바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

logo

  • P-ISSN0023-3900
  • E-ISSN2733-9343
  • A&HCI, SCOPUS, KCI

Protestantism in Korea and Japan from the 1880s to the 1940s

Korea Journal / Korea Journal, (P)0023-3900; (E)2733-9343
2005, v.45 no.4, pp.261-290

Abstract

One of the most remarkable facts about religion in South Korea is that Protestantism, which was introduced in 1884, is the second largest religion with nearly nine million adherents and that it has been the fastest growing religion for the last four decades. This is all the more astonishing given the fact that Christianity has failed to strike roots in Japana neighbouring country with strikingly similar social organizational arrangements and shared cultural traditions and practiceswhere less than one percent of the population has converted to the new religion. The key historical-sociological problematic raised by this phenomenal development is obvious: what confluence of historical, religio-cultural, and social conditions and factors account for the Christian success story in South Korea and the corresponding failure of this imported Western religion to make similar progress in Japan? This study argues that the main reasons for the different response lie in the political and religious context between the late nineteenth century and the mid 1940s. The factors that set the stage for the different fate of Protestant Christianity in Korea and Japan are many, but the following three have been most important: 1) the difference in socio-political contexts (political instability and defeat versus relatively greater stability and triumph); 2) contrasts in the missionaries efforts and their impact (appreciation versus indifference and contempt); and 3) dissimilarity in the religio-cultural milieu (lack of religious opposition versus concerted opposition by traditional religions and Shinto-centered unity).

keywords

Reference

1.

Syracuse, (1986) Crucible of the Millennium The Burned-Over District of New York in the 1840s, Syracuse University Press

2.

Beasley, (1972) The Meiji Restoration, Stanford University Press

3.

Bird, (1897[1985]) Korea and Her Neighbours, KPI Limited

4.

Breen, John, (2000) Shinto in History: Ways of the Kami, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press

5.

Cary, (1976) A History of Christianity in Japan, Tuttle Company

6.

Breen, (1995) Japan and Christianity: Impacts and Responses, Macmillan Press

7.

Church Information Service, (1997) Japan Church Data at a Glance,

8.

Clark, (1971) A History of the Church in Korea, Christian Literature Society of Korea

9.

Christian Literature Society, (1937) The Nevius Plan for Mission Work,

10.

Creemers, (1968) Shrine Shinto after World War II,

11.

Draper, (1994) The Almanac of the Christian World/1993-1994, Tyndale House Publishers

12.

Fujita, (1991) Japans Encounter with Christianity, Paulist Press

13.

Grayson, (1985) Early Buddhism and Christianity in Korea,

14.

Griffis, (1885) Corea Without and Within The Presbyterian Board of Publication,

15.

(1888) The Gospel in All Lands Vol,

16.

Hall, (1949) Cardinal Principles of the National Entity of Japan, Harvard University Press

17.

Herbert, (1967) Shinto at the Fountainhead of Japan, Stein and Day Publishers

18.

Daniel C, (1947) A Study of Present-Day Trends in Japanese Religion University of Chicago Press,

19.

Hunt, (1980) Protestant Pioneers in Korea,

20.

Iglehart, (1959) A Century of Protestant Christianity in Japan,

21.

Jansen, (1995) The Emergence of Meiji Japan, Cambridge University Press

22.

Jansen, (1988) Japan in Transition From Tokugawa to Meiji, Princeton University Press

23.

(1995) Japanese Ministry of Education.1995 Agency for Cultural Affairs, Agency for Cultural Affairs.

24.

Kerr, (1949) Japan Begins Again, Friendship Press

25.

Ketelaar, (1993) Of Heretics and Martyrs in Meiji Japan, Princeton University Press

26.

Kim, (1995) A History of Christianity in Korea From Its Troubled Beginning to Its Contemporary Success,

27.

(2000) Korean Religious Culture and Its Affinity to Christianity: The Rise of Protestant Christianity in South Korea,

28.

Kim, (19671876-1910) Korea and the Politics of Imperialism University of California Press,

29.

(1995) Korea National Statistical Office. ,

30.

Koyama, (1984) A Critique of Idols, Orbis Press

31.

Kukmin Daily, (1998July) Hanguk, seon-gyosa pasong segye 3 wi (Korea, Third in the World for the Number of Missionaries Sent),

32.

Littleton, C. Scott, (2002) Shinto: Origins, Rituals, Festivals, Spirits and Sacred Places, New York: Oxford University Press

33.

Lowell, (1886) The Land of the Morning Calm, Tichnor and Company

34.

Min,Gyungbae, (1982) Hankuk gidok gyohoesa(A History of Christianity in Korea, Daehan Gidokgyo Chulpansa

35.

Moffett, (1962) The Christians of Korea, Friendship Press

36.

Murakami, (1980) Japanese Religion in the Modern Century Translated by H University of Tokyo Press,

37.

Paik, (19711832-1910) The History of Protestant Missions in Korea, Yonsei University Press

38.

Palmer, (1967) Korea and Christianity, Royal Asiatic Society/Hollym

39.

Picken, (1994) Essentials of Shinto An Analytical Guide to Principal Teachings, Greenwood Press

40.

Rhodes, (19351884-1934) History of the Korea Mission,

41.

Ryu, Daeyoung, (2000) Gidokgyo-wa seon-gyosa-e daehan gojong-ui taedo, 1882-1905 (King Kojongs Attitude toward Christianity and Missionaries, 1882-1905),

42.

Sharp, (1906) Motives for Seeking Christ,

43.

Shearer, (1966) Church Growth in Korea, Eerdmans Publishing

44.

Stark, (1985) The Future of Religion University of California Press,

45.

Swain, (1967) Japan TodayWhat Lies Ahead? In The Response of the Church in Changing Japan edited by Charles Germany, Friendship Press

46.

Takenaka, (1957) Reconciliation and Renewal in Japan, Friendship Press

47.

Underwood, (1908) The Call of Korea,

48.

Wasson, (1934) Church Growth in Korea, International Missionary Council

49.

Weems, (1964) University of Arizona Press,

50.

Wells, (19901896-1937) Protestants and Self-Reconstruction Nationalism in Korea University of Hawaii Press,

51.

Woodard, (19721945-1952) The Allied Occupations of Japan,

52.

Yi,Man-yeol, (1991) Hanguk gidokgyo-wa minjok uisik(Christianity in Korea and National Consciousness, Jisik Sanupsa

53.

Yi,Man-yeol, (1991) Hanguk gidokgyo-wa minjok uisik(Christianity in Korea and National Consciousness, Jisik Sanupsa

Korea Journal