Most people know about the 1951 battle between India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and President Rajendra Prasad over his decision to attend the installation of Hindu idols at the newly reconstructed Somnath Temple in Gujarat. Prasad attended in his personal capacity after Nehru objected to his presiding over the inauguration of the reconstructed Somnath temple in his capacity as head of state. What is less known is yet another public debate between India’s first Prime Minister and its first President soon thereafter over foreign missionaries and evangelical work by Christian churches. This debate unfolded in Delhi between Nehru, Rajendra Prasad, the Home Ministry and several Congress chief ministers. Coming soon after the controversy over Rajendra Prasad’s decision to attend the installation of idols at the reconstructed Somnath Temple in Gujarat, this controversy reflected yet another episode in the tensions over religion, freedom of expression, the role of the state and a Hindu backlash that animated the ruling Congress within the first decade of Independence.