Religion in South Korea: Difference between revisions
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'''Religion in South Korea''' is dominated by the traditional [[Buddhist]] and more recent [[Christianity|Christian]] faiths. The practice of both of these faiths has been strongly influenced by the enduring legacies of [[Korean Confucianism]], which was the official ideology of the 500-year-long [[Joseon Dynasty]], and [[Korean shamanism]], which was the original religion of the Korean people. |
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{{EngvarB|date=July 2017}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2017}} |
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{{Pie chart |
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According to 2003 statistics compiled by the South Korean government, about 46% of citizens profess to follow no particular religion. [[Christianity in Korea|Christians]] account for 27.3% of the population and [[Korean Buddhism|Buddhists]] 25.3%.{{ref|demrel1}} |
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|caption = Religion in South Korea (2024)<ref>{{cite web |trans-title=Status of religious population and religious activities in South Korea (2024) |url=https://hrcopinion.co.kr/archives/31599}}</ref> |
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|label1 = [[Irreligion]] |
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|value1 = 51 |
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|color1 = White |
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|label2 = [[Christianity in Korea|Protestantism]] |
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|value2 = 20 |
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|color2 = Darkblue |
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|label3 = [[Catholic Church in South Korea|Catholicism]] |
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|value3 = 11 |
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|color3 = Purple |
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|label4 = [[Korean Buddhism|Buddhism]] |
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|color4 = Yellow |
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|value4 = 17 |
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|label5 = Other |
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|color5 = Red |
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|value5 = 2 |
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}} |
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The majority of [[South Koreans]] have [[Irreligion in South Korea|no religion]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Song|first=Kyung Ho|script-title=ko:'신의 존재' 믿지 않는 한국인… 26개국 중 최하위권|trans-title=South Koreans Among Least Likely to Believe in God Among 26 Countries|url=https://www.christiantoday.co.kr/news/363595|access-date=5 September 2024|newspaper=Christian Today|date=4 September 2024}}</ref> [[Buddhism]] and [[Christianity]] ([[Protestantism]] and [[Catholicism]]) are the dominant confessions among those who affiliate with a formal religion.<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|title=Religion|url=https://www.korea.net/AboutKorea/Korean-Life/Religion|archive-url=https://archive.today/20150523125909/http://www.korea.net/AboutKorea/Korean-Life/Religion|url-status=dead|archive-date=23 May 2015|access-date=2021-02-13|website=[[Korea.net]]}}</ref> |
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Various other religions account for about 2.5 % of the religious population. These include the [[Wonbulgyo]] movement, which emphasises the unity of all things. Another notable minor religion is [[Cheondogyo]], an indigenous faith combining elements of Buddhism, [[Taoism]], [[Confucianism]], and Christianity. [[Confucianism]] is also small in terms of self-declared adherents, but the great majority of South Koreans, irrespective of their formal religious affiliation, are strongly influenced by Confucian values, which continue to permeate Korean culture. A small minority of Koreans also profess [[Islam in Korea|Islam]]. |
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According to a 2024 Korea Research's regular survey 'Public Opinion in Public Opinion', 51% identify with [[Atheism|no religion]], 17% with [[Buddhism]] and 31% with [[Christianity]] ([[Protestantism]] with 20% and [[Catholic Church|Catholicism]] with 11%) and other religions 2%.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lesage |first=Jonathan Evans, Alan Cooperman, Kelsey Jo Starr, Manolo Corichi, William Miner and Kirsten |date=2024-06-17 |title=Religion and Spirituality in East Asian Societies |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2024/06/17/religion-and-spirituality-in-east-asian-societies/ |access-date=2024-07-04 |website=Pew Research Center |language=en-US}}</ref> Buddhism is the fastest growing religion in South Korea in recent years. South Korean youth are quite interested in Buddhism and it's gaining popularity again in South Korea. |
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According to government statistics, 42.6 percent or more than 17 million of South Korea's 1985 population professed adherence to an organized religious community. There were at least 8 million Buddhists (about 20 percent of the total population), about 6.5 million Protestants (16 percent of the population), some 1.9 million Roman Catholics (5 percent), nearly 500,000 people who belonged to Confucian groups (1 percent), and more than 300,000 others (0.7 percent). Significantly, large metropolitan areas had the highest proportions of people belonging to formal religious groups: 49.9 percent in Seoul, 46.1 percent for Pusan, and 45.8 percent for Taegu. The figures for Christians revealed that South Korea had the highest percentage of Christians of any country in East Asia or Southeast Asia, with the exception of the Philippines. |
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Buddhism was influential in ancient times while Christianity had influenced large segments of the population in the 18th and 19th century. However, they grew rapidly in membership only by the mid-20th century, as part of the profound transformations that South Korean society went through in the past century.<ref name="Pyong Gap Min, 2014">Pyong Gap Min, 2014.</ref> Since 2000, both Buddhism and Christianity have been declining. Native shamanic religions (i.e. ''[[Korean shamanism|Sindo]]'') remain popular and could represent a large part of the unaffiliated. Indeed, according to a 2012 survey, only 15% of the population declared themselves to be not religious in the sense of "[[atheism]]".<ref>WIN-Gallup International: [http://www.wingia.com/web/files/news/14/file/14.pdf "Global Index of Religiosity and Atheism 2012"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131021065544/http://www.wingia.com/web/files/news/14/file/14.pdf |date=21 October 2013 }}.</ref> According to the 2015 census, the proportion of the unaffiliated is higher among the youth, about 64.9% among the 20-years old.<ref name="Kim-Shon-Chosunilbo2016">Kim Han-soo, Shon Jin-seok. [http://news.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2016/12/20/2016122000155.html 신자 수, 개신교 1위… "종교 없다" 56%]. ''The Chosunilbo'', 20/12/2016. Retrieved 02/07/2017.</ref> |
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Except for the Christian groups, who maintain a fairly clearcut distinction between believers and nonbelievers, there is some ambiguity in these statistics. As mentioned above, there is no exact or exclusive criterion by which Buddhists or Confucianists can be identified. Many people outside of formal groups have been deeply influenced by these traditions. Moreover, there is nothing contradictory in one person's visiting and praying at Buddhist temples, participating in Confucian ancestor rites, and even consulting a shaman and sponsoring a kut. Furthermore, the statistics may underrepresent the numbers of people belonging to new religions. Some sources have given the number of adherents of Ch'ondogyo as over 1 million. |
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Korea entered the 20th century with an already established Christian presence and a vast majority of the population practicing native religion, [[Sindo (religion)|Sindo]]. The latter never gained the high status of a national religious culture comparable to [[Chinese folk religion]], [[Vietnamese folk religion]] and Japan's [[Shinto]]; this weakness of Korean Sindo was among the reasons that left a free hand to an early and thorough rooting of Christianity.<ref name="Ogata, Mamoru Billy 1984 p. 32">Ogata, Mamoru Billy (1984). ''A Comparative Study of Church Growth in Korea and Japan: With Special Application to Japan''. Fuller Theological Seminary. p. 32 ff.</ref> The population also took part in Confucian rites and held private [[jesa|ancestor worship]].<ref name="Pyong Gap Min, 2014"/> Organised religions and philosophies belonged to the ruling elites, this coupled with the extensive patronage exerted by the Chinese empire allowed these elites to embrace a particularly strict interpretation of Confucianism (i.e. [[Korean Confucianism]]). [[Korean Buddhism]], despite an erstwhile rich tradition, at the dawn of the 20th century was virtually extinct as a religious institution, after 500 years of suppression under the [[Joseon]] kingdom.<ref name="Pyong Gap Min, 2014"/><ref name="Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 15">Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 15</ref> Christianity had antecedents in the Korean peninsula as early as the 18th century, when the philosophical school of ''[[Seohak]]'' supported the religion. With the fall of the Joseon in the last decades of the 19th century, Koreans largely embraced Christianity, since the monarchy itself and the intellectuals looked to Western models to modernise the country and endorsed the work of Catholic and Protestant missionaries.<ref>Grayson, 2002. pp. 155-187</ref> During [[Korea under Japanese rule|Japanese colonisation]] in the first half of the 20th century, the identification of Christianity with [[Korean nationalism]] was further strengthened,<ref name="Grayson, 2002. pp. 158-161">Grayson, 2002. pp. 158-161</ref> as the Japanese tried to combine native Sindo with their [[Shinto in Korea|State Shinto]]. |
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Given the great diversity of religious expression, the role of religion in South Korea's social development has been a complex one. Some traditions, especially Buddhism, are identified primarily with the past. Buddhist sites such as the Pulguksa Temple and the Sokkuram Grotto in Kyongju and the Haeinsa Temple near Taegu are regarded by most South Koreans as important cultural properties rather than as places of worship. Confucianism remains important as a social ethic; its influence is evident in the immense importance Koreans ascribe to education. Christianity is identified with modernization and social reform. Many Christians in contemporary South Korea, such as veteran political opposition leader Kim Dae Jung, a Catholic, have been outspoken advocates of human rights and critics of the government. Christian-sponsored organizations such as the Urban Industrial Mission promote labor organizations and the union movement. New religions draw on both traditional beliefs and on Christianity, achieving a baffling variety and diversity of views. It has been estimated that there were as many as 300 new religions in South Korea in the late 1980s, though many were small and transient phenomena. |
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With the [[division of Korea]] into two states after 1945, the communist north and the capitalist south, the majority of the Korean Christian population that had been until then in the northern half of the peninsula,<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 158, p. 162">Grayson, 2002. p. 158, p. 162</ref> fled to South Korea.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 163">Grayson, 2002. p. 163</ref> It has been estimated that Christians who migrated to the south were more than one million.<ref>[[Andrei Lankov|Lankov, Andrei]]. ''[[The Real North Korea: Life and Politics in the Failed Stalinist Utopia]]''. Oxford University Press, 2014. {{ISBN|0199390037}}. p. 9.</ref> Throughout the second half of the 20th century, the South Korean state enacted [[misin tapa undong|measures to further marginalise indigenous Sindo]], at the same time strengthening Christianity and a revival of Buddhism.<ref>Kendall, 2010. pp. 4-17</ref> According to scholars, South Korean censuses do not count believers in indigenous Sindo and underestimate the number of adherents of [[Korean shamanism#Branchings|Sindo sects]].<ref>Baker, 2008. pp. 4-5</ref> Otherwise, statistics compiled by the ARDA<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thearda.com/|title=Quality Data on Religion|work=The Association of Religion Data Archives|access-date=28 January 2016}}</ref> estimate that as of 2010, 14.7% of South Koreans practice ethnic religion, 14.2% adhere to new movements, and 10.9% practice Confucianism.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thearda.com/internationalData/countries/Country_124_2.asp|title=The Republic of South Korea: Religious Adherents, 2010 (World Christian Database)|work=Association of Religion Data Archives|access-date=27 January 2016}}</ref> |
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==Buddhism== |
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{{main|Korean Buddhism}} |
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According to some observers, the sharp decline of some religions (Catholicism and Buddhism) recorded between the censuses of 2005 and 2015 is due to the change in survey methodology between the two censuses. While the 2005 census was an analysis of the entire population ("whole survey") through traditional data sheets compiled by every family, the 2015 census was largely conducted through the [[internet]] and was limited to a sample of about 20% of the South Korean population. It has been argued that the 2015 census penalised the rural population, which is more Buddhist and Catholic and less familiar with the internet, while advantaging the Protestant population, which is more urban and has easier access to the internet. Both the Buddhist and the Catholic communities criticised the 2015 census' results.<ref name=Kim-Shon-Chosunilbo2016/> |
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Daoism, which focuses on the individual in nature rather than the individual in society, and Buddhism entered Korea from China during the Three Kingdoms period (fourth to seventh centuries A.D.). Daoist motifs are seen in the paintings on the walls of Koguryo tombs. Buddhism was the dominant religious and cultural influence during the Silla (A.D. 668-935) and Koryo (918-1392) dynasties. Confucianism also was brought to Korea from China in early centuries, but it occupied a subordinate position until the establishment of the Choson Dynasty and the persecution of Buddhism carried out by the early Choson Dynasty kings |
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==Demographics== |
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Buddhism is stronger in the more conservative east of the country, namely the [[Yeongnam]] and [[Gangwon]] regions, where it accounts for more than half of the religious population. There are a number of different "schools" in Korean Buddhism, including the [[Seon]]; however, the overwhelming majority of Buddhist temples are part of the [[Jogye Order]]. Many adherents of Buddhism combine Buddhist practice and [[Korean Shamanism|shamanism]]. |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" style="margin:auto;" |
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|- |
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!rowspan="2"|religion |
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!colspan="2"|1950–1962<ref>{{cite web |trans-title=Development of Protestantism in South Korea: Positive and Negative Elements |url=https://aatfweb.org/2014/10/31/development-of-protestantism-in-south-korea-positive-and-negative-elements/ |website=AATF |access-date=9 October 2022 |language=ko |script-title=ko:한국의 개신교 발전: 긍정적 요소와 부정적 요소 |date=2014-10-31}}</ref> |
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!colspan="2"|1985 |
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!colspan="2"|1995<ref>{{cite web |trans-title=South Korea National Statistical Office's 19th Population and Housing Census (2015) |url=http://image.kmib.co.kr/online_image/2016/1219/201612191738_61220011145071_1.jpg |access-date=9 October 2022 |language=ko |script-title=ko:통계청 제19차 인구주택총조사(2015)}}</ref> |
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!colspan="2"|2005<ref>{{cite web |trans-title=South Korea National Statistical Office's 19th Population and Housing Census (2015) |url=http://image.kmib.co.kr/online_image/2016/1219/201612191738_61220011145071_1.jpg |access-date=9 October 2022 |language=ko |script-title=ko:통계청 제19차 인구주택총조사(2015)}}</ref> |
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!colspan="2"|2015<ref>{{cite web |trans-title=South Korea National Statistical Office's 19th Population and Housing Census (2015) |url=http://image.kmib.co.kr/online_image/2016/1219/201612191738_61220011145071_1.jpg |access-date=9 October 2022 |language=ko |script-title=ko:통계청 제19차 인구주택총조사(2015)}}</ref> |
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!colspan="2"|2024<ref>{{cite web |title= |script-title=ko:[2024 종교인식조사] 종교인구 현황과 종교 활동 |trans-title=[2024 Religious Awareness Survey] Status of religious population and religious activities |url=https://hrcopinion.co.kr/en/archives/31599 |access-date=9 November 2024 |language=ko}}</ref> |
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|- |
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Buddhism in South Korea is dominated by the [[Jogye Order]], a syncretic sect traditionally linked to the [[Seon]] tradition. Most of the country's old and famous temples, such as [[Bulguksa]] and [[Beomeosa]], are operated by the Jogye Order, which is headquartered at [[Jogyesa]] in central Seoul. |
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!num. !! % |
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!num. !! % |
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!num. !! % |
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!num. !! % |
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!num. !! % |
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!num. !! % |
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|- |
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!style="background:DodgerBlue;"|Christianity<br>{{nobold|(overall)}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|5-8}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|20.7}} |
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|align=right|11,390,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|26.0}} |
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|align=right|13,461,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|29.2}} |
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|align=right|13,566,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|27.6}} |
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|align=right|16,030,100 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|31}} |
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|- style="font-size:90%;" |
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!style="background:Turquoise;"|(Protestantism) |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|2.8}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|16.1}} |
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|align=right|8,505,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|19.4}} |
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|align=right|8,446,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|18.3}} |
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|align=right|9,676,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|19.7}} |
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|align=right|10,342,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|20}} |
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|- style="font-size:90%;" |
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!style="background:Orchid;"|(Catholicism) |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|2.2}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|4.6}} |
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|align=right|2,885,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|6.6}} |
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|align=right|5,015,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|10.9}} |
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|align=right|3,890,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|7.9}} |
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|align=right|5,688,100 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|11}} |
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|- |
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!style="background:Yellow;"|Buddhism |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|2.6}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|19.9}} |
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|align=right|10,154,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|23.2}} |
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|align=right|10,588,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|22.8}} |
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|align=right|7,619,000 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|15.5}} |
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|align=right|8,790,700 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|17}} |
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|- |
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!style="background:Pink;"|other |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|92.4}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|2.1}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|1.2}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|1}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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| align=right|1,034,200 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|2}} |
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|- |
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!style="background:Honeydew;"|non-religious |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|57.3}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|49.6}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|47.2}} |
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|{{n/a}} |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|56.9}} |
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| align=right|26,372,100 |
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|{{percentage bar|width=50|51}} |
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|} |
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{| style="with:100%" align="center" |
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| |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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|+ The percentage of religious beliefs by region in Korea (2024)<ref>{{Cite web |last=이동한 |date=2024-12-11 |title=[2024 종교인식조사] 종교인구 현황과 종교 활동 |url=https://hrcopinion.co.kr/en/archives/31599 |access-date=2024-12-18 |website=한국리서치 정기조사 여론속의 여론 |language=ko-KR}}</ref> |
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|- |
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! Administrative area |
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! [[Protestantism]] |
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! [[Catholic Church|Catholicism]] |
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! [[Buddhism]] |
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! Other |
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!No Religion |
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|- style="text-align:center;" |
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| [[Seoul]] |
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| 22% |
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| 13% |
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| 13% |
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| 1% |
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|51% |
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|- style="text-align:center;" |
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| [[Incheon]]/[[Gyeonggi Province|Gyeonggi]] |
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| 22% |
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| 12% |
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| 12% |
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| 2% |
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|52% |
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|- style="text-align:center;" |
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| [[Daejeon]]/[[Sejong City|Sejong]]/[[Chungcheong Province|Chungcheong]] |
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| 21% |
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| 10% |
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| 17% |
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| 2% |
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|51% |
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|- style="text-align:center;" |
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| [[Gwangju]]/[[Jeolla Province|Jeolla]] |
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| 25% |
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| 10% |
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| 11% |
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| 3% |
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|50% |
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|- style="text-align:center;" |
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| [[Daegu]]/[[North Gyeongsang Province|North Gyeongsang]] |
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| 15% |
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| 10% |
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| 24% |
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| 2% |
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|49% |
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|- style="text-align:center;" |
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| [[Busan]]/[[Ulsan]]/[[South Gyeongsang Province|South Gyeongsang]] |
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| 14% |
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| 7% |
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| 29% |
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| 2% |
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|48% |
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|- style="text-align:center;" |
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| [[Gangwon Province, South Korea|Gangwon]]/[[Jeju Province|Jeju]] |
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| 17% |
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| 11% |
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| 19% |
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| 2% |
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|52% |
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|- style="background:#9ff;" |
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! Korea National |
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! 20% |
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! 11% |
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! 17% |
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! 2% |
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!51% |
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|} |
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|} |
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{{Graph:Chart |
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==Christianity== |
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|width=400 |
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{{main|Christianity in Korea}} |
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|height=300 |
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|xAxisTitle=Year |
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|yAxisTitle=People (in millions) |
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|legend=Legend |
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|yAxisMin=0 |
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|yAxisMax=30 |
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|xType=string |
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|x=1985,1995,2005,2015 |
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|y1Title=No affiliation |
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|y2Title=Buddhism |
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|y3Title=Protestantism |
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|y4Title=Catholicism |
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|y5Title=Other religions |
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|y1=23,22,22,27 |
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|y2=8,10,11,8 |
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|y3=6,9,9,10 |
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|y4=2,3,5,4 |
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|y5=0.8,0.7,0.5,0.4 |
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}} |
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=== Religious affiliation by age (2024) === |
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Roman Catholic missionaries did not arrive in Korea until 1794, a decade after the return of the first baptized Korean from a visit to Beijing. However, the writings of the Jesuit missionary, Matteo Ricci, who was resident at the imperial court in Beijing, had been brought to Korea from China in the seventeenth century. It appears that scholars of the Sirhak, or practical learning, school were interested in these writings. Largely because converts refused to perform Confucian ancestor rites, the government prohibited the proselytization of Christianity. Some Catholics were executed during the early nineteenth century, but the anti-Christian law was not strictly enforced. By the 1860s, there were some 17,500 Roman Catholics in the country. There followed a more rigorous persecution, in which thousands of Christians died, that continued until 1884. |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center; width:70%;" |
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!Age <ref name=":1">{{Cite web |date=2024 |title= |script-title=ko:[2024 종교인식조사] 종교인구 현황과 종교 활동 |trans-title=[2024 Religious Awareness Survey] Status of religious population and religious activities |url=https://hrcopinion.co.kr/en/archives/31599 |access-date=2018-03-17 |website=Korean Statistical Information Service |language=ko}}</ref> |
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![[Protestantism]] |
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![[Catholic Church|Catholicism]] |
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![[Buddhism]] |
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!Other religions |
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!No affiliation |
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|- |
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!18–29 |
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|{{percentage bar|13}} |
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|{{percentage bar|7}} |
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|{{percentage bar|8}} |
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|{{percentage bar|2}} |
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|{{percentage bar|69}} |
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|- |
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!30–39 |
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|{{percentage bar|16}} |
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|{{percentage bar|9}} |
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|{{percentage bar|11}} |
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|{{percentage bar|2}} |
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|{{percentage bar|63}} |
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|- |
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!40–49 |
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|{{percentage bar|20}} |
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|{{percentage bar|9}} |
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|{{percentage bar|14}} |
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|{{percentage bar|2}} |
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|{{percentage bar|56}} |
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|- |
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!50–59 |
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|{{percentage bar|20}} |
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|{{percentage bar|9}} |
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|{{percentage bar|20}} |
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|{{percentage bar|2}} |
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|{{percentage bar|49}} |
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|- |
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!60–69 |
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|{{percentage bar|23}} |
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|{{percentage bar|14}} |
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|{{percentage bar|23}} |
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|{{percentage bar|1}} |
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|{{percentage bar|38}} |
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|- |
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!Above 70 |
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|{{percentage bar|29}} |
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|{{percentage bar|18}} |
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|{{percentage bar|22}} |
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|{{percentage bar|2}} |
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|{{percentage bar|30}} |
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|- |
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! colspan="6" |<small>Other religions include [[Won Buddhism]], [[Confucianism]], [[Cheondoism]], [[Daesun Jinrihoe]], [[Daejongism]], and [[Jeungsanism]].</small> |
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|} |
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=== Religious affiliation by gender (2024) === |
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Protestant missionaries entered Korea during the 1880s and, along with Catholic priests, converted a remarkable number of Koreans. Methodist and Presbyterian missionaries were especially successful. They established schools, universities, hospitals, and orphanages and played a significant role in the modernization of the country. During the Japanese colonial occupation, Christians were in the front ranks of the struggle for independence. Factors contributing to the growth of Protestantism included the degenerate state of Korean Buddhism, the efforts made by educated Christians to reconcile Christian and Confucian values (the latter being viewed as purely a social ethic rather than a religion), the encouragement of self-support and selfgovernment among members of the Korean church, and the identification of Christianity with Korean nationalism. |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:70%;" |
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!<ref name=":1" /> |
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![[Protestantism]] |
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![[Catholic Church|Catholicism]] |
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![[Buddhism]] |
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!Other religions |
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!No affiliation |
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|- |
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!Male |
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|{{percentage bar|18}} |
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|{{percentage bar|10}} |
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|{{percentage bar|16}} |
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|{{percentage bar|2}} |
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|{{percentage bar|55}} |
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|- |
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!Female |
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|{{percentage bar|22}} |
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|{{percentage bar|12}} |
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|{{percentage bar|17}} |
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|{{percentage bar|2}} |
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|{{percentage bar|47}} |
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|- |
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! colspan="6" |<small>Other religions include [[Won Buddhism]], [[Confucianism]], [[Cheondoism]], [[Daesun Jinrihoe]], [[Daejongism]], and [[Jeungsanism]].</small> |
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|} |
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==History== |
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A large number of Christians lived in the northern part of the peninsula where Confucian influence was not as strong as in the south. Before 1948 P'yongyang was an important Christian center: one-sixth of its population of about 300,000 people were converts. Following the establishment of a communist regime in the north, however, most Christians had to flee to South Korea or face persecution. |
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===Before 1945=== |
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The profusion of church steeples in most South Korean cities has often attracted attention. Christianity, which initially got a foothold in Korea in the late 18th century, grew [[exponential growth|exponentially]] in the 1970s and 1980s, and despite slower growth in the 1990s, caught up to and then surpassed Buddhism in the number of adherents. Protestant churches including [[Presbyterian]]s, [[Pentecostal]]s, and [[Methodist]]s make up about 19.8% of the total population, while [[Roman Catholic]]s occupy about 7.4%. Christians are especially strong in the west of the country including [[Seoul]], [[Gyeonggi]] and [[Honam]] regions. [[Seoul]] is home to [[Yoido Full Gospel Church]], the largest single church in the world. |
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{{See also|Religion in North Korea#Before 1945}} |
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Before the introduction of Buddhism, all Koreans believed in their [[indigenous religion]] socially guided by ''mu'' (shamans). Buddhism was introduced from the Chinese Former Qin state in 372 to the northern Korean state of Goguryeo and developed into distinctive Korean forms. At that time, the peninsula was divided into [[Three Kingdoms of Korea|three kingdoms]]: the aforementioned Goguryeo in the north, [[Baekje]] in the southwest, and [[Silla]] in the southeast. Buddhism reached Silla only in the 5th century, but it was made the state religion only in that kingdom in the year 552.<ref name="Korea, 300 to 600 CE">Asia For Educators: ''[http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/tps/300ce_ko.htm#buddhism Korea, 300 to 600 CE]''. Columbia University, 2009.</ref> Buddhism became much more popular in Silla and even in Baekje (both areas now part of modern South Korea), while in Goguryeo the Korean indigenous religion remained dominant. In the following unified state of Goryeo (918–1392) Buddhism flourished, and even became a political force.<ref>Vermeersch, Sem. (2008). ''The Power of the Buddhas: the Politics of Buddhism during the Koryŏ Dynasty (918-1392)''. p. 3</ref> |
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The Christian faith in South Korea is heavily dominated by four denominations: Roman Catholics, Presybterians, Methodists, and Baptists. Some non-denominational churches also exist. |
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The Joseon kingdom (1392–1910), adopted an especially strict version of [[Neo-Confucianism]] (i.e. [[Korean Confucianism]]) and suppressed and marginalised Korean Buddhism<ref name="Grayson, 2002. pp. 120-138">Grayson, 2002. pp. 120-138</ref><ref name="Tudor, 2012">Tudor, 2012.</ref> and Korean shamanism.<ref name="Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 15"/> Buddhist monasteries were destroyed, and their number dropped from several hundreds to a mere thirty-six; Buddhism was eradicated from the life of towns as monks and nuns were prohibited from entering them and were marginalised to the mountains.<ref name="Tudor, 2012"/> These restrictions lasted until the 19th century.<ref>Grayson, 2002. p. 137</ref> |
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The traditional [[peace churches]] have not gained a strong foothold on the peninsula. [[Quakerism]] briefly attracted a national following in the late 20th century, thanks to the leadership of [[Ham Seok-heon]]. However, after Ham's death interested in Quaker thought withered, and now only one Quaker meeting is active nationwide. The state of [[Unitarianism]] is similar. |
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In the late 19th century, the Joseon state was politically and culturally collapsing.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 155">Grayson, 2002. p. 155</ref> The intelligentsia was looking for solutions to invigorate and transform the nation.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 155"/> It was in this critical period that they came into contact with Western Christian missionaries who offered a solution to the plight of Koreans.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 155"/> Christian communities had already existed in Joseon since the 17th century; however, it was only by the 1880s that the government allowed a large number of Western missionaries to enter the country.<ref>Grayson, 2002. p. 157</ref> Christian missionaries set up schools, hospitals and publishing agencies.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. pp. 157-158">Grayson, 2002. pp. 157-158</ref> The royal family supported Christianity.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 158">Grayson, 2002. p. 158</ref> |
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===Unification Church=== |
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{{main|Unification Church}} |
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As the Japanese tried to impose [[State Shinto]] during the [[Korea under Japanese rule|absorption of Korea into the Japanese Empire]] (1910–1945), the already formed link of Christianity with [[Korean nationalism]] was strengthened,<ref name="Grayson, 2002. pp. 158-161"/> co-opting within it native Korean Sindo, and Christians refused to take part in Shinto rituals.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. pp. 158-161"/> At the same time, numerous religious movements that since the 19th century had been trying to reform the Korean indigenous religion, notably [[Cheondoism]], flourished.<ref name="Carl Young 2013. pp. 51-66">Carl Young. ''Into the Sunset: Ch'ŏndogyo in North Korea, 1945–1950''. On: ''Journal of Korean Religions'', Volume 4, Number 2, October 2013. pp. 51-66 / 10.1353/jkr.2013.0010</ref> |
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The Unification Church, founded in Seoul in 1954 by [[Sun Myung Moon]], is one of the modern world's most prominent charismatic faiths. Although most of its followers are now in other countries, it retains a high profile in South Korean affairs, operating various companies including the national media network [[Pyonghwa Broadcasting Corporation|PBC]]. The Church has used its substantial resources to support work towards [[Korean reunification]]. |
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== |
===1945–2015=== |
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[[File:Mudang performing a ritual placating the angry spirits of the dead.jpg|thumb|150px|A ''mudang'' holding a ''gut'' to placate the angry spirits of the dead.]] |
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{{main|Korean shamanism}} |
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With the [[division of Korea]] into two states in 1945, the [[history of North Korea|communist north]] and the [[history of South Korea|anti-communist south]], the majority of the Korean Christian population that had been until then in the northern half of the peninsula,<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 158, p. 162" /> fled to South Korea.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 163" /> Christians who resettled in the south were more than one million. Cheondoists, who were concentrated in the north like Christians, remained there after the partition,<ref name="Carl Young 2013. pp. 51-66" /> and South Korea now has no more than few thousands Cheondoists. |
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The so-called "[[misin tapa undong|movement to defeat the worship of gods]]" promoted by governments of South Korea in the 1970s and 1980s prohibited indigenous cults and wiped out nearly all traditional shrines (''sadang'' 사당) of the Confucian kinship religion.<ref name="Kendall, 2010. p. 10">Kendall, 2010. p. 10</ref> This was particularly tough under the rule of [[Park Chung Hee]], who was a Buddhist.<ref name="Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 17">Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 17</ref> This measure, combined with the rapid social changes of the same period,<ref name="Pyong Gap Min, 2014" /> favoured a rapid revival of Buddhism, as it traditionally intermingled with [[folk religion]] and allowed a way for these traditional believers to express their folk beliefs in the context of an officially accepted religion.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Yoo|first1=Sam Hyun|last2=Agadjanian|first2=Victor|date=2021|title=The paradox of change: Religion and fertility decline in South Korea|journal=Demographic Research|volume=44|pages=537–562|doi=10.4054/DemRes.2021.44.23|jstor=27032925 |s2cid=233022777|issn=1435-9871|doi-access=free}}</ref> This period also saw the growth of Christian churches in a trend to register as members of organised religions.<ref>Baker, 2008. p. 4</ref> |
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Shamanism |
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The number of Buddhist temples rose from 2,306 in 1962 to 11,561 in 1997, Protestant churches rose from 6,785 in 1962 to 58,046 in 1997, the Catholic Church had 313 churches in 1965 and 1,366 in 2005, [[Won Buddhism]] had 131 temples in 1969 and 418 in 1997.<ref>Baker, 2008. p. 3</ref> Similarly, [[Daesun Jinrihoe]]'s temples have grown from 700 in 1983 to 1,600 in 1994.<ref>Baker, 2003. p. 5</ref> Statistics from censuses show that the proportion of the South Korean population self-identifying as Buddhist has grown from 2.6% in 1962 to 22.8% in 2005,<ref name="Pyong Gap Min, 2014" /> while the proportion of Christians has grown from 5% in 1962 to 29.2% in 2005.<ref name="Pyong Gap Min, 2014" /> However, both religions have shown a decline between the years 2005 and 2015, with Buddhism sharply declining in influence to 15.5% of the population, and a less significant decline of Christianity to 27.6%.<ref name="2015 Census">South Korea National Statistical Office's 19th Population and Housing Census (2015): "[http://image.kmib.co.kr/online_image/2016/1219/201612191738_61220011145071_1.jpg Religion organisations' statistics]". Retrieved 20 December 2016</ref> |
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Koreans, like other East Asians, have traditionally been eclectic rather than exclusive in their religious commitments. Their religious outlook has not been conditioned by a single, exclusive faith but by a combination of indigenous beliefs and creeds imported into Korea. Belief in a world inhabited by spirits is probably the oldest form of Korean religious life, dating back to prehistoric times. There is a rather unorganized pantheon of literally millions of gods, spirits, and ghosts, ranging from the "god generals" who rule the different quarters of heaven to mountain spirits (sansin). This pantheon also includes gods who inhabit trees, sacred caves, and piles of stones, as well as earth spirits, the tutelary gods of households and villages, mischievous goblins, and the ghosts of persons who in many cases met violent or tragic ends. These spirits are said to have the power to influence or to change the fortunes of living men and women. |
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According to Pew Research Center (2010), about 46% of the population had [[Irreligion|no religious affiliation]], 23% are [[Buddhism|Buddhist]] and 29% are [[Christianity|Christians]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=6 facts about Christianity in South Korea |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/08/12/6-facts-about-christianity-in-south-korea/ |access-date=2021-02-13 |website=Pew Research Center |date=12 August 2014 |language=en-US}}</ref> According to 2015 national census, 56.1% are irreligious, [[Protestantism]] represents (19.7%) of the total population, [[Korean Buddhism]] (15.5%), and [[Catholic Church|Catholicism]] (7.9%). A small percentage of South Koreans (0.8% in total) are members of other religions, including [[Won Buddhism]], [[Confucianism]], [[Cheondoism]], [[Daesun Jinrihoe]], [[Islam]], [[Daejongism]], [[Jeungsanism]] and [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Eastern Orthodox Christianity]].<ref name=":1" /> [[File:Hrcopinion theme 201111 01.webp|thumb|213x213px|Study performed by a South Korean Research Journal revealing the change in religion demographics from 2018 to 2020.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-11-11|script-title=ko:[사회지표] 종교 인식 조사 - 종교 활동 및 종교의 영향력|url=https://hrcopinion.co.kr/archives/16859|access-date=2021-02-28|website=한국리서치 정기조사 여론속의 여론|language=ko-KR}}</ref>]] |
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Korean shamans are similar in many ways to those found in Siberia, Mongolia, and Manchuria. They also resemble the yuta found on the Ryukyu Islands, in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. Cheju Island is also a center of shamanism. |
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=== 2015–present === |
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Shamans, most of whom are women, are enlisted by those who want the help of the spirit world. Female shamans (mudang) hold kut, or services, in order to gain good fortune for clients, cure illnesses by exorcising evil spirits, or propitiate local or village gods. Such services are also held to guide the spirit of a deceased person to heaven. |
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In response to the rapidly changing demographics of religion in South Korea, 여론 속의 여론 (''Yeolon Sog-ui Yeolon'') a Korean research journal, performed a survey on the present religious demographic in South Korea. According to the survey, new results deviate from the traditional sentiments of South Korean culture. While much of the population is irreligious, Protestants make up the largest religious group.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-11-11|script-title=ko:[사회지표] 종교 인식 조사 - 종교 활동 및 종교의 영향력|url=https://hrcopinion.co.kr/archives/16859|access-date=2021-02-25|website=한국리서치 정기조사 여론속의 여론|language=ko-KR}}</ref> The latter half of the population that are religious, are split in the following way: 20% believe in [[Protestantism]], 16% believe in [[Buddhism]], 13% believe in [[Catholic Church|Catholicism]], and 1% believe in other religions or cults. Essentially, the studies findings show that 50% of South Koreans are now non-religious, 32% follow some section of Christianity, 16% are Buddhist, and 2% believe in some other form of religion. The deviation from the traditionally religious South Korean culture and demographics is the rise of atheism. |
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Previous to this sudden change, ''A Cohort Analysis of Religious Population Change in Korea''<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Lim|first=Young Bin|date=2019|title=A Cohort Analysis of Religious Population Change in Korea|url=https://www.kci.go.kr/kciportal/ci/sereArticleSearch/ciSereArtiView.kci?sereArticleSearchBean.artiId=ART002539522|journal=Hyonsang-gwa-Insik|language=ko|volume=43|issue=4|pages=123–150|doi=10.46349/kjhss.2019.12.43.4.123|s2cid=219952917|issn=1229-3555}}</ref> launched by the [[Korea Citation Index|Korean Citation Index]] analyzed South Korean religious demographics from 1999 to 2015. The data from the study focused on understanding religious conversion, switching, or abandonment within the demographic. Today, the study has given insight on the potential effects of the deviation in South Korea's religious demographic. |
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Often a woman will become a shaman very reluctantly--after experiencing a severe physical or mental illness that indicates "possession" by a spirit. Such possession allegedly can be cured only through performance of a kut. Once a shaman is established in her profession, she usually can make a good living. |
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The study performed by the research journal, 여론 속의 여론 (''Yeolon Sog-ui Yeolon''), discovered that the change in the South Korean religious demographics stemmed from the youth. The younger demographic of South Korea tend to have a higher percentage of atheists, while the older demographics have remained relatively religious. The study states that 33% of South Koreans who are around the age of 20 believe in religion, while above 61% of those aged 60 or older continue to believe in religion. The study also reveals that the demographic of believers and non believers are also affected by many more variables. For example, the specific religion and the age at which the religion was introduced to the individual can have effects on the probability of an individual to stay religious throughout their lives. Overall, there seems to be a large deviation between those who were introduced to religion before elementary and those who were introduced after their 50s. Of 101 individuals interviewed, 29 were introduced to religion before elementary school, 18 during elementary, 9 in their 40s, and 7 in their 50s. While Catholicism and Protestantism maintained a similar standard deviation, believers of Buddhism seemed to start during and near their 30s. With the younger generation of South Korea remaining increasingly non-religious and South Korea traditionally being a religious nation, the developments of South Korea's religious demographics will have many implications on the nation's culture, politics, and way of life. |
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Many scholars regard Korean shamanism as less a religion than a "medicine" in which the spirits are manipulated in order to achieve human ends. There is no notion of salvation or moral and spiritual perfection, at least for the ordinary believers in spirits. The shaman is a professional who is consulted by clients whenever the need is felt. Traditionally, shamans had low social status and were members of the ch'ommin class. This discrimination has continued into modern times. |
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===Protestant attacks on traditional religions=== |
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Animistic beliefs are strongly associated with the culture of fishing villages and are primarily a phenomenon found in rural communities. Shamans also treat the ills of city people, however, especially recent migrants from the countryside who find adjustment to an impersonal urban life stressful. The government has discouraged belief in shamanism as superstition and for many years minimized its persistence in Korean life. Yet in a climate of growing nationalism and cultural self-confidence, the dances, songs, and incantations that compose the kut have come to be recognized as an important aspect of Korean culture. Beginning in the 1970s, rituals that formerly had been kept out of foreign view began to resurface, and occasionally a Western hotel manager or other executive could even be seen attending a shamanistic exorcism ritual in the course of opening a new branch in Seoul. Some of these aspects of kut have been designated valuable cultural properties that should be preserved and passed on to future generations. |
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{{see also | Christian fundamentalism | Chinese Rites controversy }} |
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Since the 1980s and the 1990s, there have been acts of hostility committed by Protestants against Buddhists and followers of traditional religions in South Korea. This include the arson of temples, the beheading of statues of Buddha and bodhisattvas, and red Christian crosses painted on either statues or other Buddhist and other religions' properties.<ref name="Buswell, Lee. 2007. p. 375">Buswell, Lee. 2007. p. 375</ref> Some of these acts have even been promoted by churches' [[pastor]]s.<ref name="Buswell, Lee. 2007. p. 375"/> |
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The future of shamanism itself was uncertain in the late 1980s. Observers believed that many of its functions in the future probably will be performed by the psychiatric profession as the government expands mental health treatment facilities. Given the uncertainty of social, economic, and political conditions, however, it appears certain that shamans will find large numbers of clients for some time to come. |
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==Dominant religions== |
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Unlike the other traditions here, shamanism does not have a clear creed of its own. Over the centuries, it has become closely associated with Korean Buddhism. Most of those who engage in or follow shamanism are also Buddhists; however, not all Buddhists follow shamanism. |
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<!-- IMPORTANT: As per the wikipedia convention, list the sections in alphabetical and historical chronological order only. --> |
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===Buddhism=== |
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Although generally considered unfashionable in South Korea today, shamanic practices remain widespread. The largest association of shamans in South Korea claims more than 100,000 members.{{ref|shamans1}} Away from Jeju Island, these practitioners are almost entirely female. The shamanic rites, known as ''gut'', vary from region to region. |
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{{Main|Korean Buddhism}} |
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{{see also | Silk Road transmission of Buddhism | Buddhism#Cultural_influence | l2= Influence of Buddhism on cultures | Culture of Buddhism | Culture of Korea }} |
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[[File:Buddhist Expansion.svg|thumb|right|320px|[[Silk Road transmission of Buddhism|Buddhist expansion in Asia]]: [[Mahayana Buddhism]] [[Chinese Buddhism#History|first entered]] the [[Chinese Empire]] ([[Han dynasty#Religion, cosmology, and metaphysics|Han dynasty]]) through [[Silk Road]] during the [[Kushan Empire|Kushan Era]]. The overland and maritime "Silk Roads" were interlinked and complementary, forming what scholars have called the "great circle of Buddhism".<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |author-last=Acri |author-first=Andrea |date=20 December 2018 |title=Maritime Buddhism |url=https://oxfordre.com/religion/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.001.0001/acrefore-9780199340378-e-638 |encyclopedia=Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion |location=[[Oxford]] |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |doi=10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.013.638 |isbn=9780199340378 |doi-access=free |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190219153342/https://oxfordre.com/religion/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.001.0001/acrefore-9780199340378-e-638 |archive-date=19 February 2019 |url-status=live |access-date=30 May 2021}}</ref>]] |
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{{multiple image |
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| align = right |
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| width = 150 |
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| image1 = South Korea-Busan-Samgwangsa 3243-06.jpg |
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| caption1 = A building of the Samgwangsa (temple built in 1969) in [[Busan]]. |
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| image2 = Gaeamsa Gabsupjje 13-05651 - Buan-gun, Jeollabuk-do, South Korea.JPG |
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| caption2 = [[bodhisattva]] altar in the Gaeamsa, [[Buan County]], [[North Jeolla Province]]. |
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| image3 = Korea-Gyeongju-Bunhwangsa-Three story stone pagoda-01.jpg |
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| caption3 = Three-storey stone pagoda of [[Bunhwangsa]] in [[Gyeongju]], [[North Gyeongsang Province]]. |
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}} |
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====Arrival and spread since 4th century ==== |
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==Confucianism== |
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Buddhism (불교/佛敎 ''Bulgyo'') entered Korea from China during the [[Three Kingdoms of Korea|period of the three kingdoms]] (372, or the 4th century).<ref name="Korea, 300 to 600 CE" /> Buddhism was the dominant religious and cultural influence in the [[North–South States Period]] (698–926) and subsequent Goryeo (918–1392) states. Confucianism was also brought to Korea from China in early centuries, and was formulated as [[Korean Confucianism]] in Goryeo. However, it was only in the subsequent Joseon kingdom (1392–1910) that Korean Confucianism was established as the state ideology and religion, and Korean Buddhism underwent 500 years of suppression.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. pp. 120-138" /><ref name="Tudor, 2012" /> Buddhism in the contemporary state of South Korea is stronger in the east of the country, namely the [[Yeongnam]] and [[Gangwon Province (South Korea)|Gangwon]] regions, as well as in [[Jeju Province|Jeju]].{{citation needed|date=December 2020}} |
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{{main|Korean Confucianism}} |
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====Denominations ==== |
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Only 0.7% of contemporary South Koreans give "Confucianism" as their religion. However, the influence of Confucian ethical thought on other religious practices, and on [[Korean culture]] in general, remains quite extensive. |
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=====Korean Zen or Seon Buddhism ===== |
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Confucian rituals are still practiced at various times of the year. The most prominent of these are the annual rites held at the Shrine of Confucius in Seoul. Other rites, for instance those in honor of clan founders, are held at the numerous shrines found throughout the country. |
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There are a number of different schools in Korean Buddhism (대한불교/大韓佛敎 ''Daehanbulgyo''), including the ''[[Korean Seon|Seon]]'' (Korean Zen). Seon is represented by [[Jogye Order]] and [[Taego]] Order.<ref name=geom1>[http://www.koreapost.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=9318 Korean Buddhism has its own unique characteristics different from other countries], koreapost.com, Jun 16, 2019.</ref> The overwhelming majority of Buddhist temples in contemporary South Korea belong to the dominant Jogye Order, traditionally related to the Seon school. The order's headquarters are at [[Jogyesa]] in central [[Seoul]], and it operates most of the country's old and famous temples, such as [[Bulguksa]] and [[Beomeosa]]. Jogye requires their monastics to be celibate. Taego lineage is a form of Seon (Zen) and it differs from Seon by allowing priests to marry.{{citation needed|date=December 2020}} |
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==New religions== |
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=====Jingak and Cheontae Buddhism ===== |
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Ch'ondogyo, generally regarded as the first of Korea's "new religions," is another important religious tradition. It is a synthesis of Confucian, Buddhist, shamanistic, Daoist, and Catholic influences. Ch'ondogyo grew out of the Tonghak Movement (also called Eastern Learning Movement) established by Ch'oe Cheu , a man of yangban background who claimed to have experienced a mystic encounter with God, who told him to preach to all the world. Ch'oe was executed by the government as a heretic in 1863, but not before he had acquired a number of followers and had committed his ideas to writing. Tonghak spread among the poor people of Korea's villages, especially in the Cholla region, and was the cause of a revolt against the royal government in 1894. While some members of the Tonghak Movement-- renamed Ch'ondogyo (Teachings of the Heavenly Way)--supported the Japanese annexation in 1910, others opposed it. This group played a major role, along with Christians and some Confucians, in the Korean nationalist movement. In the 1920s, Ch'ondogyo sponsored Kaebyok (Creation), one of Korea's major intellectual journals during the colonial period (see The Media , ch. 4). |
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[[Jingak Order]], is a modern esoteric form of [[Vajrayana]] Buddhism, which also permits its priests to marry. [[Cheontae]] is a modern revival of the [[Tiantai]] lineage in Korea, focusing on the ''[[Lotus Sutra]]''. Cheontae orders requires their monastics to be celibate.<ref name=geom1/> |
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Ch'ondogyo's basic beliefs include the essential equality of all human beings. Each person must be treated with respect because all persons "contain divinity;" there is "God in man." Moreover, men and women must sincerely cultivate themselves in order to bring forth and express this divinity in their lives. Self-perfection, not ritual and ceremony, is the way to salvation. Although Ch'oe and his followers did not attempt to overthrow the social order and establish a radical egalitarianism, the revolutionary potential of Ch'ondogyo is evident in these basic ideas, which appealed especially to poor people who were told that they, along with scholars and high officials, could achieve salvation through effort. There is reason to believe that Ch'ondogyo had an important role in the development of democratic and anti-authoritarian thought in Korea. In the 1970s and 1980s, Ch'ondogyo's antecedent, the Tonghak Movement, received renewed interest among many Korean intellectuals. |
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=====Won Buddhism===== |
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Apart from Ch'ondogyo, major new religions included Taejonggyo, which has as its central creed the worship of Tangun, legendary founder of the Korean nation. Chungsanggyo, founded in the early twentieth century, emphasizes magical practices and the creation of a paradise on earth. It is divided into a great number of competing branches. Wonbulgyo, or Won Buddhism, attempts to combine traditional Buddhist doctrine with a modern concern for social reform and revitalization. There are also a number of small sects which have sprung up around Mount Kyeryong in South Ch'ungch'ong Province, the supposed future site of the founding of a new dynasty originally prophesied in the eighteenth century. |
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[[Won Buddhism]] (원불교/圓佛敎 ''Wonbulgyo'') is a modern reformed Buddhism that seeks to make enlightenment possible for everyone and applicable to regular life. The scriptures and practices are simplified so that anyone, regardless of their wealth, occupation, or other external living conditions, can understand them.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Won Buddhism as a Korean New Religion|journal=Numen|first= Michael|last=Pye|volume=49|issue=2|pages=113–141|jstor=3270479|doi=10.1163/156852702760186745|year=2002}}</ref> |
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Several new religions derive their inspiration from Christianity. The Chondogwan, or Evangelical Church, was founded by Pak T'ae-son. Pak originally was a Presbyterian, but was expelled from the church for heresy in the 1950s after claiming for himself unique spiritual power. By 1972 his followers numbered as many as 700,000 people, and he built several "Christian towns," established a large church network, and managed several industrial enterprises. |
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====Growth: Number of temples by denomination ==== |
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Because of its overseas evangelism, the Hold Spirit Association for the Unification of the World Christianity, or Unification Church (T'ongilgyo), founded in 1954 by Reverend Sun Myong Moon (Mun Son-myong), also a former Christian, is the most famous Korean new religion. During its period of rigorous expansion during the 1970s, the Unification Church had several hundred thousand members in South Korea and Japan and a substantial (although generally overestimated) number of members in North America and Western Europe. Moon claimed that he was the "messiah" designated by God to unify all the peoples of the world into one "family," governed theocratically by himself. Like Pak's Evangelical Church, the Unification Church has been highly authoritarian, demanding absolute obedience from church members. Moon, for example, has arranged marriages for his younger followers; United States television audiences were treated some years ago to a mass ceremony at which several hundred young "Moonies" were married. Also like Pak, Moon has coupled the church's fortunes to economic expansion. Factories in South Korea and abroad manufacture arms and process ginseng and seafood, artistic bric-a-brac, and other items. Moon's labor force has worked long hours and been paid minimal wages in order to channel profits into church coffers. Virulently anticommunist, Moon has sought to influence public opinion at home and abroad by establishing generally unprofitable newspapers such as the Segye Ilbo in Seoul, the Sekai Nippo in Tokyo, and the Washington Times in the United States capital, and by inviting academics to lavish international conferences, often held in South Korea. At home, the Unification Church was viewed with suspicion by the authorities because of its scandals and Moon's evident desire to create a "state within a state." His influence, however, had declined by the late 1980s. |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" |
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The fall of the [[Joseon Dynasty]] and the coming of the [[Korea under Japanese rule|Japanese occupation]] spurred the formation of several new faiths. These typically drew on a combination of Western, Eastern, and autochthonous traditions. The most prominent is [[Chondogyo]], which claimed more than a million members at its height in the early 20th century. Today Chondogyo believers make up less than 0.1% of the South Korean population. Other similar religions include [[Won Buddhism]], [[Daejonggyo]] and [[Jeung San Do]]. |
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|+ 907 major Korean Buddhist temples by school (2005)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.andong.go.kr/download/open.content/ko/administrative/administration.data/contemporary/book4/4%EA%B6%8C_%EB%AC%B8%ED%99%94(%EB%82%B4%EC%A7%80).pdf|script-title=ko:안동근현대사|trans-title=Andong National: Modern and Contemporary history|language=ko|work=andong.go.kr|date=15 December 2010|page=228|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141210230335/http://www.andong.go.kr/download/open.content/ko/administrative/administration.data/contemporary/book4/4%EA%B6%8C_%EB%AC%B8%ED%99%94(%EB%82%B4%EC%A7%80).pdf|archive-date=10 December 2014|quote=문화관광부의 2005년 5월 자료에 따르면 우리나라에는 907개의 사찰이 있는데, 이를 종단별로 보면, 대한불교조계종 735개소(81%), 한국불교태 고종 102개소(11%), 대한불교법화종 22개소(2%), 선학원 16개소(2%), 대한불교원효종 5개소(1%), 기타 27개소(3%) 순이다.}}</ref> |
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! School || Temples |
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|- |
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| [[Jogye Order]] (조계종/曹溪宗) || 735 (81%) |
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|- |
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| [[Cheontae]] Order (천태종/天台宗) || 144 (16%) |
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|- |
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| [[Taego Order]] (태고종/太古宗) || 102 (11%) |
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|- |
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| [[Beobhwa Order]] (법화종/法華宗) || 22 (2%) |
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|- |
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| [[Seonhag-won]] (선학원/禪學院) || 16 (2%) |
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|- |
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| [[Wonhyo Order]] (원효종/元曉宗) || 5 (1%) |
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|- |
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| Other || 27 (3%) |
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|} |
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====Buddhism's syncretic influence on Korea culture ==== |
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{{see also | Buddhism#Cultural_influence | l1= Influence of Buddhism on cultures | Culture of Korea | Culture of Buddhism | Religious syncretism }} |
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According to a 2005 government survey, a quarter of South Koreans are practicing Buddhist.<ref name=koreastats>According to figures compiled by the South Korean [[National Statistical Office (South Korea)|National Statistical Office]].{{cite web|url=http://kosis.nso.go.kr:7001/ups/chapterRetrieve.jsp?pubcode=MA&seq=292&pub=3 |access-date=August 23, 2006 |work=NSO online KOSIS database |script-title=ko:인구,가구/시도별 종교인구/시도별 종교인구 (2005년 인구총조사) |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060908233718/http://kosis.nso.go.kr:7001/ups/chapterRetrieve.jsp?pubcode=MA&seq=292&pub=3 |archive-date=September 8, 2006 }}</ref> However, the actual number of Buddhists in South Korea is ambiguous as there is no exact or exclusive criterion by which Buddhists can be identified, unlike the Christian population. With Buddhism's incorporation into traditional Korean culture, it is now considered a philosophy and cultural background rather than a formal religion. As a result, many people outside of the practicing population are deeply influenced by these traditions. Thus, when counting secular believers or those influenced by the faith while not following other religions, the number of Buddhists in South Korea is considered to be much larger.<ref name=culim1>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Jb0rCQD9NcoC&q=atheism |last=Kedar |first=Nath Tiwari |year=1997 |title=Comparative Religion |publisher=[[Motilal Banarsidass]] |isbn=81-208-0293-4 }}</ref> Similarly, in officially atheist North Korea, while Buddhists officially account for 4.5% of the population, a much larger number (over 70%) of the population are influenced by Buddhist philosophies and customs.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20071013201130/http://www.religiousintelligence.co.uk/country/?CountryID=37 Religious Intelligence UK Report]</ref><ref>[http://geography.about.com/od/northkorea/a/northkorea.htm] North Korea, about.com</ref> |
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===Christianity=== |
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{{multiple image |
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| align = right |
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| width = 150 |
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| image1 = Jeondong Catholic Church in Jeonju, South Korea.jpg |
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| caption1 = Jeondong Catholic Church in [[Jeonju]], [[North Jeolla Province]]. |
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| image2 = Ulsan St.Dionysios Church.jpg |
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| caption2 = Saint Dionysios Orthodox Church in [[Ulsan]]. |
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| image3 = Suwon Jeil Church by night.jpg |
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| caption3 = Jeil Presbyterian Church of Suwon, in Gyeonggi Province, by night. |
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}} |
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{{Main article|Christianity in Korea}} |
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====Arrival in late 18th century ==== |
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Foreign Catholic [[Missionary|missionaries]] did not arrive in Korea until 1794, a decade after the return of [[Yi Sung-hun]], a diplomat who was the first baptised Korean in [[Beijing]].<ref>Choi Suk-woo. ''Korean Catholicism Yesterday and Today''. On: ''Korean Journal'' XXIV, 8, August 1984. pp. 5-6</ref> He established a grass roots lay Catholic movement in Korea. However, the writings of the Jesuit missionary [[Matteo Ricci]], who was resident at the imperial court in Beijing, had been already brought to Korea from China in the 17th century. Scholars of the ''[[Silhak]]'' ("Practical Learning") were attracted to Catholic doctrines, and this was a key factor for the spread of the Catholic faith in the 1790s.<ref>Kim Han-sik. ''The Influence of Christianity''. In: ''Korean Journal'' XXIII, 12, December 1983. pp. 5-7</ref> |
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====Denominations ==== |
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Christianity (그리스도교/----敎 ''Geurisdogyo'' or 기독교/基督敎 ''Gidoggyo'', both meaning religion of Christ) in South Korea is dominated by four denominations: [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] (천주교/天主敎 pronounced ''Cheonjugyo''), [[Protestantism|Protestant]] [[Presbyterianism]] (장로교 pronounced ''Jangnogyo''), [[Methodism]] (감리교 pronounced ''Gamnigyo'') and [[Baptists]] (침례교 pronounced ''Chimnyegyo''). The [[Yoido Full Gospel Church]] is the largest [[Pentecostalism|Pentecostal]] church in the country. Some [[non-denominational]] churches also exist.<ref name=denom1/> According to 2015 census, Protestants and Catholics numbered 9.6 million and 3.8 million respective. There are also small [[Eastern Orthodox]] communities. |
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=====Protestantism===== |
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Protestant missionaries entered Korea during the 1880s and, along with Catholic priests, converted a remarkable number of Koreans, this time with the support of the royal government which winked at Westernising forces in a period of deep internal crisis (due to the waning of centuries-long patronage from a then-weakened China).<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 158"/> The lack of a national religious system compared to [[Chinese folk religion|those of China]] and [[Shinto|that of Japan]] (Korean [[Korean shamanism|Sindo]] never developed to a high status of institutional and civic religion) gave a free hand to Christian churches.<ref name="Ogata, Mamoru Billy 1984 p. 32"/> [[Methodism|Methodist]] and [[Presbyterianism|Presbyterian]] missionaries were especially successful. They established schools, universities, hospitals, and orphanages and played a significant role in the modernisation of the country.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. pp. 157-158"/> |
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[[Anglican Church of Korea]] also is one of Protestant denominations. Unlike other protestant denominations in Korea, it is influenced by Commonwealth realms such as [[Church of England]], [[Scottish Episcopal Church]], [[Anglican Church of Canada]], [[Anglican Church of Australia]], [[Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia]] rather than North American missionaries. They concentrate on harmonisation of Traditional Korean Architecture and European Architecture such as [[Ganghwa Anglican Cathedral]] and usually invest on School and supporting minorities such as labourers and LGBT in Korea. |
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=====Catholicism===== |
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{{see also|Seohak}} |
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The penetration of Western ideas and Christianity in Korea became known as ''[[Seohak]]'' ("Western Scholar"). A study of 1801 found that more than half of the families that had converted to Catholicism were linked to the Seohak school.<ref>Kim Ok-hy. ''Women in the History of Catholicism in Korea''. In: ''Korean Journal'' XXIV, 8, August 1984. p. 30</ref> Largely because converts refused to perform Confucian ancestral rituals, the Joseon government prohibited Christian proselytising. Some Catholics were executed during the early 19th century, but the restrictive law was not strictly enforced. A large number of Christians lived in the northern part of the peninsula (it was part of the so-called "[[Manchurian revival]]")<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 158" /> where Confucian influence was not as strong as in the south.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 158, p. 162" /> Before 1948 [[Pyongyang]] was an important Christian centre: one-sixth of its population of about 300,000 people were converts. Following the establishment of the communist regime in the north, an estimated more than one million Korean Christians resettled to South Korea to escape persecution by North Korea's anti-Christian policies.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 163" /> Catholicism in Korea grew significantly during the 1970s to 1980s.<ref>{{Cite web|title=[80년대 한국 가톨릭의 결산] 2. 한국교회와 교세|url=https://www.catholictimes.org/article/article_view.php?aid=352235|access-date=2021-03-12|website={{Ill|Catholic Times (South Korean newspaper)|lt=Catholic Times|ko|가톨릭신문}}|language=ko}}</ref> |
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=====Orthodoxy===== |
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[[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox Christian]] missionaries entered Korea from Russia in 1900. In 1903, the first Eastern Orthodox church in Korea was established. However, the [[Russo-Japanese War]] in 1904 and the [[Russian Revolution]] in 1917 interrupted the activities of the mission. After the North's army abducted Korea's only Orthodox priest at the time, Fr. Alexi Kim, at the start of the Korean War in 1950, and after the St. Nicholas Church building was destroyed by the 1951 bombing of Seoul, the small flock of Orthodox faithful was at risk of annihilation. In 1955, the Orthodox faithful of Korea wrote a letter to the Holy Synod of the [[Ecumenical Patriarchate]] asking to come under the Ecumenical Patriarchate's spiritual care and jurisdiction. Their request was granted, and the development and growth of the Church in Korea began to accelerate. Today, the roughly 5,000 Orthodox faithful of Korea remain under the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, whose Holy Synod elevated the flourishing Church in Korea in 2004 to the status of a "Metropolis."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://publicorthodoxy.org/2017/08/30/korea-another-threat/lang=eng|title=KOREA: FACING ANOTHER THREAT… |
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|publisher=Public Orthodoxy|date=30 August 2017|access-date=25 February 2021}}</ref> The [[Oriental Orthodox Churches|non-Chalcedonian]] [[Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria|Coptic Church of Alexandria]] was first established in Seoul in 2013 for Egyptian Copts and Ethiopians residing in South Korea.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.igoodnews.net/news/articleView.html?idxno=50168|script-title=ko:마가의 후예 '콥트기독교'… "한국에도 있다"|date=19 July 2016|website=아이굿뉴스}}</ref> |
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=====Others===== |
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[[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in South Korea]] was established following the baptism of [[Kim Ho Jik]] in 1951,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/1988/07/kim-ho-jik-korean-pioneer?lang=eng|title=Kim Ho Jik: Korean Pioneer|publisher=The Ensign|date=July 1988|access-date=7 July 2013}}</ref> which had 81,628 members in 2012 with one temple in Seoul,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/temples?lang=eng |title=Seoul Korea |publisher=churchofjesuschrist.org |date=21 February 2012|access-date=13 March 2013}}</ref> four [[Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints|Mormon]] missions (Seoul, Daejeon, Busan, and Seoul South),<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.deseretnews.com/article/765623191/LDS-Church-announces-creation-of-58-new-missions.html?pg=all|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130226115755/http://www.deseretnews.com/article/765623191/LDS-Church-announces-creation-of-58-new-missions.html?pg=all|url-status=dead|archive-date=26 February 2013|title=LDS Church announces creation of 58 new missions|publisher=Deseret News|date=22 February 2013|access-date=7 July 2013}}</ref> 128 congregations, and twenty-four family history centres.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/facts-and-statistics/country/south-korea|title=Facts and Statistics, South Korea |publisher=LDS Newsroom|date=31 December 2012|access-date=7 July 2013}}</ref> |
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There are an estimated 2 million South Koreans who attend fringe churches not recognized by the [[Christian Council of Korea]], the Communion of Churches in Korea and the Council of Denomination Heads for Korean Church Unity.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-02-23 |title=What's behind South Korea's attraction to fringe churches? {{!}} South China Morning Post |url=https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/society/article/3010763/whats-behind-south-koreas-attraction-fringe-churches |access-date=2023-03-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200223112100/https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/society/article/3010763/whats-behind-south-koreas-attraction-fringe-churches |archive-date=23 February 2020 }}</ref> |
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[[Sun Myung Moon]]'s [[Unification Church]] (통일교 ''Tongilgyo'')<ref>{{cite book|title=Unificationism: A New Philosophy and Worldview|last=Matczak|first=Sebastian|publisher=New York Learned Publications|year=1982|location=New York, NY}}</ref> is a [[new religious movement]] founded in South Korea in 1954 by [[Sun Myung Moon]], which has financed many organizations and businesses in news media, education, politics and social activism.<ref>{{cite book|title=True Families: Gateway To Heaven|last=Moon|first=Sun Myung|publisher=HSA-UWC|year=2013|isbn=978-1-931166-31-7|location=New York|page=37}}</ref> In 2003, Korean Unification Church members started a political party named "The Party for God, Peace, Unification, and Home".<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.iol.co.za/news/world/moonies-launch-political-party-in-s-korea-1.101978|title='Moonies' launch political party in S Korea|date=10 March 2003|access-date=28 January 2016|publisher=iol.co.za|agency=Sapa-AFP}}</ref> |
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[[World Mission Society Church of God]], [[Victory Altar]], [[Shincheonji Church of Jesus|Shincheonji Church]], [[Providence (religious movement)|Christian Gospel Mission]] (also known as JMS or Providence), [[Grace Road Church]] and [[Evangelical Baptist Church of Korea]] are other Korean [[new religious movement]]s that originated within Christianity.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2018-11-22 |title=South Korean pastor jailed for raping followers as 'order from God' |language=en-AU |work=ABC News |url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-11-22/south-korean-pastor-lee-jae-rock-jailed-for-rape/10545738 |access-date=2023-03-15}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-08-09 |title=Inside the South Korean 'doomsday cult' recruiting young Black Christians in the UK |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/new-heaven-new-earth-lee-man-hee-cult-sect-b2119061.html |access-date=2023-03-15 |website=The Independent |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=The Cults of South Korea |url=https://thediplomat.com/2014/06/the-cults-of-south-korea/ |access-date=2023-03-15 |website=thediplomat.com |language=en-US}}</ref> Other fringe Christian churches include the [[Manmin Central Church]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-11-23 |title=Seoul cult leader jailed for rape - Taipei Times |url=https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2018/11/23/2003704779 |access-date=2023-03-15 |website=www.taipeitimes.com}}</ref> |
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====Causes of growth of Christianity==== |
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Factors contributing to the growth of Catholicism and Protestantism included the decayed state of Korean Buddhism, the support of the intellectual elite, and the encouragement of self-support and self-government among members of the Korean church, and finally the identification of Christianity with Korean nationalism.<ref name="Grayson, 2002. p. 158"/> Christianity grew significantly in the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1990s and 2000s it continued to grow, but at a slower rate. Christianity is especially dominant in the west of the country including [[Seoul]], [[Incheon]], and the regions of [[Gyeonggi Province|Gyeonggi]] and [[Honam]].<ref name=denom1/> |
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====Opposition to syncretic traditions ==== |
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{{see also | Religious syncretism | Culture of Korea | Confucianism | Chinese Rites controversy | Christian fundamentalism }} |
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[[Christian fundamentalism|Fundamentalist Christians]] continue to [[Chinese Rites controversy|oppose the syncretic aspects]] of the culture including Confucian traditions and ancestral rites practiced even by secular people and followers of other faiths.<ref name="park">{{cite book|last=Park|first=Chang-Won|title=Cultural Blending in Korean Death Rites|url=https://archive.org/details/culturalblending00park|url-access=limited|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|date=10 June 2010|pages=[https://archive.org/details/culturalblending00park/page/n26 12]–13|isbn=978-1-4411-1749-6}}</ref><ref name="Minamiki1985">{{cite book |first=George|last=Minamiki|title=The Chinese rites controversy: from its beginning to modern times|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4fzYAAAAMAAJ|access-date=20 February 2013|year=1985|publisher=Loyola University Press|isbn=978-0-8294-0457-9 }}</ref><ref name="Mantienne">Mantienne, pp. 177-82.</ref><ref>Mantienne, Frédéric 1999 ''Monseigneur Pigneau de Béhaine'', Editions Eglises d'Asie, 128 Rue du Bac, Paris, {{ISSN|1275-6865}} {{ISBN|2-914402-20-1}}, pp. 177–82.</ref><ref name="LaunayMoussay2008">{{cite book |first1=Marcel |last1=Launay |first2=Gérard |last2=Moussay |title = Les Missions étrangères: Trois siècles et demi d'histoire et d'aventure en Asie |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=qOXYAAAAMAAJ |access-date=20 February 2013 |date = 24 January 2008 |publisher=Librairie Académique Perrin |isbn = 978-2-262-02571-7 |pages = 77–83 }}</ref><ref name=culim1/> Consequently, many Korean Christians, especially Protestants, have abandoned these native Korean traditions.<ref name="suh">{{citation|title=Being Buddhist in a Christian World: Gender and Community in a Korean American Temple|last=Suh|first=Sharon A.|publisher=University of Washington Press|isbn=0-295-98378-7|pages=49|year=2004}}</ref><ref name="denom1"/> Protestants in Korea have a history of [[#Protestant attacks on traditional religions|attacking]] Buddhism and other traditional religions of Korea with arson and vandalism of temple and statues, some of these hostile acts have been promoted by the church.<ref name="Buswell, Lee. 2007. p. 375"/> |
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After the ban on traditional civil rites was lifted by Pope Pius XII in 1939,<ref name="park"/> many Korean Catholics openly observe ''[[jesa]]'' (ancestral rites); the Korean tradition is very different from the institutional religious ancestral worship that is found [[ancestor veneration in China|in China]] and Japan and can be easily integrated as ancillary to Catholicism. Protestants, by contrast, have completely abandoned the practice.<ref name=denom1>{{cite book|last=Kwon|first=Okyun|title=Buddhist and protestant Korean immigrants: religious beliefs and socioeconomic aspects of life|publisher=LFB Scholarly Publishing LLC|year=2003|pages=137–138|isbn=978-1-931202-65-7}}</ref> |
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==Indigenous religions== |
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{{multiple image |
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| align = right |
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| width = 150 |
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| image1 = Guksadang 국사당 國師堂 (5480847865).jpg |
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| caption1 = A Sindo (shamanic) shrine at [[Inwangsan]]. |
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| image2 = Shamanic temple in Ansan 05.JPG |
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| caption2 = Inner altar of a Sindo shrine, Ansan. |
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}} |
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===Korean shamanism=== |
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{{Main|Korean shamanism}} |
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Korean shamanism, also known as "Muism" (무교 ''Mugyo'', "''mu'' [shaman] religion")<ref>Used in: Chang Soo-kyung, Kim Tae-gon. ''Korean Shamanism – Muism''. Jimoondang, 1998.</ref> and "Sindo" ({{Korean|hangul=신도|labels=no}}) or "Sinism" (신교 ''Singyo'' "Way of the Gods").<ref>Lee Chi-ran, p. 13</ref><ref>Used in: Margaret Stutley. ''Shamanism: A Concise Introduction''. Routledge, 2003.</ref> is the native religion of the Koreans.<ref name="JYL4">Jung Young Lee, 1981. p. 4</ref>{{refn|group=note|Cognates of Japanese ''Shinto'' and Chinese ''[[Shendao]]''.}} Although used synonymously, the two terms are not identical:<ref name="JYL4" /> Jung Young Lee describes Muism as a form of Sindo - the shamanic tradition within the religion.<ref name="JYL5">Jung Young Lee, 1981. p. 5</ref> Particularly akin to Japan's [[Shinto]], contrariwise to it and to [[Chinese folk religion|China's religious systems]], Korean Sindo never developed into a national religious culture.<ref name="Ogata, Mamoru Billy 1984 p. 32" />{{clarify|date=July 2017|reason=Distinction between the systems is incomprehensible.}}{{multiple image |
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| align = right |
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| image1 = Saejae Chaekbawi.jpg |
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| caption1 = ''Chaekbawi'' shrine at [[Mungyeong Saejae]]. |
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| image2 = Korea-Samseonggung 11-07398.JPG |
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| caption2 = Pavilions of the ''[[Samseonggung]]'', a shrine for the worship of Hwanin, Hwanung, and Dangun. |
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}} |
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In contemporary Korean language the shaman-priest or ''[[mu (shaman)|mu]]'' ({{hanja|巫}}) is known as a ''mudang'' ({{korean|hangul=무당|hanja=巫堂}}) if female or ''baksu'' if male, although other names and locutions are used.<ref name=JYL4 />{{refn|group=note|Another term is ''dangol'' ({{korean|당골}}). The word ''mudang'' is mostly associated, though not exclusively, to female shamans due to their prevalence in the Korean tradition in recent centuries. This has brought to the development of other locutions for male shamans, including ''sana mudang'' (literally "male ''mudang''") in the Seoul area or ''baksu mudang'' ("healer ''mudang''"), shortened to ''baksu'', in the Pyongyang area. It is reasonable to believe that the word ''baksu'' is an ancient authentic designation for male shamans.<ref name="Lee 3-4">Jung Young Lee, 1981. pp. 3-4</ref>}} Korean ''mu'' "shaman" is synonymous with [[Chinese language|Chinese]] ''[[wu (shaman)|wu]]'', which denotes priests both male and female.<ref name=JYL5 /> The role of the ''mudang'' is to act as intermediary between the spirits or [[gods]] and the human plane, through ''[[gut (ritual)|gut]]'' (rituals), seeking to resolve problems in the patterns of development of human life.<ref>Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 21</ref> |
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Central is interaction with ''Haneullim'' or ''Hwanin'', meaning "source of all being",<ref name=JYL18>Jung Young Lee, 1981. p. 18</ref> and of all gods of nature,<ref name=JYL5 /> the utmost god or the supreme mind.<ref name=JYL17>Jung Young Lee, 1981. p. 17</ref> The ''mu'' are mythically described as descendants of the "Heavenly King", son of the "Holy Mother [of the Heavenly King]", with investiture often passed down through female princely lineage.<ref>Jung Young Lee, 1981. pp. 5-12</ref> However, other myths link the heritage of the traditional faith to Dangun, male son of the Heavenly King and initiator of the Korean nation.<ref name=JYL13>Jung Young Lee, 1981. p. 13</ref> |
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Besides Japanese [[Shinto]], Korean religion has also similarities with Chinese [[Chinese shamanism|Wuism]],<ref name=JYL21>Jung Young Lee, 1981. p. 21</ref> and is akin to the Siberian, Mongolian, and Manchurian religious traditions.<ref name=JYL21 /> Some studies trace the Korean ancestral god Dangun to the Ural-Altaic Tengri "Heaven", the shaman and the prince.<ref>Sorensen, p. 19-20</ref><ref name="JYL 17-18">Jung Young Lee, 1981. pp. 17-18</ref> In the dialects of some provinces of Korea the shaman is called ''dangul dangul-ari''.<ref name=JYL18 /> The ''mudang'' is similar to the Japanese ''miko'' and the Ryukyuan ''yuta''. Muism has exerted an influence on some Korean new religions, such as [[Cheondoism]] and [[Jeungsanism]]. According to various sociological studies, Korea's type of Christianity owes much of its success to native shamanism, which provided a congenial mindset and models for the religion to take root.<ref>{{cite web|first=Andrew E.|last=Kim|url=http://socrel.oxfordjournals.org/content/61/2/117.full.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151018073517/http://socrel.oxfordjournals.org/content/61/2/117.full.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=2015-10-18|title=Korean Religious Culture and Its Affinity to Christianity|publisher=Korea University, Sociology of Religion|date=2000|access-date=28 January 2016|url-access=registration }}</ref> |
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In the 1890s, the last decades of the Joseon kingdom, Protestant missionaries gained significant influence, and led a demonisation of native religion through the press, and even carried out campaigns of physical suppression of local cults.<ref name="Kendall, 2010. pp. 4-7">Kendall, 2010. pp. 4-7</ref> The Protestant discourse would have had an influence on all further attempts to uproot native religion.<ref name="Kendall, 2010. pp. 4-7"/> The "movement to destroy Sindo" carried out in South Korea in the 1970s and 1980s, destroyed much of the physical heritage of Korean religion (temples and shrines),<ref name="Kendall, 2010. p. 10"/> especially during the regime of President [[Park Chung Hee]].<ref name="Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 17"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.koreana.or.kr/months/news_view.asp?b_idx=2244&lang=en&page_type=list|title = ERROR}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.koreana.or.kr/months/news_view.asp?b_idx=2243&lang=en&page_type=list|title = ERROR}}</ref> There has been of a revival of shamanism in South Korea in most recent times.<ref>Joon-sik Choi, 2006. pp. 17-18-19</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Sang-Hun|first=Choe|title=In the age of the Internet, Korean shamans regain popularity|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/06/world/asia/06iht-shaman.1.6527738.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=6 July 2007}}</ref> |
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===Cheondoism=== |
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{{Main|Cheondoism}} |
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Cheondoism (천도교 ''Cheondogyo'') is a fundamentally Confucian religious tradition derived from indigenous Sinism. It is the religious dimension of the ''[[Donghak]]'' ("Eastern Learning") movement that was founded by [[Choe Je-u]] (1824–1864), a member of an impoverished [[yangban]] (aristocratic) family,<ref>Lee, 1996. p. 109</ref> in 1860 as a counter-force to the rise of "foreign religions",<ref name="Lee, 1996. p. 105">Lee, 1996. p. 105</ref> which in his view included Buddhism and Christianity (part of ''[[Seohak]]'', the wave of Western influence that penetrated Korean life at the end of the 19th century).<ref name="Lee, 1996. p. 105" /> Choe Je-u founded Cheondoism after having been allegedly healed from illness by an experience of ''Sangje'' or ''[[Haneullim]]'', the god of the universal Heaven in traditional shamanism.<ref name="Lee, 1996. p. 105" /> |
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The Donghak movement became so influential among common people that in 1864 the Joseon government sentenced Choe Je-u to death.<ref name="Lee, 1996. p. 105" /> The movement grew and in 1894 the members gave rise to the Donghak Peasant Revolution against the royal government. With the division of Korea in 1945, most of the Cheondoist community remained in the north, where the majority of them dwelled.<ref name="Carl Young 2013. pp. 51-66" /> Only few thousands of them remain in South Korea today. |
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The social and historical significance of the Donghak movement and Cheondoism has been largely ignored in South Korea,<ref name="Lee, 1996. p. 110">Lee, 1996. p. 110</ref> contrarywise to North Korea where Cheondoism is viewed positively as a folk (''[[minjung]]'') movement.<ref name="Lee, 1996. p. 110" /> |
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===Other sects=== |
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Apart from Cheondoism, other sects based on [[indigenous religion]] were founded between the end of the 19th century and the early decades of the 20th century. They include [[Daejongism]] (대종교 ''Daejonggyo''),<ref>Baker, 2008. p. 118</ref> which has as its central creed the worship of Dangun, legendary founder of [[Gojoseon]], thought of as the first proto-Korean kingdom; and a splinter sect of Cheondoism: [[Suwunism]].{{citation needed|date=April 2015}} |
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[[Jeungsanism]] (증산교 ''Jeungsangyo'') defines a family of religions founded in the early 20th century<ref>Baker, 2008. p. 85</ref> that emphasise magical practices and [[millenarianism|millenarian]] teachings of [[Kang Jeungsan]] ([[Gang Il-Sun]]). There are more than a hundred "Jeungsan religions," including the now defunct [[Bocheonism]]: the largest in Korea is currently [[Daesun Jinrihoe]] ({{Korean|hangul=대순진리회|labels=no}}), an offshoot of the still existing Taegeukdo ({{Korean|hangul=태극도|labels=no}}), while [[Jeungsando]] ({{Korean|hangul=증산도|labels=no}}) is the most active overseas.<ref>Baker, 2008, p. 986;</ref> |
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There are also a number of small religious sects, which have sprung up around [[Gyeryongsan]] ("Rooster-Dragon Mountain", always one of Korea's most-sacred areas) in [[South Chungcheong Province]], the supposed future site of the founding of a new dynasty originally prophesied in the 18th century (or before). Japanese [[Tenriism]] (천리교 ''Cheonligyo'') also claims to have thousands of South Korean members.<ref>Baker, 2008. p. 93</ref> |
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According to Andrew Eungi Kim, there was a rise of new religious movements in the late 1900s which account for about 10 percent of all churches in South Korea. According to Kim, this is the outcome of foreign invasions, as well as conflicting views regarding social and political issues. Many of the new religious movements are [[Religious syncretism|syncretic]] in character.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Characteristics of Religious Life in South Korea: A Sociological Survey|jstor=3512000|journal=Review of Religious Research|volume= 43|issue=4|pages=291–310|last1=Kim|first1=Andrew Eungi|doi=10.2307/3512000|year=2002}}</ref> |
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==Other religions== |
==Other religions== |
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<!-- IMPORTANT: As per the wikipedia convention, list the sections in alphabetical and historical chronological order only. --> |
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{{multiple image |
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===Islam=== |
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| align = right |
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{{main|Islam in South Korea}} |
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| width = 150 |
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| image1 = Daeseongjeon Shrine at Confucian School in Gangneung, Korea 02.jpg |
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| caption1 = Shrine of a Confucian school in [[Gangneung]]. |
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| image2 = Chisan Seowon 13-12379.JPG |
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| caption2 = Chisan Seowon, a ''[[seowon]]'' (private Confucian school) of the Joseon era. |
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| image3 = Kyeonghakwon.jpg |
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| caption3 = Ritual at a Confucian temple (before 1935). |
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}} |
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=== Bahá'í Faith === |
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The number of Muslims in South Korea is estimated at about 40,000. Some are migrant workers from South and Southeast Asia; others are Koreans who have converted to the faith. The largest mosque is the [[Seoul Central Mosque]] in the [[Itaewon]] district of Seoul; smaller mosques can be found in most of the country's major cities. |
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[[Baháʼí Faith]] was first introduced to Korea by an American woman named [[Agnes Baldwin Alexander|Agnes Alexander]].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Troxel|first=Duane|date=1998|title=Life of Agnes Alexander|url=http://bahai-library.com/troxel_life_agnes_alexander|website=bahai-library.com}}</ref> |
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===Confucianism=== |
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{{Main|Korean Confucianism}} |
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Only few contemporary South Koreans identify as adherents of Confucianism (유교 ''Yugyo''). Korean intellectuals historically developed a distinct [[Korean Confucianism]].<ref>Baker, Donald. "The Transformation of Confucianism in 20th-century Korea: How it has lost most of its metaphysical underpinnings and survives today primarily as ethical rhetoric and heritage rituals" ''한국학연구원 학술대회''. p 107</ref><ref name="Koh192">Koh, Byong-ik. "Confucianism in Contemporary Korea," In ''Confucian Traditions in East Asian Modernity'', edited by Tu Wei-ming, (Harvard University Press, 1996) p 192</ref> However, with the end of the Joseon state and the wane of Chinese influence in the 19th and 20th century, Confucianism was abandoned. The influence of Confucian ethical thought remains strong in other religious practices, and in [[Korean culture]] in general. Confucian rituals are still practised at various times of the year. The most prominent of these are the annual rites held at the [[Munmyo|Shrine of Confucius]] in Seoul. Other rites, for instance those in honour of clan founders, are held at shrines found throughout the country.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://koreana.kf.or.kr/view.asp?article_id=410&lang=English |title=Sunggyun-gwan, Sanctuary of Confucianism in Korea |work=Korana |first=An |last=Byung-ju |access-date=2 March 2021 |archive-date=24 September 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160924233148/http://koreana.kf.or.kr/view.asp?article_id=410&lang=English |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.parandeul.co.kr/munmyo.htm |title=Munmyo Shrine|work=Parandeul }}</ref> |
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===Hinduism=== |
===Hinduism=== |
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{{Main article | Hinduism in Korea }} |
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{{see also|List of Hindu temples in South Korea}} |
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Hinduism (힌두교 ''Hindugyo'') is practiced among South Korea's small [[India]]n, [[Nepal]]i and [[Bali]]nese migrant community. However, Hindu traditions such as [[yoga]] and [[Vedanta]] have attracted interest among younger South Koreans. Hindu temples in the Korea include the [[Sri Radha Shyamasundar Mandir]] in central Seoul, [[Sri Lakshmi Narayanan Temple]] in metropolitan Seoul, [[Himalayan Meditation and Yoga Sadhana Mandir]] in [[Seocho]] in Seoul, and [[Sri Sri Radha Krishna temple]] in [[Uijeongbu]] 20 km away on outskirt of Seoul.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.krishnakorea.com/| archiveurl=https://archive.today/20121206014529/http://www.krishnakorea.com/| archivedate=2012-12-06|title=ISCKON Vedic Cultural Center |publisher=KrishnaKorea |accessdate=13 January 2018}}</ref> |
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Orthodox Hinduism is practiced only by South Korea's tiny Indian community. However, Hindu traditions such as [[yoga]] and [[Vedantic]] thought have attracted widespread interest among younger South Koreans. |
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===Islam=== |
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{{Main article|Islam in Korea}} |
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There are around a hundred thousand foreign workers from Muslim countries, particularly Indonesians, Malaysians, Bruneians, Pakistanis, Kazakhs and Bangladeshis.<ref>{{cite web|title=Korea's Muslims Mark Ramadan|work=[[The Chosun Ilbo]]|date=11 September 2008|url=http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200809/200809110016.html|access-date=9 October 2008|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080913195801/http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200809/200809110016.html|archive-date=13 September 2008}}</ref> |
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===Judaism=== |
===Judaism=== |
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{{Main article|History of the Jews in South Korea}} |
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=== Shinto === |
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The Jewish presence in South Korea effectively began with the outbreak of the [[Korean War]] in 1950. At this time a large number of Jewish soldiers, including the chaplain [[Chaim Potok]], came to the Korean peninsula. Today the Jewish community is very small and limited to the [[Seoul National Capital Area|Seoul metropolitan area]]. There have been very few Korean converts to Judiasm. |
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{{Main|Shinto in Korea}} |
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[[File:Keijyo shrine 11.jpeg|thumb|150px|Keijyo Shinto Shrine, prior to 1935, Seoul]] |
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==Notes== |
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# April 23 2004 ''Yonhap News'' article, no longer available. Formerly at [http://english.yna.co.kr/Engnews/20040423/320000000020040423090346E6.html]. Google cache retrieved March 29 2006: [http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:4_vZ4KYg620J:english.yna.co.kr/Engnews/20040423/320000000020040423090346E6.html+yonhap+shamanism&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&client=opera]. |
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During Japan's colonisation of Korea (1910–1945), given the suggested common origins of the two peoples, Koreans were considered to be outright part of the Japanese population, to be wholly assimilated. The Japanese studied and coopted native ''[[Korean shamanism|Sindo]]'' by overlapping it with their [[State Shinto]] (similar measures of assimilation were applied to Buddhism), which hinged upon the worship of Japanese high gods and the emperor's godhead. Hundreds of Japanese [[Shinto shrines]] were built throughout the peninsula.<ref>Yi, Yong-sik (2010). ''Shaman Ritual Music in Korea''. University of Minnesota. {{ISBN|1931897107}}. p. 11</ref> This policy led to massive conversion of Koreans to Christian churches, which were already well ingrained in the country, representing a concern for the Japanese program, and supported Koreans' independence.<ref>''Korean Social Sciences Journal'', '''24''' (1997). Korean Social Science Research Council. pp. 33–53</ref> After the Allied forces defeated Japan in 1945, Korea was liberated from Japanese rule. As soon as the Shinto priests withdrew to Japan, all Shinto shrines in Korea were either destroyed or converted into another use.{{Citation needed|date=May 2019}} |
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==References== |
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{{loc}} |
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There is a tiny presence of [[Sect Shinto]] groups, [[Zenrinkyo]] and [[Daehan Cheolligyo]], in South Korea today. |
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=== Sikhism === |
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{{Main|Sikhism in South Korea}} |
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[[Sikhism|Sikhs]] have been in South Korea for 50 years. The first South Korean [[gurdwara]] was established in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Singh|first=Lakhvinder|date=August 13, 2020|title=Multicultural Korea: Sikhism in Korea|url=http://www.koreaittimes.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=99651|access-date=February 26, 2021|website=[[Korea IT Times]]}}</ref> There are about 550 Sikhs in South Korea, now recently the Sikhs in South were allowed to acquire South Korean citizenship.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Ahuja|first=Sanjeev K.|date=August 10, 2020|title=Proud Moments: Sikhs in Korea now can acquire citizenship while keeping their articles of faith intact|url=https://www.asiancommunitynews.com/proud-moments-sikhs-in-korea-now-can-acquire-citizenship-while-keeping-their-articles-of-faith-intact/|access-date=February 26, 2021|website=Asian Community News}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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{{Commons category|Religion in South Korea}} |
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*[[Freedom of religion in North Korea]] |
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*[[Freedom of religion in South Korea]] |
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*[[Irreligion in South Korea]] |
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*[[Religion in Korea]] |
*[[Religion in Korea]] |
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*[[Religion in North Korea]] |
*[[Religion in North Korea]] |
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*[[ |
*[[Taoism in Korea]] |
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*[[List of Korea-related topics]] |
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==Footnotes== |
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*[[Contemporary culture of South Korea]] |
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{{reflist|group=note|1}} |
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*[[Saju]] |
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==References== |
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{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} |
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==Sources== |
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* Daniel Tudor. ''Korea: The Impossible Country''. Tuttle Publishing, 2012. {{ISBN|0804842523}} |
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* Donald L. Baker. ''Korean Spirituality''. University of Hawaii Press, 2008. {{ISBN|0824832574}} |
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* Donald L. Baker. ''Modernization and Monotheism: How Urbanization and Westernization Have Transformed the Religious Landscape of Korea''. University of British Columbia. Published in: Sang-Oak Lee, Gregory K. Iverson, ''Pathways into Korean Language and Culture: Essays in Honor of Young-key Kim-Renaud''. Pajigong Press, Seoul, 2003. pp. 471–507 |
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* James H. Grayson. ''Korea - A Religious History''. Routledge, 2002. {{ISBN|070071605X}} |
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* Joon-sik Choi. ''Folk-Religion: The Customs in Korea''. Ewha Womans University Press, 2006. {{ISBN|8973006282}} |
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* Jung Young Lee. ''Korean Shamanistic Rituals''. Mouton De Gruyter, 1981. {{ISBN|9027933782}} |
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* Laurel Kendall. ''Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF: South Korean Popular Religion in Motion''. University of Hawaii Press, 2010. {{ISBN|0824833988}} |
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* Lee Chi-ran. Chief Director, Haedong Younghan Academy. ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20140413124433/http://manak.org.in/wp-content/uploads/pdf-manak/The%20Emergence%20of%20National%20Religions%20in%20Korea.pdf The Emergence of National Religions in Korea]''. |
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* Pyong Gap Min, ''[http://aatfweb.org/2014/10/31/development-of-protestantism-in-south-korea-positive-and-negative-elements/ Development of Protestantism in South Korea: Positive and Negative Elements]''. On: ''Asian American Theological Forum'' (''AATF'') 2014, VOL. 1 NO. 3, ISSN 2374-8133 |
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* Robert E. Buswell, Timothy S. Lee. ''Christianity in Korea''. University of Hawaii Press, 2007. {{ISBN|082483206X}} |
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* Sang Taek Lee. ''Religion and Social Formation in Korea: Minjung and Millenarianism''. Walter de Gruyter & Co, 1996. {{ISBN|3110147971}} |
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* Sorensen, Clark W. University of Washington. ''The Political Message of Folklore in South Korea's Student Demonstrations of the Eighties: An Approach to the Analysis of Political Theater''. Paper presented at the conference "Fifty Years of Korean Independence", sponsored by the Korean Political Science Association, Seoul, Korea, July 1995. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* {{Commons category-inline}} |
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*[http://english.tour2korea.com/01TripPlanner/KoreaInBrief/religion.asp?kosm=m1_1&konum=6 Tour2Korea on religion] |
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* {{Wikiquote-inline}} |
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*[http://www.lifeinkorea.com/information/religion.cfm Lifeinkorea on religion] |
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*[http://www.cyberspacei.com/jesusi/inlight/religion/korean/hreligion.htm Jesusi: 한국의 종교] |
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{{Asia in topic|Religion in}} |
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[[Category:Religion in South Korea| |
[[Category:Religion in South Korea| ]] |
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[[ru:Религия в Южной Корее]] |
Latest revision as of 11:41, 18 December 2024
The majority of South Koreans have no religion.[2] Buddhism and Christianity (Protestantism and Catholicism) are the dominant confessions among those who affiliate with a formal religion.[3]
According to a 2024 Korea Research's regular survey 'Public Opinion in Public Opinion', 51% identify with no religion, 17% with Buddhism and 31% with Christianity (Protestantism with 20% and Catholicism with 11%) and other religions 2%.[4] Buddhism is the fastest growing religion in South Korea in recent years. South Korean youth are quite interested in Buddhism and it's gaining popularity again in South Korea.
Buddhism was influential in ancient times while Christianity had influenced large segments of the population in the 18th and 19th century. However, they grew rapidly in membership only by the mid-20th century, as part of the profound transformations that South Korean society went through in the past century.[5] Since 2000, both Buddhism and Christianity have been declining. Native shamanic religions (i.e. Sindo) remain popular and could represent a large part of the unaffiliated. Indeed, according to a 2012 survey, only 15% of the population declared themselves to be not religious in the sense of "atheism".[6] According to the 2015 census, the proportion of the unaffiliated is higher among the youth, about 64.9% among the 20-years old.[7]
Korea entered the 20th century with an already established Christian presence and a vast majority of the population practicing native religion, Sindo. The latter never gained the high status of a national religious culture comparable to Chinese folk religion, Vietnamese folk religion and Japan's Shinto; this weakness of Korean Sindo was among the reasons that left a free hand to an early and thorough rooting of Christianity.[8] The population also took part in Confucian rites and held private ancestor worship.[5] Organised religions and philosophies belonged to the ruling elites, this coupled with the extensive patronage exerted by the Chinese empire allowed these elites to embrace a particularly strict interpretation of Confucianism (i.e. Korean Confucianism). Korean Buddhism, despite an erstwhile rich tradition, at the dawn of the 20th century was virtually extinct as a religious institution, after 500 years of suppression under the Joseon kingdom.[5][9] Christianity had antecedents in the Korean peninsula as early as the 18th century, when the philosophical school of Seohak supported the religion. With the fall of the Joseon in the last decades of the 19th century, Koreans largely embraced Christianity, since the monarchy itself and the intellectuals looked to Western models to modernise the country and endorsed the work of Catholic and Protestant missionaries.[10] During Japanese colonisation in the first half of the 20th century, the identification of Christianity with Korean nationalism was further strengthened,[11] as the Japanese tried to combine native Sindo with their State Shinto.
With the division of Korea into two states after 1945, the communist north and the capitalist south, the majority of the Korean Christian population that had been until then in the northern half of the peninsula,[12] fled to South Korea.[13] It has been estimated that Christians who migrated to the south were more than one million.[14] Throughout the second half of the 20th century, the South Korean state enacted measures to further marginalise indigenous Sindo, at the same time strengthening Christianity and a revival of Buddhism.[15] According to scholars, South Korean censuses do not count believers in indigenous Sindo and underestimate the number of adherents of Sindo sects.[16] Otherwise, statistics compiled by the ARDA[17] estimate that as of 2010, 14.7% of South Koreans practice ethnic religion, 14.2% adhere to new movements, and 10.9% practice Confucianism.[18]
According to some observers, the sharp decline of some religions (Catholicism and Buddhism) recorded between the censuses of 2005 and 2015 is due to the change in survey methodology between the two censuses. While the 2005 census was an analysis of the entire population ("whole survey") through traditional data sheets compiled by every family, the 2015 census was largely conducted through the internet and was limited to a sample of about 20% of the South Korean population. It has been argued that the 2015 census penalised the rural population, which is more Buddhist and Catholic and less familiar with the internet, while advantaging the Protestant population, which is more urban and has easier access to the internet. Both the Buddhist and the Catholic communities criticised the 2015 census' results.[7]
Demographics
[edit]religion | 1950–1962[19] | 1985 | 1995[20] | 2005[21] | 2015[22] | 2024[23] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
num. | % | num. | % | num. | % | num. | % | num. | % | num. | % | |
Christianity (overall) |
— | — | 11,390,000 | 13,461,000 | 13,566,000 | 16,030,100 | ||||||
(Protestantism) | — | — | 8,505,000 | 8,446,000 | 9,676,000 | 10,342,000 | ||||||
(Catholicism) | — | — | 2,885,000 | 5,015,000 | 3,890,000 | 5,688,100 | ||||||
Buddhism | — | — | 10,154,000 | 10,588,000 | 7,619,000 | 8,790,700 | ||||||
other | — | — | — | — | — | — | 1,034,200 | |||||
non-religious | — | — | — | — | — | — | 26,372,100 |
|
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Religious affiliation by age (2024)
[edit]Age [25] | Protestantism | Catholicism | Buddhism | Other religions | No affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
18–29 | |||||
30–39 | |||||
40–49 | |||||
50–59 | |||||
60–69 | |||||
Above 70 | |||||
Other religions include Won Buddhism, Confucianism, Cheondoism, Daesun Jinrihoe, Daejongism, and Jeungsanism. |
Religious affiliation by gender (2024)
[edit][25] | Protestantism | Catholicism | Buddhism | Other religions | No affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Male | |||||
Female | |||||
Other religions include Won Buddhism, Confucianism, Cheondoism, Daesun Jinrihoe, Daejongism, and Jeungsanism. |
History
[edit]Before 1945
[edit]Before the introduction of Buddhism, all Koreans believed in their indigenous religion socially guided by mu (shamans). Buddhism was introduced from the Chinese Former Qin state in 372 to the northern Korean state of Goguryeo and developed into distinctive Korean forms. At that time, the peninsula was divided into three kingdoms: the aforementioned Goguryeo in the north, Baekje in the southwest, and Silla in the southeast. Buddhism reached Silla only in the 5th century, but it was made the state religion only in that kingdom in the year 552.[26] Buddhism became much more popular in Silla and even in Baekje (both areas now part of modern South Korea), while in Goguryeo the Korean indigenous religion remained dominant. In the following unified state of Goryeo (918–1392) Buddhism flourished, and even became a political force.[27]
The Joseon kingdom (1392–1910), adopted an especially strict version of Neo-Confucianism (i.e. Korean Confucianism) and suppressed and marginalised Korean Buddhism[28][29] and Korean shamanism.[9] Buddhist monasteries were destroyed, and their number dropped from several hundreds to a mere thirty-six; Buddhism was eradicated from the life of towns as monks and nuns were prohibited from entering them and were marginalised to the mountains.[29] These restrictions lasted until the 19th century.[30]
In the late 19th century, the Joseon state was politically and culturally collapsing.[31] The intelligentsia was looking for solutions to invigorate and transform the nation.[31] It was in this critical period that they came into contact with Western Christian missionaries who offered a solution to the plight of Koreans.[31] Christian communities had already existed in Joseon since the 17th century; however, it was only by the 1880s that the government allowed a large number of Western missionaries to enter the country.[32] Christian missionaries set up schools, hospitals and publishing agencies.[33] The royal family supported Christianity.[34]
As the Japanese tried to impose State Shinto during the absorption of Korea into the Japanese Empire (1910–1945), the already formed link of Christianity with Korean nationalism was strengthened,[11] co-opting within it native Korean Sindo, and Christians refused to take part in Shinto rituals.[11] At the same time, numerous religious movements that since the 19th century had been trying to reform the Korean indigenous religion, notably Cheondoism, flourished.[35]
1945–2015
[edit]With the division of Korea into two states in 1945, the communist north and the anti-communist south, the majority of the Korean Christian population that had been until then in the northern half of the peninsula,[12] fled to South Korea.[13] Christians who resettled in the south were more than one million. Cheondoists, who were concentrated in the north like Christians, remained there after the partition,[35] and South Korea now has no more than few thousands Cheondoists.
The so-called "movement to defeat the worship of gods" promoted by governments of South Korea in the 1970s and 1980s prohibited indigenous cults and wiped out nearly all traditional shrines (sadang 사당) of the Confucian kinship religion.[36] This was particularly tough under the rule of Park Chung Hee, who was a Buddhist.[37] This measure, combined with the rapid social changes of the same period,[5] favoured a rapid revival of Buddhism, as it traditionally intermingled with folk religion and allowed a way for these traditional believers to express their folk beliefs in the context of an officially accepted religion.[38] This period also saw the growth of Christian churches in a trend to register as members of organised religions.[39]
The number of Buddhist temples rose from 2,306 in 1962 to 11,561 in 1997, Protestant churches rose from 6,785 in 1962 to 58,046 in 1997, the Catholic Church had 313 churches in 1965 and 1,366 in 2005, Won Buddhism had 131 temples in 1969 and 418 in 1997.[40] Similarly, Daesun Jinrihoe's temples have grown from 700 in 1983 to 1,600 in 1994.[41] Statistics from censuses show that the proportion of the South Korean population self-identifying as Buddhist has grown from 2.6% in 1962 to 22.8% in 2005,[5] while the proportion of Christians has grown from 5% in 1962 to 29.2% in 2005.[5] However, both religions have shown a decline between the years 2005 and 2015, with Buddhism sharply declining in influence to 15.5% of the population, and a less significant decline of Christianity to 27.6%.[42]
According to Pew Research Center (2010), about 46% of the population had no religious affiliation, 23% are Buddhist and 29% are Christians.[43] According to 2015 national census, 56.1% are irreligious, Protestantism represents (19.7%) of the total population, Korean Buddhism (15.5%), and Catholicism (7.9%). A small percentage of South Koreans (0.8% in total) are members of other religions, including Won Buddhism, Confucianism, Cheondoism, Daesun Jinrihoe, Islam, Daejongism, Jeungsanism and Eastern Orthodox Christianity.[25]
2015–present
[edit]In response to the rapidly changing demographics of religion in South Korea, 여론 속의 여론 (Yeolon Sog-ui Yeolon) a Korean research journal, performed a survey on the present religious demographic in South Korea. According to the survey, new results deviate from the traditional sentiments of South Korean culture. While much of the population is irreligious, Protestants make up the largest religious group.[45] The latter half of the population that are religious, are split in the following way: 20% believe in Protestantism, 16% believe in Buddhism, 13% believe in Catholicism, and 1% believe in other religions or cults. Essentially, the studies findings show that 50% of South Koreans are now non-religious, 32% follow some section of Christianity, 16% are Buddhist, and 2% believe in some other form of religion. The deviation from the traditionally religious South Korean culture and demographics is the rise of atheism.
Previous to this sudden change, A Cohort Analysis of Religious Population Change in Korea[46] launched by the Korean Citation Index analyzed South Korean religious demographics from 1999 to 2015. The data from the study focused on understanding religious conversion, switching, or abandonment within the demographic. Today, the study has given insight on the potential effects of the deviation in South Korea's religious demographic.
The study performed by the research journal, 여론 속의 여론 (Yeolon Sog-ui Yeolon), discovered that the change in the South Korean religious demographics stemmed from the youth. The younger demographic of South Korea tend to have a higher percentage of atheists, while the older demographics have remained relatively religious. The study states that 33% of South Koreans who are around the age of 20 believe in religion, while above 61% of those aged 60 or older continue to believe in religion. The study also reveals that the demographic of believers and non believers are also affected by many more variables. For example, the specific religion and the age at which the religion was introduced to the individual can have effects on the probability of an individual to stay religious throughout their lives. Overall, there seems to be a large deviation between those who were introduced to religion before elementary and those who were introduced after their 50s. Of 101 individuals interviewed, 29 were introduced to religion before elementary school, 18 during elementary, 9 in their 40s, and 7 in their 50s. While Catholicism and Protestantism maintained a similar standard deviation, believers of Buddhism seemed to start during and near their 30s. With the younger generation of South Korea remaining increasingly non-religious and South Korea traditionally being a religious nation, the developments of South Korea's religious demographics will have many implications on the nation's culture, politics, and way of life.
Protestant attacks on traditional religions
[edit]Since the 1980s and the 1990s, there have been acts of hostility committed by Protestants against Buddhists and followers of traditional religions in South Korea. This include the arson of temples, the beheading of statues of Buddha and bodhisattvas, and red Christian crosses painted on either statues or other Buddhist and other religions' properties.[47] Some of these acts have even been promoted by churches' pastors.[47]
Dominant religions
[edit]Buddhism
[edit]Arrival and spread since 4th century
[edit]Buddhism (불교/佛敎 Bulgyo) entered Korea from China during the period of the three kingdoms (372, or the 4th century).[26] Buddhism was the dominant religious and cultural influence in the North–South States Period (698–926) and subsequent Goryeo (918–1392) states. Confucianism was also brought to Korea from China in early centuries, and was formulated as Korean Confucianism in Goryeo. However, it was only in the subsequent Joseon kingdom (1392–1910) that Korean Confucianism was established as the state ideology and religion, and Korean Buddhism underwent 500 years of suppression.[28][29] Buddhism in the contemporary state of South Korea is stronger in the east of the country, namely the Yeongnam and Gangwon regions, as well as in Jeju.[citation needed]
Denominations
[edit]Korean Zen or Seon Buddhism
[edit]There are a number of different schools in Korean Buddhism (대한불교/大韓佛敎 Daehanbulgyo), including the Seon (Korean Zen). Seon is represented by Jogye Order and Taego Order.[49] The overwhelming majority of Buddhist temples in contemporary South Korea belong to the dominant Jogye Order, traditionally related to the Seon school. The order's headquarters are at Jogyesa in central Seoul, and it operates most of the country's old and famous temples, such as Bulguksa and Beomeosa. Jogye requires their monastics to be celibate. Taego lineage is a form of Seon (Zen) and it differs from Seon by allowing priests to marry.[citation needed]
Jingak and Cheontae Buddhism
[edit]Jingak Order, is a modern esoteric form of Vajrayana Buddhism, which also permits its priests to marry. Cheontae is a modern revival of the Tiantai lineage in Korea, focusing on the Lotus Sutra. Cheontae orders requires their monastics to be celibate.[49]
Won Buddhism
[edit]Won Buddhism (원불교/圓佛敎 Wonbulgyo) is a modern reformed Buddhism that seeks to make enlightenment possible for everyone and applicable to regular life. The scriptures and practices are simplified so that anyone, regardless of their wealth, occupation, or other external living conditions, can understand them.[50]
Growth: Number of temples by denomination
[edit]School | Temples |
---|---|
Jogye Order (조계종/曹溪宗) | 735 (81%) |
Cheontae Order (천태종/天台宗) | 144 (16%) |
Taego Order (태고종/太古宗) | 102 (11%) |
Beobhwa Order (법화종/法華宗) | 22 (2%) |
Seonhag-won (선학원/禪學院) | 16 (2%) |
Wonhyo Order (원효종/元曉宗) | 5 (1%) |
Other | 27 (3%) |
Buddhism's syncretic influence on Korea culture
[edit]According to a 2005 government survey, a quarter of South Koreans are practicing Buddhist.[52] However, the actual number of Buddhists in South Korea is ambiguous as there is no exact or exclusive criterion by which Buddhists can be identified, unlike the Christian population. With Buddhism's incorporation into traditional Korean culture, it is now considered a philosophy and cultural background rather than a formal religion. As a result, many people outside of the practicing population are deeply influenced by these traditions. Thus, when counting secular believers or those influenced by the faith while not following other religions, the number of Buddhists in South Korea is considered to be much larger.[53] Similarly, in officially atheist North Korea, while Buddhists officially account for 4.5% of the population, a much larger number (over 70%) of the population are influenced by Buddhist philosophies and customs.[54][55]
Christianity
[edit]Arrival in late 18th century
[edit]Foreign Catholic missionaries did not arrive in Korea until 1794, a decade after the return of Yi Sung-hun, a diplomat who was the first baptised Korean in Beijing.[56] He established a grass roots lay Catholic movement in Korea. However, the writings of the Jesuit missionary Matteo Ricci, who was resident at the imperial court in Beijing, had been already brought to Korea from China in the 17th century. Scholars of the Silhak ("Practical Learning") were attracted to Catholic doctrines, and this was a key factor for the spread of the Catholic faith in the 1790s.[57]
Denominations
[edit]Christianity (그리스도교/----敎 Geurisdogyo or 기독교/基督敎 Gidoggyo, both meaning religion of Christ) in South Korea is dominated by four denominations: Catholic (천주교/天主敎 pronounced Cheonjugyo), Protestant Presbyterianism (장로교 pronounced Jangnogyo), Methodism (감리교 pronounced Gamnigyo) and Baptists (침례교 pronounced Chimnyegyo). The Yoido Full Gospel Church is the largest Pentecostal church in the country. Some non-denominational churches also exist.[58] According to 2015 census, Protestants and Catholics numbered 9.6 million and 3.8 million respective. There are also small Eastern Orthodox communities.
Protestantism
[edit]Protestant missionaries entered Korea during the 1880s and, along with Catholic priests, converted a remarkable number of Koreans, this time with the support of the royal government which winked at Westernising forces in a period of deep internal crisis (due to the waning of centuries-long patronage from a then-weakened China).[34] The lack of a national religious system compared to those of China and that of Japan (Korean Sindo never developed to a high status of institutional and civic religion) gave a free hand to Christian churches.[8] Methodist and Presbyterian missionaries were especially successful. They established schools, universities, hospitals, and orphanages and played a significant role in the modernisation of the country.[33]
Anglican Church of Korea also is one of Protestant denominations. Unlike other protestant denominations in Korea, it is influenced by Commonwealth realms such as Church of England, Scottish Episcopal Church, Anglican Church of Canada, Anglican Church of Australia, Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia rather than North American missionaries. They concentrate on harmonisation of Traditional Korean Architecture and European Architecture such as Ganghwa Anglican Cathedral and usually invest on School and supporting minorities such as labourers and LGBT in Korea.
Catholicism
[edit]The penetration of Western ideas and Christianity in Korea became known as Seohak ("Western Scholar"). A study of 1801 found that more than half of the families that had converted to Catholicism were linked to the Seohak school.[59] Largely because converts refused to perform Confucian ancestral rituals, the Joseon government prohibited Christian proselytising. Some Catholics were executed during the early 19th century, but the restrictive law was not strictly enforced. A large number of Christians lived in the northern part of the peninsula (it was part of the so-called "Manchurian revival")[34] where Confucian influence was not as strong as in the south.[12] Before 1948 Pyongyang was an important Christian centre: one-sixth of its population of about 300,000 people were converts. Following the establishment of the communist regime in the north, an estimated more than one million Korean Christians resettled to South Korea to escape persecution by North Korea's anti-Christian policies.[13] Catholicism in Korea grew significantly during the 1970s to 1980s.[60]
Orthodoxy
[edit]Orthodox Christian missionaries entered Korea from Russia in 1900. In 1903, the first Eastern Orthodox church in Korea was established. However, the Russo-Japanese War in 1904 and the Russian Revolution in 1917 interrupted the activities of the mission. After the North's army abducted Korea's only Orthodox priest at the time, Fr. Alexi Kim, at the start of the Korean War in 1950, and after the St. Nicholas Church building was destroyed by the 1951 bombing of Seoul, the small flock of Orthodox faithful was at risk of annihilation. In 1955, the Orthodox faithful of Korea wrote a letter to the Holy Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate asking to come under the Ecumenical Patriarchate's spiritual care and jurisdiction. Their request was granted, and the development and growth of the Church in Korea began to accelerate. Today, the roughly 5,000 Orthodox faithful of Korea remain under the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, whose Holy Synod elevated the flourishing Church in Korea in 2004 to the status of a "Metropolis."[61] The non-Chalcedonian Coptic Church of Alexandria was first established in Seoul in 2013 for Egyptian Copts and Ethiopians residing in South Korea.[62]
Others
[edit]The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in South Korea was established following the baptism of Kim Ho Jik in 1951,[63] which had 81,628 members in 2012 with one temple in Seoul,[64] four Mormon missions (Seoul, Daejeon, Busan, and Seoul South),[65] 128 congregations, and twenty-four family history centres.[66]
There are an estimated 2 million South Koreans who attend fringe churches not recognized by the Christian Council of Korea, the Communion of Churches in Korea and the Council of Denomination Heads for Korean Church Unity.[67]
Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church (통일교 Tongilgyo)[68] is a new religious movement founded in South Korea in 1954 by Sun Myung Moon, which has financed many organizations and businesses in news media, education, politics and social activism.[69] In 2003, Korean Unification Church members started a political party named "The Party for God, Peace, Unification, and Home".[70]
World Mission Society Church of God, Victory Altar, Shincheonji Church, Christian Gospel Mission (also known as JMS or Providence), Grace Road Church and Evangelical Baptist Church of Korea are other Korean new religious movements that originated within Christianity.[71][72][73] Other fringe Christian churches include the Manmin Central Church.[74]
Causes of growth of Christianity
[edit]Factors contributing to the growth of Catholicism and Protestantism included the decayed state of Korean Buddhism, the support of the intellectual elite, and the encouragement of self-support and self-government among members of the Korean church, and finally the identification of Christianity with Korean nationalism.[34] Christianity grew significantly in the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1990s and 2000s it continued to grow, but at a slower rate. Christianity is especially dominant in the west of the country including Seoul, Incheon, and the regions of Gyeonggi and Honam.[58]
Opposition to syncretic traditions
[edit]Fundamentalist Christians continue to oppose the syncretic aspects of the culture including Confucian traditions and ancestral rites practiced even by secular people and followers of other faiths.[75][76][77][78][79][53] Consequently, many Korean Christians, especially Protestants, have abandoned these native Korean traditions.[80][58] Protestants in Korea have a history of attacking Buddhism and other traditional religions of Korea with arson and vandalism of temple and statues, some of these hostile acts have been promoted by the church.[47]
After the ban on traditional civil rites was lifted by Pope Pius XII in 1939,[75] many Korean Catholics openly observe jesa (ancestral rites); the Korean tradition is very different from the institutional religious ancestral worship that is found in China and Japan and can be easily integrated as ancillary to Catholicism. Protestants, by contrast, have completely abandoned the practice.[58]
Indigenous religions
[edit]Korean shamanism
[edit]Korean shamanism, also known as "Muism" (무교 Mugyo, "mu [shaman] religion")[81] and "Sindo" (신도) or "Sinism" (신교 Singyo "Way of the Gods").[82][83] is the native religion of the Koreans.[84][note 1] Although used synonymously, the two terms are not identical:[84] Jung Young Lee describes Muism as a form of Sindo - the shamanic tradition within the religion.[85] Particularly akin to Japan's Shinto, contrariwise to it and to China's religious systems, Korean Sindo never developed into a national religious culture.[8][clarification needed]
In contemporary Korean language the shaman-priest or mu (Hanja: 巫) is known as a mudang (Korean: 무당; Hanja: 巫堂) if female or baksu if male, although other names and locutions are used.[84][note 2] Korean mu "shaman" is synonymous with Chinese wu, which denotes priests both male and female.[85] The role of the mudang is to act as intermediary between the spirits or gods and the human plane, through gut (rituals), seeking to resolve problems in the patterns of development of human life.[87]
Central is interaction with Haneullim or Hwanin, meaning "source of all being",[88] and of all gods of nature,[85] the utmost god or the supreme mind.[89] The mu are mythically described as descendants of the "Heavenly King", son of the "Holy Mother [of the Heavenly King]", with investiture often passed down through female princely lineage.[90] However, other myths link the heritage of the traditional faith to Dangun, male son of the Heavenly King and initiator of the Korean nation.[91]
Besides Japanese Shinto, Korean religion has also similarities with Chinese Wuism,[92] and is akin to the Siberian, Mongolian, and Manchurian religious traditions.[92] Some studies trace the Korean ancestral god Dangun to the Ural-Altaic Tengri "Heaven", the shaman and the prince.[93][94] In the dialects of some provinces of Korea the shaman is called dangul dangul-ari.[88] The mudang is similar to the Japanese miko and the Ryukyuan yuta. Muism has exerted an influence on some Korean new religions, such as Cheondoism and Jeungsanism. According to various sociological studies, Korea's type of Christianity owes much of its success to native shamanism, which provided a congenial mindset and models for the religion to take root.[95]
In the 1890s, the last decades of the Joseon kingdom, Protestant missionaries gained significant influence, and led a demonisation of native religion through the press, and even carried out campaigns of physical suppression of local cults.[96] The Protestant discourse would have had an influence on all further attempts to uproot native religion.[96] The "movement to destroy Sindo" carried out in South Korea in the 1970s and 1980s, destroyed much of the physical heritage of Korean religion (temples and shrines),[36] especially during the regime of President Park Chung Hee.[37][97][98] There has been of a revival of shamanism in South Korea in most recent times.[99][100]
Cheondoism
[edit]Cheondoism (천도교 Cheondogyo) is a fundamentally Confucian religious tradition derived from indigenous Sinism. It is the religious dimension of the Donghak ("Eastern Learning") movement that was founded by Choe Je-u (1824–1864), a member of an impoverished yangban (aristocratic) family,[101] in 1860 as a counter-force to the rise of "foreign religions",[102] which in his view included Buddhism and Christianity (part of Seohak, the wave of Western influence that penetrated Korean life at the end of the 19th century).[102] Choe Je-u founded Cheondoism after having been allegedly healed from illness by an experience of Sangje or Haneullim, the god of the universal Heaven in traditional shamanism.[102]
The Donghak movement became so influential among common people that in 1864 the Joseon government sentenced Choe Je-u to death.[102] The movement grew and in 1894 the members gave rise to the Donghak Peasant Revolution against the royal government. With the division of Korea in 1945, most of the Cheondoist community remained in the north, where the majority of them dwelled.[35] Only few thousands of them remain in South Korea today.
The social and historical significance of the Donghak movement and Cheondoism has been largely ignored in South Korea,[103] contrarywise to North Korea where Cheondoism is viewed positively as a folk (minjung) movement.[103]
Other sects
[edit]Apart from Cheondoism, other sects based on indigenous religion were founded between the end of the 19th century and the early decades of the 20th century. They include Daejongism (대종교 Daejonggyo),[104] which has as its central creed the worship of Dangun, legendary founder of Gojoseon, thought of as the first proto-Korean kingdom; and a splinter sect of Cheondoism: Suwunism.[citation needed]
Jeungsanism (증산교 Jeungsangyo) defines a family of religions founded in the early 20th century[105] that emphasise magical practices and millenarian teachings of Kang Jeungsan (Gang Il-Sun). There are more than a hundred "Jeungsan religions," including the now defunct Bocheonism: the largest in Korea is currently Daesun Jinrihoe (대순진리회), an offshoot of the still existing Taegeukdo (태극도), while Jeungsando (증산도) is the most active overseas.[106]
There are also a number of small religious sects, which have sprung up around Gyeryongsan ("Rooster-Dragon Mountain", always one of Korea's most-sacred areas) in South Chungcheong Province, the supposed future site of the founding of a new dynasty originally prophesied in the 18th century (or before). Japanese Tenriism (천리교 Cheonligyo) also claims to have thousands of South Korean members.[107]
According to Andrew Eungi Kim, there was a rise of new religious movements in the late 1900s which account for about 10 percent of all churches in South Korea. According to Kim, this is the outcome of foreign invasions, as well as conflicting views regarding social and political issues. Many of the new religious movements are syncretic in character.[108]
Other religions
[edit]Bahá'í Faith
[edit]Baháʼí Faith was first introduced to Korea by an American woman named Agnes Alexander.[109]
Confucianism
[edit]Only few contemporary South Koreans identify as adherents of Confucianism (유교 Yugyo). Korean intellectuals historically developed a distinct Korean Confucianism.[110][111] However, with the end of the Joseon state and the wane of Chinese influence in the 19th and 20th century, Confucianism was abandoned. The influence of Confucian ethical thought remains strong in other religious practices, and in Korean culture in general. Confucian rituals are still practised at various times of the year. The most prominent of these are the annual rites held at the Shrine of Confucius in Seoul. Other rites, for instance those in honour of clan founders, are held at shrines found throughout the country.[112][113]
Hinduism
[edit]Hinduism (힌두교 Hindugyo) is practiced among South Korea's small Indian, Nepali and Balinese migrant community. However, Hindu traditions such as yoga and Vedanta have attracted interest among younger South Koreans. Hindu temples in the Korea include the Sri Radha Shyamasundar Mandir in central Seoul, Sri Lakshmi Narayanan Temple in metropolitan Seoul, Himalayan Meditation and Yoga Sadhana Mandir in Seocho in Seoul, and Sri Sri Radha Krishna temple in Uijeongbu 20 km away on outskirt of Seoul.[114]
Islam
[edit]There are around a hundred thousand foreign workers from Muslim countries, particularly Indonesians, Malaysians, Bruneians, Pakistanis, Kazakhs and Bangladeshis.[115]
Judaism
[edit]Shinto
[edit]During Japan's colonisation of Korea (1910–1945), given the suggested common origins of the two peoples, Koreans were considered to be outright part of the Japanese population, to be wholly assimilated. The Japanese studied and coopted native Sindo by overlapping it with their State Shinto (similar measures of assimilation were applied to Buddhism), which hinged upon the worship of Japanese high gods and the emperor's godhead. Hundreds of Japanese Shinto shrines were built throughout the peninsula.[116] This policy led to massive conversion of Koreans to Christian churches, which were already well ingrained in the country, representing a concern for the Japanese program, and supported Koreans' independence.[117] After the Allied forces defeated Japan in 1945, Korea was liberated from Japanese rule. As soon as the Shinto priests withdrew to Japan, all Shinto shrines in Korea were either destroyed or converted into another use.[citation needed]
There is a tiny presence of Sect Shinto groups, Zenrinkyo and Daehan Cheolligyo, in South Korea today.
Sikhism
[edit]Sikhs have been in South Korea for 50 years. The first South Korean gurdwara was established in 2001.[118] There are about 550 Sikhs in South Korea, now recently the Sikhs in South were allowed to acquire South Korean citizenship.[119]
See also
[edit]- Freedom of religion in North Korea
- Freedom of religion in South Korea
- Irreligion in South Korea
- Religion in Korea
- Religion in North Korea
- Taoism in Korea
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Cognates of Japanese Shinto and Chinese Shendao.
- ^ Another term is dangol (Korean: 당골). The word mudang is mostly associated, though not exclusively, to female shamans due to their prevalence in the Korean tradition in recent centuries. This has brought to the development of other locutions for male shamans, including sana mudang (literally "male mudang") in the Seoul area or baksu mudang ("healer mudang"), shortened to baksu, in the Pyongyang area. It is reasonable to believe that the word baksu is an ancient authentic designation for male shamans.[86]
References
[edit]- ^ [Status of religious population and religious activities in South Korea (2024)] https://hrcopinion.co.kr/archives/31599.
{{cite web}}
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missing title (help) - ^ Song, Kyung Ho (4 September 2024). '신의 존재' 믿지 않는 한국인… 26개국 중 최하위권 [South Koreans Among Least Likely to Believe in God Among 26 Countries]. Christian Today. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
- ^ "Religion". Korea.net. Archived from the original on 23 May 2015. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
- ^ Lesage, Jonathan Evans, Alan Cooperman, Kelsey Jo Starr, Manolo Corichi, William Miner and Kirsten (17 June 2024). "Religion and Spirituality in East Asian Societies". Pew Research Center. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d e f Pyong Gap Min, 2014.
- ^ WIN-Gallup International: "Global Index of Religiosity and Atheism 2012" Archived 21 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ a b Kim Han-soo, Shon Jin-seok. 신자 수, 개신교 1위… "종교 없다" 56%. The Chosunilbo, 20/12/2016. Retrieved 02/07/2017.
- ^ a b c Ogata, Mamoru Billy (1984). A Comparative Study of Church Growth in Korea and Japan: With Special Application to Japan. Fuller Theological Seminary. p. 32 ff.
- ^ a b Joon-sik Choi, 2006. p. 15
- ^ Grayson, 2002. pp. 155-187
- ^ a b c Grayson, 2002. pp. 158-161
- ^ a b c Grayson, 2002. p. 158, p. 162
- ^ a b c Grayson, 2002. p. 163
- ^ Lankov, Andrei. The Real North Korea: Life and Politics in the Failed Stalinist Utopia. Oxford University Press, 2014. ISBN 0199390037. p. 9.
- ^ Kendall, 2010. pp. 4-17
- ^ Baker, 2008. pp. 4-5
- ^ "Quality Data on Religion". The Association of Religion Data Archives. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
- ^ "The Republic of South Korea: Religious Adherents, 2010 (World Christian Database)". Association of Religion Data Archives. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- ^ 한국의 개신교 발전: 긍정적 요소와 부정적 요소 [Development of Protestantism in South Korea: Positive and Negative Elements]. AATF (in Korean). 31 October 2014. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
- ^ 통계청 제19차 인구주택총조사(2015) [South Korea National Statistical Office's 19th Population and Housing Census (2015)] (in Korean). Retrieved 9 October 2022.
- ^ 통계청 제19차 인구주택총조사(2015) [South Korea National Statistical Office's 19th Population and Housing Census (2015)] (in Korean). Retrieved 9 October 2022.
- ^ 통계청 제19차 인구주택총조사(2015) [South Korea National Statistical Office's 19th Population and Housing Census (2015)] (in Korean). Retrieved 9 October 2022.
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문화관광부의 2005년 5월 자료에 따르면 우리나라에는 907개의 사찰이 있는데, 이를 종단별로 보면, 대한불교조계종 735개소(81%), 한국불교태 고종 102개소(11%), 대한불교법화종 22개소(2%), 선학원 16개소(2%), 대한불교원효종 5개소(1%), 기타 27개소(3%) 순이다.
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Sources
[edit]- Daniel Tudor. Korea: The Impossible Country. Tuttle Publishing, 2012. ISBN 0804842523
- Donald L. Baker. Korean Spirituality. University of Hawaii Press, 2008. ISBN 0824832574
- Donald L. Baker. Modernization and Monotheism: How Urbanization and Westernization Have Transformed the Religious Landscape of Korea. University of British Columbia. Published in: Sang-Oak Lee, Gregory K. Iverson, Pathways into Korean Language and Culture: Essays in Honor of Young-key Kim-Renaud. Pajigong Press, Seoul, 2003. pp. 471–507
- James H. Grayson. Korea - A Religious History. Routledge, 2002. ISBN 070071605X
- Joon-sik Choi. Folk-Religion: The Customs in Korea. Ewha Womans University Press, 2006. ISBN 8973006282
- Jung Young Lee. Korean Shamanistic Rituals. Mouton De Gruyter, 1981. ISBN 9027933782
- Laurel Kendall. Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF: South Korean Popular Religion in Motion. University of Hawaii Press, 2010. ISBN 0824833988
- Lee Chi-ran. Chief Director, Haedong Younghan Academy. The Emergence of National Religions in Korea.
- Pyong Gap Min, Development of Protestantism in South Korea: Positive and Negative Elements. On: Asian American Theological Forum (AATF) 2014, VOL. 1 NO. 3, ISSN 2374-8133
- Robert E. Buswell, Timothy S. Lee. Christianity in Korea. University of Hawaii Press, 2007. ISBN 082483206X
- Sang Taek Lee. Religion and Social Formation in Korea: Minjung and Millenarianism. Walter de Gruyter & Co, 1996. ISBN 3110147971
- Sorensen, Clark W. University of Washington. The Political Message of Folklore in South Korea's Student Demonstrations of the Eighties: An Approach to the Analysis of Political Theater. Paper presented at the conference "Fifty Years of Korean Independence", sponsored by the Korean Political Science Association, Seoul, Korea, July 1995.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Religion in South Korea at Wikimedia Commons
- Quotations related to Religion in South Korea at Wikiquote