Romans — korean
TRI knowledge bundle for Romans (korean).
Executive Summary
Executive Summary
Why it matters
Romans is the theological backbone of the New Testament, and Korean carries a doctrinal-translation risk profile distinct from every other language in this pipeline: Korea has the largest Christian population proportionally in East Asia and its own robust, century-old Bible translation tradition, so the risk here is not large-scale syncretism but a narrower, sharper overlap between Korean shamanistic folk religion (무속신앙) and the very “spirit”/“power” vocabulary central to Romans, plus a historically significant collision between Confucian filial-piety ancestor rites and exclusive loyalty to God as Father.
Key findings
- The registry tracks 40 doctrines across Romans 1-16; 25 require mandatory human theologian review before any translated segment ships (5 Critical, 20 High) — the lowest Critical/High combined count in this batch of four languages, reflecting Korea’s more settled Christian vocabulary tradition.
- Grace, Power of God for Salvation, and Holy Spirit-related sanctification are Critical-risk specifically because Korean charismatic Christianity’s own internal self-critique has long flagged a shamanistic transactional pattern (기복신앙, “fortune-seeking faith”) as a live pastoral concern, not a hypothetical one.
- “Father” carries the heaviest historical weight of any term in this package: 18th-19th century Korean Catholic converts were persecuted and martyred specifically over refusing Confucian ancestor-memorial rites (제사), a real doctrinal-cultural collision this curriculum must teach with historical awareness.
- Kingdom of God and Kingdom Mission are unusually Low/Medium-risk here, since Korea has no live competing “divine kingdom” state ideology — a genuine point of contrast with Mandarin’s Mandate-of-Heaven risk and Japan’s State Shinto risk.
Risks
- Shamanistic overlap risk: grace, holy spirit, and power of God each risk being processed through Korea’s still-active shamanism (무속신앙), where a mudang’s ritual power and spirit-channeling supply a superficially similar but doctrinally opposite framework.
- Ancestor-rite collision risk: “Father” and “adoption” language intersects with Korea’s historically significant, sometimes lethal conflict between Confucian jesa ancestor rites and exclusive Christian loyalty to God.
- Achievement-culture risk: obedience, election, and mission all risk being read through Korea’s intensely competitive, hierarchical, achievement-oriented social culture rather than as gifts of grace.
Opportunities
- Korean already maintains a clean structural distinction between covenant (언약) and secular contract (계약) that some other languages in this pipeline lack, removing a whole category of dilution risk for free.
- Korean 아빠 (appa, informal “dad”) closely parallels the Aramaic Abba’s intimate register, an unusually good natural fit.
Recommended actions
- Route every Critical and High risk segment (25 of 40 doctrines) through human theologian review before publication; do not allow automated-only review to touch these terms.
- Brief native-speaker reviewers specifically on the internal Korean-church critique of 기복신앙 so a fluent-but-transactional rendering of grace or power language is caught before it ships.
- Reuse this Language Package’s
translation_memory.jsonfor every Romans lesson in Korean rather than re-deriving terms per document, per the two-phase pipeline design.
Requirements
Culture Impact Analysis
Doctrines
Doctrine Risk Groups
Critical
- Deity of Christ CRITICAL: co-equal, eternal divine nature — not a spiritually powerful shamanistic deity or ancestor-spirit granted elevated status.
- Grace CRITICAL: the central Korean risk term.
- Lordship of Christ CRITICAL: Romans 10:9 — 예수는 주님이시다 is the salvation confession.
- Power of God for Salvation CRITICAL: 능력 required, but must be explicitly distinguished from a mudang's shamanistic spirit-power (영력) sought for healing/blessing.
- Salvation CRITICAL: NEVER 해탈 (Buddhist liberation from samsara).
High
- Adoption into God's Family Traditional Korean heir-adoption existed primarily to continue Confucian ancestor-memorial rites (제사), an instrumental rather than relational purpose.
- Assurance of Salvation Assurance rests on God's unchanging character, not on an ongoing fortune-seeking exchange (기복신앙) that could always still be judged insufficiently maintained.
- Christian Identity in Christ Identity located in union with Christ, not in family/clan lineage status, social achievement (출세), or ritual loyalty performance.
- Divine Calling Must be kept distinct from saju-paljja birth-chart astrology (사주팔자), still commonly consulted in Korea.
- Effectual Calling God's sovereign call that secures the salvation of the called; not a birth-chart-determined fate (팔자) or competitive-selection outcome.
- Faith Personal trust in Christ specifically, not superstitious belief (미신) or confidence placed in fortune-telling/astrology practices still common in Korean folk life.
- Fulfillment of Prophecy Linear, one-time historical fulfillment (OT to NT), not a fortune-telling prediction (점, 사주팔자 예측) coming true by chance.
- Incarnation NEVER 화신 (a Buddhist avatar/incarnation-of-a-buddha concept describing a provisional, repeatable manifestation).
- Inspiration of Scripture Distinguish God-breathed Scripture from Confucian classical texts (경, gyeong) transmitted through a scholarly lineage, or from folk divination manuals; Scripture is the direct communication of a personal God.
- Obedience of Faith Korea's historically rigorous Confucian hierarchical-obedience ethics (including the traditional, rejected 'three obediences' doctrine for women) risk reducing obedience of faith to hierarchical social-status compliance rather than a Spirit-produced response to grace.
- Providence God's personal, purposive care, not a birth-chart-determined fate (팔자) from the still-common saju-paljja folk-astrology system.
- Resurrection of Christ 부활, not 환생 (rebirth) or 윤회 (reincarnation cycle).
- Sainthood (Called to be Holy) All believers are 성도 corporately; not an elevated Daoist-immortal (신선) or spiritually-accomplished-master (도인) class.
- Sanctification Spirit-wrought process, distinguished from ascetic self-cultivation (수행, 도 닦기) drawn from Korean Buddhist/folk-religious practice.
- Separation unto God's Service Must not be confused with shamanistic ritual purification performed in a gut ceremony to remove misfortune (부정을 씻음).
- Sonship of Christ Korea's own founding myth (Dangun/Hwanung as son of the heavenly god Hwanin) offers a real but comparatively low-intensity echo, being legendary rather than a living state ideology.
- Spiritual Gifts Spirit-given enablements for building up the church; must not be framed as a shaman's spirit-power (영력) sought for personal display or this-worldly benefit, a risk Korean charismatic church leaders have themselves flagged.
- Unity of Jews and Gentiles Directly challenges any lingering ethnic-insider framing; must translate with theological clarity rather than softened diplomatic language.
- Universal Human Accountability All humanity equally guilty before God regardless of social standing; must be taught as guilt before a personal God, not merely loss of face (체면 손상) or bad luck (액운).
- Universal Scope of the Gospel No ethnic barrier to the gospel; must resist framing that echoes Korea's ethnic-nationalist 단일민족 ('single ethnic nation') self-conception.
Medium
- Christ-Centered Ministry Ministry done in Christ's name and by his power, for his glory, not achievement-oriented ministry success measured by growth metrics.
- Church as God's People New covenant community, not a shamanistic village shrine (당집) or Buddhist temple institution (절).
- Davidic Covenant Requires OT background explanation; Korean already distinguishes 언약 (covenant) cleanly from 계약 (commercial contract), which helps rather than hinders this doctrine's clarity relative to some other languages in this pipeline.
- Evangelism Frame in terms of gospel-motivated proclamation and witness, not numbers-driven achievement culture.
- Gospel 복음 is established and unambiguous as a word, but its root character 복 (fortune/blessing) sits inside the same semantic field targeted by 기복신앙 ('fortune-seeking faith') critique; teaching must be explicit the gospel announces salvation, not forecasted prosperity.
- Humanity of Christ Real, physical human nature, not a provisional manifestation-form (화신) exchangeable for another appearance.
- Messianic Promise Korea's high existing Christian literacy makes this comparatively lower-risk than in Japan; still avoid conflating with 미륵 (Maitreya, the future Buddha of Korean Buddhist eschatology, historically invoked by Korean folk-millenarian movements).
- Mission to the Nations Korea is a leading missionary-sending nation; the caution here is a success-and-growth-oriented missions culture rather than a foreign-stigma or receptivity problem.
- Peace with God Relational, covenantal peace through justification (화평), kept distinct from the general well-being greeting sense of 평안.
- Prayer and Intercession Direct access to God in Christ's name; distinguish from a mudang's ritual mediation between the living and spirits during a gut ceremony.
Low
- Apostleship Low collision risk: 사도 is specific and established.
- Christian Fellowship Shared participation in Christ; no significant doctrinal risk.
- Kingdom Mission God's reign advancing through the gospel; Korea has no live competing 'divine kingdom' state ideology, making this comparatively lower-risk than in some other languages in this pipeline.
- Mutual Edification Building one another up in faith; no significant doctrinal risk.
- Thanksgiving Standard term; minor risk of generic secular gratitude without reference to God specifically.
Glossary
Glossary Risk Groups
Critical
- Father CRITICAL: Korea's rigorous Confucian filial piety (효, hyo) tradition and ancestor-memorial rites (제사, jesa) historically created the sharpest doctrinal collision in Korean church history — 18th-19th century Korean Catholic converts were persecuted and martyred specifically for refusing to perform jesa rites toward deceased parents/ancestors as idolatrous.
- God CRITICAL: this package standardizes on 하나님 (Protestant usage, popularized through the late-19th-century Korean Bible translation tradition, built on 하나 'one' plus the honorific 님, emphasizing explicit monotheism).
- Grace CRITICAL: this is the central Korean risk term.
- Holy Spirit CRITICAL: always use the compound 성령; NEVER use 신령 (sillyeong, a generic 'divine spirit') or 신 (sin) alone, both central to Korean shamanism (무속신앙), where a mudang channels or is possessed by spirits during a gut ritual.
- Imputed Righteousness CRITICAL: righteousness credited by God, NOT earned through relational loyalty (의리) or spiritual cultivation (도를 닦음).
- Jesus Standard KRV transliteration.
- Justification CRITICAL: established KRV compound, a forensic declaration ('being made/declared righteous'), not a process.
- Power Of God CRITICAL: Korean shamanism (무속신앙) is fundamentally organized around a mudang's claimed spiritual power (영력, yeongnyeok) to heal, exorcise, and grant fortune through gut ritual.
- Salvation CRITICAL: NEVER use 해탈 (haetal, Buddhist liberation from samsara) or describe salvation as 윤회에서 벗어남 ('escaping the cycle of rebirth').
High
- Abba Aramaic term of intimacy preserved in Romans 8:15 (아바 아버지).
- Adoption Traditional Korean adoption (양자, historically adopting a male heir when no biological son existed) was primarily instrumental — its central purpose was continuing the family's Confucian ancestor-memorial rites (제사, jesa), not primarily relational belonging.
- Called NEVER use 팔자에 정해진 ('fixed by one's birth-chart/fate,' referencing the still-common Korean folk-astrology practice of saju-paljja, Four Pillars of Destiny).
- Calling NEVER use 운명 (unmyeong, impersonal fate) or 팔자 (paljja, one's fixed life-lot per birth-chart astrology).
- Faith Personal trust placed in Christ specifically.
- Gentiles Avoid framing through Korea's historically powerful ethnic-nationalist self-conception of 단일민족 (danil minjok, 'a single, homogeneous ethnic nation'), which risks reinforcing an ethnic-insider/foreigner (외국인) reading rather than the specific redemptive-historical Jew/non-Jew category Romans addresses.
- Holy Set apart for God, morally pure.
- Incarnation Established Korean theological term ('holy flesh-becoming').
- Law The Mosaic Law.
- Obedience Of Faith Romans 1:5 and 16:26.
- Providence NEVER use 팔자 (paljja, one's fixed fate per birth-chart astrology, from the still-common saju-paljja folk-astrology system) or 운명 (unmyeong, impersonal destiny).
- Righteousness 의 also anchors 의리 (uiri), a Korean ethical concept of loyalty and faithfulness in relationships prominent in Korean social ethics and popular culture (e.g.
- Saints NEVER use 신선 (sinseon, a Daoist immortal/transcendent being) or 도인 (doin, an accomplished spiritual master who has attained the Way).
- Sanctification The Spirit's ongoing work in a believer already justified by faith.
- Seed Of David Romans 1:3; conveys physical lineage and OT covenant fulfillment.
- Sin Distinguish from 액운 (aegun, bad luck/misfortune attributed to fate or spiritual causes in folk belief) and from 체면 손상 (loss of face/social standing, 체면 chemyeon being a strong Korean social concept).
- Son Of God Korea's own founding myth (the Dangun legend) tells of Hwanung, described as the son of the heavenly god Hwanin, descending to found Korea's first kingdom — a real but comparatively low-intensity echo (mythological/legendary rather than a living state ideology, unlike historic Chinese or pre-1946 Japanese imperial-divinity doctrines).
- Spiritual Gifts Established term, prominent in Korean Pentecostal/charismatic church life.
Medium
- Church Established term.
- David Standard KRV proper name form.
- Election Avoid 팔자 (birth-chart-determined fate) or 운 (luck/fortune).
- Glory Avoid collapsing into 명예 (secular honor/reputation) or 출세 (chulse, career/social success), both prominent in Korea's intensely status-and-achievement-conscious culture.
- Gospel Established KRV term, literally 'blessing-news' (福音).
- Intercession Prayer on behalf of others addressed directly to God through Christ.
- Israel Proper name; established form.
- Lord Established term with required honorific suffix 님 (nim).
- Messiah 그리스도 (transliteration of 'Christos') is the KRV standard, used consistently.
- Mission Korea is now one of the world's largest missionary-sending nations per capita; unlike the foreign-stigma risk found in some other Asian contexts, the risk flavor here is closer to an inverse concern — a success-and-growth-oriented, numbers-driven missions culture that some Korean church leaders themselves have flagged as a caution.
- Peace KRV uses 화평 for the relational peace-with-God sense in Romans 5:1, distinct from the more general well-being greeting sense of 평안 (pyeongan).
- Prophecy God-inspired declaration; distinguish from 점 (fortune-telling divination) and from 사주팔자 (saju-paljja) astrological prediction, both widely practiced in Korean folk culture.
- Prophet God's spokesperson; distinguish from 점쟁이 (jeomjaengi, a fortune-teller) and from a mudang shaman who claims to speak for spirits, both still commonly consulted in Korean folk practice.
- Resurrection NEVER use 환생 (hwansaeng, rebirth) or 윤회 (yunhoe, the reincarnation cycle).
Low
- Apostle Established term; no significant collision.
- Covenant Korean Christian usage already maintains a clean structural distinction unavailable in some of this pipeline's other languages: 언약 (relational, divinely initiated covenant) is kept distinct from 계약 (gyeyak, an ordinary secular/commercial contract).
- Exhort Standard term for encouraging fellow believers.
- Fellowship Shared participation in Christ.
- Kingdom Of God Unlike some other languages in this pipeline, Korea has no live competing state ideology claiming a 'divine kingdom' framing (no equivalent of a Mandate-of-Heaven dynasty system or a divine-emperor doctrine), so the political-collision risk is comparatively low.
- Thanksgiving Standard term.