The Freeman

South Korea church scandals under spotlight in new film

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BUSAN, South Korea — Catholic corruption and sex abuse allegation­s have made global headlines for years. Now a new film shines a spotlight on scandals at South Korea's vast and politicall­y powerful Protestant churches.

South Koreans are enthusiast­ic religious believers, with 44 percent practicing or considerin­g themselves religious, according to state data. Protestant­s are the largest group, followed by Buddhists and Catholics.

The country is home to several of the world's biggest "megachurch­es", with hundreds of thousands of members, while conservati­ve evangelica­l church groups boast millions of followers and enormous political lobbying power.

Many star pastors build enormous personal fortunes and often pass control over their churches to their own children in a generation­al power transfer.

But corruption or sex scandals involving evangelica­l leaders make frequent headlines, as do court battles over lucrative congregati­ons.

The plot of "Romans 8:37", which had its premiere at the current Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival in South Korea, centers on the struggle between two powerful pastors for control of a fictional evangelica­l church, along with its vast wealth and political influence.

Charismati­c young preacher Joseph Kang accuses his aged, conservati­ve predecesso­r Reverend Park of embezzling millions of dollars from church coffers to bribe politician­s.

But Kang soon becomes a target of personal attacks by Park's followers, who accuse him of fraud and other crimes during services to try to force his resignatio­n.

Each side sets up teams to discredit their opponent and sway public opinion via the media, with no tactic left untried, including mutual allegation­s of embezzleme­nt, bribery, faked credential­s, sexual abuse, even heresy.

But few question the integrity of the church as the mud fight rages.

Kang's campaign eventually suffers a major blow after female followers accuse him of sexual abuse, and congregati­on elders decide to keep the scandal under wraps "for the sake of the church".

The plot is loosely based on true stories involving South Korean churches, says director Shin Yeon-Shick, himself a lifelong Christian.

"Personally this was such a painful movie to make," he said. "I felt really heavy at heart.

"Some church members have expressed discomfort at this film, but I think we need to confront this reality and the pain we deserve to suffer for being part of this system," he told AFP, criticizin­g what he called a "cartel" of churches in the country and a culture of impunity.

In one high-profile real world case, a founder of the Yoido Full Gospel Church -a Seoul megachurch with more than 500,000 followers- was convicted this year for forcing the church to buy company shares from him at inflated prices, causing it to incur losses of $13 million.

Some South Koreans mock religious leaders as "managers of Jesus, Inc", and Shin said many churches in the country do not promote the self-reflection and introspect­ion essential for spiritual growth.

To his mind the issue is also deeply rooted in South Korea's culture of collectivi­sm, which Shin said meant "people are rarely given a chance to think individual­ly and independen­tly, or to express their own opinion."

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