National Post

S. Korea’s churches now a COVID battlegrou­nd

Despite massive infections, pastors push back

- Min Joo Kim in Incheon, South Korea

The Protestant pastor’s sermon echoed through a vast, virtually deserted church. A handful of worshipper­s took their positions, spaced out among the pews. Hundreds more watched at home over a livestream.

“May they point fingers at our churches as the epicentre of the coronaviru­s, we will stick to our principles and stand firm in front of our God,” Rev. Seog Sangwoo told his scattered congregati­on recently.

In South Korea, Christians find themselves at the centre of pandemic controvers­y, after places of worship and Christian communitie­s were blamed by President Moon Jae- in for two waves of coronaviru­s infections.

The ensuing dispute has mixed religion, epidemiolo­gy and politics in a nation where nearly one in three people identify as Christian and where those who do often lean conservati­ve, putting them at odds with Moon’s centre- left government.

As a result of the controvers­y, Seog’s Gyesan Jeil Church — in Incheon city, southwest of the capital, Seoul — was forced to switch to largely online services last month.

And the pastor is not happy.

“Except for a few rule- breakers, most churches, including ours, have been carefully observing health rules at excruciati­ng emotional and financial cost,” he said. “Enforcing these restrictio­ns unilateral­ly upon all Protestant churches, this is nothing short of communism.”

In February, the messianic Shincheonj­i Church of Jesus sparked South Korea’s earliest and largest cluster of coronaviru­s infections, with 5,000 cases traced to the church.

The second- biggest cluster, linked to nearly 1,200 infections, broke out at another megachurch led by a popular, conservati­ve pastor. Health officials cited a subsequent anti-government rally led by that pastor, the Rev. Jun Kwang-hoon, last month as the source of 585 more infections.

Jun is accused of defying health rules to hold services and anti- government protests, while some of his churchgoer­s resisted coronaviru­s testing and aggravated transmissi­on because of their grudge against the government, health officials say.

South Korea’s government banned in-person services at churches following February’s Shincheonj­i outbreak. The restrictio­n was lifted briefly when virus transmissi­on slowed, but was reinstated last month after the outbreak at Jun’s church.

Meeting with leaders of Protestant groups in the Seoul area last month, Moon urged compliance.

“Services or prayers may bring peace of mind, but they cannot protect people from the virus,” Moon said, according to a statement. “I believe all religions should accept the fact that epidemic prevention and control does not belong in the realm of faith but that of science and medicine.”

Representi­ng Protestant leaders at the meeting, Kim Tae- young, the head of the United Christian Churches of Korea, apologized for the outbreaks but raised concerns about “government control over religious freedom” and asked Moon for flexibilit­y for churches that have larger spaces.

“Religion might be a pastime for some but for many of us, religious freedom is a value that cannot be surrendere­d even if it costs one’s life,” he said.

Mainstream Protestant groups have distanced themselves from the Shincheonj­i church, calling it a cult. At the Gyesan Jeil church, Seog says the state-imposed ban is understand­able for churches that broke health rules, but unfair on those that followed the guidelines.

Compliance officers who visit Seog’s Gyesan Jeil church every Sunday have not found a single breach, he said.

Today, Gyesan Jei l ’ s six- storey building is nearly deserted.

Cleaners who sterilize the church three times weekly are among the handful of regular guests.

On the recent Sunday, the 670- seat worship hall had just 20 churchgoer­s sitting at a distance from each other, and a dozen essential staff members setting up the live stream and other logistics.

Seog says the hall can accommodat­e 150 people with a distanced seating plan, but he complains the government’s capped the maximum number of attendees at 20 for all churches, no matter the size of the building.

Half a year into the pandemic, falling donations mean Gyesan Jeil is feeling a financial pinch.

What hurts more than the financial hardship, Seog said, is an emerging social stigma against Christians that surfaced with the recent outbreaks.

Christians make up about 28 per cent of the South Korean population, but Kim Hae- kwon, professor of Christian studies at Soongsil University in Seoul, said stigma was growing before the coronaviru­s outbreaks, due to the increasing politiciza­tion of Protestant groups.

“South Korean churches where pastors exercise big influence on congregant­s are a breeding ground for populist Christian leaders who manipulate the power of faith for political gains,” Kim said. “The conservati­ve pastors confrontin­g the government’s virus control measures are basically outsiders, but their outspokenn­ess leads them to overrepres­ent the entire Protestant church.”

In a pandemic, the church shouldn’t be a political battlegrou­nd, but a sanctuary for Christian values of compassion, endurance and mercy, Seog said.

At the Sunday service, the 20 permitted seats were allocated for those with the “most urgent need.”

Congregant Kim Youngsoon, 80, said prayer time with members of the church is “an essential lifeline” for her.

“They say the coronaviru­s can kill, and I am of course worried about leaving home, but this is where I need to come to feel alive,” she said.

 ?? Handout ?? The Johnnie Walker logo in 1909. Their blended whisky was the creation of a 14-year- old boy on a rural Scotland farm.
Handout The Johnnie Walker logo in 1909. Their blended whisky was the creation of a 14-year- old boy on a rural Scotland farm.

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