Where is Kim Jung-wook?
South Korean missionary Kim Jung-wook boarded a plane to North Korea on 7 October 2013. It was his last day as a free man. North Korean authorities arrested him the next day. He’s still being held in North Korea.
Kim Jung-wook would be 61 this year, if he’s still alive. As a missionary, he was involved in helping North Korean refugees. He provided shelter, food and other aid to defectors in hiding. He also taught them from the Bible.
In 2012, Kim Jung-wook’s work was compromised when police officers arrested a group of women who had received help from him. North Korean secret agents infiltrated his network, earned his trust and, in 2013, convinced him to come to North Korea. At their instigation, he even brought religious materials. He was arrested a day after his arrival.
North Korea interrogated the pastor and charged him with an attempt to overthrow the regime and spying for South Korea. On 14 February the following year, Kim Jung-wook appeared on North Korea state media and read out a statement. He claimed he had spied for the South Korean government, was paid by the South Korean intelligence agency and had set up an underground church.
He also ‘confessed’ that he had paid locals to set up 500 churches in North Korea to overthrow the regime. In 2014, a North Korean court sentenced Kim Jung-wook to life imprisonment and forced labour. Around the same time, North Korea arrested dozens of Kim Jung-wook’s contacts in the country. Most were sent to labour camps, although it’s likely a number of them have been executed.
More church leaders missing
Kim Jong-un’s regime has never given any updates about Kim’s fate since that court judgment – and he’s not the only foreign missionary who’s disappeared in North Korea.
Kim Kug-gi (70, if he’s still alive) and
Choi Chun-kil (64, if still alive) were arrested in December 2014, accused of espionage. Both have been locked up in a labour camp since 2015.
Ko Hyon-chol – a North Korean defector who had gained South Korean citizenship and become a missionary – was accused of plotting to kidnap North Korean children who would be sold for adoption in other countries. He was sentenced to a lifetime of hard labour in 2016.
Kim Won-ho – another North Korean defector who had become a South Korean citizen and a missionary – was abducted in March 2016.
Pastor Jang Moon-seok was involved in helping North Koreans, compelled by Jesus’ instruction to clothe the naked, and give a drink to the thirsty (Matthew 25:35-40). He was kidnapped in November 2014 and never heard of again, though some former prisoners claim to have met him.
‘Remember those who are in prison’
The Bible says, “Continue to remember those in prison as if you were together with them in prison, and those who are mistreated as if you yourselves were suffering” (Hebrews 13:3).
These faithful believers have been captives for a decade now. Please mention their names in your prayers, and please also pray for all those prisoners in North Korea whose names we don’t know.
please pray
- For each six believers by name, asking God to protect them, hold them near to His heart and empower them in all situations
- That all Christians imprisoned in North Korea will be engulfed by God’s peace and presence
- That the Holy Spirit will come in power upon Kim Jong-un and his government, softening their hearts and leading them to Jesus.
please give
Your gift will go to believers from North Korea and other countries in the World Watch List top 10.
- Every HK$200 could get Bibles to two adults in a country where God’s Word is not easy to access.
- Every HK$390 could help provide six months of safe housing and relief aid to a family of North Korean refugees who have fled extreme persecution.
- Every HK$450 could help give North Korean women like Joo Min biblical leadership training.
*Any excess funds from this appeal will be used to strengthen other persecuted Christians where urgent help is needed.
give today: WWL Top 10