Eschatology and Ecology: Experiences of the Korean Church.
Park, Joon-Sik
Eschatology and Ecology: Experiences of the Korean Church. By Paul
Hang-Sik Cho. Oxford: Regnum Books, 2010. Pp. xii, 260. 26.99 [pounds
sterling].
In Eschatology and Ecology, Paul Hang-Sik Cho of St. Andrew's
Theological Seminary in Manila, Philippines, grapples with Korean
Protestant Christianity's predominant indifference to ecological
concerns. An insightful study, it is the publication of the
author's doctoral thesis, completed in 2004 at the University of
Kent at Canterbury.
Cho painstakingly explores the link between Korean churches'
lack of ecological concerns and their prevalent other-worldly
eschatology, which is deeply rooted in dispensational premillennialism,
originally introduced by American missionaries. In part 1 he depicts in
detail the ecological state of Korea, identifying and analyzing its
destructive causes in relation to the country's rapid economic
development. Providing a brief historical background to traditional
Korean religions, part 2 focuses on examining the religious,
sociopolitical, and economic soil of premodern Korea, which was
conducive to the acceptance of the dispensational premillennialist
eschatology. Part 3 investigates the historical and theological backdrop
of dispensational premillennialism, critically probing the impact of its
pessimistic and escapist eschatology upon ecological issues. Cho
convincingly argues that this particular brand of millennialism has
espoused an eschatology that severely undermines Christians' sense
of environmental responsibility, for it embraces a dualistic worldview
and simply awaits a divinely ordained cataclysm.
Eschatology and Ecology is an important work that rightly calls
attention to the significance of the eschatological dimension in shaping
ecological attitudes in Korean Christianity. However, it does not fully
reflect on the complexity of Korean churches' social involvement,
which, at some critical junctures in the history of the nation, defied
the typical other-worldly, escapist social ethics of dispensational
premillennialism. These churches were a vanguard in the independence
movement against Japanese colonization, a prophetic advocate for
democracy under the suppressive government, and the soil for the
emergence of minjung theology during industrial modernization. Although
dispensational premillennialism undeniably shaped its dominant
eschatology, Korean Protestantism has manifested a complex and dynamic
pattern of social engagement.
Joon-Sik Park is the E. Stanley Jones Professor of World Evangelism
at the Methodist Theological School in Ohio, Delaware, Ohio.