The clergymen are accused of holding meetings at which they discussed resisting the order, issued last week, to close 714 churches and one mosque for allegedly failing to meet safety and hygiene standards.
"After the suspension of churches that did not meet required standards, some church leaders began illegal meetings intended to defy and obstruct the directive," said Rwanda police spokesman Theos Badege.
"Police began investigations to find the masterminds behind this illegal act."
Badege said the six Pentecostal preachers "conducted illegal meetings with bad intentions aimed at calling for the directives to be defied."
Most of the those affected are small, informal Pentecostal churches with congregations in the hundreds.
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