Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Persecution in North Korea: Learning from Pastor Han’s faithful witness
Persecution in North Korea: Learning from Pastor Han’s faithful witness
Nov 13, 2025 2:27 PM

Struggling under the weight munism, North Korea is increasingly known as a land of poverty and hardship, ranked last among nations when es to economic freedom and religious liberty.

What’s less discussed, however, is the importance of each of those features, taken together. Economic and religious life are closely connected, making the preservation of both absolutely essential if society is to flourish.

In a new short film from Voice of the Martyrs, we get a small glimpse of this reality through the story of Pastor Han Chung Ryeol, a Chinese missionary who shared the Gospel with at least 1,000 North Koreans before being assassinated by their government. Watch below:

The story is told from the perspective of Sang-chul, one of Pastor Han’s North Korean disciples, who first got to know the pastor through a series of economic exchanges, which soon grew into a years-long relationship.

Due to the lack of food and work in North Korea, Sang-chul had begun to seek opportunity elsewhere—sneaking across the Chinese border to sell mushrooms that he would harvest along the way. During one such journey, he encountered a man (later identified as Pastor Han) who offered to help sell his mushrooms for a fair price in nearby Chinese cities.

Sang-chul was perplexed that the man would help him in such way—risking severe government penalties for no personal economic gain. Nevertheless, the partnership continued, prompting Sang-chul to eventually ask the man about his motives.

“I asked why he would do this, for he himself was in great danger for assisting a North Korean.” explains Sang-chul. “‘It is because I’m a Christian,’ [Pastor Han] said. I was afraid.”

Sang-chul knew that such an admission could easily lead to imprisonment in a concentration camp. Further, he had been taught that Christian missionaries were dangerous and capable of great violence.Yet Pastor Han’s economic witness resembled something far different from the government’s caricatures. He set an example of generosity, sacrifice, and love. Throughout their mundane interactions, Pastor Han had offered him hope, and Sang-chul wanted to learn more, regardless of the potential consequences. He would eventually give his life to Christ.

Years later, he heard of Pastor Han’s assassination, but it would not deter him in sharing his faith. “Pastor Han gave his life, but he gave hope to me and to many other North Koreans,” Sang-chul says. “Despite the ever present danger, many of us will continue to share the message that God is real.”

It’s pelling story for a number of reasons, and it’s sure to passion, prayer, and reflection around persecuted peoples around the world. As one area of reflection, it’s worth returning to that original topic of economic freedom and religious liberty, taken together.

In the case of Sang-chul, economic exchange served as the initial risk of government retribution, but it also served as the context for evangelism. Trust was developed between two strangers—trust that confounded particular notions of self-interest and self-protection—and through the proceeding partnership, Sang-chul was able to encounter a uniquely Christian witness—all before even hearing the name “Jesus.”

In his efforts to love his neighbors, Pastor Han was not waiting for Christianity to e popular in North Korea, nor was he waiting for the government to allow or sanction his missionary work. He was simply serving Sang-chul’s economic needs, regardless of the risk to his life, and proceeded to offer much, much more. He was acting as though he had full economic and religious freedom, despite having neither. As a result, individual transformation ensued.

As Jay Richards writes in One and Indivisible, pilation of essays on the topic, “the philosophical basis for religious freedom rests on the same foundation as the case for economic freedom: individual rights, freedom of association and the family, and the presence of a government with limited jurisdiction.”

Both areas rely on a recognition of the dignity of every human person. Both rest on a foundation of freedom of association. Both require a properly constrained government, or, as Richards puts it, “a government limited by laws.” In turn, each is necessary for the other to thrive and survive.

Because the economic and religious realms involve man as an individual, as a member of a family, and as a member of society, it is unrealistic to imagine that we can cordon off our religious liberty from our economic liberty.

….[A]n environment in which economic liberty is enjoyed is one in which religious liberty is likely to be enjoyed and vice versa. It is a virtuous circle. Similarly, in environments where our economic liberty is restrained, either by the state or by general lawlessness, our religious liberty is likely to suffer as well. This is a vicious circle.

It may seem overly simplistic to focus so closely on the context of Pastor Han’s interactions, but in doing so, we are reminded that violations of human dignity and conscience inevitably run deep and wide, despite the state’s preferred scope of tyranny. Conversely, being truly free in one area is bound to lead to plenty of freedom in the other, as well.

As we contemplate new ways to support persecuted and oppressed peoples around the world, Sang-chul’s story reminds us that any solution mustn’t be too focused or relegated to one area or the other.

“If we wish to preserve religious liberty,” Richards concludes, “what we need are robust defenses of both economic and religious liberty, framed in a way that makes it clear that these two liberties, these two freedoms, are mutually reinforcing and indivisible.”

Image: North Korea, Pyongyang (Pixabay License)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Kenyans Value Children, But Their Government Doesn’t
In the nation of Kenya, large families (4-5 children) are the norm. While it is difficult to make blanket statements about a nation as diverse as Kenya, children are typically valued in Kenyan families. One woman, Isabela Samora, recounts her experience of awaiting her first child: I can’t wait to see my baby. To be able to hold those tiny hands and see those feet that give me some serious kicks to the ribs. I can’t wait to look at...
The Hypocrisy of Requiring Business to Abandon their Conscience
Mary Ann Glendon makes an excellent point about the outcry for more corporate responsibility while government is simultaneously stripping away the rights of religious conscience of businesses. In The Boston Globe, Glendon notes, The simple truth is that if we want businesses, incorporated or not, to be responsible for their actions, they must be treated as having some moral agency. And with moral agency and accountability must go the freedom to act in accordance with conscience. The push to ghettoize...
Why Max Weber was wrong about capitalism
Sociologist Max Weber famously associated Protestantism with capitalism. Although widely accepted by many, that claim is theologically dubious, empirically disprovable, and largely incidental, says Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg: Even when we consider modern capitalism’s emergence, a direct connection between this event and Protestantism is very open to question. The economic historian Jacques Delacroix, for instance, has highlighted many facts about this period that Weber’s theory simply cannot account for. “Amsterdam’s wealth,” Delacroix writes, “was centered on Catholic families; the...
Sophia Institute 2013 Annual Conference
An icon of Christ as the Divine Sophia, the Wisdom of God (See Proverbs 8) by Eileen McGuckin This past Friday, I attended the Sophia Institute annual conference. I am a fellow of Sophia and presented a short paper there on Orthodox Christian monastic enterprise. The theme of the conference this year was “Monasticism, Asceticism and Holiness in the Eastern Orthodox World.” In addition to my paper, the subjects of the keynote addresses may interest readers of the PowerBlog. The...
Redeeming the DIA
mentators, apart from Virginia Postrel and the like, seem to think that it would be tragic for the city of Detroit to lose the art collection at the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) in the city’s bankruptcy proceedings. I agree that liquidating or “monetizing” the collection and shipping the works off to parts unknown like the spare pieces on a totaled car would be tragic. But at the same time, there’s something about the relationship between the DIA collection and...
What Should a Pope Say About Capitalism?
Pope Francis’ ments about economics has raised concerns among conservatives and libertarians. But at National Review, James Pethokoukis says free marketeers shouldn’t take the critique so personally: If you are a free marketeer offended by Pope Francis’s Evangelii Gaudium (“The Joy of the Gospel”) — in which he critiqued “deified” market capitalism and attacked e inequality — ask yourself: What should the leader of the worldwide Catholic Church say about economics in 2013? Should he take a victory lap over...
Wayne Grudem on the Solution to Global Poverty
“There is only one effective solution to world poverty,” says theologian Wayne Grudem in a recent lectureon his latest book, The Poverty of Nations, co-authored with economist Barry Asmus.That solution, he argues, is a rightly ordered free market, and such a solution, he goes further, is “consistent with the teachings of the Bible about productivity, property, government, and personal moral values.” Watch the whole thing here: Grudem’s primary question, “What causes wealth or poverty in the world?,” is not new,...
Audio: Jordan J. Ballor on the Economics of the Heidelberg Catechism
Did you miss Acton on Tap? You really shouldn’t miss Acton on Tap. That’s a bad idea. For instance, if you missed last night’s event, you passed up an opportunity to hear Jordan J. Ballor, Executive Editor of the Journal of Markets & Morality and author of Get Your Hands Dirty: Essays on Christian Social Thought (and Action), speak at San Chez Bistro in Grand Rapids, Michigan on the topic of the economics of the Heidelberg Catechism. He focused on...
Video: Samuel Gregg on Tea Party Catholic at the Acton Lecture Series
Samuel Gregg, Director of Research at the Acton Institute and author ing Europe: Economic Decline, Culture, and How America can Avoid a European Future, and more recentlyTea Party Catholic:The Catholic Case for Limited Government, a Free Economy, and Human Flourishing, delivered a lecture on November 7th in the Acton Building’s Mark Murray Auditorium focusing on the subject of his latest book as part of the 2013 Acton Lecture Series. We’ve embedded the video of his lecture below; if you’re interested...
Soccer, Swindling And Sex Trafficking: 10 Things To Know
The Fédération Internationale de Football Association is holding the World Cup in Brazil, June 2014.Six men have been arrested for fixing Premier League soccer matches.Earlier this month, two British men were arrested for fixing Australian soccer matches.Retired English striker Alan Shearer is calling for “zero tolerance” for fixing of soccer matches. Marcus Gayle, a former striker for Wimbledon, told BBC London regarding the fixing scandal: “I was disgusted that it is still around in the game.” The Minas Gerais state...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved