Sometimes Underground Christians Lose Their Faith, Too…And This Is How God Rekindles It

WLO_visitrememberKSH made her way to South Korea from North Korea nine years ago. She first heard about the gospel while she lived in China and became a Christian at that time. She is a student at our Underground University missionary training school, and she takes her training very seriously.

It has been ten years since her oldest son was sent back to the North while he was searching for an easy way for her to come to South Korea from China. She recently received the news he had been sent to a political prisoner camp. She said that at first she did not go to church after she learned that her son had been dragged back to the North. But now she puts her every worry in God’s hands, knowing that God is watching over her son.

Her family was a Christian family during the Japanese colonial era, especially her mother who was an evangelist. (This is a formal designation in the Korean church.) Her family went to live in China because her father participated in the independence movement against Japan.

Later, her parents moved to North Korea but they left KSH’s two older sisters in China for a time. But when her sisters entered North Korea, they had to declare everything about their lives in China. Her sisters did indeed declare everything, including their faith in Jesus Christ. As a result, they were denied permission to enter North Korea.

After that, her evangelist mother taught KSH not to speak out about Christ or the family’s Christian faith at all.

Gradually she even came to forget that her family was Christian.

Then when KSH visited relatives in China as an adult, her uncle reminded her of the family’s heritage of faith. She accepted Jesus Christ and became a Christian while she stayed in her sister’s house in China.

Except her oldest son, she, her daughter, and her younger son have settled down well in South Korea. KSH’s faith in God, entrusted to her parents but rekindled by her uncle, is continuing to grow, along with her sense of calling, vocation, and mission.

God remembers–and rekindles–the faith of our fathers in the most interesting ways.

 

I am reminded of your sincere faith, which first lived in your grandmother Lois and in your mother Eunice and, I am persuaded, now lives in you also.

For this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands. For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self-discipline. So do not be ashamed of the testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner. Rather, join with me in suffering for the gospel, by the power of God. (1 Timothy 1:5-8, NIV)

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Video – Why North Korean Citizens Always Spy On Their Neighbors

Pastor Eric Foley says that Christianity is an unpardonable crime against the North Korean state.  And because it is such a serious offense, everyone is required to spy and report on the activities of their neighbors. If you don’t, you become guilty by association if a neighbor is discovered to be doing something wrong.

Therefore, Christians aren’t able to worship together like we are used to seeing in the Chinese underground church.  And yet despite these limitations in worship, “Connector Christians” are sometimes able to share teaching, encouragement, and even the Lord’s supper between households.

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

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Great Expectations – A Tale of Kim Jong Il and Jesus Christ

dear leaderI feel let down when I see the Dear Leader up close, because I am confronted by an old man who looks nothing like the familiar image of the People’s Leader. Even though we are clapping fervently and cheering for him, he doesn’t respond or even seem to notice. He continues to play with his puppy, as if resentful of being surrounded by men who are younger than him (Dear Leader, xvii).

This was Jang Jin Sung’s reaction when he met Kim Jong Il for the first time. Mr. Jang had been brought up to believe in the divinity of Kim Jong Il’s father, Kim Il Sung. During the 1970s-80s , Kim Il Sung came to be viewed as more of a God than a great leader. And after his death in 1994, the belief in his deity only increased. For example, three years after his death, the NK calendar officially changed by marking “Kim Il Sung’s birthday, April 15, 1912, as the first year of the new Juche Calendar.” And Kim Il Sung came to be remembered and worshiped as the Eternal President and the Sun whose immortal life is a smile (Dear Leader, 20).

This was propagated by his son, and co-member of the NK trinity, Kim Jong Il. By reinforcing the deity of his father, Kim Jong Il was setting the stage for his own honor and reverence. Consider the fact that NKs now say a star appeared overhead when Kim Jong Il was born in a humble log cabin in the snowy midwinter.

Mr. Jang’s experience with Kim Jong Il caused me to think of the various Bible stories that tell of people who had the opportunity to experience the divine. No doubt, their expectations were high as well, but instead of being disappointed like Mr. Jang, they were overwhelmed with the greatness of God.

Remember when Moses had the opportunity to experience the glory of God? God himself had to go to great lengths to protect Moses because “man shall not see God and live,” and even then the very skin of his face shone because he had been talking with God.

Or consider Paul, who after meeting Christ, fell to the ground and was struck blind. And of course, the great worship scene in Revelation 7, where the elders and the four living creatures fell on their faces before the throne and worshiped God.

Take notice of how different Mr. Jang’s reaction was when he first met Kim Jong Il.

He has taken off his shoes. Even the General suffers the curse of sore feet! I had always thought him divine, not even needing to use the toilet . . . But here I am, looking into his shoes, which have high heels and an inner platform at least two and half inches high. Those shoes have deceived his people. Although his thin, permed hair adds to the illusion of height, the Dear Leader can’t be more than five feet three inches without those shoes (Dear Leader, 20).

The difference is not so much in the expectations, but in the one with whom the expectations are placed. Moses, Paul and the author of Revelation experienced the true and living God, while Mr. Jang experienced a well-orchestrated imitation. And as well-thought and well-planned as that imitation was, Mr. Jang quickly realized it for what it was.

As potentially dangerous as “dashed expectations” are to the North Korean regime, it is not nearly as dangerous as having those expectations met by someone other than Kim Il Sung.  This is precisely the reason why Christianity is so dangerous to North Korea. Christianity not only has the power to expose Juche and the Kim family for being nothing more than a cheap imitation, but it has the power to reveal the one true living God!

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