Korean students prepare for ministry via ''travelling theology''

Gyoung Ho Jeong: ''process of learning from life settings''

A Korean professor who has taken theology students to live with nomadic herders in Mongolia and with the urban poor in Viet Nam believes he may be creating a new branch of theology, one which he has dubbed « Travelling Theology ».

Gyoung Ho Jeong who teaches Christian social ethics at Youngnam Theological College and Seminary in Kyungsan is in Geneva for meetings of the executive committee of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (21-31 May).

Jeong described his novel approach to teaching theology in a review of initiatives by Reformed church institutions in response to economic and environmental concerns. In Mongolia, Jeong’s students learned from herders about living a lifestyle that respects the local ecology.

“The herders showed us that they could gather all their garbage for six months in one small plastic bag,” Jeong marvels. “Each time they cooked rice, they would put a few grains into the ground to say thank you to Grandmother Earth.”

Jeong laughs as he reports that students learned about caring for God’s creation by literally getting their hands dirty. “When the local people realized that we could not ride horses and would be of no use for herding, they assigned us to collect horse dung to enrich the soil!”

The Korean group observed that, despite the herders’ care for the environment, their drinking water is polluted by other sources and is causing high rates of kidney problems. The students left vowing to return with a kidney specialist. "This is a process of learning from life settings,” says Jeong. “It is not tourism.”

A second group of students travelled to Ho Chi Min City on a peace mission to bring apologies to local churches for Korea’s role in the American war in Viet Nam. Jeong says it is not widely known in Korea that from 1968 - 1971 there were Korean soldiers fighting alongside American troops.

“This involvement in the war effort helped Korea take off economically,” Jeong says. “We are now a rich country because of what we did. So we must apologize.”

The students were invited by the church in Viet Nam to visit congregations where they brought apologies, the first known to have been made by Korean Christians.

Seeing the poverty in the communities they visited, the students chose to eat frugally and to save their food money to contribute to a project which is building houses for the poor. The savings of USD $1500 will cover the costs of building three new homes.

“My job is to train seminarians who will work in the future world,” says Jeong. “These experiences will affect how their theology develops for years to come.”


Pressemitteilung des Reformierten Weltbundes (RWB) / WARC, 27. Mai 2009

Edmond Perret, former general secretary of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC), dies in Geneva

''The Reformed family of churches worldwide has lost a brilliant mind, a loving leader and a pastor committed to societal transformation''
The former general secretary of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC), Edmond Perret, has died aged 87 in Geneva, Switzerland. The Swiss pastor passed away Saturday 24 March.

WCRC, 28 March 2012

Reformed Communiqué

March 2012, Vol. 3 No. 1
WCRC focuses on the future - Indonesian churches discuss the future of mission work - Cuban theologian to lead Reformed church movement's Justice Office - From the General Secretary

Reformed church group and Mission Council seek closer ties

Covenanting towards an new ecumenical engagment Council for World Mission and World Communion of Reformed Churches
WCRC. The World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC) and the Council for World Mission (CWM) have issued a statement following a three-day meeting in Johannesburg, South Africa between leaders of the two organizations. Talks sought to chart new ways of working together. Participants at the talks included WCRC’s president, CWM’s moderator and the general secretaries of the two organizations.

WCRC, 23 February 2012
Migration - Austausch zwischen Pfarrern in Korea und der Schweiz - Antworten des Glaubens auf die Globalisierung - Generalsekretär Setri Nyomi zum Advent

WeltgemeinschaftsSonntag - ''Familienfest'' der Reformierten

Setri Nyomi: ''Wir werden zu Werkzeugen von Gottes Gerechtigkeit und Gottes Veränderung der Welt.''
Den ersten Sonntag im Oktober hat die Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen (WGRK) zum Weltgemeinschaftssonntag ausgerufen. Wuppertaler Reformierte kamen in der Gemarker Kirche zu einem Gottesdienst zusammen, an dem u.a. Rev. Dr. Setri Nyomi, Generalsekretär der WGRK, Präses Nikolaus Schneider mit seiner Frau Anne und der Moderator des Reformierten Bundes, Peter Bukowski, teilnahmen.

Muss die Weltgemeinschaft reformierter Kirchen Genf verlassen?

Geringe Geldmittel werden zur Finanznot, wenn der Schweizer Franken stark ist
Die Weltgemeinschaft reformierter Kirchen (WGRK) ist von dem Höhenflug des Schweizer Franken besonders hart betroffen, aber auch dem Ökumenischen Rat der Kirchen (Weltkirchenrat, ÖRK) und dem Lutherischen Weltbund (LWB) macht der derzeitige Wechselkurs zu schaffen.

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Geneva (ENInews)--The largest global grouping of Reformed churches has approved a strategic plan for 2011- 2017 that focuses on youth leadership development, increased collaboration with regional church groups, and a call to make visible the connection between Reformed theology and justice concerns.

ENI, 16. Mai 2011
Ein Besuch von Führungspersonen Schweizerischer Kantonalkirchen bei Vertretern von Leitungsorganen der Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen (WGRK) war Anlass zu einem Austausch über neue Perspektiven im Zusammenhang mit den Herausforderungen, vor denen Christinnen und Christen eines säkularisierten, wohlhabenden Landes stehen.

Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen, Medienmitteilung, 16. Mai 2011

Das neue update ist da

update11.1 - das reformierte Quartalsmagazin des Reformierten Bundes, März 2011 jetzt online
Der Heidelberger Katechismus in der Evangelisch-altreformierten Kirche in Niedersachsen - Reformierte in Weißrussland - Reformierte Theologie in der Johannes a Lasco Bibliothek - angedacht: Gute Hirten und die kirchliche Führungskrise
Für ihre außerordentlichen Verdienste um die Ausbildung von Frauen erhielt Agnes Lisulo Mulemwa aus Senanga, Sambia, am Sonntag, 20. März, in der Deutschen Kirche in Murten (FR) den internationalen Sylvia-Michel-Preis, verliehen von der Weltgemeinschaft Reformierter Kirchen in Zusammenarbeit mit den Präsidentinnen der Reformierten Kirchen der Schweiz.