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David Yonggi Cho (Korean: 조용기; 14 February 1936 – 14 September 2021 as Paul Yungi Cho) was a South Korean Pentecostal Pastor.He was the founder of the Yoido Full Gospel Church (Assemblies of God), which he started in a tent with 5 people (including his future mother-in-law Choi Ja-shil and her children as its first members), which eventually became the world's largest congregation ...
The Yoido Full Gospel Church was founded in 1958 by Pastor David Yonggi Cho and his mother-in-law, Choi Ja-shil, both Assemblies of God pastors. [5] [6] On 15 May 1958, a worship service was held in the home of Choi Ja-shil.
David Yonggi Cho; Choi Ja-shil; L. Young Hoon Lee This page was last edited on 19 July 2015, at 13:58 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
David Yonggi Cho: Senior Pastor of the largest church in the world, Yoido Full Gospel Church in Seoul, South Korea: Korea: Vern Clark: Admiral (United States Navy, Retired) – Former Chief of Naval Operations, graduate of Evangel College Springfield, Missouri: United States of America Bruce Cozart: member of the Arkansas House of ...
In 2008, he succeeded David Yonggi Cho as senior pastor of Yoido Full Gospel Church. [11] [12] [13] He also became Superintendent of Assemblies of God of South Korea Yoido General Council in 2009. [14] In 2016, he became president of the Christian Council of Korea. [15]
David Cho may refer to: David Yonggi Cho (born 1936), Korean Christian minister; David Cho (director) (born 1969), South Korean producer and director;
Squid Game (Korean: 오징어 게임; RR: Ojing-eo Geim) is a South Korean survival drama series created by Hwang Dong-hyuk for Netflix.The series revolves around a secret contest where 456 players, all of whom are in deep financial hardship, risk their lives to play a series of deadly children's games for the chance to win a ₩45.6 billion won prize (100 million per person eliminated).
Cho (Korean: 조, also written as Jo) is a Korean family name, historically Royal family name in Korea [citation needed]. As of 2000, there were 1,347,730 people by this surname in South Korea , about 1% of the total population. [ 1 ]