The Diplomat
 
 
 
Christianity and Korea
 
How did the religion become so apparently prevalent in South  Korea?
 
 
By Dave Hazzan for The  Diplomat
April 07,  2016



 
 
South Korea is awash with evangelical Christianity. 
This once resolutely shamanistic and Confucian country now seems to have 
more  churches than corner stores. From miniscule, storefront chapels to the 
biggest  church in the world, the skyline of every major city is ablaze with 
neon  crosses. Evangelical Christians proselyte house to house, distribute 
pamphlets  and church-emblazoned tissue packets on street corners, and cycle 
through town  blaring sermons and homilies through bullhorns, urging you to 
either accept  Jesus, or be prepared for the Devil’s wrath below. It is very 
rare to spend more  than a few days in Korea without being preached to. 
“We think of Korea as the Second Jerusalem,” says Hong Su Myeon, an older  
volunteer at Somang Presbyterian, a megachurch in Gangnam. He says Korea is 
 leading a wave of evangelization around the world. 
At the same time, Hong says, “It’s true that [a lot of] Christianity is  
corrupt. But there are a lot of hidden true pastors working hard, and their  
passion for God is why we are so successful in Korea.” 
What can be most surprising to a visitor to Korea is that only 29 percent 
of  the population actually identifies as Christian – about three-quarters  
Protestant, one quarter Catholic. But their zeal is so enormous that it  
overshadows the 23 percent who are Buddhist, and the 46 percent who say they  
have no religion at all. 
“It is kind of amazing” how zealous Korean Christians are, says Dr. Hwang  
Moon-kyung, Professor of History at the University of Southern California. “
They  give you the impression that South Korea is a very religious country 
when in  fact it isn’t. But the ones who are religious tend to be very 
fervently  religious.” 
Up From Persecution 
It is one of East Asia’s greatest historical riddles – how did this small, 
 divided country go from being a place where Christianity was just a 
footnote –  barely one percent of the population in 1900 – to one that produces 
more  missionaries than any other country in the world, bar the U.S. 
No one would have predicted Christianity’s success in Korea 200 years ago.  
Catholicism was first introduced in the 18th century by returning Confucian 
 scholars from China, but they saw it more as an academic interest. It was 
the  direct arrival of French and Chinese Catholic missionaries in the early 
19th  century that set off the first round of missionizing. But Korea’s 
rulers were  having none of it. 
“For its first 75 years [the Catholic church] underwent the most horrendous 
 persecution, comparable really to the history of the early church,” says 
Dr.  James Grayson, professor of Modern Korean Studies at the University of  
Sheffield. Murder, torture, and massacre were all directed at early 
Christians  by the Joseon Kings, who saw the church’s teachings of equality 
before 
God as a  direct threat to their power. 
At least 8000 Catholics were killed, and many have since been canonized,  
giving Korea the fourth largest number of saints of any nation. In 1984, John 
 Paul II canonized 103 all at once. 
Explaining and Resisting a Tumultuous World 
It was the arrival of Protestantism in the 19th century that changed  
everything. By this point the Joseon kings were fast losing power, their 
Chinese  
protectors were in decline, and an ascendant Japan, America and Russia were 
all  eyeing the Korean peninsula. The country needed whatever grace God 
could give  it. 
Protestantism arrived mostly from American missionaries, like Horace Allen  
and the Underwood family (famous for their typewriters), who built the 
schools,  hospitals, and universities the kings didn’t. Christians were reputed 
to treat  peasants with respect, as opposed to the scorn poured on them by 
the traditional  nobility. The Bible was translated into Hangul, the simple 
phonetic writing  system, rather than only into Chinese characters, which 
most people couldn’t  read. 
Christianity became a source of resistance, especially to Japanese colonial 
 rule, which began in 1910 and was famously brutal. Though not all churches 
were  anti-Japanese, many were. 
“There was no other hope for Koreans at that time,” says Dr. Andrew Park,  
professor of Theology and Ethics at United Theological Seminary in Dayton, 
Ohio.  “They couldn’t depend on China, Russia, Americans, any other 
country. There was  no help. Only God alone, they were so desperate.” 
Grayson says that annexation provided a link between nationalism and  
Christianity. “The Korean church has never had to answer questions about  
association with Western imperialism, because imperialism in Korea was  
Japanese.” 
American Religion, American Protection 
When the Japanese left in 1945, the church was in high standing. The first  
South Korean president, Syngman Rhee, was a U.S.-educated Protestant. Even 
Kim  Il-sung, first ruler of North Korea, had been a Presbyterian as a 
child. 
Following the Korean War, South Koreans came to view the Americans as  
saviors, and the Americans’ religion, Christianity, as a source of strength and 
 
wealth. Protestant leaders in South Korea “became very much familiar with 
the  so-called American-style Protestant religion, sort of an American 
religion,”  says Dr. Song Jae-Ryong, professor of Sociology at Kyunghee 
University, and  President of the Korean Association for the Sociology of 
Religion. 
They adapted  American evangelical themes and worked hard at turning South 
Korea into a  Christian nation. 
“In some sense, America became a substitute for the traditional role taken 
by  China,” Grayson says, that of a protective big brother. This affected 
how  Christians saw themselves, and made America out as “a model of a 
Christian  state.” 
The 1950s through 1980s saw South Korea governed by a series of murderous  
strongmen and generals. Some were Christian, some weren’t, but all were  
fanatical anticommunists, which proved nicely compatible with evangelical  
Protestantism. 
Many Christian preachers were from the north – Pyongyang had been a hotbed 
of  Christianity before the Korean War – and when they fled south they 
brought with  them a virulent hatred of communism. Conservative, evangelical 
Christianity  meshed well with the authoritarian, development-minded 
dictatorships, and the  two forces reinforced each other. 
Evangelization spread with development. The new factories often had  
chaplains, as did the military, which required three years of service from 
every  
young male Korean. The dislocation caused by rapid industrialization sent 
many  Koreans scrambling for something to believe in. 
“If society changes very quickly on a large scale, some people soon become  
left behind, and those people have some emotional, and psychological 
feelings of  deprivation,” says Song. As a result, they will often attend 
church, 
maybe one  they learned about at work, or from a pamphleteer on the street. 
The Rise of the Megachurch 
Many people had also left their villages for the big city, and found  
themselves alone and in need of a social group, in a culture where social 
groups  
are extremely important to identity. In many cases, the bigger the social 
group,  the better. 
The most successful evangelist by far was Cho Yong-gi, also known as Paul 
or  David Cho. In the late 1950s he founded Yoido Full Gospel Church, with, 
as he  loves to boast, only six members. Now it’s the largest church in the 
world, with  over 830,000 congregants. It takes up an entire river-front 
block in central  Seoul, and is worth untold millions of dollars. 
There are dozens of other megachurches in Korea – Somang Presbyterian, 
Nambu  Full Gospel, Assembly of God Grace And Truth, Myungsung Presbyterian, 
Kum 
Ran  Methodist, Young Nak Presbyterian, Soong Eui Methodist – all of them 
with more  than 40,000 worshippers every Sunday, some well in excess of 
100,000. 
Park says the megachurches have a “vacuuming effect,” sucking up 
parishioners  from smaller churches. “People like to gather together,” says 
Park, 
explaining  the popularity of megachurches in Korea. “The more people gather, 
the happier  people will be.” 
He also says there is often less pressure to be devout in a large church,  
because you are so anonymous. 
Large churches provide other tangible benefits as well. “If you belong to 
one  of the big churches, […] that gives you a very strong feeling of 
belonging,”  Song says. “And this church, because they are family members to 
each 
other  emotionally, they help each other to make business networks, deal 
making, and so  on and so on.” 
Korean Christianity™ 
Many pastors have been eager to emulate Cho’s success with Yoido Full 
Gospel.  Christianity has always equalled wealth in Korea, but in Cho’s case, 
it 
has  equalled quite a bit of it. In 2014, Cho was convicted of embezzling 
$12 million  in church funds, receiving a fine and a suspended sentence, 
though his son went  to prison. The church was torn apart as elder attacked 
elder 
(sometimes  physically) and accusations grew that $12 million was only the 
tip of the  iceberg, and that Cho and his family had secreted away as much 
as $500  million. 
Throughout Korea, stories of the lavish, usually tax-free lifestyles of  
Protestant leaders have caused almost universal mistrust of the churches by  
non-Christians, and many Christians themselves are fed up with what they  
perceive to be widespread corruption behind the pulpit. A 2015 poll found that  
only 20 percent of Koreans generally trust Protestant pastors. 
“The ideology of the Christian religion, or Protestantism, is usually a 
poor  Christian is not a Christian,” says Song. There is a pervasive belief,  
influenced by shamanism, that God wants you to be rich, and wants the Korean  
nation to be rich. Most Christians attribute South Korea’s rapid rise to  
prosperity to God’s work. 
In the present as in the past, Koreans will visit shamans, people who can  
reputedly speak to the spirits around you, not for care in the afterlife, 
but  for good fortune now: for the success of a business, the healing of an 
ailment,  a perfect score on a child’s exam. This shamanism has infused itself 
into Korean  Christianity, where Koreans will pray for day to day health, 
wealth, and  happiness, and Christian ministers will work to guarantee it. 
“There’s always been this basic belief that the priest, namely the shaman, 
or  in Christianity the minister, has this tremendous […] access to the 
gods, or  God,” says Hwang. Cho, like many Christian ministers and most 
shamans, claims to  be able to heal people spiritually of real medical 
ailments, 
notably paralysis.  (“And he walks!”) The end of each service at Yoido 
involves the minister going  through a long list of medical conditions, 
demanding 
they be gone. 
Protestant services are rarely subdued in Korea, with people falling into  
trances, speaking in tongues, and loudly proclaiming their allegiance to God 
–  in hopes they will reap the benefits not just in the next life, but in 
this one  too. 
No More Growth? 
But the appeal of evangelical Protestantism appears to have hit a wall.  
Attendance rates, and the number of Koreans claiming to be Protestants, have  
stalled. The democratization movement caused many young Koreans to resent 
the  largely conservative, pro-regime roles most churches held. Corruption,  
internecine battles within the churches, and a singular focus on growth at 
all  costs have also hurt church attendance. 
By contrast, the Catholic Church has continued to grow, largely because it 
is  perceived as being progressive, anti-regime, above corruption, and more  
democratic, ironic as that might sound to reform-minded Westerners. Kim  
Dae-jung, a well-known dissident during the dictatorships who would later go 
on  to become president and win the Nobel Peace Prize, was Catholic. Though 
there  was a “minjung” theology among some Protestants, that emphasized 
democracy and  freedom during the dictatorship, it was only preached in a 
minority of  churches. 
The question remains about how relations between South Korea’s religious  
factions will continue. Protestants remain a powerful conservative force,  
picketing LGBT Pride events, demonstrating against North Korea, and even  
protesting against the introduction of halal meat in some stores, a move meant  
to attract tourists from Muslim countries. 
In 2009, some evidence for evolution was removed from high school science  
textbooks because of pressure from religious groups, and a full third of 
Koreans  – more than the number of Christians – do not believe in evolution. 
Former President Lee Myung-back was criticized by Buddhists and the  
non-religious for stacking his cabinet with members of his own church, Somang  
Presbyterian, where he is an elder. Current president Park Geun-hye is an  
atheist, but her conservative power base relies on Christian support. 
Evangelical zeal to send missionaries to places most others would never go –
  including Afghanistan, Iraq, Jordan, and Yemen – have caused headaches 
for the  government. In 2007, after ignoring the government’s advice, 27 
Korean  missionaries to Afghanistan were kidnapped by the Taliban, and two were 
killed.  In 2009, the Korean foreign ministry warned Korean Christians to 
stop  missionizing in Arab countries, fearing it was making Koreans terrorist  
targets. 
Back to Somang 
But to the casual visitor, Christianity hardly appears to be fading. 
Park Yong-jin, a middle aged man waiting outside the Somang Church, says  
Korea is particularly blessed by God, above other countries, and that  
Christianity “helped Korea adapt to Western culture and devices for  
development.”
 When asked why Koreans are so passionate about their religion, he  
answered, “It’s in the Korean character. We are always passionate!” 
Standing near the steps of the same church, Park Ki-min says that  
Christianity for him is not about material wealth, or creating a business  
network, 
or boasting about the size of your congregation. 
“My goal is to wake up every day and feel grateful for God,” he says. “And 
 that’s the right way to live.”

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