RT Article T1 Evolution of Korean Megachurch Christianity Intensified by the COVID-19 Pandemic in a Socio-Political Context JF Religions VO 13 IS 11 A1 Yoo, Kwang Suk LA English YR 2022 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1822733014 AB This paper examines how megachurch congregations in South Korea responded to governmental measures to control the COVID-19 pandemic in terms of religious governance. This empirical study of Saeronam Church (SC) in Daejeon shows that the unexpected crisis forced its congregants to look back on their faithfulness in terms of self-reflection, and hence, made them more committed to their congregation socially and organizationally. The theologically and politically conservative megachurch congregants tend to regard the pandemic crisis as a God-planned ordeal which must be endured not only through self-reflection and repentance, but also through protection of their congregation from secular authorities. This attitude made it easier for conservative congregants to protest against governmental quarantine measures more explicitly and collectively. While some argue that the COVID-19 pandemic basically accelerated secularity by shrinking religious influence on society, this paper finds this aspect remarkably opposite in Korean conservative churches like SC, and emphasizes how a secular challenge, like the recent quarantine measures, can intensify megachurch Christianity. In this sense, it claims that the second-generation Korean megachurches like SC cannot be explained entirely by traditional theories of urbanization, marketing strategies, and church growth. K1 Saeronam Church K1 religious conservatism K1 Covid-19 Pandemic K1 Korean Protestantism K1 Korean megachurch DO 10.3390/rel13111109