The Presbyterian Church of Korea (PCK; ), also known by the abbreviation "Yejang" (), is a Korean Calvinist Protestant denomination based in South Korea that adheres to the Westminster Confession of Faith.
Korean Presbyterianism originated in the early 1880s with the establishment of the Sorae Church by Seo Sang-ryun in 1884, following his conversion by Scottish Presbyterian missionaries.
As the Presbyterian mission expanded, the need for Korean pastors to serve congregations and provide theological education grew. In 1907, Presbyterians from the United States, Australia, and Canada established the first theological seminary in Korea, located in Pyongyang. In the same year, the Presbyterian Church of Korea organized its first presbytery and established a governing council.
Since the 1950s, the Presbyterian Church of Korea has undergone numerous schisms, resulting in multiple separate denominations such as the Presbyterian Church of Korea (TongHap) and the Presbyterian Church in Korea (HapDong), primarily over differences in ecclesiology and relations with ecumenical bodies. As of 2019, there were 286 branches in South Korea, with approximately four million church attendees. Numerous denominations that emerged from these schisms continue to incorporate "Presbyterian Church of Korea" in their official names.
History
Early missionaries
Calvinism first arrived in Korea in August of 1866, when pastor Robert Jermain Thomas was captured and martyred during the General Sherman incident. The first Korean Presbyterian church was founded by Seo Sang-ryun in Hwanghae Province in 1884.
Large-scale missions began two decades later, when Horace Newton Allen of the Northern Presbyterian Church entered the royal court of Joseon as a physician. In 1885, Horace Underwood and John W. Heron arrived to establish a formal Presbyterian mission in Korea. Although the first Korean Bible was translated by John Ross in the 1870s, it was later printed by the British and Foreign Bible Society and the Scottish Bible Society in 1886.
Soon after, in 1889, missionaries James Scarth Gale and Joseph Henry Davies came from Canada and Australia, followed by Samuel Austin Moffett in 1890 from America. In 1891, teachers Isabella Menzies, Jean Perry, and Mary Fawcett arrived from Australia. Dr. James MacKenzie landed in 1893, and in 1898, Dr. Robert Grierson, pastor W. R. Foote, and Duncan MacRae of the Presbyterian Church in Canada joined the missionary effort.
McKenzie died a year and a half after his arrival while working in evangelism and medical care at Sorae Church, Hwanghae Province. His efforts led to the organization of the Korean mission church for the Presbyterian Church in Canada () in Wonsan. 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. (, also known as the Council of Missions). Both councils were made up entirely of foreign missionaries.
thumb|Organization of the Independent Council, September 17, 1907
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. That same year, the United Council decided to appoint a party committee member to oversee church affairs for the five local councils of Pyeongan, Gyeongseong, Jeolla, Gyeongsang, and Hamgyeong.
thumb|First General Assembly of the PCK, Pyongyang, September 1, 1912
On September 17, 1907, with 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 reorganized into the seven sub-presbyteries () of Pyeongbuk, Pyeongnam, Hwanghae, Chungcheong, Jeolla, Hamgyong, and Gyeongsang. 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 to establish a General Assembly and convert the seven sub-presbyteries into official presbyteries. On September 1, 1912, the first General Assembly of the PCK took place in Pyongyang. 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. 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.
The persecution of Christians intensified as a result of the movement. Police forces frequently destroyed Presbyterians' properties, and many missionaries were placed under scrutiny. By the end of June 1919, 1,461 Presbyterians had been arrested by Japanese police; within less than four months, the total number of Presbyterian arrests increased to 3,804. 41 of the Presbyterian leaders were killed, and twelve churches were destroyed. Horace Underwood made detailed accounts of the Jeam-ni Massacre during a trip to Suwon with his colleagues. Presbyterianism in Korea was reconstructed after World War II, and the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church was re-established in 1947.
Schisms in the 1950s
In the 1950s, the Presbyterian Church of Korea suffered from a series of schisms over issues of theology, ecumenism, and worship.
In 1951, the first division occurred resulting in the Presbyterian Church in Korea (Kosin). due to a controversy that began in the 1930s, when Korea was still under Japanese rule. At that time, university students were instructed to bow to the Shinto shrine in worship, which was theologically and politically controversial among Christians. While many complied, some Christians at Pyongyang Theological Seminary adamantly opposed it, holding that the Bible prohibited such actions. After Korea's liberation from Japanese rule and subsequent division, many northern Koreans relocated to the south. Those who formerly opposed the Shinto shrine worship established a new seminary, Koryo Theological Seminary (now Kosin University) in 1946.
In 1953, the second division occurred, when progressives separated to form the Presbyterian Church of the Republic of Korea (KiJang). In the 1970s, the KiJang Presbyterians would produce some of the key leaders of minjung theology, a movement advocating social justice under the dictatorship of Park Chung Hee.
In 1959, at the 44th General Assembly, a third schism divided the Presbyterian Church of Korea into two equal branches: the Presbyterian Church of Korea (TongHap) and the Presbyterian Church in Korea (HapDong). The main issue was whether the Church should be a part of the ecumenical organization, the World Council of Churches (WCC). Park Hyun-nyon, President of the Presbyterian Seminary of the General Assembly, led the formation of the Evangelical "HapDong" (the union body), whereas those who supported relations with the WCC formed the ecumenical "TongHap" (the united body). Today, TongHap and HapDong represent the largest factions of Korean Presbyterianism.
See also
- Christianity in Korea
- Presbyterianism
- Presbyterianism in South Korea
- Christianity in Korea
- Christian revivals
Footnotes
References
Bibliography
Further reading
- Clark, Donald N. Christianity in Modern Korea (University Press of America, 1986)
- Grayson, James H. Korea—A Religious History (Routledge Curzon, 2002)
- Kang, Wi Jo. Christ and Caesar in Modern Korea: A History of Christianity and Politics (State University of New York Press, 1997)
- Latourette, Kenneth Scott. Christianity in a Revolutionary Age: Vol. 5: The Twentieth century outside Europe (1962) pp 412–23
- Lee, Timothy S. "A Political Factor in the Rise of Protestantism in Korea: Protestantism and the 1919 March First Movement," Church History 2000. 69#1 pp 116–42. in JSTOR
- Mullins, Mark, and Richard Fox Young, eds. Perspectives on Christianity in Korea and Japan: The Gospel and Culture in East Asia (Edwin Mellen, 1995)
- Park, Chung-shin. Protestantism and Politics in Korea (U. of Washington Press, 2003)
