Monday, September 20, 2010

Saint Andrew Kim



September 20th marks the feast day of Saint Andrew Kim, the first Korean to be ordained a priest. Korean philosophers sought Christianity and studied it solely as a philosophy. Later, they began to adopt it as a religion. From the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, Korea was largely Confucian country. The adoption of Christianity threatened the hierarchical state of Confucianism. Saint Andrew Kim was forced to go to China to be ordained. He returned to Korea and converted many. He was tortured and killed in 1846. One hundred and three martyrs were killed between 1839, 1846 and 1867.


Today, South Korea has a very strong Christian presence. There are churches, charities, universities and hospitals throughout the entire country. Churches in North Korea were confiscated and closed down. I found the faith of Koreans was extremely strong. We've drifted away from that in the West. How we need it now!

4 comments:

RuralRite said...

You're right and third-world priests are coming to a lost North American culture to help us relearn our faith.
Thank God for the earlier work done by the Catholic Church in foreign countries.

Osumashi Kinyobe said...

South Korea is not a Third World country but you are right. The seeds sown many centuries ago bear fruit we desperately need now.

RuralRite said...

Thank you for the correction. I've lived in N. America for too long. I think of everywhere else as a third world country.
When you think about it, that's what Canada has become.

Osumashi Kinyobe said...

In a way, yes, we are.