In Yanghwajin Foreigners’
Cemetery in Seoul are 145 graves belonging to Christian missionaries and
their families who dedicated their lives to Korea during the late 19th
and early 20th centuries.
These missionaries profoundly influenced Korean society, not
only by establishing hospitals and schools, but by being God’s agents in far-reaching
spiritual revival which transformed the soul of the nation, abolished class
hierarchy and laid the framework for remarkable cultural and economic
development.
Typifying their spirit was Ruby
Kendrick (pictured), a Texan nurse who died only months after arriving in
Korea in 1908 aged only 25. Her words, ‘If I had a thousand lives Korea should
have them all’, have inspired literally thousands of Korean Christians since to
leave home and country and serve abroad in Christ’s name.
Last week I visited South Korea for an ICMDA board meeting and to take part in the 42nd
ICMDA East Asian Congress drawing Christian doctors from China, Japan, Hong
Kong, Taiwan, Mongolia and South Korea.
It was a good opportunity to learn some of the history
behind Korea’s explosive Christian growth first hand.
During the reign of the Joseon Dynasty from AD
792 to 1910, Confucianism was Korea’s official state religion and suppressed
all other ideologies, principally Buddhism.
Catholicism was introduced briefly in the 17th century
but was effectively wiped out after a wave of persecution.
When it was reintroduced by Yi
Seung-hun in 1785 further persecution followed and many were martyred,
especially during the Catholic Persecution of 1801.
The Joseon
Dynasty saw Christianity as a subversive influence and in the later
Catholic Persecution of 1866, 8,000 Catholics across the country were killed,
including nine French missionaries.
But the opening of Korea to the outside world in the
following decades brought religious toleration for the remaining Catholics and
also introduced Protestantism.
The first Presbyterian missionary
in Korea, Horace Newton Allen, arrived in 1884 and
remained in Korea until 1890, by which time he had been joined by many others.
Within twenty years of the arrival of the first resident
Protestant missionary, early stirrings of a great
revival began to sweep through the staid Presbyterian and Methodist
beginnings of missionary effort.
The climax came in 1907 with ‘extraordinary manifestations
of power’, that reminded observers of the revivals of John Wesley. Church
membership leapt upward, quadrupling in the five years between 1903 and 1908.
In spite of this early spurt the subsequent growth of both Catholicism
and Protestantism was gradual during the period of Japanese
occupation (1910-1945). By 1945 approximately 2% of the population was
Christian.
One of the most important factors leading to widespread
acceptance of Christianity in Korea was the identification that many Christians
forged with the cause of Korean nationalism during this period.
Following the Korean War (1950-1953), when the North and
South were divided, rapid
growth ensued.
Prior to the Korean War two-thirds
of Korean Christians lived in the North, but most later fled to the South.
According to ‘Operation World’, there were 11.8 million members
of over 67,000 Christian congregations by 2010, accounting for almost 25% of
South Korea’s 48 million population.
Today South Korea ranks 7th in the world with respect to numbers of Christians in the country. In addition, over 21,000 Korean missionaries
serve in 175 countries, making South Korea second only to the US as a
missionary sending nation.
South
Korean missionaries are especially prevalent in 10/40
Window nations that are hostile to Westerners.
Seoul contains eleven of the world's twelve largest
Christian congregations and a number of South Korean Christians,
including David Yonggi Cho, senior pastor of Yoido Full Gospel Church, with over
700,000 members, have attained worldwide prominence.
The cultural influence of this explosive growth has been
immense. Christians have started 293 schools and 40 universities including
three of the top five academic institutions.
Christian literature printed for use in Korea, including
that used by the network of schools established by Christian missionaries,
mostly used the Korean language and the easily learned Hangul script (see left).
This combination of factors resulted in a rise in the
overall literacy rate, and a sharp rise in female literacy.
Many Korean Christians believe that their values have had a
positive effect on various social relationships.
Traditional Korean society was hierarchically arranged
according to Confucian principles under the semi-divine emperor. Women had no
social rights, children were totally subservient to their parents, and
individuals had no rights except as defined by the overall social system.
This structure was challenged by the Christian teaching that
all human beings are created in the image of God and thus that every one of
them is equal and has essential worth.
Many South Korean Christians also view their faith as a key factor
in the country's dramatic economic growth over the past three decades,
believing that its success and prosperity are indications of God's blessing and the product of a strong protestant work ethic.
This economic growth however has also brought the challenges
of materialism and spiritual pride.
According to ‘Operation World’ the church has also struggled at times with authoritarian leadership, divisions, schisms and structures that are not always conducive to effective discipleship.
But in spite of these difficulties, South Korea has rapidly becoming
one the greatest power houses of Christianity in the world today.
And the Korean church, built through the sacrifices made by those early missionaries, will continue to be an inspiration and challenge to Christians worldwide who desire to see God's Kingdom grow.
My great-grandparents & grandparents heard about the gospel from some of those early missionaries! Praise God! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this. I hope you are right and true Christians will become greater influencers in South Korea and the world.
ReplyDeleteIt shows the level of emotional immaturity and inner lack of confidence in Koreans
ReplyDelete