9780824888565-0824888561-Balancing Communities

Balancing Communities

ISBN-13: 9780824888565
ISBN-10: 0824888561
Author: CHA
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Format: Hardcover 260 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780824888565
ISBN-10: 0824888561
Author: CHA
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Format: Hardcover 260 pages

Summary

Balancing Communities (ISBN-13: 9780824888565 and ISBN-10: 0824888561), written by authors CHA, was published by University of Hawaii Press in 2022. With an overall rating of 4.2 stars, it's a notable title among other Churches & Church Leadership (Protestantism, Christian Books & Bibles, History, Korea, Asian History) books. You can easily purchase or rent Balancing Communities (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Churches & Church Leadership books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Starting in 1884 with the arrival of the first resident Protestant missionary in Korea and ending with the expulsion of missionaries from the peninsula by the Japanese colonial government in 1942, Balancing Communities examines how the competing demands of communal identities and memberships shaped the early history of Protestantism in Korea. In so doing, the author challenges the conventional history of Korean Protestantism in terms of its relationship to the (South) Korean nation-state. Conversion to Christianity granted Koreans membership in a faith-based organization that, at least in theory, transcended national and political boundaries. As a result, Korean Christians possessed dual membership in a transnational religious community and an earthly political state. Some strove to harmonize these two associations. Others privileged one membership over the other. Regardless, the potential for conflict was always present.

Balancing competing demands was not simply a Korean issue. Missionaries also struggled to reconcile their national allegiances, political identities, and religious partnerships with both Korean Christian leaders and government officials. Improperly calibrated communal demands produced conflict and instability among missionaries, Korean Christians, and the state. These demands led to struggles for control over social institutions such as hospitals and schools, incited schisms and debates over church membership, and challenged state power and social patterns. When they were balanced differently, these demands could lead to surprisingly stable and long-lasting relations. The price of this stability, however, was often the perpetuation of inequality, for the language of community masked the hierarchy of power embedded in these associations.

Scholars of both Korea and World Christianity have identified South Korea as a prime example of the "successful" spread of Christianity outside Euro-America in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Paul S. Cha interrogates the construction of Korean Protestantism and successfully argues that frameworks anchored to nationalism or the nation-state fail to capture the complexities of this religion's history in Korea and the relationships that formed among Korean Christians, missionaries, and government officials, especially during the colonial period.

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