Jacobsen divides Christianity in Asia into four regions: Islamic West Asia, Hindu South Asia, Religiously Mixed Southeast Asia, and Buddhist/Secular East Asia. The Islamic West Asia region comprises of 25 countries, and Muslims are the majority population in 23 of them. This means that the size of Christian communities in the Islamic West Asia region is considerably tiny, and it appears to be getting even smaller. According to Jacobsen, “Christians comprised five percent of the population in 1970 and about 4 percent today. Lebanon, which had a Christian majority in 1970 (60 percent of the population), is only one-third Christian today” (Jacobsen 164). However, there is one exception to common regional trend. The number of Christians within the six oil-producing Gulf nations of Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates is actually increasing, but solely because of the abundance of recruitment’s (guest workers) who come for manual labor and domestic service. Many of the temporary workers are Christians and from the Philippines through a government-sponsored program. So in several Gulf nations, Christians account for almost 10 percent of the population. However, since the guest Christians are locked into long hours of work that are equivalent to an indentured servitude, passports are typically confiscated and workers cannot travel unless they have approval from of employers. This means that Christian guest workers almost have no impact on the religious ethos of the region, which is a majority Islamic. Guest workers have limited opportunities to even gather for Christian worship and ultimately have little to no impact on society.
The Hindu South Asia region is similar to the Islamic West Asia region in that both regions only have about four percent of the population being Christian. However, the living environment is completely different. And as Jacobsen points out about the Hindu South Asia region, “the great majority of these Christians (95 percent) live in India, where Christians are distributed unevenly across the country” (Jacobsen 165). Areas in the south, such as Kerala and Tamil Nadu are sizable in number and live quite comfortably. A similar situation exists in the northeast region of the country. However, this is not the case for Christians living elsewhere in India. They are not so fortunate. Almost 75 percent of all the Christians in India are Dalits. Dalits used to be called “untouchables” and continue to exist at the bottom of the social hierarchy. This abuse and mistreatment makes it extremely arduous to be a Christian in the Hindu South Asia region.
The Religiously Mixed Southeast Asia region is different from the previous two regions in that Christianity is general thriving in Southeast Asia. It is especially thriving in the Philippines, which now has more than 90 million Christians. And looking at the region as a whole, Christians make up about 20 percent of the population is the Philippines is included. And even without the Philippines, Christians still make up 10 percent of the total population. Jacobsen states that the Southeast Asia region “in Thailand, for example, only 2 percent of the majority Thai people are Christian, but more than 30 percent of the minority Karen people are Christian” (Jacobsen 167). Jacobsen shows that Southeast Asia tends to be overrepresented in ethnic minority groups and considerably underrepresented in the majority ethnic groups.
Out of the four regions, the Buddhist/Secular East region of Christianity, consisting of China, Japan, Mongolia, North and South Korea, and Taiwan, is growing the fastest than anywhere else in Asia. In countries like North Korea and Japan (<2%) the numbers for Christianity are significantly low. But in South Korea and China, Christianity has grown significantly over the last few decades. Christians account for almost 30 percent of South Korea’s population. South Korea also has the biggest Pentecostal Christian church in the world. In addition, six of South Korea’s eleven presidents have been Christian. Christianity in China within the last 50 years has gone from one and a half million Christians in 1970 all the way to 100 million today. However, Christianity in China remains suspect by many Chinese government officials. The government in North Korea forbids Christianity along with any other religion.
Asian Christian theology has a “triple dialogue” (similar to Ubuntu in African tradition), which guides Christian action and thinking. “Triple dialogue” involves the balancing of Christian convictions with civic loyalty; respect for members who associate with other religions, and having deep concern and care for the poor. This creates an extremely unique form of Christianity. Asian Christians hold a strong faith in civic loyalty and emphasize seeing all people as equal, focusing on the positives of life rather than the negative. Although Asian Christians are constantly in the pursuit of Christ and maintaining a loyalty to Christ, they also maintain a solidarity relationship with non-Christian neighbors. Staying in constant conversation with other religions and their faiths helps Christians to be respectful and be open to other religions, which peacefully allows everyone to freely believe what they want to without the heavy pressure to radically change or convert to a different religion. In addition, occasionally the different beliefs overlap and are similar in some way to one another, which helps support the idea of having communication and respect for other religions. The harmony, peace, and mutual respect obtained by the Asian Christians experience with other religions through this “triple dialogue” is a large part of Asian culture in general and even existent in other Asian religions such as Buddhism and Taoism. The emphasis on inter-connectedness and community seems to power the aspects of these beliefs and culture, and when Christianity can respect other religions and work with them, a peaceful unity is available for people to experience as they live in contentment and satisfaction with one another.
Jacobsen pointed out that Western Christians tend to see and point out the differences before similarities when it comes to comparing religions. Western Christianity can learn from Asian Christianity in this particular way so that they are more aware about people of other beliefs and be open to the idea that there may actually be similarities between different religions. The one concern is that this should not be taken to the extreme, as we should not expect all religions to live in community together and not try to convert one another, because unless someone is a universalist, all people believe that their particular religion is true, meaning that they must help bring people to their religion, even if it is someone who associates or believes in a different religion. I think that Western churches and Christians have a tendency to do this type converting in an aggressive and non-respectful way that is not understanding of other religions or cultures. There are definitely some positive things that could come from Western Christianity adopting ideas from the “triple dialogue.” If Western Christians desired a balance and harmony, seeing everyone as human beings that deserve respect and kindness, then those harsh and aggressive conversion conversations and attempts could be much more relational and peaceful. Asian Christianity appears to see people for who they really are and acts accordingly. Asian Christianity respects other beliefs and religions and works to live alongside them while striving together for the benefit of the community.