Originally called the Pyongyang Chosun Jesus Presbyterian Seminary, it was founded in 1901 by Samuel Austin Moffett, the father of Samuel H. Moffett. Samuel Austin was motivated to found the seminary in Pyongyang because the city had been badly damaged in the First Sino-Japanese War. Initially, the seminary would consist of two years of preparatory courses and the actual seminary lasting three years. In the beginning, Samuel Austin taught his students at home. He was its first president until 1918 and a faculty member until 1935. The Seminary was the center of Korean Christianity of the early 20th century. In 1905 the seminary became affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in the United States. The first class graduated in 1907. A building was constructed in 1909 and renewed in 1922. By 1916 Moffett was in disagreement with a teacher at the school, James Scarth Gale. Their differences concerning the quality of teaching, materials, and admission would develop into a schism between conservatives and liberals. Initially, the seminary remained conservative and mission-oriented. The seminary was temporarily closed in 1938 following the Japanese occupation of Korea. The Japanese occupiers demanded that students of the seminary would bow to Shinto shrines, something that they could not agree to. Until 1940, the seminary had been the only seminary in Korea maintained by the Presbyterian Church. After the division of Korea, the seminary was relocated to Seoul in South Korea in 1948 and renamed the Presbyterian Theological Seminary. In 1959 the seminary finally split due to the doctrinal differences into the conservative Chongshin University and the more moderate Presbyterian College and Theological Seminary.
Under government control
In 1972, the seminary was reopened and assumed by the government-controlled Protestant body Korean Christian Federation. The seminary operated under KCF until 1995 when it ran out of funds. In April 1999, the Korean Methodist Church of South Korea offered to fund the seminary to secure the continuation of its operation. KMC bid $600,000 to provide funding for three years. It reopened in 2000, and a new building was completed in 2003.
Operation
The Seminary is run by the KCF, which chooses its students and devises its curriculum. KMC, however, is consulted each semester. The seminary is located in Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea. The seminary trains pastors and evangelists for the KCF. Before 1995, the seminary had produced some 60 graduates.
Attendees
Hahn Sang-dong
Yoo Jae-kee
Kil Sun-joo
Chu Ki-chol
Kang Ryang-uk, president of KCF
Kang Yong-sop, president of KCF
Park Yun-sun
Song Yang-wong
Professors
Samuel Austin Moffett
William Davis Reynolds
Horace Grant Underwood
Hyuk Namkung, first Korean Doctor of Divinity and first Korean professor at the seminary.
Park Hyng-nong, became the second Korean professor at the seminary in 1931