the accompanying music and the singers in the worship team (Field
notes 2018).
Remarkably, all attendees have electronic cards that they swipe before en-
tering the worship centre. The card records attendance and enables tithing to
be given efficiently. Every member of CT gets a swipe card and anyone can
become a member on their first visit with a short declaration of their intention
to become a member. On the spot membership is made easier because most
first-time visitors are already familiar with Kumar and CT through his nation-
wide television ministry (Brown 2015).
Kumar’s messages air on 300 TV channels each month in several Indian lan-
guages (Brown 2015). It is estimated that the more than 5,000 new visitors
come to CT each week because of this media exposure, and many of the new-
comers become committed church members (Brown 2015). Kumar’s TV reach
is estimated to be 10 million viewers (tbn YouTube).
Like most megachurches, CT has a user-friendly website, a Facebook pres-
ence, and a YouTube channel which extend the church’s scope. However, the
most intriguing and noteworthy aspect of CT’s global dimension is its growing
transnational political activism. Kumar met with the usa Vice President Mike
Pence in Washington D.C. in February 2018 while attending the National Reli-
gious Broadcasters Convention – where Kumar was their keynote speaker
(nrb website 2018). The meeting Kumar had with Pence was considered major
news at CT, and the Church website used this meeting to bolster Kumar’s
standing in the international scene. The talk with Pence was reported as a dis-
cussion about religious freedom – an obvious reference to the current Indian
government’s tardiness in handling the issue of the persecution of Christians
in India by Hindu fundamentalist groups (nrb website 2018). Thus, Kumar has
now been attributed with opening a global political platform to champion the
5.2 Glocal
At CT several innovations and cultural adaptations have evolved. The large
buildings in the 12-acre property were built despite strenuous opposition from
Hindu-inspired groups and local government agencies (Field notes 2018). In
building CT, Kumar has successfully created an alternative space and imbued
Christians with a sense of belonging. As mentioned above, CT provides seating
for everyone, devoid of bias according to caste or class. Thus, the minority sta-
tus of Christians in India is forgotten by worshippers when they gather at CT.
At CT, charity and meeting physical needs is a major component of the
church ministry. Because of the electronic cards issued to all members, if any-
one misses a service, they receive a telephone call the next day from a staff
member, enquiring about their wellbeing and asking if prayer is needed (Field
notes 2018). Brown (2015) explained this practice: “While this may seem over-
bearing for many Christians in the West, it is very meaningful to the Indian
believers” (Brown, 2015 para 15). Amazingly, every member of the church gets a
birthday cake delivered to their door on their birthday, which means CT hand
delivers (through their network of volunteers) as many as 4,000 birthday cakes
a day (Brown 2015; Field notes 2018). In the context of abject poverty amongst
many in the church, and the fact that their families cannot celebrate their
birthdays, it’s not unusual to see recipients cry when their cake arrives (Brown
2015). CT also provides about 10,000 meals every Sunday for poor members and
subsidises 50 percent of the cost of all medical prescriptions (Brown 2015).
The preaching and worship at CT also show glocal elements. There are five
two-hour services every Sunday and Kumar preaches for 60–70 minutes at
each service (Brown 2015). It is interesting to note that the first Sunday service
commences at 6.00 am; and the last service concludes at 8.00 pm. Kumar also
gives a 30-minute teaching session to 1,200 key church workers before one of
11 The 2011 Indian Census shows 2.3 per cent of the population as being Christians. Some
Christian leaders think this figure is understated. See: http://censusindia.gov.in/Census_
And_You/religion.aspx.
the late afternoon services (Brown 2015). As mentioned earlier, Kumar is not
theologically linked with the Pentecostal or neo-Pentecostal movement, so his
sermons are biblically-based and free of calls to receive the second blessing,
the gift of tongues and the like. Instead: “…. he [Kumar] does not mince words,
calling out sin, calling for repentance, and pointing to the cross. His goal in all
his messages is that Jesus be exalted” (Brown 2015: para 11–12). Kumar’s preach-
ing content and delivery style display more of a Baptist and evangelical theo-
logical orientation than that of the Pentecostal tradition.
The respondents I interviewed all agreed that Kumar is not the best preach-
er, but he gives clear, biblical and easy-to-understand sermons (Field notes
2018). CT’s website, with links to the church’s YouTube channel, describe Ku-
mar’s preaching this way:
He adopted his preaching method from Jesus Christ, i.e. preaching the
word with illustrations and parables. This greatly helps people to under-
stand the word and apply it to their daily lives. His spirit filled sermons
have attracted hundreds and thousands of people to Calvary Temple….
Calvary Temple website A
From my observation, Kumar’s use of stories, folk tales, anecdotes and illustra-
tions in his preaching bears similarity to the Hebrew method of parables used
by Jesus Christ, and it resembles the style and presentation of the Indian folk
teacher:
be patient and be pure”. And in a sermon, that resonated with the poor and
marginalised titled: “There is hope for the useless and the hopeless”, Kumar
urged the congregation to take heart because, although the people of Israel
were slaves for hundreds of years, they were eventually delivered by God’s ser-
vant, Moses. Then, Kumar added: “Joseph was sold as a slave but he did not live
as a slave”. At this point, Kumar shared his own story of how at 12 years of age,
he was thought to be useless by his family. He was engaged in smoking and
gambling, all of which brought great shame to his family. But he was delivered
(YouTube Kumar 2018).
Hence Kumar, like an Indian folk narrator applies the narrative of the bible
to his own life and then, to the lives of the listeners, thereby connecting the
past with the present and engaging with the congregation. Kumar’s preaching
method is not expository; he does not preach a passage of Scripture by explain-
ing the language, history and context to draw out the meaning of the passage.
Kumar’s preaching method is topic based – on a single verse of Scripture or a
short passage with a view to answering one of the issues outlined above. Con-
sidering the large number of worshippers in each service at CT, and the demo-
graphic of the congregation, Kumar’s style of preaching is apt and effective.
As indicated above, the main thrust of CT is its worship services on Sunday.
A large Sunday School ministry exists for young children and youth, but it
seems that the Sunday School is considered more of an ‘afterthought’ – a con-
venient place for parents to leave their children with teachers while they at-
tend worship in the main auditorium (Field notes 2018). There is no systematic
curriculum for Sunday School, and not all the teachers are adequately equipped
to handle the children of different ages (Field notes 2018). One of the inter-
viewees explained: “It is a pity that Kumar has put so much emphasis on the
worship services and the other ministries, but he has clearly neglected the
ministry of the Sunday School” (Field notes 2018).
5.3 Local
CT has several local characteristics that are typical to the Indian context. The
Indian church has a spirituality that is quite different from her counterpart in
the West. For example, there is no secular-sacred divide: “In Indian epistemol-
ogy yoga and bhoga are used as synonyms for the sacred and the secular – that
is, spirituality and worldly happiness” (Chaudhuri, n.d.). Hence, even televi-
sion becomes sacred when it relays a Christian message (James 2010). This ex-
plains why the actual worship centre and the recognition of leaders’ birthdays
have such great spiritual significance.
Indian churches accept a literal interpretation of the Bible and furthermore,
whereas Christians in the West have downplayed the supernatural, Indian
Christians embrace the supernatural and pray fervently against the forces of
spiritual darkness. When Kumar sensed the call of God to build CT in 52 days,
he relied on the verse in the Old Testament book of Nehemiah: “…. the Word
gave me faith to repeat history.…” (Daystar 52 Day Miracle 2018). Thus, Kumar
staked his life and reputation on the bible and the literal meaning of the prom-
ise given to Nehemiah. He also chose the 11th of November – his birthday – as
the starting day for the building programme for CT. This was the day that the
foundation stone was laid. (Day Star 52 Day Miracle, 2018).
There is a very strong emphasis on prayer and fasting as part of the disci-
pline of the life of a Christian in Indian churches. Brown illustrates this at CT:
The congregation always put a strong emphasis on prayer and fasting, but
when they were about to embark on their building project, Pastor Satish
[Kumar] called for 40 days of prayer and fasting, with believers fasting
and joining together in corporate prayer as much as they could.
The problem was that he called for this during the rainy season, a time when it
is unbearably hot and unbearably wet. Yet night after night crowds of thou-
sands gathered on the empty property to join for hours, sitting with their um-
brellas up as Satish preached in the pouring rain (without an umbrella). It
made for quite a sight (Brown 2015: paras 6–9).
After the first 40-day period of prayer and fasting, Kumar called for another
40 days of prayer and fasting, and when that ended, he called for 40 days
more – adding to a total of 120 consecutive days of corporate prayer and fasting
(Brown, 2015).
Kumar preaches mostly in the Telugu language – the main language spoken
in the State of Andhra Pradesh. All the services are in Telugu except one at 6.00
pm that is in English. Telugu worship songs are sung in the services. Although
Kumar is a good communicator in the English language, when he preaches in
Telugu, he does so with greater fluency and grace.
Kumar has claimed that the church was fully funded by local giving (Daystar
TV YouTube 2017). However, Spencer (Daystar TV YouTube 2017), in the same
video, alluded to the fact that when he met Kumar in the usa, Spencer prom-
ised to financially support Kumar before the building project was completed.
We are not told whether funds eventually came from the usa or other foreign
countries.
When Christianity came to India through Saint Thomas (as alluded to in
rich historical traditions),12 Thomas had a positive response in gospel witness
12 The following works are used to support this tradition of St. Thomas’ ministry in India:
Mingana, A. The Early Spread of Christianity in India (Manchester: Manchester University
Press, 1926), 15–16. Also, Acts of Thomas 1 (c. ad 200–220); Teachings of the Apostles 3, (3rd.
from the cultured and wealthy Indians (Firth 1961; Philip 1950). However, with
the entry of British and American missionaries in the 18th and 19th centuries,
the Christian message was redirected toward the lower classes (Firth 1961;
Philip 1950; Wolpert 1991). Christians – mostly from the lower rungs of society –
are generally treated as second class citizens. Hence, the positive aspect of CT
is that Kumar has managed to make the church a place where the various
castes and classes can mingle without sociocultural and economic division.
Notwithstanding, CT and several other megachurches in India have tried to
resolve the delicate issue of Christianity and sociopolitical acceptance. Bap-
tism and communion are two sacraments that the Church worldwide has prac-
tised unequivocally. In India, baptism is a contentious issue because most
Christian converts are from what is referred to as Scheduled Castes (SC). When
a convert from a SC is baptised, he or she then goes on record as an Indian
Christian. However, Indian Christians from SCs are treated as members of
Backward Class (BC) and denied government benefits. Only Hindu SCs are
granted government benefits.13 To deal with this matter, the sacrament of bap-
tism is oftentimes bypassed at CT and other megachurches in India (Reddy
2015). Hence the Indian Christians from SCs enjoy membership at CT as well
as benefits in society.
Whereas the various castes and classes can mingle, CT upholds gender seg-
regation in the seating arrangement at the worship services – women and men
are seated separately. This is in keeping with most denominational and non-
denominational churches in the nation. At CT, Sunday School is for all chil-
dren and youth but there are separate seating sections for boys and girls. At
present, only male teachers can minister to the Sunday School children, to
avoid male and female teachers fraternising (Field notes 2018). At one time all
the teachers were women; however, that changed recently without much ex-
planation. (Field notes 2018).
CT upholds the notion of the church as a family. The church caters for the
whole family and there are activities beyond Sunday for various members.
However, CT goes a step further than most churches regarding the issue of
property ownership of its members: members must declare their assets and
century); Hippolytus on the Twelve (c. 3rd. cent.); Origen, Commentary on Genesis, vol. 3
(d. c. 254); Clementine Recognitions 9.29 (c ad 350); St. Gregory of Nazianzen, Oration 33.11
(c. ad 325–390).
13 The 1950 legislation listed Hindu Dalits as a “Scheduled Caste”, which made them eligible
for free education with a quota of jobs made available to them in the government and
seats in state legislatures – as a way of improving their status. The same privileges were
extended to Sikh Dalits in 1956, and to Buddhist Dalits in 1990. However, similar prefer-
ences were not given to the Muslim and Christian Dalits.
make agreements in the presence of the church leaders as to how family prop-
erty and assets will be divided (Reddy 2015). Kumar believes that this prevents
family conflicts and avoids unnecessary litigation cases in courts (Reddy 2015).
This is another instance of the infusion of Indian collectivistic culture in CT –
as opposed to the situation in Western churches where individualism
prevails.
6 Discussion
7 Conclusion
In this chapter, I have situated CT’s growth and ministry in the context of the
cultural and religious landscape of India. The growth of CT is amazing consid-
ering the Indian government’s chequered history with the Christian church.
CT is India’s largest megachurch and it is poised to become by far the largest
church facility in the world. The church is clearly part of the global mega-
church movement but it still maintains glocal and local elements that ensure a
promising future. The chapter indicates that the global aspects of the mega-
church movement are being assimilated within CT’s Indian identity, tradition
and aspirations. However, given the current trajectory of CT’s alignment with
conservative Christian politicians in the usa, the global elements may
strengthen and upset this balance.
The Rev Satish Kumar is not known for his oratorical skills (although his
preaching style which resembles the Indian folk narrator is effective for India),
but his visionary leadership and organisational acumen are impressive. CT has
References
Chester, T. 2008. “Attractional Church versus missional Church”. Tim Chester. Retrieved
20 May 2018 from https://timchester.wordpress.com/2008/09/21/attractional
-church-verses-missional-church/.
Clowney, E. 1995. The Church: Contours of Christian Theology. Downers Grove: InterVar-
sity Press.
Cultural Reader Website, 2012. “Roland Robertson’s Concept of Glocalization”. 10 May
2012. Retrieved 1 March 2018 from http://culturalstudiesnow.blogspot.com/2012/05/
roland-robertsons-concept-of.html.
Dawn, M. 1999. Reaching Out Without Dumbing Down. Michigan: William B. Eardmans
Publishing.
Day Star TV YouTube. 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2018 from https://www.youtube
.com/watch?v=U75S2S72Hsw.
Day Star 52 Day Miracle (Kumar and Spencer) 2018. Retrieved on 5 May 2018 from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tVG75avgsNo.
Donnan, S. 2014. “World Bank eyes biggest global poverty line increase in decades” The
Financial Times 9 May 2014.
Freston, P. 2001. Evangelicals and Politics in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Firth, C. 1961. An Introduction to Indian Christian Church History. Chennai: CLS Press.
Harper, S. 2000 In the Shadow of the Mahatma: Bishop V.S. Azariah and the Travails of
Christianity in British India. Studies in the History of Christian Missions. Grand
Rapids, USA: William B. Eerdmans.
Hexam, I. and Poewe, K. 1997. New Religions as Global Cultures: Making the Human Sa-
cred. Boulder: Westview Press.
James, J.D. 2010. McDonaldisation, Masala McGospel and Om Economics: Televangelism
in Contemporary India. Washington D.C. & New Delhi: Sage.
James, J.D. 2017. Transnational Religious Movements: Faith’s Flows. Thousand Oaks and
New Delhi: Sage.
Jenkins, P. 2002. The Next Christendom: The Rise of Global Christianity. New York: Ox-
ford University Press.
Katju, M. 2003. Vishva Hindu Parishad and Indian Politics. Hyderabad: Orient
Longman.
Kilde, J. 2005. When Church Became Theatre: The Transformation of Evangelical Archi-
tecture and Worship in Nineteenth-century America. New York: Oxford University
Press.
Kim, S. 2003. In Search of Identity: Debates on Religious Conversion in India. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Kinnvall, C. 2004. “Globalization and Religious Nationalism: Self Identity, and the
Search for Ontological Security”. Political Psychology. 25:5, 741–767.
Lisa, A. 2005. “Government Announces Anti Conversion Law Not in Force…” Christian
Today 24 May 2005. Retrieved 18 May 2018 from https://www.indiatoday.in/
magazine/states/story/20021118-jayalalithaas-anti-conversion-law-causes-political
-polarisation-in-tamil-nadu-794296-2002-11-18.
Lyon, D. 2000. Jesus In Disneyland: Religion in Postmodern Times. Cambridge: Polity
Press.
McCorquodale, R. and Fairbrother, R. 1999. “Globalization and Human Rights” Human
Rights Quarterly. 21:3, 735–766.
Miller, P. 1996. “Editorial: Whither the Church?” Theology Today. 52:4, 445–448.
NRB website. 2018. Retrieved 11 March 2018 from http://nrb.org/news-room/articles/ft/
vice-president-pence-hosts-nrb-members-white-house/.
Pew Research Center. “Overview: Pentecostalism in Asia”. Pew Research Center. Retrieved
March 2018 from http://www.pewforum.org/2006/10/05/overview-pentecostalism
-in-asia/.
Philip, E. 1950. The Indian Church of St. Thomas. Nagercoil: LMS Press.
Ram, A. 2002. “Jayalalithaa’s Anti-Conversion Law”. India Today. November 11 2002.
Retrieved 11 May 2018 from https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/states/story/
20021118-jayalalithaas-anti-conversion-law-causes-political-polarisation-in-tamil-
nadu-794296-2002-11-18.
Reddy, S. 2015.”Nurturing Globalized Faith Seekers: Mega Churches In Andhra Pradesh”.
In Ed. James, J.D. A Moving Faith: Mega Churches Go South. New Delhi and Los An-
geles: Sage.
Robertson, R. 1995. “Glocalization: time-space and homogeneity-heterogeneity”. In
Eds. Featherstone, M. et al. Global Modernities. London: Sage.
Rojek, C. 1993. “Disney Culture”. Leisure Studies. 12:2, 121–135.
Ruggie, G. 1998. Constructing the World Polity: Essays on International Institutionaliza-
tion. London and New York: Routledge.
Saha, D. 2017. “Every hour, one Student commits suicide in India”. Hindustan Times.
Retrieved 20 June 2018 from https://www.hindustantimes.com/health-and-fitness/
every-hour-one-student-commits-suicide-in-india/story-7UFFhSs6h1HNgr
NO60FZ2O.html.
Scholte, J. 2000. Globalization: A Critical Introduction. Basingstoke: Macmillan.
Schaller, L. 1980. The Multiple staff and the larger Church. Nashville: Abingdon.
Sharma, R. & Varshney, N. 2014. “History of Separate Electoral System in India” Legal Heri-
tage. Retrieved 20 March 2018 from https://legalheritage.wordpress.com/2014/
04/03/history-of-separate-electorate-system-in-india-by-dr-richa-sharma/.
Sungjemmeren, I. 2011. “Indian Megachurches Centripetal Mission”. Lausanne World
Pulse Archives. Retrieved 1 February 2017 from http://www.lausanneworldpulse
.com/perspectives-php/1360/01-2011.