A North Korean Recounts How She Was Evangelized In A Labor Camp By North Korean Underground Christians

WLO_visitrememberUnderground Technology, or UT for short, is our foundational discipleship training program for North Korean defectors in South Korea. Sadly, many South Korean churches do not have a systematic discipleship method for their North Korean members. So we have seen North Korean defectors who have gone to church and morning prayer in South Korea for literally a decade who truly do not understand even the first principles of the Christian faith.

As we have been doing UT school for several years, we have learned that it is very important to teach UT students the basic Biblical concepts and repeat them many times. North Koreans often inadvertently blend Christianity into their existing North Korean Juche (Kim Il-Sungist) ideology. So we focus on teaching UT students about creation, sin, redemption, and the character of God, reprising and reviewing the core concepts each week. Dr. Hyun Sook Foley, the UT dean, incorporates a lot of visual materials and life applications to aid students in understanding the basics of the faith clearly and effectively.

Dr. Foley recently taught on the subject of God as our Abba Father. UT students watched a short video about the lost son based on Luke 15:11-32.

UT student CHJ shared that she still has a long way to go in understanding the love of God, which she first sensed in a North Korean labor camp. She was sent to labor camps in North Korea four times before coming to SK.

The third time, she met 19 underground believers in the camp. They ranged in age from 16 to 79 years old. They came from five families (likely an entire church network) that were caught together. CHJ said they clearly had no fear but showed only peace and gentleness. One of them told CHJ, “God is here with us. Why would we be afraid? God protects us.”

Through the encounter, CHJ was greatly encouraged and started to pray to this unknown God who was protecting the underground believers. She is now coming to know this God as her Abba Father. Through the video, she was once again reminded of the love of our Father God toward the believers in prison.

You may not like it, but God knows that the best way to reach people in prison in North Korea isn’t to smuggle a Bible in. It’s to permit a Christian to be sent to jail.

Then the chief cupbearer said to Pharaoh, “Today I am reminded of my shortcomings. 10 Pharaoh was once angry with his servants, and he imprisoned me and the chief baker in the house of the captain of the guard. Each of us had a dream the same night, and each dream had a meaning of its own. Now a young Hebrew was there with us, a servant of the captain of the guard. We told him our dreams, and he interpreted them for us, giving each man the interpretation of his dream. And things turned out exactly as he interpreted them to us (Genesis 41:9-13, NIV).

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Video – Did God Say To Abraham, “I’m Going To Bless You For The Pure Joy Of Blessing You?” Not Even Close . . .

Pastor Tim Dillmuth reminds us that the blessing of Genesis 12 was not simply to make Abraham happy.  God wasn’t “blessing the socks off” of Abraham, for the pure joy of “blessing his socks off!”  Abraham, and all of Israel were blessed in order to be a blessing to others.  Pastor Tim says that this is one of the first places in the Bible where we see God’s plan for discipleship.

To listen to the full sermon and other Seoul USA Podcasts, visit the Seoul USA Podcast Page!

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Who’s A Better Female Role Model Than Beyonce? How About A 70 Year Old North Korean Woman . . .

70 yr old womanAs a society, we love the idea of a smart, strong, caring and independent woman . . . and well we should! Unfortunately, the female role models that our society often admires sometimes fall short of the above ideals. Jane Merrick recounting the role model she choose at 15 years of age, is a great example. She says,

But when I turned 15, she (my role model) was replaced by Kate Moss, who was edgy and stylish. She also made smoking a cigarette look cool, so I started smoking too.

It may be easy for us to recognize the absurdity with which we sometimes choose our role models, but have you ever considered that the best female role model might just be a 70 year old North Korean woman?

How do I know? Because “smart, strong, caring, independent 70 year old NK woman” describes the majority of our Underground University and Underground Technology students. That’s right . . . they aren’t young NK seminary students, ready to take on the world . . . they are seasoned, wise, older women who are ready to give their last years on this earth for the Lord!

So, what makes these women strong, independent, seasoned and wise? Take for example, their journey from North Korea to South Korea. Every North Korean defector has a different and yet powerful story, but many NK defector women have something in common . . . they were sex-trafficked out of NK.

Quite often the NK government sells their women to Korean-Chinese gangs, who then sell these women for even “bigger-money” to Chinese men who need a wife. Jang Jin-Sung, author of Dear Leader, recounted a terrible story of one NK woman in China, which I fear is all too common.

She was sold into a Chinese village family where she was locked up and used by all the men in the family. One day the father-in-law would be the aggressor, the next the brother-in-law, all sleeping with her. So she doesn’t even know who the father of her baby boy is, whether it’s the husband or the father-in-law or the brother-in-law. In the end, they pimped her out to the other men in the village, and pocketed the money (Dear Leader, 169).

Our Underground University students are women who suffered at the hands Kim Jong Il in North Korea, lived a miserable existence in China at the hands of their captors, and now battle depression and loneliness in South Korea. And yet, these women haven’t crumbled, become bitter, or lost hope. What have they done? They’ve committed their lives to the Lord and purposed in their hearts to reach out to other hurting North Koreans around the world.

Our typical female role models (in the Western world at least) tend to be focused more on things like material success and sex appeal. If you paid attention to the television, you’d be convinced that Beyonce Knowles, Angelina Jolie, and Danica Patrick were the boldest and bravest this world had to offer.

But consider the simple and yet powerful response one of our UU students had when she found out her son had been sent to a political prison camp in North Korea. She said,

At first I did not go to church after hearing the news that my son had been dragged to the North. But now, I put my every worry in God’s hands, believing that God is taking care of my son.

This woman, while certainly not perfect, shows the kind of perseverance and simple faithfulness that should be a model for each of us . . . regardless if we are male or female.

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