DeokKyo Oh | |
Nationality: | South Korean |
Education: | Th.M. Ph.D. |
Alma Mater: | Westminster Theological Seminary, |
Occupation: | Professor |
Known For: | Research on church history, the Reformation, and Puritans |
Deok-Kyo Oh (; born 14 December 1952) is a South Korean theologian who served as the president of Hapdong Theological Seminary in South Korea[1] and the president of the International University of Ulaanbaatar in Mongolia,[2] [3] [4] and is a member of South Korea's National Unification Advisory Council since 2014.
Deokkyo Oh was born in Boryeong, South Chungcheong Province, South Korea in 1952. He studied theology at Chongshin University (BA), Graduate School of Theology (M.Div.), and graduate school (Th.M.). He was ordained as a pastor at the Chungnam Presbytery Church in 1978. He joined the Air Force to serve as the chaplain of the Air Force until 1981. He worked as a full-time lecturer at Chongshin University School of Theology in 1981. In September 1982 he began to study in Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia.In 1987 he became the first Korean to get Ph.D. in Westminster Theological Seminary. His dissertation title was "the Churches Resurrection : John Cotton’s Eschatological Understanding of the Ecclesiastical Reformation".After returning to South Korea, he taught church history for 27 years. From 2005 to 2009, he served as the 7th President of Hapdong Theological Seminary. He was a research fellow at Yale University Divinity School in 1986, and visiting professor at Westminster Theological Seminary in 1992–1993, and Stellenbosch University of South Africa in 2000. He was the president of the Presbyterian Theological Society of Korea in 2014. From February 2014 to 2017, he served as the President of the International University of Ulaanbaatar in Mongolia. In recognition of its contribution to the development of the Mongolian education, the Mongolian government gave him the best educator award in 2017.He was nominated as the theologian of the year from the Memorial Association of the 500th anniversary of the birth of John Calvin.[5] Since 2015 he has been a member of South Korea's National Unification Advisory Council. He is a member of the editorial committee for Unio cum Christo: An International Reformed Journal on Faith and Life.[6]