SEARCH
Home
About Us
Contact Us
Subscribe
English
Español
اللغة العربية
Updated
2/8/2012 7:27 PM GMT
News by Country
Afghanistan
Algeria
Bangladesh
Bhutan
Bolivia
Burma
China
Colombia
Cuba
Dagestan
Eastern Europe and Eurasia
Egypt
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Honduras
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Israel
Kenya
Laos
Malaysia
Maldives
Mauritania
Mexico
Morocco
Nepal
Nigeria
North Korea
Other
Other Africa
Other Asia
Other Latin America
Other Middle East
Pakistan
Palestinian Territories
Peru
Philippines
Saudi Arabia
Somalia
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Uganda
Uzbekistan
Vietnam
Yemen
Massive Christian Celebration Allowed
Officials permit rare, open-air Easter event by unregistered groups.
HO CHI MINH CITY, April 23
(CDN) —
In what religious freedom advocates regarded as a breakthrough in Vietnam, authorities granted rare permission to unregistered house church groups to hold a large, public Easter-related service here last night.
More than 15,000 people gathered at Tao Dan Stadium to worship God, proclaim Christ and experience a rare sense of large-scale Christian unity, especially house church members accustomed to meeting in small groups. The only other such event granted to unregistered groups was an open-air meeting during Christmas of 2007 sponsored by the Vietnam Evangelical Fellowship (VEF, a house church umbrella group).
At the event last night, the VEF endeavored to include all house churches, not just its own members, sources said.
Unregistered groups holding an event that includes worship and evangelism outside a church building violates Vietnam’s restrictive religion laws, and the celebration – in which 1,200 people indicated they had decided to follow Christ – did not happen without struggles. Reluctant to endorse such Christian unity events, authorities demanded and got the removal of one of the organizers – pastor Nguyen Ngoc Hien, who heads a Baptist house church and a group called the Christian Fellowship of Vietnam – as a condition to consider approval.
Officials did not grant permission until 4 p.m., just three hours before the event was to begin, though event organizers had requested permission several months prior. Authorities had assured them that permission was forthcoming, but organizers were understandably nervous. Adding to their concerns was the rain that hit just before the service began, though the rainy season has yet to arrive.
Since the celebration was held in the open air, a heavy rain would have been more than inconvenient. It rained just enough to refresh the air, stopping as the service began – an answer to prayer for participants. The celebration began with congregational worship; participants said the huge crowd sang with enthusiasm and joy.
“I never heard any singing like this, even in a Billy Graham crusade,” said one overseas Vietnamese Christian leader. “It was as if they offered to God all the praise and worship stored up in their hearts during many years of oppression.”
Worship included a dance group, and a 120-voice choir sang with gusto. Pastor Duong Thanh Lam of the Assemblies of God served as master of ceremonies, pastor Vo Van Lac of the Full Gospel Church preached a gospel message and pastor Pham Dinh Nhan of the United Gospel Outreach Church made an evangelistic appeal. People responded with loud applause and raised their hands in praise, and those who decided to follow Christ included old and young, students and teachers, rank-and-file workers and some disabled people. Witnesses said some were healed as leaders prayed for them.
Leaders of the celebration and religious freedom advocates in Vietnam said the event was significant in that unregistered house churches were allowed to hold a large public celebration. They added that authorities must have felt enough pressure to consider the event less harmful than possible negative publicity from denying permission.
The sources also said the event showed that Vietnam’s house churches, widely known for divisiveness and provincialism, could cooperate with good results.
“Those who have long urged and worked for unity can be pleased,” said one advocate. “While there is still a long way to go for Vietnamese Christian groups in practicing collaboration and partnership, this Easter celebration is seen as a significant step forward.”
A prominent overseas Vietnam leader who founded the Vietnam World Christian Fellowship witnessed the event and highly commended the leadership of pastor Ho Tan Khoa, chairman of the VEF, and his committee.
Some former Vietnam missionaries were incredulous that such events can take place in Vietnam, which until recently has had a place among the world’s top persecutors of religion. Prior to the Easter-related event organized by unregistered house churches, Christmas events were similarly held by the legally recognized Evangelical Church of Vietnam (South) last December.
“That a successful Christian celebration with mass evangelism approved by the government can take place in Vietnam where in some places Christians are still heavily persecuted shows the ongoing inconsistency of Vietnam’s religion policy,” said one source. “Vietnam Christian leaders have long prayed for such opportunities. They see these events as direct answers from God, whom they believe holds the hearts of rulers in his hands.”
Three representatives of a house church group in China were present at the service; they expressed amazement. They promised Vietnamese church leaders to send missionaries to help in the evangelization of Vietnam and invited Vietnamese church leaders to visit China to learn about the church there.
Vietnamese participants said the celebration was inspiring, describing it as “spectacular,” “splendid,” “glorious” and “phenomenal.”
END
Did you like this story?
e-mail this to a friend
printable version
More Top Stories
India: Recent Incidents of Persecution
Pakistan: Christian Charged with ‘Blasphemy’ Denied Bail
Uganda: Former Muslim Extremist Flees Wrath of Ex-Colleagues
Sudan: Two Catholic Priests Kidnapped
Nigeria: Seven Christians Killed in Bauchi State
Uganda: Convert from Islam Survives Societal Hostilities
Sudan: Police Beat, Arrest Evangelist
India: Tensions Rise in Kashmir after ‘Guilty Verdict,’ Fatwa
Also in the News
Sudan: Government Threatens to Arrest Church Leaders
Uganda: Girl Tortured for Christ Regaining Use of Legs
India: Karnataka Most Dangerous State for Christians
Somalia: Convert from Islam Whipped in Public
Nigeria: Death Toll Climbs in Islamist Attacks in Northeast
China: Authorities Again Deny Facility to Shouwang Church
Burma: Christian Civilians Attacked During Christmas
Nigeria: Compass Direct News’ Top 10 Stories of 2011
Most Read News
1. Uganda: Former Muslim Extremist Flees Wrath of Ex-Colleagues
2. Mezico: Missionary Couple Slain; Peace Pact in Puebla
3. Sudan: Two Catholic Priests Kidnapped
4. Kenya: Ethiopian Convert from Islam Dodges Dangers
5. Kenya: Islamic Extremists Behead Another Convert
Compass Feeds
Home
|
About Us
|
Contact Us
|
Subscription Information
|
Newssitemap.xml
|
Sitemap.xml
Copyright © 2012 Compass Direct
News Material on this site may shared by individuals or bloggers with credit to Compass Direct News, but print, broadcast or Internet media companies wishing to reprint or redistribute stories must be subscribers to Compass Direct News.