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Ernest Trice Thompson Award luncheon honors past moderator's half-century of ministry
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Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date
Mon, 05 Jul 2010 10:28:37 -0700
Hip Hip Hoo-Rhee! Ernest Trice Thompson Award luncheon honors past moderator's
half-century of ministry
Moderator candidates also make brief statements
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Photo of one man shaking another's hands
Jack Haberer, editor of the Presbyterian Outlook, presents their award to Rev.
Dr. Syngman Rhee. ?By Tony Oltmann
Posted at
July 3, 2010 10:50 p.m.
By Jim Nedelka
Blending a celebration of recent heritage with anticipation of the new was the
theme of the Presbyterian Outlook?s luncheon at the 219th General Assembly
(2010).
The six candidates for Moderator of this Assembly took time to sum up their
weeks of campaigning.
The Rev Julia Leeth recalled the evangelical influence a youth pastor had in
her life at a youth camp at age 19, where she first accepted Jesus Christ.
Later, she was encouraged to work in church leadership and followed the road to
her pastorate.
?I can never repay the Presbyterian Church enough for the faithfulness they had
in me ? a young, wild girl who was making all the wrong choices,? Leeth said.
Cynthia Bolbach, the lone elder in the running, discussed her perception that
the most pressing issue facing this Assembly is ?? how to make our denomination
? especially its structure ? more relevant and more able to help us do ministry
effectively in the 21st century post-modern society.?
The Rev. Maggie Lauterer spoke about her assignment, which she sees as
reminding congregants of Jesus? admonition to ?not be afraid.?
?God has something ? to say to all of us that you need to hear,? she said.
The Rev. Jin S. Kim, lauded the faith journey of past moderator and recipient
of the Ernest Trice Thompson Award, the Rev. Syngman Rhee, thanking him for
?paving the way. ?
Kim sees the unity of the church as a ?witness to a world that is fractured in
so many ways and that the scandal of division mars the body of Christ.?
The Rev. James Belle described himself as a ?PPK
? a Presbyterian Pastor?s Kid.? Then, without missing a beat, added ?and yet,
I?m still here.?
As a fourth-generation Presbyterian who grew up in the pre-unification days,
Belle says he can be defined by this statement: ?Find our common faith by
seeing one another not with labels ? I hate labels.?
The Rev. Eric Nielsen hopes to turn the church more toward the ?gifts of the
Holy Spirit? rather than what he likened to the ?enmities of Paul: the
manifestations of the flesh.?
Jack Haber, editor of the Presbyterian Outlook, presented the Ernest Trice
Thompson Award to Rhee for his nearly half-century of ministry and service to
Christ and the PC(USA), especially for his ecumenical outreach efforts in the
world and to Korea in particular.
Rhee, born in North Korea and expelled from high school in Pyongyang in 1948
for being a minister?s son, was welcomed at Sung Wha Methodist Seminary to
train at a college level for the next two years. When Chinese troops joined the
war, his mother sent him to Seoul with 200 other refugees, many of whom died.
In 1956, the Presbyterian Church provided funds for him to come to the United
States where he was ordained in 1960. Six days later, he married Hae-Sun Lee.
In an emotional thank you at Saturday?s luncheon, Rhee addressed his wife, with
whom he will soon celebrate 50 years of marriage.
?Thank you for your steadfast love and faithful partnership,? he said. ?This
honor is for you.?
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