| Korean-American
bishop cites need for roots
May. 3, 2004 News media
contact: General Conference Newsroom * (412) 3256080* {GC04047}
NOTE: News media contact: after
May 10: (615) 742-5470.
By Jackie Campbell*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - The first
Korean-American bishop in the United Methodist Church emphasized the
importance of racial and ethnic churches in spreading the gospel of
Jesus Christ.
Bishop Hae-Jong Kim preached at
the May 3 morning worship service of the denomination's top
legislative assembly, General Conference. Kim leads the church's
Pittsburgh Area.
"Finding one's ethnic and racial
identity is so important to one's well-being," the bishop said.
"That's why it's so important that racial and ethnic churches are
there -- because people find their identity in their churches."
Kim likened ethnic churches to the
early church in Antioch, which he said first was made up only of
Jews, but later encompassed Gentiles and spurred the growth of
Christianity.
"Antioch is the mother of all
missionary churches," Kim said.
As immigrant and ethnic mission
churches help people find their identity and become rooted in
Christianity, they find wings to reach out and spread the gospel, he
said. As younger generations take over, the congregations often
become inclusive, multicultural Christian communities like the
church in Antioch.
"The Antioch church was a church
of roots, but it began to give wings to the people," he explained.
The bishop noted that the United
Methodist Church also has roots in an ethnic church, the Evangelical
United Brethren Church, which initially was made up of German
congregations.
Kim survived the Korean War as a
refugee with his mother, brother and two sisters, and he worked as a
U.S. Army chaplain's interpreter to support his family after his
father died. During that time, his mother converted to Christianity
and offered her four children to God.
After coming to the United States,
Kim was ordained in the United Methodist Church, served as a pastor
in New Jersey and was the first Korean-American elected a bishop.
His brother, the Rev. Joon Urn Kim, is pastor of First United
Methodist Church in Flushing, N.Y., a large Korean-American
congregation whose choir sang during the worship service.
The bishop acknowledged that U.S.
military forces that helped liberate South Korea during the Korean
War are one of the reasons "that we have hope on the Korean
peninsula today."
Lack of roots can promote an
identity crisis in individuals, he noted. He's particularly
concerned with helping adopted Korean children in the United States
to get to know their roots, he said.
But, the bishop said, "Sometimes
there is a danger in going back to the roots. Fundamentalists go
back to the Old Testament roots and stay there."
He noted, "Christ gave us an
identity ... beyond a national identity. The roots of the cross
reach to heaven," he said. "We have not only ethnic or national
roots, but roots to God."
Our roots give us wings; "we mount
up with wings like eagles," he added.
General Conference, too, brings
United Methodists back to their Wesleyan roots and gives them wings
to reach out, he said. "It is where we come to energize ... to give
us power to go into the world to serve God."
*Campbell is a staff writer for
the United Methodist Church's Western Pennsylvania Annual
Conference.
********************
United Methodist News
Service
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