Abstract
The purpose of this article is to describe how North Korean refugee understanding of evil can shape missionary practice in the Korean Peninsula. The central research question guiding this study was, how do North Korean Christian refugees describe evil based on their lived experiences? Using purposeful sampling and snowball sampling, data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 12 North Korean Christian refugees who were living in South Korea in 2021. The findings indicated that North Korean Christian refugees understand evil as the oppression of the vulnerable, primarily due to human activities, and as exemplified through governmental actions, human trafficking, and sexual violence. This study also discusses how North Korean Refugees understand evil in light of theology, specifically teleology and theodicy, and explores how their understanding resonates with historic Christian beliefs in Korea as found in the views of Augustine Chong Yak-Chong, Alexander Sayong Hwang, and Thomas An Chunggun. Furthermore, this study’s findings provide practical implications for Christian ministry and theodicy as well as the sensitization of practitioners who work with North Korean refugees, specifically, to encourage practitioners to subvert the oppressive narratives that North Koreans are responsible for the evil that befalls them, and to be aware that refugees may have been traumatized by their own compatriots.
Published Version
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