Nepals Christians look forward to first official Christmas

The Christian community in Nepal is looking forward to celebrating its first official Christmas and Christians in the UK are being asked to show their support.

Christmas Day this year is the first ever to be marked as a public holiday in Nepal, a predominantly Hindu nation.

Although the Christian community remains small, it has grown considerably from around 30,000 people 15 years ago to some 700,000 believers today.

The growing number of believers has seen a huge increase in demand for Bibles but the Nepal Bible Society, with its limited funds, is struggling to meet the need and most Nepalese cannot afford to buy their own copy unless it is heavily subsidised.

“This is where churches in England and Wales come in,” said Peter Meadows Bible Society’s Director of Giving and Communications. “We are asking churches to make this Christmas different here too.”

Bible Society in England and Wales is seeking donations to help provide more Nepalese Christians with their own copies of the Bible, including a complete translation of the Tibetan Bible for the five million Tibetan speakers and copies of the Bible on solar-powered microchip for those who live without electricity in the mountains.

Bible Society has put together a free Nepal Christmas pack and DVD showing some of the ways that churches can celebrate Christmas Nepalese-style.

Nepalese Christians have traditionally been socially marginalised and there have been reports of authorities harassing churches. Twenty years ago, being a Christian was illegal.

“We couldn’t even go to church holding a Bible in our hand,” said Tej Jirel, General Secretary of the Nepal Bible Society.

Now the Christian community is looking forward to spreading the Good News about Jesus Christ over Christmas.

“This Christmas gives the Nepalese Church and Bible Society huge opportunities. We can invite non-Christians into church to explain the real meaning behind Jesus’ birth,” he added.



On the web: www.biblesociety.org.uk/nepal
News
Buddhism declines worldwide as ageing and disaffiliation take their toll, Pew study finds
Buddhism declines worldwide as ageing and disaffiliation take their toll, Pew study finds

Buddhism was the only major world faith to record a decline between 2010 and 2020.

Scotland: Eleventh hour plea to MSPs to reject assisted suicide
Scotland: Eleventh hour plea to MSPs to reject assisted suicide

Bishop John Keenan, President of the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland, is urging members of the Scottish Parliament to think of the vulnerable and vote against assisted suicide. 

Archbishop of Canterbury to embark on historic six-day pilgrimage
Archbishop of Canterbury to embark on historic six-day pilgrimage

The Archbishop of Canterbury will undertake a six-day pilgrimage before she is installed as the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury later this month. 

Baptist seminary provides refuge to people displaced in Lebanon
Baptist seminary provides refuge to people displaced in Lebanon

The Arab Baptist Theological Seminary near Beirut is sheltering displaced people who fled their homes as fighting between Israel and Hezbollah forces hundreds of thousands of civilians across Lebanon to seek refuge.