Presbyterian Church of Korea explained

The Presbyterian Church of Korea
Main Classification:Protestant
Orientation:Calvinist
Polity:Presbyterian
Founded Date:early 1880s
Founded Place:Hwanghae Province (Sorae Church) or Seoul (Saemoonan Church)
Separations:Gosin (1952), Gijang (1953), Tonghap and Hapdong (1959)
Area:Korea
Module:
Hangul:대한예수교장로회
Hanja:大韓예수敎長老會
Rr:Daehan yesugyo jangnohoe
Mr:Taehan yesugyo changnohoe
Child:yes

The Presbyterian Church of Korea (PCK), also abbreviated as Yejang, is a Protestant denomination based in South Korea that follows Calvinist theology and the Westminster Confession of Faith. Since the 1950s, the denomination has separated into various branches of the same name due to theological and political disputes. As of 2019, 286 branches in South Korea, many of which have separated from the PCK, use the title 'Presbyterian Church of Korea'.[1]

Some biblical historians consider the Sorae Church, which was established in the early 1880s by Seo Sang-ryun, as the origin of Korean Presbyterianism. Others consider the Saemoonan Church, established by American missionary Horace Underwood in 1887, as the true birthplace of the PCK. However, the PCK was first organized as an independent Korean church in 1907.[2]

History

Early Missionaries

Calvinism is believed to have first arrived in Korea in 1865 when pastor Robert Jermain Thomas was captured and martyred during the General Sherman incident.[3] The first Korean Presbyterian church was founded by Seo Sang-ryun, who was converted into Christianity by Scottish pastor John McIntyre in Manchuria,[4] in Hwanghae province in 1884.[5]

Full-scale missions were able to take place twenty years later when Horace Newton Allen of the Northern Presbyterian Church was admitted into the royal court of Joseon as a physician.[6] In 1885, Horace Grant Underwood and arrived and established the Korean mission church for the Northern Presbyterian Church. The Korean edition of the Bible was first translated by John Ross during the 1870s. The edition was first printed and published by the British and Foreign Bible Society and the Scottish Bible Society in 1886.[7]

Subsequently, more Western missionaries set foot in Korea with Canadian missionary James Scarth Gale and Australian Joseph Henry Davies arriving in 1889, and American missionary Samuel Austin Moffett in 1890. In 1891, female teachers such as Isabella Menzies, Jean Perry and Mary Fawcett arrived from Australia. Dr. James MacKenzie arrived in 1893, and in 1898, Dr. Robert Grierson, pastor W. R. Foote, and Duncan MacRae of the Presbyterian Church in Canada arrived to serve as missionaries.[8]

McKenzie died after a year and a half while working in evangelism and medical care in Sorae Church, Hwanghae Province. His efforts led to the organization of the Korean mission church for the Presbyterian Church in Canada in Wonsan. In the Southern Presbyterian Church, pastors William D. Reynolds and Lewis B. Tate arrived in 1892 and organized the Korean mission church for the Southern Presbyterian Church in Jeolla Province.

In 1889, the Northern Presbyterian Church and the Presbyterian Church of Victoria created The United Council of Presbyterian Missions, with John W. Heron as chairman, to settle issues over the unification of churches. In 1893, the United Council of Presbyterian Missions became the Council of Missions Holding the Presbyterian Form of Government (also succinctly known as the Council of Missions). The two councils consisted only of foreign missionaries.

Birth of the PCK

Elections for the first Korean presbyters for the council began in 1900. (Hwanghae), Kim Chong-sŏp, and I Yŏng-ŭn(both South Pyongan) were elected as elders in 1900. The following year, Kil Sŏn-chu and were elected as elders. On September 20 of the same year, three Korean presbyters and six ministers organized the Council of the Presbyterian Church of Korea (Chosun) with 25 missionaries in a missionary council held at the Saemoonan Church in Seoul, with missionary William L. Swallen inaugurated as the first chairman. However, as the Council of Missions had jurisdiction over church affairs, the Presbyterian Church of Korea was then only a fraternal organization. In 1902, was appointed as an elder, and more people were elected as elders in 1903.[9] In 1901, Samuel Moffett established the Pyongyang Theological Seminary and became its first principal. The spread of Presbyterianism was further intensified by the Great Pyongyang Revival of 1907. On June 20, 1907, Kil Sŏn-chu, Yang Chŏn-paek,,, Sŏ Kyŏng-cho,, and Pang Kich'ang became the first graduates of the Pyongyang Theological Seminary. The same year, the United Council decided to select a party committee member to handle church affairs for the five local councils of Pyeongan, Gyeongseong, Jeolla, Gyeongsang, and Hamgyeong.[10] On September 17, 1907, under the approval of four presbyters from the Mission Council, 33 missionaries and 38 presbyters organized the Presbyterian Church of Korea into an independent church. The five local councils were re-organized into the seven sub-presbyteries [11] of Pyongbuk, Pyongnam, Hwanghae, Chungcheong, Jeolla, Hamgyong, and Gyeongsang.[10] [12] The PCK was also known during this era as the "Independent Council" . On September 17, 1911, during an assembly at Nammoon Church, Daegu, the Independent Council agreed on creating a General Assembly, and converting the seven sub-presbyteries into official presbyteries. On September 1, 1912, the first General Assembly of the PCK took place in Pyongyang.[13] In 1916, the Presbytery of Gyeongsang was divided into the presbyteries of Gyeongnam and Gyeongbuk, and the presbytery of Pyongseo(west Pyongan) was separated from the presbytery of Pyongbuk.[10]

The Colonial Period

Korean Presbyterians were advised to stay uninvolved with any political cause even after the Japanese annexation of Korea in 1910. Thus, initial relationships between the colonial government and the Presbyterians were peaceful. Missionaries accepted Japanese rule as "the powers that be," and asserted a position of "loyal recognition" of the Japanese occupation. Nevertheless, many Korean Presbyterians were suspected of being political agents by the colonial government and were arrested, often without proper explanation or trial. In one incident, a group of Presbyterians was accused of plotting an assassination of then-Governor-General of Korea Terauchi Masatake in Sonchon. Missionaries were also accused of distributing firearms for the alleged assassination plot.

The Government-General of Chōsen actively sought policies that oppressed Christianity. A set of restrictions established in 1915 limited evangelist activities and placed sermons under police scrutiny. The same year, the colonial government further demanded that all schools in Korea discontinue all courses on Bible studies within ten years.[14] Tensions between Christians and the colonial government led many Korean Presbyterians, such as Kil Sŏn-chu, to become closely involved in the March First Movement of 1919.[15] Of the of the movement, sixteen were Christians, and seven were Presbyterians.

The persecutions of Christians were exacerbated as a result of the movement. Presbyterians frequently saw their properties destroyed by police forces; many missionaries were put under scrutiny. 1,461 Presbyterians were arrested by Japanese police by the end of June 1919; in less than four months, the total number of Presbyterian arrests increased to 3,804. 41 Presbyterian leaders were killed, and 12 churches were destroyed.[16] Horace Underwood made detailed accounts of the Jeam-ni Massacre during a trip to Suwon with his colleagues. The March First Movement did not end in complete vain, however, as the movement led to the resignation of Governor-General Hasegawa Yoshimichi on August 4, 1919, and the nomination of Saitō Makoto as his successor. Saitō accepted the Korean representatives' demands and agreed to alleviate restrictions on protests and the press. In September, a complaint documenting the requests of the church to the colonial government, which included an end to the ban on Bible study courses, was drafted among six missionary councils. The complaint was submitted to the Government-General, which accepted the requests.

By 1937, the Presbyterian churches were largely independent of financial support from the United States.[17] Presbyterianism in Korea was reconstructed after World War II in 1947. The church adopted the name the Reformed Church in Korea.

Schisms in the 1950s

In the 1950s, the church suffered tensions because of issues of theology, ecumenism, and worship. The first of these occurred in 1951, over issues related to shinto shrine worship, resulting in the formation of the Presbyterian Church in Korea (Kosin). The second occurred in 1953 when progressives separated, forming the Presbyterian Church of the Republic of Korea (KiJang). In the third schism, the Presbyterian Church of Korea broke into two equal sections in 1959: the Presbyterian Church of Korea (TongHap) and the Presbyterian Church in Korea (HapDong).[18]

General assembly

General
assembly
DateHostGeneral SecretaryNote
11907Samuel Austin MoffetDongnohoe
21908James Scarth Gale
31909Horace Grant Underwood
41910James Scarth Gale
51911W. D. Reynolds
1September 1–4, 1912Pyongyang Theological SeminaryHorace Grant UnderwoodGeneral assembly era
2September 7–11, 1913Soandong Church, SeoulG. Engel
3September 6–9, 1914Namsanhyeon Church, ChaeryongEugene Bell
4September 4–18, 1915Seomunbak Church, JeonjuKim Pil-su
5September 2–6, 1916Pyongyang Theological SeminaryYang Jeon-baek
6September 1–6, 1917Seungdong Church, SeoulHan Seok-jin
7August 31–September 5, 1918Sincheonbuk Church, SinchonKim Seon-du
8October 4–9, 1919Pyongyang Theological SeminarySamuel Austin Moffet
9October 2–7, 1920Andong Church, SeoulKim Ik-du
10September 10–15, 1921Jangdaehyeon Church, PyongyangLee Ki-pung
11September 10–15, 1922Seungdong Church, SeoulKim Seong-taek
12September 8–13, 1923Sinuiju ChurchHam Tae-yeong
13September 13–18, 1924Sinchangni Church, HamhungLee Ja-ik
14September 12–18, 1925Seomunbak Church, PyongyangIm Taek-gwon
15September 11–17, 1926Seomunbak Church, PyongyangKim Seok-chan
16September 9–15, 1927Gwangseok Church, WonsanKim Yeong-hun
17September 7–13, 1928Sinjeong Church, DaeguYeom Bong-nam
18September 6–12, 1929Saemunan Church, SeoulCha Jae-myeong
19September 12–18, 1930Seomunbak Church, PyongyangHong Jong-pil
20September 11–17, 1931Geumgangsan ChurchJang Gyu-myeong
21September 9–16, 1932Changdong Church, PyongyangNamgung Hyeok
22September 8–15, 1933Seoncheonnam Church, SonchonJang Heung-beom
23September 7–14, 1934Seomunbak Church, PyongyangLee In-sik
24September 6–13, 1935Seomunbak Church, PyongyangJeong In-gwa
25September 11–19, 1936Yangnim Church, GwangjuLee Seung-gil
26September 10–16, 1937Daegu Jeil Church, DaeguLee Mun-ju
27September 9–15, 1938Seomunbak Church, PyongyangHong Taek-gi
28September 8–15, 1939Sineuiju Jei Church, SinuijuYun Ha-yeong
29September 6–13, 1940Changdong Church, PyongyangKwak Jin-geun
30November 21–26, 1941Changdong Church, PyongyangChoi Ji-hwa
31October 16–20, 1942Seomunbak Church, PyongyangKim Eung-sun1943–45: Discontinued due to World War II
32June 11–14, 1946Seungdong Church, SeoulBae Eun-huiSouth Korea era
33April 18–22, 1947Daegu Jeil Church, DaeguLee Ja-ik
34April 20–23, 1948Saemunan Church, SeoulLee Ja-ik
35April 19–23, 1949Saemunan Church, SeoulChoi Jae-hwa
36April 21–25, 1950Daegu Jeil Church, Daegu
36May 25–29, 1951Jungang Church, BusanKwon Yeon-ho
37April 29–May 2, 1952Seomun Church, DaeguKim Jae-seok
38April 24–28, 1953Seomun Church, DaeguMyeong Sin-hong
39April 23–27, 1954Jungang Church, AndongLee Won-yeong
40April 22–26, 1955Yeongnak Church, SeoulHan Gyeong-jik
41September 20–25, 1956Saemunan Church, SeoulLee Dae-yeong
42September 19–24, 1957Jungang Church, BusanJeon Pil-sun
43September 25–October 1, 1958Yeongnak Church, SeoulNo Jin-hyeon
44September 24–29, 1959Jungang Church, DaejeonSchism

See also

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 전국 교단 총 374개, '대한예수교장로회'만 286개. 최승현. January 2, 2019. Newsnjoy.
  2. Web site: 공의회시대, 혹은 그 선교시대로 돌아간 한국의 장로교회. 장대선. May 1, 2019. bohnd.net.
  3. News: 宣敎五十週年맛는 長老會懷舊錄. 김만형. 1934-09-07. The Chosun Ilbo.
  4. Web site: 서상륜 (徐相崙). August 23, 2024. 민경배. Encyclopedia of Korean Culture.
  5. Web site: The Presbyterian Church of Korea : History. 2008-04-16. Pck.or.kr.
  6. Web site: Presbyterianism in the Hermit Kingdom: Presbyterian Church of Korea at 110. March 1, 2017. Presbyterian Historical Society. David. K.
  7. News: 朝鮮長老敎會의今昔 可驚할五十年發達史 (中). 정인과. 1934-06-28. The Dong-A Ilbo.
  8. News: 宣敎五十週年맛는 長老會懷舊錄 (二). 김만형. 1934-09-08. The Chosun Ilbo.
  9. News: 김만형. September 9, 1934. 宣敎五十週年맛는 長老會懷舊錄 ㈢. The Chosun Ilbo.
  10. News: 김만형. September 10, 1934. 宣敎五十週年맛는 長老會懷舊錄 ㈣. The Chosun Ilbo.
  11. Web site: 경상대리회. 이상규. August 20, 2024. 부산역사문화대전. ko. Academy of Korean Studies.
  12. The Independent Korean Presbyterian Church of 1907: its Origin and Meaning. 1907년 대한예수교장로회(독노회) 설립과정 및 그 의의에 대한 연구. Jae Buhm Hwang. 2007. 20. 281–313. 한국교회사학회. subscription. ko. August 24, 2024.
  13. 朝鮮長老敎會의今昔 可驚할五十年發達史 (中). 정인과. June 28, 1934. The Dong-A Ilbo.
  14. Web site: 2) 3·1운동과 기독교. National Institute of Korean History. ko. December 2, 2024. Database of Korean History.
  15. Lee. Timothy S.. 2000. A Political Factor in the Rise of Protestantism in Korea: Protestantism and the 1919 March First Movement. Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture. 69. 1. 116–142. 10.2307/3170582. 3170582.
  16. Web site: 3) 일제통치와 한국 기독교. National Institute of Korean History. August 24, 2024.
  17. Kenneth Scott Latourette, Christianity in a Revolutionary Age: Vol. 5: The Twentieth century outside Europe (1962) pp 414-5
  18. Book: Kim . In Soo . Kim . Sebastian C. H. . Kollontai . Pauline . Hoyland . Greg . Peace and Reconciliation: In Search of Shared Identity . 2016 . Routledge . 978-1-317-08290-3 . 137 . https://books.google.com/books?id=x70oDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA137 . en . Towards Peace and Reconciliation between South and North Korean Churches: Contextual Analysis of the Two Churches.