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  1. Rev. Dr. Gideon Chiu and his wife, May, founded the Church of Zion in 1982. Upon arriving from Hong Kong in 1974, Gideon advanced his studies in Vancouver and graduated with a B.Ed. from Simon Fraser University, and an M.Ed. from University of British Columbia.

  2. In 1896 Dowie disbanded the International Divine Healing Association to form the Christian Catholic Church in Zion. He renamed it as the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church in 1903. By the late 1890s, Zion headquarters had moved to the seven-story Zion Home on Michigan Avenue.

  3. John Alexander Dowie (born May 25, 1847, Edinburgh—died March 9, 1907, City of Zion, Ill., U.S.) was a U.S. evangelist and faith healer who founded the Christian Catholic Church and the City of Zion. Dowie moved with his family to Australia as a boy but returned to Edinburgh to study theology.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Engenas Barnabas Lekganyane (c. 1885–1948) was the founder of the Zion Christian Church (ZCC). He first formed the ZCC in 1924, and by the time of his death the church had at least 50,000 members. Under the leadership of his descendants the ZCC has gone on to have more than a million members primarily located in southern Africa. [1]

  5. Albert Zehr is both pastor and author at Church of Zion. You can find books such as Dealing With Offence and The Corporate Walk, as well as a running list of Pastor Albert Zehrs literature by clicking the button below.

  6. Since 1977, Chief Apostle Patricia Pinckney has been dedicated to helping those who have lost their way. Once God kept his promise and healed her oldest son, Eric she began to run a race that would change the lives of anyone who came into contact with her and the anointing God had placed on her.

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  8. E.V. Hill. Edward Victor Hill Sr. (November 10, [1] 1933 – February 24, 2003) was an American pastor. He was senior pastor at the Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles, California from 1961 until his death; under his leadership, it became one of the largest African-American congregations in the US. [2]

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