What About the Victims?: Overcoming the Wounds of Evil
Stock No: WW38811
What About the Victims?: Overcoming the Wounds of Evil  -     By: Andrew Sung Park

What About the Victims?: Overcoming the Wounds of Evil

Abingdon Press / 2004 / Paperback

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Product Description

At any gathering, you will likely see both abusers and victims. In Christian theology, we have approached these two very different types of people with a single solution. Having drawn a map of salvation for sinners, we ignore the victims, making it their responsibility to find their way back to peace. Park argues it is time for the church and its theology to remedy this situation by using an Asian religious concept called han--the psychic and spiritual pain caused by unjust oppression--as a way of healing the wounds of abuse and violence.

Product Information

Title: What About the Victims?: Overcoming the Wounds of Evil
By: Andrew Sung Park
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 192
Vendor: Abingdon Press
Publication Date: 2004
Weight: 11 ounces
ISBN: 0687038812
ISBN-13: 9780687038817
Stock No: WW38811

Publisher's Description

Look around at any gathering--whether it be a sporting event, a civic meeting, or a worship service--and you will likely see representatives of two groups of people. On one hand there will be someone who has caused grievous harm to another person by physical mistreatment, emotional abuse, sexual victimization, violence, or any number of other ways. On the other hand will be those who have been harmed by just these same evils. While the two groups are inextricably linked, and while it is far too often the case that an individual can be both abused and abuser, nonetheless the two groups stand before God with very different sets of needs. In Christian theology, however, we have approached these very different sets of personal situations with one vocabulary and one solution. Traditionally, we have had only the language of sin to describe these very different human predicaments. What's more, we have offered but one solution to the problem, the two-way transaction of God's forgiveness of sinners. Yet when one person harms another, that action not only violates God's will, but also unleashes anguish and misery in the victim, scarring his or her soul. We are right to speak of the sinner's need of forgiveness, but we have forgotten to take the next step: to seek healing for the victims. Having drawn the map of salvation for sinners, we have left it to those who have been sinned against to find their own way to wholeness and peace. Andrew Sung Park argues that it is time for the church and its theology to face this issue and work toward its remedy. It is time to give a name to the suffering of those who have been sinned against and to seek their healing. He proposes that the Korean religious term han can serve as an instrument in this endeavor. While it is an intricate concept, in short han can be defined as the psychic and spiritual hurt caused by unjust oppression and suffering. As the church seeks to play its distinctive role in healing the wounds of abuse and violence, the idea of han can be a powerful tool. It can allow pastors and other caregivers to explore the depths of anguish that victims experience. It can illustrate the fact that, having sinned against their victims as well as against God, the perpetrators of violence and abuse must seek salvation not only by asking for God's forgiveness, but also by working for the healing of those they have wronged.

Author Bio

Andrew Sung Park is associate professor of theology at United Theological Seminary, Dayton, Ohio. He is the author of The Wounded Heart of God, also published by Abingdon Press.

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