- Syngman Rhee (Presbyterian minister)
Syngman Rhee is a
Presbyterian minister who has served as theModerator of the General Assembly of thePresbyterian Church (USA) in 2000.Rhee and a younger brother fled
North Korea in 1950, leaving behind his mother and four sisters. His family was hoping they would return in two or three weeks. For Rhee, it turned into decades of separation, finally ended in 1978.As a refugee in
South Korea , Rhee recalls that"
Church World Service came with food, blankets, most of all hope in the hopeless situation for the people who were struggling. The ministry of compassion touched me very, very deeply. That's one of the reasons why I was very active inNational Council of Churches and Church World Service."Rhee joined the
Republic of Korea Marine Corps and in 1953 was sent to theUnited States for special training at the U.S. Marine School in Quantico,Virginia . He says he struck up close friendships with Christian Marine officers and that they continued to correspond after he went back toSouth Korea .His friends from Quantico sponsored him as a student at
Davis and Elkins College inWest Virginia , where Rhee majored in English and religion. From there, he went toLouisville Theological Seminary , graduating in 1960. He was ordained in Louisville and a week later married to Haesun Rhee, a long-time friend and medical doctor in South Korea.Rhee's first call was to serve two small congregations near Louisville. "That was a wonderful experience for me," he said. "I found what it means to be one in Jesus Christ."
Rhee next served for 13 years as Presbyterian campus minister at the
University of Louisville . He began his campus ministry in the early 1960s and recalls thatMartin Luther King made several visits to the campus. "I remember marching with him and the black students in Louisville," Rhee said. "That experience taught me what it is to be engaged in the ministry of racial justice."In 1978, Rhee left the
University of Louisville and to become coordinator for Middle East Missions for what was then the United Presbyterian Church (USA). He was with that agency for seven years.
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