A South Korean Megachurch “pastor” was jailed after sexually abusing eight women from his church because he said it was an “order from God” according to a report:
South Korean megachurch pastor Lee Jae-rock was sentenced to 15 years in prison for raping eight female followers, and telling them it was God’s will.
The Korea Times reported that Lee, the 75-year-old pastor of Manmin Central Church, was found guilty on Thursday of using his power and status to force the victims, all in their 20s, to have sex with him, saying that it was an “order from God.”
The Seoul Central District Court also ordered the church leader to take 80 hours of therapy classes and banned him from working with youth institutions for 10 years after his prison term.
The court found that Lee had presented himself as a holy figure of sorts, with his followers too afraid to disobey him.
“The victims have been attending the church since their teenage years and regarded the pastor as a holy figure, thinking that obeying him would open the way to Heaven. So they did not disobey his orders, and he took advantage of this to repeatedly rape and harass them for a long time,” the court said.
Lee, whose church claims over 130,000 followers, was arrested back in May on charges that he raped at least eight women on nearly 40 different occasions.
He insisted that the victims are intentionally defaming him and that they could have spurned his advances.
The court rejected the argument, however, noting that “there was no reason for the victims to accuse him falsely because they themselves would face shame and public attention.”
“The pastor praised himself as a holy figure. The victims believed him as such a figure and that the sexual acts were God’s will,” it added.
One of the victims, who wasn’t named, told local media earlier this year that Lee would call women to his apartment and force them to have sex.
“I was unable to turn him down,” the woman said.
“He was more than a king. He was god,” she added, noting that she had been a member of the church since childhood.
Back in April, Manmin (which means “all creation”) defended its pastor, claiming that “false rumors” were being started against him out of jealousy.
The church argued that Lee has long been “stressing the importance of sexual ethics.”
Following Thursday’s ruling, the church said that it would appeal, insisting that the court did not accept material it had offered allegedly refuting the claims of the victims.
The church has claimed that its growth since starting out in 1982 to open 10,000 branch and associative churches around the world has been due to God’s blessings.
“Manmin has experienced such an astounding and rapid growth only in 30 years because, amidst God’s abundant blessings, there are always the messages of life proclaimed by Rev. Dr. Jaerock Lee, marvelous manifestations of the fiery works of the Holy Spirit, and the unceasing prayer of its members,” it says on its website. (source)
Now surely it is true that some of the women consented from the story, because they believed he was a “holy man.” They too have a role to play in this, and in that sense some of this may not have been “rape” in the true sense (i.e. forced, unwilling sex with another person). However, the fact that there is a consistent and clear idea that the “pastor” was able to persuade such women to have sex with him by saying it was an “order from God” is indicative of the cult-like personality that this “pastor” developed and was knowingly using for his own benefit.
There is plenty of blame on all sides for this scandal. The pastor should not have done what he did, but at the same time, one cannot say that all of the women, based on the evidence presented, were sexually assaulted without their consent.