Sebastian Kim
Chair in Theology and Public Life
Contact Details
T:01904 876439 E: s.kim@yorksj.ac.uk
Information
Professor Kim holds the Chair in Theology and
Public Life in the Faculty of Education & Theology. Before
coming to York St John University, he taught World Christianity and
was Director of the Christianity in Asia Project at the Faculty of
Divinity of the University of Cambridge. Previous to that, he
taught at the Cambridge Theological Federation, Cambridge, the
Presbyterian College and Theological Seminary, Seoul, and the Union
Biblical Seminary, Pune, India. He received his PhD from the
Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge, and he is a Fellow of
the Royal Asiatic Society. His research interests include: public
theology; world Christianity; theology of mission; community and
identity; contextual theologies; religion and post-modern
society.
Professor Kim’s current projects include:
Religion, Peace and
Reconciliation:
This project was started in 2006 with
colleagues in the Theology and Religious Studies section in order
to examine methodology for sustainable and constructive
contributions to peace and reconciliation. For effective
peace-making, encouraging and utilizing religious communities is
vital in any society regardless of the cause of conflicts. The
research team has utilized approaches from various global contexts
in order to gather concrete findings for peace-building initiated
by religious communities. The International Conference on Peace and
Reconciliation series has brought together scholars, religious
leaders, policy-makers and practitioners in York St John University
(2006), University of California in Los Angeles (2009), and
Youngnak Presbyterian Church (2010).
» For
further information on the Peace and
Reconciliation conference
Ebor Lectures: The Ebor
Lectures are a response to the growing need for theology to
interact with public issues in contemporary society. This series of
lectures aims to promote public conversation and to contribute to
the formation of personal decisions and collective policy-making in
economic, political and social spheres. It is also an ecumenical
project that seeks to exchange insights between academic and
religious traditions and to build bridges between churches and
other religious groups. Each year a relevant theme is chosen and
the most prominent scholars, church leaders and religious leaders
in the field are invited to speak. The Ebor lectures have become a
national and international lecture series.
» For
further information on Ebor Lectures
International Journal of Public
Theology: This is an academic journal on public theology
launched in the early 2007 by Brill Academic Publishers. Public
theology is an interdisciplinary subject resulting from the growing
need for theology to interact with public issues of contemporary
society, and it seeks to engage in dialogue with different academic
disciplines such as politics, economics, cultural studies, religion
and spirituality, society in general, and globalization. The
Journal is a platform for original interdisciplinary research in
the field of public theology. It is affiliated with the Global
Network for Public Theology. The editorial office is in York St
John University and Professor Kim is the editor.
» For further information on the Journal
of Public Theology
Selected Publications
Books
- Sebastian C. H. Kim,
Theology in the Public Sphere: Public Theology as a
Catalyst for Open Debate (London: SCM, 2011)
- Sebastian Kim and Jonathan Draper (eds),
Christianity and the Renewal of Nature (London:
SPCK, 2011)
- Sebastian C.H. Kim & Kirsteen Kim,
Christianity as a World Religion (London: Continuum,
2008)
- Sebastian C.H. Kim (ed),
Christian Theology in Asia (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2008)
- Sebastian C.H. Km, Pauline Kollontai &
Greg Hoyland (eds),
Peace and Reconciliation: In Search of Shared Identity
(Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate, 2008)
- Sebastian C.H. Kim & Jonathan Draper
(eds),
Liberating Sacred Texts? Revelation, Identity and Public
Life (London: SPCK, 2008)
- Sebastian C.H. Kim & Pauline Kollontai
(eds),
Community Identity: Perspectives from Theology and Religious
Studies (London: T & T Clark, 2007)
- Sebastian C.H. Kim,
In Search of Identity: Debates on Religious Conversion in
India(New Delhi & Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2003 & 2005)
- Sebastian C.H. Kim and Krickwin Marak (eds),
Good News to the Poor: The Challenge to the Church
(Delhi: ISPCK, 1997)
- Joseph Mattam and Sebastian C.H. Kim (eds),
Mission Trends Today: Historical and Theological
Perspectives (Bombay: St. Pauls, 1997)
- Joseph Mattam and Sebastian Kim (eds),
Mission and Conversion: A Reappraisal (Bombay: St.
Pauls, 1996)
- F. Hrangkhuma and Sebastian C.H. Kim (eds),
The Church in India: Its Mission Tomorrow (Delhi:
ISPCK, 1996)
- Joseph Mattam and Sebastian Kim (eds),
Dimensions of Mission in India (Bombay: St. Pauls,
1995)
Current book projects
- Sebastian C.H. Kim & Kirsteen Kim, A
History of Korean Christianity (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, forthcoming in 2013).
- Sebastian Kim and Chung Yueb Ha (eds),
Building Communities of Reconciliation: Reflections on the Life
and Teaching of Reverend Kyung-Chik Han.
- Sebastian Kim & Jonathan Draper (eds),
Business As Usual? The Global Economic Crisis and the
Future of Capitalism (London: SPCK, forthcoming in 2012).
- Maria Rovisco & Sebastian Kim (eds),
Cosmopolitanism, Religion, and the Public Sphere (London:
Routledge, forthcoming in 2012).
Selected articles / book
chapters:
- ‘Pandita Ramabai’s Conversion Toward Mukti:
In Search of Companionship, Integrity and Faith’ in Roger E.
Hedlund, Sebastian Kim, and Rajkumar Boaz Johnson (eds), Indian
& Christian: The Life and Legacy of Pandita Ramabai (New
Delhi: ISPCK, 2011), 3-29.
- ‘Korean Theology’ in Ian Mcfarland, David
Fergusson, Karen Kilby and Iain Torrance (eds), The Cambridge
Dictionary of Christian Theology (Cambridge: CUP, 2011),
266-68.
- ‘The Public Significance of the Christian
Gospel in Plural Societies: Some Aspects of Engaging in Public
Theology’ in Martin Reppenhagen (ed), Kirche Zwischen
Postmoderner Kultur und Evangelium (Gőttingen: Neukirchener,
2010), 113-31.
- ‘Pandita Ramabai’s Quest for Mukti: The
Struggle to be an Indian Christian’ in Grace Jacb and Paulson
Pulikottil (eds), Beyond Borders: Challenging Boundaries of
Philosophy, Faith & Education (Bangalore: Pimalogue,
2010), 105-17.
- ‘The Kingdom of God versus the
Church: The Debate around the Conference of the International
Missionary Council at Tambaram, Madras in 1938’ in Ogbu U. Kalu
(ed), Interpreting Contemporary Christianity: Global Processes
and Local Identities (William B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapid, MI,
2008).
- ‘Reconciliation Possible? The Churches’
Efforts Toward the Peace and Reunification of North and South
Korea’ in Sebastian C.H. Km, Pauline Kollontai & Greg Hoyland
(eds), Peace and Reconciliation: In Search of Shared
Identity (Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate, 2008), 161-78.
- ‘The Word and the Spirit: Overcoming
Poverty, Injustice and Division in Korea’ in Sebastian C.H. Kim
(ed), Christian Theology in Asia (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2008), 129-53.
- ‘The Future Shape of Christianity from an
Asian Perspective’ in Frans Wijsen and Robert Schreiter (eds),
Global Christianity: Contested Claims (Amsterdam: Rodopi,
2007).
- 'Freedom or Respect? Public Theology and the
Debate over the Danish Cartoons’, International Journal of
Public Theology 1/2 (2007).
- Differing Concepts of Community Identity:
Debates over the “Racial and Religious Hatred Bill”’ in Sebastian
C. H. Kim and Pauline Kollontai (eds), Community Identity:
Dynamics of Religion in Context (London: T & T Clark,
2007).
- ‘The Problem of Poverty in Post-War Korean
Christianity: Kibock Sinang or Minjung
Theology?’, Transformation 24/1 (January 2007).
- “Hindutva, World Evangelization and the
Question of Conversion in India” in Max L. Stackhouse and
Lalsangkima Pachuau (eds), News of Boundless Riches:
Interrogating, Comparing, and Reconstructing Mission in a Global
Era vol I (New Delhi: ISPCK, 2007).
- “Mission and the Integrity of the Church:
Reflections on the Christian Response to the Problem of Poverty in
Post-War Korea” in Max L. Stackhouse and Lalsangkima Pachuau (eds),
News of Boundless Riches: Interrogating, Comparing, and
Reconstructing Mission in a Global Era vol II (New Delhi:
ISPCK, 2007).
- ‘Revival Movements in the Khassia Hills and
Mukti Mission in the Early Twentieth-Century India’ in Won-Mo Suh
(ed), Protestant Revivals in the 20th Century and
Pyeungyang Great Awakening Movement (Seoul: PCTS Press,
2006).
- ‘Henry Martyn, the Bible and Christianity in
Asia’, UBS Journal 3/2 (September 2005).
- ‘The Problem of Conversion in India: Freedom
of Religion or Religious Tolerance?’, Connections 9/1
(2005).
- ‘Evangelical Understandings of Conversion and
their Implications for Christian Mission’, Dharma Deepika
9/2 (July-Dec 2005).
- ‘Reconciliation Possible? The Churches’
Efforts Toward the Peace and Reunification of North and South
Korea’, Rethinking Mission 3/3 (Autumn 2005).
- ‘The Debate on Conversion Initiated by the
Sangh Parivar,, 1998-1999’, Transformation 22/4 (October
2005).
- ‘Understanding Religious Conversion’ in Roger
E. Hedlund & Paul Joshua Bhakiaraj, Missiology for the
21st Century (Delhi: ISPCK, 2004).
- ‘Christianity in South Asia’ in Keith Brown
(ed), Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics, 2nd Ed.
(Oxford: Elsevier, 2006), 398-400.
- ‘Hindutva, Secular India and the Report of
the Christian Missionary Activities Enquiry Committee, 1954-57’ in
Mark T.B. Laing (ed), Nationalism and Hindutva: A Christian
Response (Delhi: ISPCK, 2004).
- ‘Indian Christian Mission Theology: Models
for Engagement with Hinduism’ in Mark Laing (ed), The Indian
Church in Her Context: The Emergence, Growth and Mission of the
Church in a Pluralistic Context (Delhi: ISPCK, 2003).
- ‘Minjung Theology: Whose Voice for Whom?’ in
Israel Selvanayagam (ed), Moving Forms of Theology: Faith
Talk’s Changing Contexts (Delhi: ISPCK, 2003).
- ‘The Kingdom of God versus the Church: The
Debate around the Conference of the International Missionary
Council at Tambaram, Madras in 1938’, KoreaJournal of
Theology Vol.3 (2003).
- ‘‘Freedom of Religion’ Legislation in India’,
Mission and Theology, No. 9 (2002).
- “Indian Christian Mission Ecclesiology:
Models for Engagement with Hinduism – with Special Reference to
Conversion” in Mark T.B. Laing (ed), The Indian Church in
Context: Her Emergence, Growth and Mission (New Delhi: ISPCK,
2002).
Supervision of PhD
candidates:
- Hooshmand Badii, ‘Bahá’í teachings on
economics and their implications on contemporary economic
problems’.
- Brian Gant, ‘Towards a theology of social
justice for today, as particularly expressed in the Jubilee Concept
of the Hebrew Scriptures, with special reference to the Jubilee
2000 and Make Poverty History campaigns’.
- Lauri Bower, ‘A critical evaluation of the
key concepts of Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh as implemented at
Plum Village’.
- Malcolm Grundy, ‘The exercise of leadership
and oversight by senior members of the Anglican Church in
Yorkshire’.
- Agustinus Sutiono, ‘Wong Pinter, the
omniscient men: reifying the significance of the Javanese
specialists in spiritualism’.
Programme taught at YSJ (MA
modules)
- Theologies of Liberation
- Christianity and Culture
- Religion and Identity
- Public Theology