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Korea Journal

  • P-ISSN0023-3900
  • E-ISSN2733-9343
  • A&HCI, SCOPUS, KCI

Family Resemblances of Religious Reappropriation in Modern Korean Indigenous New Religions

Family Resemblances of Religious Reappropriation in Modern Korean Indigenous New Religions

Korea Journal / Korea Journal, (P)0023-3900; (E)2733-9343
2025, v.65 no.4, pp.11-45
https://doi.org/10.25024/kj.2025.65.4.11
박종천(Jongchun PARK) (고려대학교)

초록

Modern Korean indigenous new religions were originally peripheral faiths—Buddhism, Seondo (immortal Daoist practice), Daoism, folk belief, shamanism, etc.—that had been fragmented and pushed to the margins in a traditional Confucian society. They emerged amid the external threat of Western imperialism and the internal contradictions of late Joseon Confucian society, at a time when the Confucian tradition of yangban aristocratic men dominated the social hierarchy as the official religion. This article examines the family resemblances of modern Korean indigenous new religions through four key aspects: (1) the modern transformation of the concept of the divine— a dynamic revitalization of transcendent reality and an enhancement of direct communication with it; (2) the faith-oriented transformation of religious practice—as Confucian self-cultivation centered on sincerity (seong 誠) and reverence (gyeong 敬) was inherited and then reappropriated into the practice of “sincerity, reverence, and faith” (seong-gyeong-sin 誠敬信), emphasizing “faith” (sin 信); (3) the divergence of practice into meditative disciplines versus magicalritual practices; and (4) the presentation and implementation of an alternative religious ideal of “Later Heaven Gaebyeok” as a utopian vision aimed at overthrowing the oppression of the ruling class and replacing the existing order.

keywords
modern Korean indigenous new religions, family resemblance, postsubaltern, Later Heaven Gaebyeok 1

Abstract

Modern Korean indigenous new religions were originally peripheral faiths—Buddhism, Seondo (immortal Daoist practice), Daoism, folk belief, shamanism, etc.—that had been fragmented and pushed to the margins in a traditional Confucian society. They emerged amid the external threat of Western imperialism and the internal contradictions of late Joseon Confucian society, at a time when the Confucian tradition of yangban aristocratic men dominated the social hierarchy as the official religion. This article examines the family resemblances of modern Korean indigenous new religions through four key aspects: (1) the modern transformation of the concept of the divine— a dynamic revitalization of transcendent reality and an enhancement of direct communication with it; (2) the faith-oriented transformation of religious practice—as Confucian self-cultivation centered on sincerity (seong 誠) and reverence (gyeong 敬) was inherited and then reappropriated into the practice of “sincerity, reverence, and faith” (seong-gyeong-sin 誠敬信), emphasizing “faith” (sin 信); (3) the divergence of practice into meditative disciplines versus magicalritual practices; and (4) the presentation and implementation of an alternative religious ideal of “Later Heaven Gaebyeok” as a utopian vision aimed at overthrowing the oppression of the ruling class and replacing the existing order.

keywords
modern Korean indigenous new religions, family resemblance, postsubaltern, Later Heaven Gaebyeok 1
투고일Received
2025-05-12
수정일Revised
2025-10-05
게재확정일Accepted
2025-10-10
출판일Published
2025-12-31

Korea Journal