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Church of North India
Dominant united Protestant church in North India
Dominant united Protestant church in North India
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Church of North India |
| image | CNI-Seal-Trans.jpg |
| caption | Official seal of the Church of North India |
| main_classification | Protestant |
| orientation | United church |
| polity | Episcopal |
| founded_date | 29 November 1970 |
| founded_place | Nagpur |
| leader_name1 | The Rt. Rev. Dr. Silvans S Christian |
| leader_title | Moderator |
| leader_name | The Most Rev. Dr. Paritosh Canning |
| leader_title1 | Deputy Moderator |
| leader_name2 | The Rev. Dr. D. J. Ajith Kumar |
| leader_title2 | General Secretary |
| merger | |
| separations | United Church of Northern India – Presbyterian Synod |
| fellowships | World Council of Churches, Council for World Mission, Christian Conference of Asia, Communion of Churches in India, National Council of Churches in India |
| associations | |
| area | All of India except Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Lakshadweep, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu |
| hospitals | 65 hospitals and nine nursing schools. |
| congregations | 3500 congregations in 3000 parishes and 28 dioceses |
| members | 2,300,000 (2025) |
| ministers | 2000+ |
| secondary_schools | 564+ educational institutions and three technical schools. |
| website | cnisynod.org |
The Church of North India (CNI) is the dominant united Protestant church in Northern India. It was established on 29 November 1970 by bringing together most of the Protestant churches working in northern India. It is a province of the worldwide Anglican Communion and a member of the World Methodist Council and the World Communion of Reformed Churches. The merger, which had been in discussions since 1929, came eventually between the Church of India, Pakistan, Burma and Ceylon (Anglican), the Methodist Church, Disciples of Christ, and some congregations from the United Church of Northern India (Congregationalist and Presbyterian).
The CNI's jurisdiction covers all states of India with the exception of the five states in the south (Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu which are under the jurisdiction of the Church of South India). It has approximately 2,300,000 members (0.2% of the population of its constituent states) in 3,000 pastorates.
History

Ecumenical discussions with a view to a unified church were initiated by the Australian Churches of Christ Mission, the Methodist Church of Australia, the Wesleyan Methodist Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church and the United Church of Northern India during a religious convention in Lucknow in 1929.
A negotiation committee was set up in 1951 using the plan of Church Union that resulted from the earlier consultations as its basis. The committee was composed of representatives from the Baptist Churches in Northern India; the Church of India, Pakistan, Burma and Ceylon; the Methodist Church (British and Australian conferences); the Methodist Church in Southern Asia; and the United Church of Northern India (UCNI). The Methodist Episcopal Church, however, did not join the discussions and, in 1981, it became the Methodist Church in India (MCI). In 1957, the Church of the Brethren in India and the Disciples of Christ denominations joined in the negotiations as well.
A new negotiation committee was set up in 1961 with representatives from all the above-mentioned denominations. In 1965, a finalized plan of Church Union, known as the 4th Plan of Union 1965, was made. The union was formalized on 29 November 1970 when all the negotiating churches were united as the Church of North India with the exception of the Methodist Church in Southern Asia, which decided not to join the union.
Beliefs and practices
The CNI is a trinitarian church that draws from the traditions and heritage of its constituent denominations. The basic creeds of the CNI are the Apostles' Creed and the Nicene Creed of 381 AD.
Liturgy
The liturgy of the CNI is of particular interest, as it combines many traditions, including that of the Methodists and such smaller churches as the Church of the Brethren and the Disciples of Christ. Provision is given for diverse liturgical practices and understandings of the divine revelation.
Ordination
Men and women may be ordained deacons, presbyters, and bishops. The CNI approved the ordination of women to the priesthood in 1977. In 2024, the CNI ordained the first woman to serve as a bishop within the CNI. In June, 2024, a second woman was ordained a bishop. In 2025, the CNI ordained a third woman as bishop.
Governance
Moderator The polity of the CNI brings together the episcopal, the presbyterial and the congregational elements in an effort to reflect the polity of the churches which entered into union. The episcopacy of the CNI is both historical as well as constitutional. There are 26 dioceses, each under the supervision of a bishop. The main administrative and legislative body is the synod, which meets once every three years to elect a presiding bishop, called a moderator, and an executive committee. The moderator acts as the head of the church for a fixed term; another bishop is elected Deputy Moderator.
Social involvement
Social involvement is a major emphasis in the CNI. There are synodal boards in charge of various ministries: Secondary, Higher, Technical and Theological Education, Health Services, Social Services, Rural Development, Literature and Media. There is also a synodal Programme Office which seeks to protect and promote peace, justice, harmony and dignity of life.
The CNI currently operates 65 hospitals, nine nursing schools, 250 educational institutions and three technical schools. Some of the oldest and well-respected educational institutions in India like Scottish Church College in Calcutta, La Martiniere Calcutta, Wilson College in Mumbai, St. James' School, Calcutta, Hislop College in Nagpur, St. John's Diocesan Girls' School, Calcutta, St. Paul's School in Darjeeling, St. John's College, Agra, Bishop Cotton School in Shimla, Christ Church College, Kanpur, Sherwood College in Nainital, Ewing Christian College, Boys' High School & College in Prayagraj are under the administration of the CNI.
Ecumenism
The CNI participates in many ecumenical bodies as a reflection of its commitment towards church unity. Domestically it participates in a joint council with the Church of South India and the Mar Thoma Syrian Church known as the Communion of Churches in India. It is also a member of the National Council of Churches in India. Regionally, the CNI participates in the Christian Conference of Asia and on an international level it is a member of the World Council of Churches, the Council for World Mission, World Alliance of Reformed Churches, World Methodist Council and in full communion with the Anglican Communion. The CNI is also in partnership with many other domestic, regional and international Christian agencies.
Gallery
File:St Paul's Cathedral.jpg|St. Paul's Cathedral, Kolkata File:Allsaintcathedral ald.jpg|All Saints Cathedral, Prayagraj File:Cathedral Church of the Redemption - New Delhi.jpg|Cathedral Church of the Redemption, New Delhi File:Christ Church Shimla India.jpg|Christ Church, Shimla File:StJohnsChurchMeerut.jpg|St. John's Church, Meerut File:St.james b.jpg|St. James' Church, New Delhi File:St. Thomas Cathedral, Mumbai.jpg|St. Thomas' Cathedral, Mumbai File:The Wilson College, Mumbai.jpg|The Wilson College, Mumbai File:La Martiniere College, Lucknow - by Ahmad Faiz Mustafa.jpg|La Martiniere College, Lucknow File:La Martiniere, Calcutta by Francis Frith.jpg|La Martiniere College, Calcutta File:St Pauls School.jpg|St. Paul's School, Darjeeling File:Scottish Church College.jpg|Scottish Church College, Calcutta File:Delhi, Holy Trinity Church (Turkman gate).jpg|Holy Trinity Church, New Delhi File:KITLV 100117 - Unknown - St. Paul's Church at Poona in India - Around 1875.tif|alt=St Paul's Church, Pune|St. Pauls Church, Pune - photographed during British era File:St Johns Church Gorakhpur 2025.jpg|Exterior view of St. John's Church, Gorakhpur
Present administrators
- Moderator: The Most Rev. Dr. Paritosh Canning
- Deputy Moderator: The Rt. Rev. Silvans S. Christian, Bishop, Diocese of Gujarat
- Treasurer: Mr. Subrata Gorai
- General Secretary: The Revd. Dr. D.J. Ajith Kumar
Moderators
Since its formation in 1970, the Synod of the CNI has elected a Moderator and one Deputy every three years.
| Term | Moderator | Deputy Moderator |
|---|---|---|
| April 1971July 1974 | , | |
| Bishop in Delhi (and Rajasthan) | , | |
| Bishop in Nagpur | ||
| July 1974October 1977 | ||
| October 1977October 1980 | ||
| October 1980November 1983 | , | |
| Bishop in Nagpur | , | |
| Bishop in Calcutta | ||
| November 1983October 1986 | , | |
| Bishop in Calcutta | , | |
| Bishop in Lucknow | ||
| October 1986October 1989 | , | |
| Bishop in Lucknow | , | |
| Bishop in Darjeeling | ||
| October 1989October 1992 | , | |
| Bishop in Darjeeling | , | |
| Bishop in Jabalpur | ||
| October 1992October 1995 | , | |
| Bishop in Amritsar | , | |
| Bishop in Cuttack | ||
| October 1995October 1998 | , | |
| Bishop in Cuttack | , | |
| Bishop in Nagpur | ||
| October 1998January 2001 | , | |
| Bishop in Nagpur | ||
| (died December 2000) | , | |
| Bishop in Chotanagpur | ||
| JanuaryOctober 2001 | , | |
| Bishop in Chotanagpur | , | |
| Bishop in Barrackpore | ||
| October 2001October 2004 | , | |
| Bishop in Chotanagpur | , | |
| Bishop in Chandigarh | ||
| October 2004October 2005 | ||
| October 2005October 2008 | , | |
| Bishop in Chandigarh | , | |
| Bishop in North East India | ||
| October 2008October 2011 | , | |
| Bishop in North East India | , | |
| Bishop in Patna | ||
| October 2011October 2014 | , | |
| Bishop in Patna | , | |
| Bishop in Amritsar | ||
| October 20143 October 2017 | , | |
| Bishop in Amritsar | Prem Singh, | |
| Bishop in Jabalpur | ||
| October 201723 August 2019 | Prem Singh, | |
| Bishop in Jabalpur | Probal Dutta, | |
| Bishop in Durgapur and Kolkata | ||
| 23 August 201914 September 2022 | , | |
| Bishop in Phulbani | ||
| 9 December 2022 – October 2025 | Bijay Kumar Nayak | Paul B.P. Duphare |
| 23 October 2025 - present | Paritosh Canning, | Silvans S Christian, |
Dioceses
Diocese of Calcutta
When originally founded in 1813, the fourth overseas diocese of the Church of England covered all the subcontinent, all Australasia and some of Africa. With its 1835 split to create Madras diocese, Calcutta was made metropolitan over all its original area, and has been split many times since. The Bishop of Calcutta remained Metropolitan of India until the CNI's 1970 creation; the current diocese covers parts of Bengal and the bishop is The Most Rev. Paritosh Canning, Moderator CNI.
Diocese of Mumbai
Split from Calcutta diocese in 1837, the Diocese of Bombay was the last new Indian diocese of the Church of England before all colonial dioceses became independent in 1863. Like Calcutta, Mumbai diocese has been a very large Church of England diocese, a diocese of the independent Indian Anglican church, and now a United Church diocese. The CNI diocese today covers Maharashtra, and the bishop is the Rt. Rev. Prabhu D. Jebamani.
Diocese of Chotanagpur
Founded from Calcutta diocese in 1890, the current diocese is based in Ranchi, its territory is Jharkhand and the bishop is B. B. Baskey.
Diocese of Lucknow
The Diocese of Lucknow is an ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Church of India (CIPBC), with its headquarters in Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh. Established in 1893 following its separation from the Diocese of Calcutta, the diocese retained Prayagraj as its administrative center despite being named after the city of Lucknow. It encompasses the eastern region of Uttar Pradesh and includes several deaneries such as Jhansi, Prayagraj, Lakhimpur, Gorakhpur, Varanasi, Mirzapur.
Diocese of Nagpur
The diocese was originally created in 1902/03, from Chotanagpur diocese.
Diocese of North East India
The CNI Northeast diocese, based in Shillong, North East India is headed by bishop Michael Herenz. It originated as the Diocese of Assam, in the Anglican Church of India, erected from Calcutta in 1915; and became known by the present name before 1986.
Diocese of Nasik
In 1929, Nasik diocese was founded from Bombay; her present bishop is the Rt. Rev. Darbara Singh.
List of Dioceses
| Name | Founded | Headquarters | Location | Bishop | Website | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diocese of Delhi | title=The Church of North India: Historical Background: AD 1800-1970. | work=Diocese of Delhi | date=2016 | access-date=8 June 2019 | url=http://dioceseofdelhi.org/ | archive-date=1 July 2019 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190701142743/http://dioceseofdelhi.org/ | url-status=dead }} | New Delhi | Delhi, Haryana | The Rt. Rev. Dr. Paul Swarup | https://www.dioceseofdelhi.org/ |
| Diocese of Dooars | 2023 in Delhi | West Bengal & Assam | Santalpur, Mission Compound | The Rt. Rev. David Roy | ||||||||
| Diocese of Amritsar | title=Welcome to the official website of the Diocese of Amritsar | work=amritsardiocesecni.org | date=n.d. | access-date=8 June 2019 | url=http://www.amritsardiocesecni.org/ | archive-url=https://archive.today/20130922160539/http://www.amritsardiocesecni.org/ | url-status=dead | archive-date=22 September 2013 }} | Amritsar | Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir | The Rt. Rev. Manoj Charan | www.amritsardiocesecni.org |
| Diocese of Barrackpore | 1956, from Calcutta | Barrackpore | West Bengal | url=https://new.cnisynod.org/consecration-of-the-revd-paritosh-canning-bishop-elect-diocese-of-barrackpore-cni/ | title=Consecration of the Revd. Paritosh Canning, Bishop-elect, Diocese of Barrackpore, CNI | date=14 August 2018 | website=CNI Synod | access-date=17 February 2019 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181109190515/http://new.cnisynod.org/consecration-of-the-revd-paritosh-canning-bishop-elect-diocese-of-barrackpore-cni/ | archive-date=9 November 2018 | url-status=dead }} | |
| Diocese of Andaman and Nicobar | 1966, from Calcutta | Port Blair | Andaman and Nicobar Islands | The Rt. Rev. Thomas | ||||||||
| Diocese of Jabalpur | title=Christ Church Cathedral Jabalpur History of 150 Years Since 1844. | work=Christ Church Cathedral CNI Jabalpur | date=2015 | access-date=8 June 2019 | url= http://www.christchurchcnijbp.org/history.php }} | Jabalpur | Madhya Pradesh | The Rt. Rev. Ajay Umesh James | http://dioceseofjabalpur-cni.org/ | |||
| Diocese of Patna | bef. 70 | Bhagalpur | Bihar and Jharkhand | The Rt. Rev. Francis Hansda | ||||||||
| Diocese of Cuttack | 1970 | Cuttack | Cuttack, Odisha | The Rt. Rev.Surendra Kumar Nanda | http://www.dioceseofcuttackcni.in/ | |||||||
| Diocese of Bhopal | betw. 70–79, from Jabalpur | Indore | Madhya Pradesh | The Rt. Rev. Neena Charan | ||||||||
| Diocese of Rajasthan | 1981, from Delhi | Ajmer | Rajasthan | The Rt. Rev. Raimson Victor | ||||||||
| Diocese of Gujarat | betw. 70–96 | Ahmedabad | Gujarat | The Rt. Rev. Silvans Christian, Deputy Moderator CNI | ||||||||
| Diocese of Kolhapur | betw. 70–96 | Kolhapur | Maharashtra | The Rt. Rev. Manoj Devdan Kate | ||||||||
| Diocese of Durgapur | betw. 70–96 | Durgapur | West Bengal | The Rt. Rev. Sameer Issac Khimla | ||||||||
| Diocese of Chandigarh | 1974, from Amritsar | Ludhiana | Chandigarh, Punjab | The Rt. Rev. Darbara Singh | ||||||||
| Diocese of Agra | 1976, from Lucknow | Agra | Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand | The Rt. Rev. Bijay Kumar Nayak | http://cnidioceseofagra.org | |||||||
| Diocese of Lucknow | 1893, from Diocese of Calcutta | Prayagraj | Uttar Pradesh | Rt. Rev. Morris Edgar Dan | https://www.dioceseoflucknowcni.org | |||||||
| Diocese of Eastern Himalaya | title=Two Bishops die in car crash | work=anglicannews.org | date=8 December 2000 | access-date=8 June 2019 | url= https://www.anglicannews.org/news/2000/12/two-bishops-die-in-car-crash.aspx }} from Barrackpur | Darjeeling | West Bengal, Bhutan, parts of Assam | The Rt. Rev. Roshan Thapa | ||||
| Diocese of Sambalpur | title=Confirmation Lessons | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RoOkggMb3BwC&pg=PA57 | year=1998 | publisher=ISPCK | isbn=978-81-7214-341-1 | pages=57–}} | Bolangir | Odisha | The Rt. Rev. Immanuel Dani | |||
| Diocese of Phulbani | 1997, from Cuttack | Kandhmal | Odisha | The Rt. Rev. Violet Nayak | ||||||||
| Diocese of Marathwada | title=Prayer Diary | work=oremus.org | date=1999 | access-date=8 June 2019 | url= http://www.oremus.org/acp/1999.txt }} | Aurangabad | Maharashtra | The Rt. Rev. Prakash D. Patole | ||||
| Diocese of Pune | c. 2000 | Pune | Maharashtra | The Rt. Rev. Alfred C. Tiwade | ||||||||
| Diocese of Chhattisgarh | 2010, from Jabalpur | Raipur | Chhattisgarh | The Rt. Rev. Sushma Kumar |
References
References
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- (n.d.). "Welcome to the official website of the Diocese of Amritsar". amritsardiocesecni.org.
- (10 February 1956). "New Dioceses".
- (14 August 2018). "Consecration of the Revd. Paritosh Canning, Bishop-elect, Diocese of Barrackpore, CNI".
- (1 April 1966). "Happy Nicobars".
- (2015). "Christ Church Cathedral Jabalpur History of 150 Years Since 1844.". Christ Church Cathedral CNI Jabalpur.
- "History of Church".
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- (1998). "Confirmation Lessons". ISPCK.
- "Welcome to CNI Phulbani Diocese".
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