Article

한국개신교와 종교 혼합주의

김은기 1 ,
Andrew Eungi Kim 1 ,
Author Information & Copyright
1한국, 고려대학교
Corresponding Author : Andrew Eungi Kim

ⓒ Copyright 2009, The Daesoon Academy of Sciences. This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Published Online: Jun 30, 2005

Abstract

This study offers an analysis of how Protestant Christianity in South Korea incorporated many beliefs and practices of Korean traditional religions in order to make the new faith more appealing to the masses. The paper also examines the way in which specific Protestant doctrines and practices were modified or accentuated to suit the disposition of the Korean people. In agreement with Confucianism, for example, Protestant churches in general emphasized the values of diligence, self-cultivation, righteous living, and, most importantly, filial piety. By overtly and subtly permitting ancestral rites to be conducted by Christians, moreover, Protestant Christianity evaded successfully the potential alienation of the tradition-bound Koreans. From Buddhism, Protestant Christianity syncretized such elements as the daily dawn prayer and all-night prayer as well as the practices of baekilgido (“a hundred-day prayer”) and chunilgido (“a thousand-day prayer”). Hundreds of prayer centers that exist deep in the mountains also manifest a Buddhist influence.

Shamanistic influences are also evident in Korean Protestantism, replete with the latter’s emphasis on this-worldly success (health, prosperity, long life, etc.), faith healing, and conceptualization of God as being merciful and generous. What all of this reveals is that Christian conversion in South Korea did not involve an exclusivistic change of religious affiliation, meaning that it did not require the repudiation of traditionally held beliefs. Instead, millions of South Koreans eagerly embraced Protestant Christianity precisely because the new faith was advanced as an extension or continuation of traditional religious practices.

Keywords: 한국개신교; 종교혼합주의; 종교문화; 유교; 불교; 무속신앙; 조상숭배
Keywords: Korean church; Protestantism; religious syncretism; traditional religion; Confucianism; Buddhism; ancestor worship

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