Chilgol Church

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Chilgol Church
Exterior of Chilgol Church
Exterior of Chilgol Church
Chilgol Church is located in Pyongyang
Chilgol Church
Chilgol Church
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Location Kwangbok Street, Kwangbok, Pyongyang
Country North Korea
Denomination Protestant
History
Founded 1899 (1899)
Dedication Kang Pan-sok
Architecture
Years built 1989 (rebuilt)
Administration
Division Korean Christian Federation

Chilgol Church is one of the two Protestant churches in North Korea and is located on Kwangbok Street, Kwangbok in west Pyongyang.[1] It is dedicated to Kang Pan-sok, who was a Presbyterian deaconess and the mother of Kim Il-sung.[2]

History

The church was originally founded in 1899.[1] It was attended by Kang Pan-sok, the mother of Kim Il-sung who sometimes accompanied her there.[3]

The church was destroyed in June 1950 in the beginning of the Korean War by an American bombing.[1] Kim Il-sung ordered the church to be rebuilt on the spot where the original one associated with his mother had stood.[4] The church was rebuilt in its original style in 1989,[5] and placed under the authority of the Korean Christian Federation.[6]

There is a museum devoted to Kang near the church.[7]

Worship

The church welcomes believers on official visits as well as foreign travelers to Pyongyang, diplomats, and members of international organizations. Morale, patriotism and national unity are celebrated there and prayers are addressed to the reunification of the country.[1]

The congregation is about 150 persons.[8] North Korean defectors from outside Pyongyang have reported that they were not aware of the existence of the church.[2] The church is under lay leadership.[9] Protestant pastors are present in the church, but it is not known if they are resident or visiting pastors.[2]

The church is characterized as Protestant, but a denomination is not specified.[10]

Politics

South Korean missionaries consider the church to be an instrument of state propaganda.[11] South Korean pastor Han Sang-ryeol visited the church on 28 June 2010.[12] His travel to North Korea was not authorized by the government of his home country and he was sentenced to five years in prison upon his return to South Korea.[13]

See also

References

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