Lutheran Church in Korea

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Lutheran Church in Korea
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Logo of the LCS
Classification Protestant
Orientation Lutheran
Polity Interdependent local, and national expressions with modified episcopal polity
Leader Rev. Dr. Kim Chul-Hwan
Associations LWF, ILC, ALC, NCCK
Region Republic of Korea
Origin 1971
Branched from Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod
Congregations 37
Members 5857
Ministers 42
Tertiary institutions 1
Other name(s) Kidokkyo Hankuk Lutuhoi
Official website http://www.lck.or.kr/

The Lutheran Church in Korea or LCK (Korean: 기독교한국루터회) is a confessional Lutheran denomination in the Republic of Korea and the only Lutheran denomination in South Korea. Unusual for a confessional Lutheran church, the LCK is not just a member of the confessional International Lutheran Council but also the mainline Lutheran World Federation.

The LCK has 5,857 baptized members, 5,210 communicant members, 37 congregations, 42 active pastors and a seminary. The current president of the LCK is the Rev. Dr. Chul-Hwan Kim, first elected in 2013.[1][2]

History

Early history

Early Lutheran mission work in Korea can be traced to the initial effort by the German missionary, Karl Friedrich August Gützlaff, who also worked for the East India Company as a translator. Gützlaff arrived in Wonsan Island off the west coast of Korea[3] as part of a fact finding mission and good will tour of the coastal provinces and regions of China (Korea was considered a suzerainty of China then) to collect information about the reactions in official circles, the business community and the population at large to the petition requesting opening the harbors and initiating free-trade and missionary activity.[4] Sent by the Netherlands Missionary Society, Gützlaff visited the western provinces of Hwanghae and Chungcheong (today located within North Korea and South Korea respectively), sending gifts and a petition to the Korean king requesting an opening for trade and mission work.

While waiting for a reply, he distributed Bibles and tracts in the regions he visited. The petition and gifts were returned with a reply that the Koreans could not permit his party to trade without consulting the Chinese court ending the initial effort by Gützlaff to start a mission work in Korea and forcing him to return to Macao.[5] Lutherans would not start any sustained mission work in Korea until after the Second World War.

Lutheran mission and the establishment of a national church

Sustained Lutheran mission work in Korea began in 1958 with the arrival of three missionary families and a Korean national worker, Dr. Won-Yong Ji, sent by The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod (LCMS).[6] The Korea Lutheran Mission, as it was known then, used mass media techniques as an outreach tool and by 1971, was reorganised as a national church known as the Lutheran Church in Korea. Since then, the LCK has been a partner church of the LCMS.

Beliefs and practices

The LCK is a member church of the International Lutheran Council and the Lutheran World Federation. As a church in the Lutheran tradition, it accepts the teachings found in the unaltered Augsburg Confession, Luther's Small Catechism and other confessional articles and symbols of the Book of Concord.

Ministries & social services

The LCK operates the Luther University, which includes a seminary through one of its graduate programs, with an enrollment of approximately 600 students. In recent years, the LCK expanded the programs offered through Luther University which was fully accredited by the Ministry of Education of South Korea in 2006 and offers degrees in seven departments.[7]

The Korea Lutheran Hour radio programme continues to broadcast weekly over six stations. The Korea Bethel Series correspondence course and seminars was started in 1974 and has been attended by more than 6,500 clergy and have enrolled more than 450,000 people throughout Korea.[8]

Currently, the LCK is focusing on starting new congregations and gaining membership as well as reaching out to the Korean diaspora, particularly in China and the currently inaccessible North Korea.

Affiliations

The LCK participates actively in ecumenical relationships through:

The LCK also works in partnership with:

See also

References

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External links