HISTORY OF KOREA
Korea is one of the most important nations in world evangelism today—and why Korea will become even more important in the years to come.
God has placed His hand on Korea for a global purpose.
Korea is not just a nation.
Korea is a mission field turned mission force.
Korea Is One of the Great Missionary-Sending Nations
In the last half-century, Korea has become one of the world’s largest missionary-sending nations. Per capita, Korea is near the top of the world.
Think about it:
A small nation—once war-torn, once poor, once broken—
now sends missionaries to every continent, every major city, every unreached region.
This is not human achievement.
This is revival.
This is the power of God.
2. Korea Carries a Testimony the World Needs
The Korean story is a Gospel story.
A story of:
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suffering
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perseverance
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transformation
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resurrection
Korea was once one of the poorest nations on earth.
Now it is one of the most advanced.
People around the world want to know:
“How did this happen?”
And the Korean church can say clearly:
“It was the grace of God. It was the Gospel. It was prayer.”
Korea itself is a testimony of God’s healing and restoration.
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Why Korea Is Important in World Evangelism
1. Korea Is One of the Largest Missionary-Sending Nations in the World
For decades, South Korea has been:
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The #2 missionary-sending country (per capita) after the U.S.
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A global training hub for pastors, evangelists, and intercessors
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A nation with an unusually high ratio of missionaries to population
Korea punches far above its size in global missions.
This is not accidental—this is the result of:
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Revival
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Prayer movements
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Suffering that birthed perseverance
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National transformation through the Gospel
Korea’s missionary DNA is one of its spiritual callings.
2. Korea Has Experienced a Unique Revival Story that Inspires the World
Few nations have a testimony like Korea:
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From deep poverty → to world-leading economy
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From colonization and war → to global influence
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From shamanism and Buddhism → to one of the most Christianized countries in Asia
This testimony gives credibility when Koreans preach the Gospel.
People listen because they see how God transformed a nation in one generation.
Korea is a living story of redemption—and every missionary carries that story.
3. Korea Is Spiritually Positioned Between East and West
Geographically and spiritually, Korea is a bridge nation:
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Influenced by Western Christianity
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Culturally connected to East Asia
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Respected in the developing world
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Trusted in nations where Western missionaries struggle
Koreans are uniquely welcomed in:
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China
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Mongolia
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Southeast Asia
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Central Asia
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The Middle East
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Africa
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South America
They can enter places Americans or Europeans cannot.
Korea’s “middle identity” gives it unusual access in global missions.
4. Korea Has a Powerful Prayer and Intercession Movement
The Korean church is known for:
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Early morning prayer
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Fasting mountains
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All-night prayer vigils
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Worship that blends suffering and victory
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A deep culture of spiritual warfare
Prayer is the engine of missions.
Korea has been the intercessory backbone for world evangelism for 50 years.
Many nations testify:
“When Koreans prayed for us, revival came.”
5. Korean Christianity Has a Heart for the Unreached
Korean missionaries often choose difficult places:
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Muslim nations
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Restricted-access countries
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Persecuted regions
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Tribal areas
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Unreached people groups
Koreans tend to go where the need is greatest, not where it is easiest.
This sacrificial spirit is rare and precious.
6. Korea Has a Special Role in the Evangelization of North Korea
Korea’s greatest mission field is not across the ocean—
It is right next to it.
North Korea is:
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One of the most closed nations on earth
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A place of intense spiritual darkness
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A future mission field that will require massive preparation
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The potential spark for an Asian revival when freedom comes
South Korea will be the first responder spiritually, socially, and economically when North Korea opens.
Many Korean Christians believe they are called to be:
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Rebuilders
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Healers
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Evangelists
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Deliverers
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Pastors to the broken
The future evangelization of North Korea is one of Korea’s God-given assignments.
7. Korea Is Strategic for Evangelizing Asia—the Largest Mission Field on Earth
Asia contains:
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The greatest population
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The most unreached people groups
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The largest Muslim, Hindu, and Buddhist communities
Korea is ideally located to reach:
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China
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Japan
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Mongolia
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Southeast Asia
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India
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Central Asia
Christians in Asia often view Korea as:
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Culturally familiar
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Economically advanced
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Spiritually credible
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Non-colonial
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Non-threatening
Korea has unique access Western missionaries do not.
8. Korea’s Suffering History Prepared It for Global Missions
Korea’s past suffering created:
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Compassion
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Empathy
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Perseverance
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Endurance under persecution
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A heart for other suffering nations
Koreans resonate with:
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Tribal people
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War-torn societies
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Oppressed minorities
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Refugees
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Persecuted believers
This makes Korean missionaries deeply effective and relatable.
9. Korea Will Play a Role in the End-Time Harvest
Many Christian leaders worldwide believe:
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Korea has an end-time calling
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The Korean church will influence global revival
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A unified Korea will be a missionary powerhouse
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Korea will help re-open the Gospel Highway from Korea → China → Central Asia → Middle East
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Missionaries from Korea may help reach the final unreached groups
Some refer to this as the “Back to Jerusalem Movement, Korean Edition.”
Whether one uses that term or not, the spiritual influence of Korea continues to increase.
Summary: Why Korea Matters for World Evangelism
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Korea sends missionaries everywhere.
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Korea experienced a miracle revival that inspires the world.
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Korea is a bridge nation between cultures.
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Korea has a deep prayer tradition that powers missions.
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Korean missionaries go to the hardest places.
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Korea is called to evangelize North Korea.
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Korea is strategically located to reach the whole of Asia.
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Korea’s suffering created compassion for the world.
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Korea has a prophetic role in the end-time harvest.
Korea is not just another mission country—
Korea is a mission-sending nation with a global calling and a prophetic destiny.
Korea and world peace-mission
Why Korea Is Crucial for Future World Peace, Korean Unification, and INDOPACOM Stability
1. Korea Sits at the Most Strategic Crossroads in the World
The Korean Peninsula is the meeting point of four great powers:
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United States
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China
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Russia
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Japan
No other country in the world sits in a tighter geopolitical pressure zone than Korea.
If Korea is stable, the whole region stabilizes.
If Korea collapses, the entire Indo-Pacific destabilizes.
2. Korea Is the Frontline of Freedom in Asia
South Korea is:
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A democratic republic
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A major US ally
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A technological and economic powerhouse
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A key defender of religious freedom, human rights, and rule of law
North Korea is:
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A nuclear dictatorship
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A major proliferator of weapons
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One of the world’s worst human-rights abusers
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Linked to Iran, Hamas, Russia, and global illicit networks
The line between these two systems is not just political—it is civilizational.
The future of Korea will shape:
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Whether authoritarianism expands
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Whether democracy survives in Northeast Asia
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Whether freedom or totalitarianism influences the next generation
3. Korean Unification Would Reshape the Global Balance of Power
A peaceful, stable, unified Korea would be:
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The 8th–10th largest economy in the world
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A bridge nation between China, Japan, and the US
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A buffer against Russian and Chinese expansion
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A powerful model of redemption and reconciliation
Unification would also:
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Remove the most dangerous nuclear regime in the world
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End the largest concentration of forced labor camps
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Create new economic corridors from Seoul to Pyongyang to China/Russia
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Transform Northeast Asian infrastructure and trade
In geopolitical terms, a unified Korea would be one of the most influential countries in Asia.
4. Korea Is Essential to INDOPACOM’s Defensive Architecture
Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) depends heavily on Korea for:
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Forward-deployed US forces
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Missile defense and early-warning systems
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Naval and air power projection
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ISR (intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance)
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Anti-submarine capabilities
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Deterring China, Russia, and North Korea
If South Korea were ever compromised:
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Japan becomes isolated
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Taiwan becomes more vulnerable
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US deterrence collapses in East Asia
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China and Russia gain strategic dominance
Korea is the linchpin.
Without Korea, INDOPACOM cannot maintain regional balance.
5. Korea's Economy and Technology Affect Global Security
South Korea leads the world in:
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Semiconductors (memory chips)
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5G, AI, robotics
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Shipbuilding
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Cyber capability
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Drones and aerospace
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Autonomous defense systems
If Korea becomes unstable or absorbed by China or Russia, the world loses access to critical technologies.
Tech = power.
Korea = one of the world’s tech engines.
6. Spiritually, Korea Is a “Missional Hub” for Asia
From a Christian perspective:
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Korea is one of the world’s largest missionary-sending nations.
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Korean Christianity influences China, Japan, Mongolia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East.
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Revival in Korea has historically shaped global missions.
A unified Korea could become:
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A missionary bridge into North Korea, China, and Central Asia
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A model of reconciliation that demonstrates the Gospel’s power
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A training ground for emerging Asian Christian leaders
Many Christian leaders view Korea as a Joseph nation prepared for a larger role.
7. Korea Is a Barometer for Peace or Conflict in the 21st Century
The Korean Peninsula represents the fault line between:
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Democracy vs. dictatorship
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Freedom vs. oppression
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US alliance system vs. authoritarian bloc
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Open markets vs. controlled economies
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Christianity vs. State atheism
How Korea goes, the region goes.
How the region goes, the world goes.
If Korea becomes unified, stable, and prosperous →
Asia moves toward peace.
If Korea collapses into war or Chinese/Russian influence →
Asia enters crisis.
Why Korea Will Matter More in the Next 30 Years
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China is rising and threatening the region.
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Russia is militarizing again.
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North Korea is expanding nuclear weapons.
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Global supply chains depend on Korean and Japanese stability.
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The US needs forward presence in Asia.
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Faith movements in Asia are accelerating.
Korea is not a small nation—Korea is a strategic hinge-point for the future world order.
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