Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Vietnam’s New Religious Decree Further Burdens Local Churches
Vietnam’s New Religious Decree Further Burdens Local Churches
Jul 6, 2025 2:37 AM

  Operating a church in Vietnam just became even more difficult thanks to new government regulations that went into effect over the weekend. Under Decree 95, the government will now require religious groups to submit financial records and allow local government officials to suspend religious activities for unspecified serious violations.

  Nguyen Ti Dinh of Vietnams religious affairs committee said the guidelines will improve how the government manages religion by implementing uniform measures for the 2018 Law on Belief and Religion, which requires religious groups to register with the government. Observers believe the decree is Vietnams attempt to demonstrate to the international community that it is trying to increase religious liberty and to get off the US State Departments Special Watch List for countries engaged in religious freedom violations.

  Yet religious liberty advocates and local church leaders believe the new rules will do the opposite. Instead of making it easier to register churches, the government is requiring more oversight and control. If the Vietnamese government is trying to show the international community that it is serious about religious freedom, noted Hien Vu, Vietnam program manager of the Institute for Global Engagement (IGE), it needs to explain how the new policy would achieve that.

  With this decree, its like Vietnam shot themselves in the foot, Vu said.

  The Southeast Asian country, where Christians make up 8 percent of the population, is ranked No. 35 in the Open Doors list of most difficult countries to be a Christian. While Christians can worship freely in bigger cities, believers among ethnic minority groups and in rural areas still face social exclusion, discrimination, and attacks. Religious groups involved in human rights advocacy have also been harassed.

  Yet due to work by IGE and other international groups, in the past few decades government officials have become more open to listening to Christians and making space for Christianity in the country.

  Decree 95 came as a surprise to religious liberty advocates and local church leaders when the government first made it public in December. It expands on a previous decree (Decree 162) by including measures that allow the government to shut down religious groups and adding requirements for receiving and reporting donations, including from foreign sources, according to Morning Star News.

  In 2022, a draft dubbed the punishment decree (due to its focus on punishments for infraction of the religious law) drew harsh criticisms from religious leaders and even some government officials. That decree was eventually tabled. But with Decree 95, the government skipped the stp of soliciting public opinion and put the new decree into effect three months after announcing it.

  To Vu, the most concerning aspect of the new decree is how it expands the governments financial oversight of churches. An article of the decree reads, Within 20 days, religious organizations and religious affiliates that receive financial aid are responsible for sending reports on the results of the use of grants to the competent state agency.

  The government wants to really know where, how, whateverything about receiving financial support, Vu said. The government also needs to know how you spend it.

  While ostensibly the reasoning is to increase financial transparency, realistically, the rules are nearly impossible for many of Vietnams Protestant churches to follow, as house churches are often not registered with the government. The governments own stringent rules (including that a church must exist for five years before applying) make it difficult to register. Some house churches are denied while others have waited years for recognition without any progress. Other house churches choose not to register due to the regulatory burdens.

  In total, Vietnam has 11 legally registered evangelical denominations, according to Morning Star News.

  Without legal status, the groups cant open bank accounts and all their transactions are done in cash. Unlike in the West where tithes and other donations are tax-deductible, such frameworks and practices are nonexistent in Vietnam, and even large donors do not ask for receipts.

  A pastor of a registered church in Ho Chi Minh City, who asked not to be named for security reasons, said that while he is familiar with the countrys religion law, the latest guideline on church finances adds confusion as to what the government now requires from them. Churches in his denomination, especially those in rural areas, often rely on foreign funding to construct or expand church buildings, and none of the pastors know how Decree 95 would impact this.

  We need the government to respect the church, he said. Something like Decree 95, something like that should not apply to the church. When we apply to have a church in Vietnam, were under very strong control from the government [already].

  The pastor believes the government doesnt need to meddle with the churchs finances, adding that if the government continues to tighten its control on churches, the future is not good.

  A third of the decrees 98-page document focuses on suspending religious activities for serious violations of the rules. Actions such as infringing on the morality of our indigenous culture and using religion for personal aggrandizement are forbidden. Vu noted that such vague language allows authorities to stop any group they view as a threat to the governments one-party rule.

  Religious groups have 24 months to rectify their behavior or face permanent dissolution. The decree also empowers more government officials in the communist bureaucracyall the way down to the commune level or the smallest unit of local governanceto suspend religious activities and organizations.

  How the new rules will play out in reality remains to be seen. One Vietnamese leader of a nondenominational ministry told Morning Star News that like previous legislation, in Vietnam everything is open, everything is negotiable. Despite what is written on paper, previous regulations have not been strictly enforced, and Christians with close relationships with government officials can continue worshiping in peace.

  Vu said that even with the new decree in effect, pastors and church leaders in Vietnam remain steadfast and resilient.

  They are used to these restrictions, Vu said. She described their attitude as Well deal with it when it comes, but well do whatever God calls us to do.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The Second One Thousand Years
A thousand years is a long time. Hence, Richard John Neuhaus has taken on a difficult task in formulating The Second One Thousand Years: Ten People Who Defined a Millennium. His decision pile a collection of ten essays, each essay focusing on one figure from each of the past ten centuries, certainly creates a broad and illuminating angle on intellectual history, as the volume moves chronologically through Pope Gregory VII, Moses Maimonides, Thomas Aquinas, Dante Alighieri, Christopher Columbus, John...
Globalization and the Kingdom of God
Globalization and the Kingdom of God contains the annual Kuyper Lecture, presented at the Center for Public Justice in 1999, along with responses by mentators.The lecture was delivered by Bob Goudzwaard, Professor Emeritus, Free University of Amsterdam. Goudzwaard also served in the Dutch Parliament in the 1970s and is a well-respected authority on issues of Christian faith, economics, and public policy. The responses were given by Brian Fikkert, Covenant College; Larry Reed, Opportunity International; and Adolfo Garcia de la...
The Splendor of Faith
It has been centuries since the Roman Catholic Church has elevated to the papacy a bishop who is both a deft shepherd and an intellectual giant; these two gifts rarely fill the Chair of Peter simultaneously. Avery Dulles, in his book The Splendor of Faith: The Theological Vision of John Paul II, mentions but two: Leo the Great and Gregory the Great–placing Pope John Paul II pany with the few who have most worthily filled the shoes of the...
Citizen Kuyper: Born-Again American
There is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry, ‘Mine!'“ said Abraham Kuyper (1837—1920), a Dutch pastor-theologian by training and jack-of-many-trades by vocation. To say he practiced what he preached would be an understatement. From university founder and newspaper editor to party activist, statesman, and church reformer par excellence, Kuyper strove to live and teach in hopes of saving humanity–starting with his own...
Why a Free Society Needs the Family
Children who spend their formative years deprived of the love and attention of caring families often have grave difficulties forming attachments throughout their lives. Locked away inside themselves, they care nothing about what others think of them—whether love, hate, or indifference. Only fear of physical force or loss of privileges can motivate them to good behavior. Otherwise, these damaged children do what they rationally calculate they can get away with—lying, cheating, stealing, and hurting others without conscience. As adults,...
Founding Faith
In On Two Wings: Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American Founding, Michael Novak amends the customary political history of the American founding to reinstate its religious underpinnings. Where most Americans do well in noting the Enlightenment elements of the American regime, they have been taught almost nothing about the religious—indeed, biblical—influence on the United States’ formation as a nation. Novak applies the corrective. Author of numerous books dealing with freedom, religion, and business, including The Spirit of...
Hot Topics in Economics
Bulls, Bears & Golden Calves: Applying Christian Ethics in Economics by John E. Stapleford (Intervarsity Press) is both a reference for Christian thinking on specific economic topics and a panion to the major economics texts of our day. The list of chapters reads like a recipe for staying up all night in group debate or private turmoil (depending on your inclination): environmental stewardship, legalized gambling, debt relief for less developed nations, population control, pornography, immigration. The only hot issue...
Marriage Woes
Marriage is in deep trouble in America, and indeed throughout most of the Western world. The numbers tell the story. By the mid-nineties, nearly one-fifth of all white children in the U.S. lived in single-parent families, almost always headed by mothers. Well over half of all black children now live in such mother-only families. These percentages represent a spectacular increase from just a few decades ago. A similar trend is at work in Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, New Zealand,...
More Money, More Ministry
Most of the sixteen essays in this volume originated at a consultation on “Evangelicals and Finance” in Naperville, Illinois, in early 1998. The purpose of the book is to take “a first step toward understanding how evangelicals have thought about, used, and raised money during the twentieth century.” The majority of its authors are historians and sociologists, so the perspectives are, for the most part, historical and social in nature. Perhaps the most obvious feature of the book is...
Christian Faith and Modern Democracy
mitted Roman Catholic, Robert Kraynak has produced one of the most significant political books for American Catholics since John Courtney Murray's We Hold These Truths. A professor of political theory at Colgate University, Kraynak deserves mention along with Murray, Jacques Maritain, and Reinhold Niebuhr as a mentator on the most profound of issues. His work will shake any reader, secular or faithful, to rethink the relationship between one's citizenship and one's faith. “We must face the disturbing dilemma that...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved