How Do North Korean Christians Envision Heaven?

praywithnorthkorea copyThe Bible begins and ends in a garden, yet I can’t recall many of us Westerners ever envisioning heaven that way. That’s why I was so fascinated to hear one of our North Korean defector students at Underground University describe heaven in exactly those terms when she prayed on our nightly radio broadcast into North Korea recently.

In fact, it’s fascinating just how biblical her prayer is. Right out of the book of Revelation she wonders aloud to God whether he is altogether too patient with the state of affairs in North Korea. “How long?” she asks. And so do we.

Here is her prayer. My prayer is that you will pray it together with her, and permit yourself to be shaped by it a little as well.

Dear Father God,

If I were living in North Korea, I would have gone to the mountain to pick herbs for a meal or I would wander from place to place, carrying a load on my back that would be as heavy as me. But you led me to arrive in this happy land, South Korea. I appreciate you.

However, my parents and brothers whom I never forget are still living in North Korea, where I do not want to return again for even a single moment. When I think about my family who is always worrying about having enough food and never relieved of anxiety, I feel piercing sadness.

God, my mother has been suffering with bad bronchitis and arthritis for a long time and I heard that my mother’s vision and hearing have become worse. Please, cure my mother so that she does not need to suffer anymore. My heart is broken and I cannot stop crying at the thought of my mother. For how long do my parents and brothers have to suffer while I live comfortably?

Yesterday, I cried again after I bumped into an old lady whom closely resembled my mother. She reminded me my mother… What is my mother doing now? Isn’t she crying for missing her daughter? Isn’t my mother who was very weak even 7 or 8 years ago when I left to China getting old? I feel guilt about living happily, because for my mother it is a miracle just to be alive.

Father God, when I saw my parents in my dream, I was worrying whether they had difficulties or were in pain. God, please, save my father, my mother, and my brothers. Let my family members all believe in you and be comforted by you when they are sick or lonely. And bless them to go to Your Kingdom.

Loving God, I know that you are very patient, so much so that you wait for an evil dictator to turn away from that evil. However, please do not be patient anymore for North Korea. Do not close your eyes nor turn your eyes away from them but let them realize you, creator God. And bless them to live life in a happy garden where there is no pain, only to praise and worship God, accepting Jesus Christ as their savior.

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Pray With North Korea On August 17th

praywithnorthkorea copy

“Pray for us?  We pray for you!”  That’s what one North Korean underground Christian said to us nearly ten years ago when we offered to pray for him.  And that’s why, on August 17th, we’re inviting you to pray “with” North Korea rather than “for” North Korea.

We will spend a few minutes learning about each important North Korean ministry, and then we will learn to pray in a uniquely Korean manner for it (you must join us to find out what that is)!

Ultimately, we will lift up some timely and important prayer requests, and pray that God finds our brothers and sisters in North Korea–and us–faithful to what He has called each to do.

Will you join us?  On August 17th, at 5:30 PM (Mountain Time), we invite you to join us via your computer or your phone and pray alongside  Christians from around the world!

Space is limited to the first 25 people.  Follow this link to the Seoul USA web-site for more information and information on how to RSVP!

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Discipling North Koreans Through Toothpaste, Underwear, Rice And The Story Of Jesus

Q. On your web-site you state that 100% of your ministry is evangelism and discipleship. But I know you distribute ministry packs, and they aren’t discipleship-related, are they?

ministrypacksA. You’re right in thinking that ministry packs are a little different than a lot of what we do, but ours are still 100% discipleship related!

One of the major misconceptions about North Korea is that North Koreans are only found inside its supposedly barbed-wired borders. But in truth, North Koreans are found all over Asia and even into the Middle East! Those who are in good standing with the government are able to visit their relatives in China with the proper (often expensive) permitting (and ideological pre-education for what they will see on the outside). Some are diplomats. Others go to school. But by far the largest number are those working difficult jobs abroad.

When North Korean men and women are sent by their government to other countries for temporary (typically one- to three-year) work assignments designed to raise hard currency for the regime, they are severely restricted in their contact with family members back home and are often given dismal accommodations and dangerous work assignments without much food or medicine.

Ministry packs contain basic necessities customized to the location. Some packs contain hygiene supplies, undergarments, socks, and rice or noodles. Others contain shoes and jackets and even work tools.

But loneliness, emptiness, and disillusionment can’t be remedied by a pair of socks. The packs also include the gospel in the form of a tract, New Testament, or other Gospel-sharing resource, such as The Story of Jesus, a visual depiction of Bible stories. All of these are done in the North Korean dialect.

We always give the packs to individual people who want them rather than mass distributing them. Recently, for example, we were able to distribute ministry packs inside of North Korea to North Koreans who had stayed at one of our discipleship bases about 10 years ago. When they visited our base, they were only teenagers, but even at such a young age they dedicated themselves to God. Since that time they have been trying to keep their faith alive in North, and as you can imagine the ministry packs were a great encouragement to them!

Do you see how discipleship is connected? For us, the packs aren’t simply an opportunity to distribute physical aid, but rather an opportunity to help someone grow in Christ . . . either by distributing the pack to others or by receiving it! Most pack recipients do both–give and receive. It’s the nature of North Koreans to care deeply for their family members and neighbors such that even when they are starving they will still almost always share what they receive with others.

Here’s the testimony of one woman who received a ministry pack. Interestingly, it came out in the form of a prayer:

Oh, loving father, thank you for remembering me and calling me to your presence. In the past, I have heard about the story of God from my grandmother just like a fairy tale. However, I never thought I would receive the gifts of God. I did not believe what grandmother shared and said to me, but as I was reading the Story of Jesus books, I came to know the old stories which my grandmother said were true. Before returning back to NK, I will complete reading the comic book [Editor’s note: This is the Story of Jesus comic noted above] and want to tell the stories to my children and parents like my late grandmother did. Please pray for me to share the word of God with my neighbors in NK. I am going to use it in precious way and carefully. Thank you so much.

Ministry packs are not an opportunity to mass distribute toothpaste. They’re an opportunity for God to invite someone to His presence as he cares for them in body, soul, and spirit!  Please pray for this young woman as she memorizes the story of Jesus and prepares to evangelize and disciple her own family, just as she was discipled by her own grandmother and by the North Korea missionaries who gave her this ministry pack.

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