“The Ranger Platoon of Love”

I sing the red-capped Master Sergeant,

chief instructor of the Rangers on Gamaksan,

whose voice once rolled through the mountains

like thunder among the pines,

whose boots struck the ridges

and taught young men

how to climb fear,

how to cross the impossible,

how to return.

I sing him now,

though he rests beneath quiet grass

in the National Cemetery,

his campaigns folded into history,

his medals sleeping in the earth.

Yet no life ends.

The mountain remembers him.

The wind remembers him.

The young soldiers he hardened

carry his shadow still.

Long ago,

he looked upon me

and saw only a slender private,

a young man following love

up the steep trail—

following the bright-eyed woman

who would become my wife,

his cherished sister-in-law.

I was uncertain then,

a recruit of both the army and the heart.

And the years marched on.

Decades unfurled their banners.

From the high country of eternity

he has watched us.

He has watched the son,

once commander of a Navy patrol boat,

standing firm against restless seas,

now guiding others

through the currents of commerce and responsibility.

He has watched the daughter,

beloved and strong,

building her own way through the world,

and beside her

the tenor husband,

lifting songs into the air

where hearts gather and listen.

He has watched the grandson,

newly returned from Air Force service,

bearing the invisible marks

that every generation leaves

upon the next.

He has watched the grandmother,

the woman he treasured,

still holding the family together

with the quiet authority of love.

And I see them all now,

gathered around one table,

laughing,

telling stories,

breaking bread,

the years forgotten,

the generations mingling

like rivers entering one sea.

O comrades,

what is a family

but another platoon?

Not assembled by command,

not driven by rank,

but formed by trust,

by sacrifice,

by the stubborn refusal

to leave one another behind.

Here is our company.

Here is our regiment.

Here are our colors.

Love is our discipline.

Faith is our training.

Hope is our field manual.

And when life throws us

against cliffs that tremble,

against storms that test our footing,

against the long marches

through grief and uncertainty,

we move forward.

We lift one another.

We complete the mission.

For we are Rangers still.

Not merely of mountain and battlefield,

but of affection,

of loyalty,

of memory.

Yes, we are the Ranger Platoon

of love and belief,

marching together

through time,

through loss,

through joy,

and answering every roll call

with the same enduring cry:

Present.

Still present.

Together.

— TaeHun Yoon, 6/24/2026

No photo description available.
May be an image of one or more people
May be an image of one or more people, sushi and text that says 'SAPPOR'
May be an image of one or more people, sushi and text that says '72.300 SAPPOP'
May be an image of sushi
No photo description available.

Posted in Poetry | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

“The God Who Stretches Out His Hand”

Last Sunday, pastor delivered his message on God’s stretching out His hands over us.

The Church is celebrating her birth-year on Deuteronomy 8:2, “Remember these forty years—the grace, the glory, and the guidance of God.”

Remember these forty years.

Not the number itself.

Remember the years

when grace walked among us

wearing the names of ordinary people;

the seasons

when tears and hymns

held one another by the shoulders;

remember the pilgrimage

by which God,

stretching out His hand,

nurtured one community

through the wilderness.

It began

with a single seed—

a small sanctuary

in Dongpangyo,

Bundang, Seongnam.

There,

a flame arose.

Not the fire of human ambition,

but the flame

of the burning bush

that Moses beheld

on Mount Horeb.

The fire burned,

yet the bush

was never consumed.

Even today,

after rebuilding the new Church building

in Seopankyo

the Holy Spirit

calls the Church

through that same fire.

For forty years,

knees met the earth

before every dawn;

songs of praise

opened the heavens.

Children grew

to become shepherds.

Young people

were sent into the world.

Missionaries

crossed borders.

Physicians

touched wounded lives.

Believers

repaired forgotten country churches,

and shared

God’s table

with hungry neighbors.

Laughter

became playgrounds.

Prayer

became streets and alleys.

Tears

became worship.

There were days

when the world itself

closed its doors.

The sanctuary stood empty,

yet the house of God

was never empty.

Beyond every screen,

the Holy Spirit

kindled fire

within human hearts.

Even a pandemic

could not bind

the hand of God.

His hand

remained

forever outstretched.

He sent pastors.

He raised new servants.

He prepared

the next generation.

Beyond one people,

toward all nations,

He opened

the way of the Gospel.

Now,

as we prepare

to celebrate

our fortieth anniversary,

we look back.

But God

looks ahead.

That a congregation

which began with two hundred people

may one day

embrace ten thousand in faith

is not merely

a human dream.

It is to become

a wider vessel of love

for the Kingdom of God.

The Church

is not a building.

It is

the two hands of God

walking

into the world.

With those hands

He wipes away tears,

binds up wounds,

lifts the lost,

and plants hope.

Once more,

I hear

that ancient voice

echoing

from Mount Horeb:

“Take off your sandals.”

“I am sending you.”

And once again,

He calls

the name of Flame Methodist Church

into the winds

of a new age.

O Flame,

remain

no longer

only upon the altar.

Light the city.

Warm every home.

Become,

for the world,

the fresh wind

of the Holy Spirit.

Forty years

are not the end.

They are

a new beginning—

as God,

stretching out His hand,

leads yet another wilderness

into

the Promised Land.

— TaeHun Yoon, 6/25/2026

May be an image of one or more people, the Reichstag Dome and skyscraper
May be a black-and-white image
May be an image of lighting

Posted in Event, Ministry, Poetry | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

“The Divine Shadow of Heaven”

Three years had flowed away

before I sought Youngseol,

the painter Seo Sang-Hwan in Busan,

my old companion upon the road of beauty.

Before,

I found him in his gallery,

surrounded by canvases breathing,

by books stacked like seasons of prayer,

and there my longing rested.

Today

I walked instead toward his home.

No—

I walked toward time itself.

Ah!

How strange the heart becomes

before departure.

As I prepared to leave Korea,

something within me refused farewell,

pulling me,

on an ordinary weekend,

toward his door—

His gracious wife welcomed us.

Once

there were four of us

sharing laughter around one table.

Long before that,

only two—

the painter

and myself—

young enough to believe

the road stretched forever.

Now he sits

like the shadow heaven casts

upon an aging earth.

He says,

“Art is born in the field of living,

searching for the form of the Heaven.”

Yes—

I remember.

From the Via Dolorosa,

where his woodcuts first learned

the grain of suffering,

to these luminous holy icons

where light itself

finds its opposite

only to embrace it—

his entire life

has been one endless pilgrimage

toward the Face of God.

Painting.

Painting again.

Painting until breath disappears,

until consciousness falls away,

until only the hand remains,

moving—

as though guided

by another Breath.

O language beyond human language!

O speech belonging to God alone!

O mysterious spring

beneath consciousness itself,

where mountains dissolve into nature

and nature awakens again

inside the searching soul!

There walks the pilgrim,

forever pursuing

the form hidden within creation.

His joy

is never possession.

It is possibility.

He paints,

not God Himself,

but the shadow

God leaves upon the world.

Life itself

is beauty.

Beauty itself

is the stubborn labor

of becoming the self

created in God’s own longing.

How fiercely he has struggled

to resemble only the Holy One!

Truth.

Life.

Beauty.

The self.

Not four separate words—

one body,

one mystery,

revealed across

more than half a century

of faithful paint

upon waiting canvas.

His work has become

transparent devotion,

reverence made visible,

silence clothed with color.

Who among us

can truly follow

such a seeker?

Who can endure

such holy hunger?

Youngseol—暎雪

approaching ninety years

beneath these Korean skies—

one day

the Breath that first awakened him

will call him home.

He will leave us

without noise,

like evening light

slipping beyond the mountain.

Yet he shall not disappear.

His countless sacred images,

his paintings

whose beauty chills the soul

with longing,

their deep contemplative stillness,

their marriage

of painting color

and eternal light—

these will continue breathing.

The Creator’s own breath

will remain within them.

And whenever we stand

before one of his canvases,

we shall discover

that the old pilgrim

has not gone at all.

He has become

another breath

within our own.

— TaeHun Yoon, 6/27/2026

* The overall shape is composed of the bell at the top symbolizing “good news,” the fish on the left and right representing fellowship, and the praying person at the very bottom. When viewed as a whole, it forms the shape of a cross.

This is the explanation given by Youngseol about the necklace he personally made and has worn throughout his life.

No photo description available.
May be an image of eyeglasses and text
May be an illustration of harp and text that says '서 한국 이맛이므 อ .!」 キロペン 南 귀을 ICON)OT しょな人 상 환 물서 口 顧 顧 顧 경 展 AE- blthendtac.ion 미광화량 미광화랑기획초대 기획초대 2017.2.10-2.25 10 -2.25 25 2017.2. 2. 전시 관합시간 평임오전 10시30분- 오후7시, 매주 힘요일은 휴분입니다. RAUO 48284 부산광역시 수영구 광남로 72번길 2/(인작품) TEL L051.758.2247 http://mkart.co'
May be an illustration of text

Posted in Poetry | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

“Farewell”

A month—

no longer than the turning

of one page

in the book of heaven—

yet long enough

for my soul

to remember

its first language.

Tomorrow

the wide-winged airplane

will lift me once more

over the Pacific,

back

to the green hills

of Tennessee,

where another home

waits quietly,

its doors already open,

its trees

remembering my name.

Between these two homes

I have lived

forty-six years.

Long enough

for one country

to become memory,

and another

to become daily bread.

Long enough

to discover

that belonging

is never divided—

only multiplied.

When I first departed,

I thought

I was leaving Korea.

Now I know

I have carried her

like hidden seed

inside every season,

inside every prayer,

inside every poem

I have ever written.

This time

I did not hurry.

I let the nation

walk beside me.

The swift KTX,

its silver body

piercing mountains

like an arrow of light.

The subways,

flowing beneath Seoul, DaeGu, Busan

like unseen rivers.

Village buses

climbing quiet roads

where grandmothers

still wave

toward passing strangers.

Every journey

became a conversation

between my footsteps

and the land

that first received them.

How kind

this country

has become

to old knees.

Escalators

lifting tired pilgrims.

Elevators

honoring

the unhurried dignity

of age.

Comfort,

once unimaginable,

now offered

without words.

Yet every blessing

carries

its own shadow.

Children

walking together,

each alone

inside the blue glow

of a small screen

to gather in an imaginable small village.

Faces

bright with light,

hungry

for one another.

Crowded streets,

quiet hearts.

At Busan Station

voices called

for passengers,

not unlike fishermen

casting nets

into uncertain water.

Even prosperity

must labor.

Even abundance

knows

the weight

of tomorrow.

I returned

to Sinchon.

To Nogosan

where I was born.

To streets

that no longer

recognized my footsteps.

Nothing

had disappeared.

Everything

had changed.

Perhaps

that is

how memory

protects love—

by allowing places

to become

more beautiful

than time

can preserve.

At Taejongdae

the cliffs

stood unmoved

before restless waves.

At Seoraksan

the pines

still prayed

their wordless psalms.

The sea at Sokcho

spoke

the same ancient language

it spoke

before my birth.

Creation

does not forget

the names

God first whispered.

Everywhere

I met

the nations.

Languages

crossing streets

like migrating birds.

New citizens

calling Korea

their own.

And I,

born beneath

this very sky,

returned

holding

only a resident card,

smiling

at the gentle humor

of history.

Home,

too,

can become

a country

one visits

with gratitude.

Politicians

still argue.

Boundaries

still remember

old wounds.

History

still limps.

But beneath

the noise,

God continues

the patient work

of resurrection.

Ashes

become harvest.

War

becomes hymn.

Broken people

become

living stones.

Tomorrow

I will close

my suitcase.

A few books.

A few gifts.

Summer clothes

holding

the fragrance

of Korean rain.

Kimchi.

Rice.

Soup.

The taste

of my mother’s kitchen—

still warm

inside memory,

still nourishing

a son

who never truly left.

Nothing

is heavy,

except gratitude.

Again

I become

a traveler.

One home

behind me.

One home

before me.

The road itself

becoming

my address.

The sky

my oldest companion.

The grace of God

my passport.

Farewell,

beloved homeland.

Do not keep me

only among those

who departed.

Remember me

among those

who returned

again

and again,

because love

always learns

the road home.

When another season

ripens

upon these mountains,

and another wind

crosses

the Pacific,

we shall meet

without explanation.

For every farewell

is only

love

taking

the longer road

back home.

— TaeHun Yoon, 6/29/2026,

On the eve of my departure, I spent a quiet hour at Dok DaBang —Eagle—the coffee house where my friends and I gathered after church throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s. Sitting in Sinchon with my lifelong friend WanHee, beside Yonsei University and just across from Changchun Methodist Church where we were married, I let the soft drift of classical music fill the room. In this very afternoon, the Presidential National Briefing came over the speakers, announcing Korea’s plan to advance its Three Major Mega-Projects: Semiconductors, Physical AI & Robotics, and AI Data Centers. It was a gentle reminder that even as I prepared to leave once more, my homeland was already imagining the shape of its future.

May be an image of text
No photo description available.
No photo description available.
May be an image of text
May be an image of one or more people
May be an image of monument and text
May be an image of text
No photo description available.
No photo description available.
No photo description available.
No photo description available.
No photo description available.
May be an image of body of water
May be an image of boat
May be an image of boat, hat and ocean
May be an image of boat
May be an image of sea bird
No photo description available.
May be an image of ‎text that says '‎חנעו IAJAGALCI AJ GALCHI‎'‎
May be an image of boat
May be an image of boat
May be an image of skyscraper
May be an image of text
May be an image of water hyacinth and lake
May be an image of monument and text
May be an image of American purple gallinule
May be an image of French lavender
May be an image of monument
May be an image of text
May be an image of the Temple of Heaven
May be an image of temple
May be an image of Victoria Peak and skyscraper
May be an image of hat, cloud, Victoria Peak and text
May be an image of cloud, skyscraper and Victoria Peak
May be an image of Tokyo Tower and the CN Tower
May be an image of tree
May be an image of text
Posted in Poetry | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

“Can You Sing of Hope?”

– A Faith Epic Woven from the Story of Bishop Yong-Jae Jun

Can you sing of hope?

Not when fields shimmer with harvest,

nor when every table is filled,

but when winter strips the earth bare,

when dust rises like forgotten prayers,

when heaven itself seems silent.

Can you sing then?

I hear a voice.

Not the voice of one person,

but the breathing of generations.

A grandfather sings

from the darkness of a well.

No choir surrounds him.

Only heaven listens.

His hymn rises

through cold stone walls,

through suffering,

through faith that refuses to die.

I hear the oldest aunt.

She waters tomorrow

with tears and sweat.

Before anyone called them miracles,

her prayers had already become flowers.

Then comes the year 1905.

A boy of sixteen

hears the Gospel

through the faithful ministry

of Missionary Sharp.

A single seed

enters one young heart.

It will become

a forest.

He walks through

Gongju Youngmyung School,

Paichai,

Hyupsung Theological Seminary,

gathering

not diplomas,

but living seeds.

In Wonsan,

at Lucy Girls’ School,

he teaches the Word

for twenty-four faithful years.

Young women

carry the Gospel home.

Some become mothers.

Some become teachers.

Some become servants of Christ.

Missionaries come.

Missionaries leave.

Some die of fever.

But the Gospel

never departs.

It simply finds

another faithful hand.

Among his students

walks Chae Yong-shin,

whose life would later bloom

through Evergreen Tree.

Among his companions

stands Cho Byung-ok,

who would help shape

a newborn nation.

Then this son rises—

Pastor Hee-Gyun Jun.

Liberation comes.

Joy is brief.

Soon,

the Korean War

splits one people

against themselves.

Behind the walls

of Seodaejeon Prison,

one hundred three believers

are driven away

by retreating North Korean soldiers.

Gunfire.

Silence.

Bodies disappear

beneath dark water.

But martyrdom

never writes

the final sentence.

The blood remembers.

The Church remembers.

The Holy Spirit remembers.

Life begins again.

Thirty-three grandchildren

grow from one faithful root.

Twelve become pastors.

Two become pastors’ wives.

Among them

stands the eldest daughter,

Jin Jun,

who offers her life

to the Korean Monastic Movement.

Stone by stone,

prayer by prayer,

she builds a monastery,

not merely with bricks,

but with silence,

hospitality,

and unceasing prayer.

As a young woman

she breathes faith

in Wonsan Namchon Church.

She listens

to the revival preaching

of Pastor Jae-Hun Yoo.

Each sermon

falls like burning coals

upon her waiting heart.

Again,

history demands surrender.

Bow.

Compromise.

Forget.

But faith chooses

another road.

Leaving.

Walking.

Trusting.

Exile.

Return.

Church.

Monastery.

Refugees.

Fields reclaimed

by weary hands.

Morning prayers

rising like mist in the nation

from mountain valleys.

The fire continues.

Another grandson,

First pastor out of thirty three grands

Yong-Jae Jun,

inherits

not privilege,

but holy responsibility.

The years gather quietly.

Then,

the fire burns again.

In 1986,

a house church.

Kneeling prayer.

In 1992,

upon the wild grasses

of Seopan-gyo,

another beginning.

Later,

Dongpan-gyo.

New sanctuaries rise,

not first from concrete,

but from hearts

set ablaze

by the Holy Spirit.

The flame

passes

from one generation

to another.

Then comes

July 2013.

The Methodist Church

calls for a captain.

Yong-Jae Jun

accepts

not an honor,

but a cross.

“I will offer my whole life,

that God may look upon

the Church

with delight.”

An elder, Sung-Do Kim, blesses him:

“Be the captain.

Let truth

be your compass.

Read the times

with wisdom.

See farther

than your own generation.

Guard relationships.

Bridge the Church

and the world.

Serve faithfully.

Then

God will perform

His miracles.”

O Korea.

O America.

O every nation

still searching

for hope—

Do you hear?

This is not merely

the story

of one family.

It is the story

of faith

walking across generations.

The grandfather’s hymn.

The mother’s tears.

The martyr’s blood.

The monastery’s silence.

The refugee’s prayer.

The pastor’s knees.

The bishop’s willing heart.

Together

they become

one everlasting song.

And the song

still asks us—

Can you sing of hope?

Not after victory.

Not after peace.

Not after certainty.

But now—

while history still bleeds,

while the road

remains unfinished,

while Christ

still walks quietly

among ordinary people.

Yes.

We will sing.

Because hope

is born

where faith kneels.

Where love

refuses to surrender.

Where one generation

places the living fire

into the hands

of the next.

Listen.

The hymn still rises

from the well,

from the prison,

from the monastery,

from the refugee road,

from the mountain chapel,

from the crowded city,

from every faithful heart.

Its melody

crosses oceans.

Its light

crosses generations.

Its name

is Christ.

And therefore,

we sing hope.

For our history

has always been—

and shall remain—

a song of hope.

— TaeHun Yoon, July 6, 2026

Note: Rev. Jun Yong‑jae, bishop of the Central Conference, was elected as the president of the Korean Methodist Church (KMC) bishop’s council at the 30th General Assembly on July 8, 2013. He led the normalization of the denomination, which had been in a state of dysfunction for five years.

No photo description available.
May be an image of text
May be an image of text
No photo description available.
No photo description available.
No photo description available.
May be an image of floor plan and text
May be an image of text
May be an image of monument
May be an image of hospital
Posted in Ministry, Poetry | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dandelion

Today I complete my seventy-seventh year upon this generous earth,

and I receive the day as one receives morning light—

without deserving it, yet full of gratitude.

Yet while I rejoiced, another birthday was unfolding beyond my sight.

Somewhere near Vladivostok
an old Korean family gathered wild dandelions,

not to celebrate life but to preserve it;

after seventy years of exile in Uzbekistan they had returned,

only to discover that home itself had become a stranger.

Others remained in Central Asia,
while descendants of those sent
long ago to the sugarcane fields
of Mexico and Cuba
still carried Korea
as an invisible homeland
flowering within the heart.

I salute them all!

For every diaspora knows what the dandelion knows.

Its root descends into darkness
without complaint;
its countless seeds surrender themselves to the free winds of heaven;
its leaves heal without boasting;
it asks neither fame nor applause,
only another spring in which to bloom wherever it has fallen.

So let me also be a dandelion.

Not seeking greatness,
but faithfulness;
but rootedness;
but the quiet grace of giving life
wherever the Creator has scattered me.

Water finds the lowest place
and becomes the sea.
Nature is complete simply
by being itself.
So perhaps the life
rather be also the simplest—
much perfect at every moment,

the meal shared with one’s beloved,
the child’s song across the ocean,
the brother’s laughter,
the blessing of friends,
the ordinary day received with little hand wave and moments of smiling.

This is my birthday.

This is everyone’s birthday.

The birthday of every exile
and every pilgrim,
every forgotten soul
and every hopeful child,
every wandering seed
carried across history by unseen winds.

O Creator,
thank You for these seventy-seven years.

Let me live and die as one small dandelion:
deeply rooted,
freely scattered,
quietly healing,

always turning my face toward Your everlasting Light.

— TaeHun Yoon, (Revised on 7/8/2026)

Posted in Ministry | Leave a comment

Dandelion

  • Unedited

Today,
I completed my seventy-seventh year
upon this generous earth.

How quietly
joy entered the house.

Before I awoke,
my wife had already arranged
a birthday card
written with the handwriting
that has accompanied my life for decades,
beside roses
she gathered from our own backyard.

The table became an altar.

My youngest son
came early,
leaving a box
of my favorite doughnuts
without asking
for anything in return.

Love,
I have learned,
often arrives
before the one who receives it
has opened the door.

At noon
my wife and I
shared a simple meal
at a nearby restaurant.

Nothing extravagant.

Only another chapter
of the long conversation
called marriage.

Returning home,
we were welcomed
by another miracle of our century.

My second daughter,
holding my grandson,
appeared upon the small glowing window.

Across hundreds of miles
they sang,

“Happy Birthday.”

For a few moments
distance forgot itself.

Soon afterward,
another gift arrived—

from my eldest daughter
and my son-in-law—

nuts gathered
from many places,
a thoughtful charger
for the telephone
through which our voices
continue finding one another.

Even technology,
when touched by love,
becomes sacramental.

Then my elder brother
called from Texas.

His laughter
still carried
our childhood.

He reminded me,
with the affection
only an older brother possesses,
what foods
old men should now eat.

So the day continued.

Greeting after greeting.

Friends.

Church members.

Relatives.

Companions
who have walked beside me
through years
too numerous to count.

Each blessing received
called forth another blessing returned.

The hours
flowed quietly,
like water
finding its own way
toward the sea.

Yet joy
never belongs
to only one household.

While I celebrated,

somewhere
near Vladivostok,

an elderly Korean family
walked into open fields,

gathering wild dandelions,

not for beauty,

but for tomorrow’s meal.

Seventy years
after being driven away
to Uzbekistan,

they have returned
to the land
their ancestors once called home.

Yet home
has become another foreign country.

How does one celebrate
a birthday
when memory itself
has no permanent address?

Others remain
in Uzbekistan,

keeping Korea alive
only through lullabies,
old recipes,
family names,
and tears
their grandchildren
may never fully understand.

And across another ocean,

the descendants
of those who departed
for the sugarcane plantations
of Mexico
and Cuba

still carry,
deep beneath successful lives,
a homeland
that continues flowering
inside the heart.

Diaspora
is not merely migration.

It is the soul’s
ancient instinct
to return.

Perhaps
that is why
the dandelion
has become
one of God’s quiet teachers.

Its root
travels downward
without complaint,

searching
for hidden water.

Its countless seeds
trust invisible winds
more faithfully
than certainty.

Its leaves
heal wounds
without announcing
their medicine.

It asks
for no applause.

It competes
with no flower.

Still,
every spring,
it returns.

Perhaps
this is greatness.

Not success.

Not recognition.

Not monuments.

Only
the quiet courage
to keep living,
to keep giving,
to keep blooming
where God
has scattered us.

Today,
I was happy.

That happiness
needed no explanation.

Water
always chooses
the lowest place,

and there
becomes
an ocean.

The forest
never envies
the mountain.

The stars
never compete
with dawn.

Creation
is complete
simply
by being itself.

Perhaps
the deepest beauty
is never extraordinary.

It is found
in the unnoticed moment,
the ordinary meal,
the familiar voice,
the backyard rose,
the child’s song,
the brother’s laughter,
the friend’s blessing,
the faithful hand
that still reaches
across the table.

Today
is the most beautiful day
I have yet been given.

Not because
it is my birthday,

but because
I discovered again

that every birthday
belongs
to all humanity.

To every child
just beginning.

To every elder
still remembering.

To every exile
still longing.

To every pilgrim
still walking.

To every dandelion
whose seeds
the Creator
continues sending
into the winds of history.

O Creator,

thank You

for allowing me
to live
as one small dandelion—

rooted deeply,

scattered widely,

healing quietly,

and always
turning my face
toward Your everlasting Light.

— TaeHun Yoon, July 7, 2026

Posted in Ministry | Leave a comment

“남산에 올라”

나는 드디어 서울 남산에 올랐다.

처음이다.

평생을 그리워했다.

남산은 그렇게 새롭도록 나를 맞고 있었다.

수억년을 기다리면서.

이성계가 도읍을 한성으로 옮기며 나라의 중심이 되였다.

참으로 아름답다.

아무리 높은 현대식 고층 건물도 병풍처럼 둘러싼 고즈녁한 산들 품에 묻혀 있다.

마치도 소란스런 대 도시의 소음들이 바다 밑 바닥에 가라않아 있듯이.

그렇게 나를 맞고 있었다.

어서 오소, 나의 벗.

어찌 이제야 왔는가?

그 수 많은 세월의 풍파를 견디며 준비해 둔 마음, 참으로 풍성한 가슴이야 내 어이 모르리요.

시리다 못해 이제는 프루른 숲에 묻힌 그대의 가슴, 그 어느 시절엔가 어느 나라의 정기로 그대 심장에 대못 박아 피 눈물 흐르던 시절이 얻그제고, 대포로 그대 정수리 흩어버린 날이 어제로고.

아! 그런 강물의 흐름을 몇고비 넘어, 어미 등에 엎혀 겨울강 건넌 날이 어제런가!

남북으로 흩어져 헐뜯어도 피속에 흐르는 사랑 어찌하랴.

형제는 싸우며 자란다는데!

남에 나라에 흩어져 품싹 팔고 생명바쳐 일군 나라, 이제는 측은즉심 어려운 이웃나라 보살피며 나가보세!

대동세상 일궈보세!

팔각정 마당에 오늘도 사물놀이 한마당 덩실 덩실 더덩실!

남산 촟대 끝에 높이 오르니 알라스카, 스모키 마운틴, 멕시코, 브라질, 모두 모두 눈 앞에 모이네! 뉴질런드, 아프리카, 유럽 그리고 아시아…

이젠 남산에 모두 모여, 평화와 번영의 다음 천년의 삼족오가 되여 알바트로스로 날아보세!

윤태헌 2026년 6월21일

Posted in Ministry | Leave a comment

Fresh Waters, My Home Church


– For Changchun Methodist Church, 120 Years

A clear stream
runs through the world,

not with noise,
not with power,

but with the patience
of water
finding every thirsty root.

On a Sunday morning,
the prophet speaks again:

“These waters flow toward the east…
and wherever the river goes,
everything shall live.”

And suddenly
Ezekiel’s river
crosses a century
and arrives here—

to Changchun,
where prayer first gathered
beneath humble roofs
in the summer of 1906.

Before towers,
before crowded streets,
before the rush of students
and the glow of screens,

there was a spring.

A handful of believers.
A gospel carried westward
from Jeong-dong.
A dream that faith
might take root
among new homes
and dusty roads.

The river began there.

I remember another stream.

A child bending over clear water,
chasing minnows
through sunlight and stone.

The creek seemed endless then.

Yet life carried me
through distant lands,
through years of ministry,
through departures
and returns.

And after the long road,

I find myself again
standing in the water.

Not in that childhood stream,
but in the broad current
of the ChangChun River,

where memory,
history,
and grace
meet together.

The river has grown wider.

Its source remains unseen.

Yet it still carries
the same living water.

For one hundred and twenty years
this church has stood
beside that clear stream—

through occupation and war,

through rebuilding and hope,

through generations
of students,
workers,
mothers,
fathers,
pastors,
and dreamers.

Here prayers were whispered.

Here tears were received.

Here young voices
heard their calling.

Here weary souls
found a place to rest.

And the water kept flowing.

Today,
I hear another witness.

The final breath
of John Steinbeck
gathered into three simple letters-

Soli Deo Gloria.

Glory to God alone.

The river does not praise itself.

The stream does not drink itself.

The water moves onward,
giving life
wherever it goes.

So may Changchun remain
a clear stream
for the city and world.

A river for the weary.

A baptism of living words
for generations yet unseen.

And when another century arrives,

may those who stand here
still hear beneath every hymn,
every prayer,
every sermon,

the sound of living water

flowing from beyond our limits,

because He came,

and still comes,

beyond every boundary,

bringing life
wherever the river flows.

— TaeHun Yoon, on Sunday 6/7/2026

Posted in Ministry | Leave a comment

The Day After Election

Some won.

Some lost.

But dawn arrived
without choosing sides.

The buses breathed along their routes.

Shop doors opened
to familiar streets.

A farmer touched the soil
still holding yesterday’s rain.

A mother set bowls upon the table.

An old man watered tomatoes
leaning toward summer.

And the people remained.

Not as winners.

Not as losers.

But as people.

The election passed.

Life did not.

Children still hurried to school.

Workers still carried lunch pails.

The market still exchanged
its small hopes for another day.

And somewhere,
beneath all the speeches,
dreams resumed their quiet work.

People are heaven.

The old mountains knew this
before flags learned to wave,
before numbers filled television screens,
before victory and defeat
borrowed the language of eternity.

People are heaven.

Yet heaven is not a wishing well.

The seed cannot demand spring.

The river cannot hurry the sea.

The heart must become spacious enough
to receive what descends from above.

Too often
we ask for harvest
with unbroken ground.

We ask for peace
without reconciliation.

We ask for justice
without sacrifice.

Forgetting the heaven within,
we lift our empty hands upward
while keeping our hearts closed.

We ask heaven to serve us.

Yet heaven has always chosen
another road.

It walks through people.

Through tired hands.

Through neighbors sharing burdens.

Through strangers learning
to become neighbors.

Through the unnoticed holiness
of daily bread.

Sometimes discipline grows weak.

The dove forgets the wind
and seeks only comfort.

The eagle forgets the sky
and follows the noise below.

Words lose their roots.

Truth becomes an echo.

Freedom becomes a slogan.

Justice becomes a banner.

And heaven falls silent.

Not absent.

Only waiting.

Waiting beneath the noise
as a spring waits beneath stone.

The mountains remain.

The wounded remain.

The unfinished work remains.

Tasks greater than mountains
stand before us.

And the road ahead
is long.

Long as history.

Long as repentance.

Long as hope.

Yet tomorrow morning

the farmer will return to the field.

The mother will prepare breakfast.

The old man will water his garden.

Children will laugh.

Neighbors will meet.

And heaven,

having rested among ordinary people,

will rise again

in their footsteps.

– TaeHun Yoon, June 5, 2026 in S. Korea

Posted in Ministry | Leave a comment