Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to care for orphans and widows in their distress, and to keep oneself unstained by the world. (James 1:27)
The global vision of American evangelicalism began in an improbable place, 1950s South Korea, as Americans encountered people like Pun Hui Pak. The youngest of four children, Pun Hui Pak was born in a small town outside Taegu, South Korea, in 1949. In an agricultural economy, the Paks were better off than many: her family owned farmland and her father served as mayor of the small town.
But that changed quickly during the summer of 1950. Supported by Mao, and given the green-light by Stalin, the North Korean People’s Army (NKPA) swept across the 38th parallel aiming to unite all Koreans under the communist government of Kim Il-Sung. A hastily assembled coalition of South Korean (ROK) and American-led U.N. forces attempted to stall the NKPA advance, but their efforts seemed doomed. Victory upon victory punctuated the Soviet-armed NPKA’s advance towards Pusan.
Taegu, the headquarters of Lt. General Walton Walker’s Eighth Army and communications hub for what remained of the defensive forces, soon became the target of the NKPA. Provoking his troops, Walker issued his “Stand or Die” order, and somehow managed to defend the Pusan Perimeter in a brilliant tactical effort. However, casualties were high, not only for military personnel, but also for South Korean civilians. While the NKPA overran the smaller cities outside Taegu, city officials from Pun’s hometown hid in a nearby cave outside of the village. For several days, family and friends clandestinely brought them food. They were eventually discovered by the NKPA and none of them, including Pun’s father, were heard from again.
Already a poor country, the war ravished Korea. As for most South Korean families, life forever changed for the Paks. Left without a father, they were forced to sell their land to care for Pun’s ailing older brother. A couple years after the Korean Armistice Agreement, when Pun was six, the family moved to the city. A hard worker, Pun excelled in school in Taegu. She also first encountered the gospel there.
The history of evangelical Christianity in Korea begins in earnest at the end of the nineteenth century. Caught between Japan and China, the Korean royal family reluctantly ended its isolationist policies and signed a treaty with the U.S. in 1882. As usual, missionary activity followed trade, and, even as most evangelical groups remained focused on evangelizing China, some began ministry in earnest in the former “hermit kingdom.” Japanese imperial rule (beginning in 1910) and the burdens of World War II disturbed these efforts, but when China “fell” to the communists in 1949, many groups, such as the Oriental Missionary Society, pivoted towards Korea. At the onset of the Korean War, missionary personnel were vacated from the peninsula, but U.N. military successes and the eventual armistice brought a new era in the evangelization of South Korea.
In the aftermath of the fighting, life was completely different. Utter destruction characterized the South Korean topography, while widows and orphans made up a disproportionate percentage of its population. As they observed these new realities, the burden of James 1:27 began to weigh upon evangelicals both in Korea and at home. As missionary personnel and Christian soldiers reported the humanitarian crisis to their constituencies in America, concern for the physical well-being of downtrodden Koreans began to percolate through the evangelical subculture. As a direct result, the newly renamed World (née War) Relief Commission of the National Association of Evangelicals turned its attention to Korea, the inimitable Bob Pierce founded World Vision (f. 1950), and an unheard of Swedish Baptist evangelist named Everett Swanson returned from a trip to Korea determined to “do something.” The organization he founded is now known as Compassion International.
Although these new efforts resembled the medical missions in some regards, they demonstrated a marked concern with the deleterious effects of poverty itself, not just medical conditions. They sought to provide basic necessities such as food, shelter, clothing, and education. All the while, they maintained an evangelical commitment to share the good news, urging those they helped to be born again.
In Taegu, Pun Hui came in contact with just such an American evangelical group. As a small girl, the Presbyterian church in the midst of the city intentionally provided a safe place to play, off the streets. Each year Americans concerned with the physical well-being of little Korean girls and boys like her, sent clothes, Christmas cards, and toys that were distributed through the church. Although sized by age, the clothes were big and sweaters sometimes looked more like dresses, but they were warm and clean, and warm clean clothes were in short supply.
Along the way, Pun memorized Bible verses and heard the good news about Jesus. In this way, her first encounter with the gospel came at the hands of American evangelicals who cared for her physical needs. Years later, after immigrating to the United States, the pastor of a small Baptist church in Patrick County, Virginia, shared the gospel with her again. This time she believed. Six months later, her husband also believed and both were baptized.
Following World War II, America’s role in the world was changing. Confronted with the communist advance across the 38th parallel on June 25, 1950, the experience of the Korean War jump-started a containment policy that had been articulated in NSC-68 less than two months before. Likewise, the experience of Korea catalyzed a change taking place within American evangelicalism. Increasingly concerned about the problems of society, culture, and the world, the Korean War and its aftermath provided both the stimulus and the opportunity for this “new evangelicalism” to express itself in action.
What emerged was a host of cooperative, pan-denominational, evangelical groups that aggressively sought to improve the lives of impoverished Koreans as they communicated the gospel message. Quickly, this would develop into a global vision for improving the lives of impoverished children throughout Asia, then Africa, and then rest of the world. Eventually, it developed into the sort of vision that typified many evangelical groups in the late twentieth-century as they moved beyond addressing individual needs to address communal issues as well. But it all began in Korea.





March 15th, 2013 | 10:12 am
I’m not sure I understand the point being made.
You are asserting as a causation – Korea as an impetus for Evangelical global vision – what is actually simply a historical correlation – American Evangelicalism became a force around the time of the aftermath of the Korean war.
If anything, Evangelicals simply followed in the global vision established by centuries of Christ’s disciples who founded hospitals, orphanages, and job creation opportunities in India, Africa, China, and beyond.
Again, I’m not questioning your telling of history so much as the claim that “it all began in Korea”. The article leaves to the imagination what “all” is, because it certainly can’t be Evangelicals’ global vision.
March 15th, 2013 | 1:41 pm
Perhaps the better point to be made is that American Evangelicals began to recapture a more comprehensive understanding of mission in Korea.
March 15th, 2013 | 7:39 pm
Thanks for your comment Scott:
I don’t see this as simply correlation. Instead of direct causation, perhaps catalyst might be the term I would use. There were certainly other factors at work: technological developments, media, resurgent evangelicalism with greater interest in “social issues,” the perception of communist aggression, the availability of military surplus, etc.
Simple unrelated correlation is always a possible answer to the historical question: “why now?” In this case the primary sources indicate that it was the specific experience of Korea that catalyzed an incipient evangelical vision away from Europe and towards the rest of the world. The rest of the century bears this out. From Korea these efforts advanced to the rest of Asia (particularly Taiwan, the Philippines, and Vietnam), then Africa and South America.
Although abject poverty existed prior to June 1950, evangelicals did not address them in the Korea-specific ways they did after the invasion (e.g. the adopt-an-orphan programs). So we must conclude that something was different about Korea. Korean suffering evoked a response from Americans that was different in large part because changes in media, which allowed evangelical leaders to convey suffering more evocatively. As a result, American evangelicals opened their hearts specifically to Korea.
Thus, Korea was the start of a 20th century global vision that was—as you point out—similar and yet very different than in the past. Beginning with some rather unique efforts to help individuals, it soon moved in a familiar pattern from simply addressing individual needs to concern itself with systemic causes of poverty in ways hitherto not common among evangelicals. Fresh water projects, massive scale disaster relief, educational missions, microfinance, etc. all have their roots in what sprang out of evangelical concern for…
March 15th, 2013 | 9:21 pm
Miles,
Thanks for the follow-up; certainly helpful in seeing the trajectory of your thinking. It is a good historical observation, my only concern was the apparent negation of centuries of global vision that evangelicals found themselves carrying the baton of. I see now what you mean that the specific manifestations of how evangelicals have carried that baton in many ways were catalyzed in 1950-60′s Korea.
It certainly leave plenty more to ponder, so I thank you for the food-for-thought.
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