I am delighted to be recognized by one of my former students:
"One of the greatest gifts of my theological journey has been the opportunity to learn from scholars who challenged me to think more deeply, study more faithfully, and approach God's Word with both humility and intellectual rigor. Today, I am honored to recognize Dr. Yung Suk Kim, Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor School of Theology, Virginia Union University, as one of the scholars featured in the "Standing on Sacred Shoulders" section of Kingdom Sermon Architect™. Dr. Kim's teaching continually challenged us to move beyond simply reading Scripture to wrestling with it—asking deeper questions, engaging multiple perspectives, and allowing the biblical text to transform both our minds and our ministries."
"Without a heaven in the present, tomorrow merely inherits yesterday's hell. Peace and spirituality are not distant destinations, but immediate realities forged in how we live, love, and coexist. We cannot expect a sacred future to bloom from a present we leave barren." --Yung Suk Kim
The apostle Paul’s Second Letter to the Corinthians is a battlefield of theology and emotion. It is a text marked by soaring spiritual heights and raw human vulnerability, where the “treasure in jars of clay” meets the painful “thorn in the flesh.” This commentary offers a clear and accessible guide to navigating this complex epistle, structuring its analysis through the dialectic of "Treasures" (theological riches and apostolic authority) and "Thorns" (suffering, rhetorical complexity, and historical conflict). Designed for scholars, pastors, and students alike, this volume ● clarifies Paul's Theology, exploring the evolving nature of Paul’s leadership and the composite nature of the letters. ● embraces paradox, refusing to sanitize the text, grappling with the “hard sayings” and historical messiness alongside the comforting theological truths. ● connects to today, bridging the gap between the fragile Corinthian community and the contemporary challenges facing the modern church. By engaging with both the beauty and the brokenness of 2 Corinthians, readers will encounter the gospel in its full, paradoxical power.
Who are you, really? Is your identity just a collection of labels—your job, your ethnicity, or your citizenship—or is it something deeper?
In this video, Dr. Yung Suk Kim explores the "Illusion of Identity." Drawing from his unique life journey—from a businessman representing a Korean company in Panama and Miami to becoming a U.S. citizen and a Professor of New Testament—Dr. Kim challenges the way we categorize ourselves and others.
In this video, we discuss:
The Limit of Labels: Why terms like "Korean American" only explain a small fraction of who a person is.
Identity as Construction: Why you must be the architect of your own identity rather than letting society "label" you.
The "Second Career" Perspective: How moving from the business world to biblical scholarship reshaped Dr. Kim’s understanding of the self.
Beyond Identity Politics: Acknowledging the commonalities we share while honoring the vast differences in how we view justice, life, and purpose.
"I often tell my students: 'Don't judge me based on what you know about me. I am more than what you describe.' This applies to all of us. We are all more than the boxes the world tries to put us in."
About Dr. Yung Suk Kim: Dr. Yung Suk Kim is a biblical scholar, author, and professor. Born in Korea and educated in the United States, he brings a multicultural, multi-professional perspective to his work, focusing on how ancient texts and modern identity intersect in a complex, globalized world.
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"살고 싶고 죽고 싶은 마음은 늘 같이 있어. 그러나 사나 죽으나 그냥 욕심을 버리고 몸을 낮추어 하루하루 감사하며 살 뿐, 무슨 욕심을 더 내랴. 이것을 아는 것이 지혜이다." —김영석
"The desire to live and the desire to die always coexist. However, whether living or dying, I simply let go of greed, humble myself, and live each day with gratitude; what more could I greedily crave? Knowing this is wisdom." —Yung Suk Kim
Do we exist to serve the system, or does the system exist to serve us? In a modern world filled with rigid rules and faceless institutions, it’s easy to feel like a cog in a machine. This video dives into a revolutionary "Human-Centered" philosophy shared by Jesus and Confucius.
We examine Jesus’s radical claim that the Sabbath—a sacred divine institution—was made for the benefit of humankind, not the other way around. We then look at Confucius’s empowering insight that "The Way" (the Dao) only becomes great through the people who walk it. This video is a reminder that you are the subject of your life, not an object of the rules.
What you’ll learn:
Why Jesus prioritized human well-being over religious technicalities.
Confucius’s secret to unfolding "The Way" through personal action.
How to apply "Human-Centered Thought" to your work, faith, and daily life.