Talk:Assemblies of God in Vietnam
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editThe Vietnam house church movement began in 1988, when some pastors were expelled from the official churches for reported charismatic gifts and healing. The most uncompromising from them was Tran Dinh Ai, whose movement in 1997 reached 16,000 members in 165 churches. The movement proclaimed itself the Assemblies of God in Vietnam, followed the AG rules and was recognized by the AG worldwide. [1] Tran Dinh Ai later left Vietnam for the United States and was considered to be "a modern day apostle".
In August 1997, three Vietnamese Christians, belonging to the unregistered Assemblies of God house churches, were jailed for three years. Lo Van Hen, his cousin Lo Van Hoa, and Nguyen Van Vuong, who were pastors in unofficial "house" communes in Dien Bien Phu (Northwest Vietnam), had been accused by local authorities of being "fake Christians" and of "illegally propagating their beliefs." [2] On May 7, 1999, police raided an Assemblies of God meeting in a hotel in Hanoi, holding 20 people for several days.
I'm giving this article a major rewrite. Until I'm finished, I'm moving more questionable material here. After I'm done with the re-write, I'll decide on if/how to reincorporate this material back in. Ltwin (talk) 21:11, 21 October 2010 (UTC)
I'm now done with the re-write. Given the questionable origins for these paragraphs, I have chosen not to include them in the article. Ltwin (talk) 00:00, 22 October 2010 (UTC)
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