Sunghyun Lee, PhD

Assistant Professor of Pastoral Theology and Psychology

slee@ambs.edu
PhD in Religion and Society with a focus in Christian Social Ethics, Psychology and Religion, and Women’s and Gender Studies; Drew University, Madison, New Jersey, 2022
Master of Theological Studies in Pastoral Care and Counseling and Christian Ethics, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, 2010
Master of Theology in Practical Theology with concentration on Pastoral Care and Counseling, Methodist Theological University, Seoul, South Korea, 2007
Bachelor of Theology, Methodist Theological University, Seoul, South Korea, 2005
 

About Sunghyun

Sunghyun Lee identifies herself as a scholar, pastoral caregiver and an ordained minister of the Korean Methodist Church. As an immigrant in the U.S. from South Korea, Sunghyun saw a lot of immigrants struggle with racism, language barriers and cultural and systemic differences in the United States. These experiences motivated her to become an advocate for immigrants and international students, which resulted in her founding an organization, Sojourner Coaching, LLC, to support them.

As a scholar, Sunghyun identifies herself as a Christian care ethicist and a scholar of pastoral care and counseling, whose core value is grounded in empathy. She endeavors to integrate theory and practice in her overarching research interests and through her own organization. Her research is primarily with an interdisciplinary approach, involving psychology, Christian ethics, and women’s and gender studies. Sunghyun’s core research questions include: “How can our society and communities — especially faith-based ones — utilize various emotions to promote social justice and equality as well as spiritual growth such as empathy, anger and shame?” and “What are the communal ways that communities of faith can empower diverse marginalized groups such as (im)migrants, racial minorities and sexually traumatized women?” 

Sunghyun’s current interdisciplinary research focuses on promoting moral and communal values of mature empathy, and anger and its use to become a moral resource for social, gender and racial justice. She mainly draws on affect theory, psychoanalysis, social psychology, feminist Christian social ethics and pastoral theology.

Publications and public activities

Books

  • The Power of Communal Empathy: Moral Implications of Empathy from Psychological and Care Ethics Perspectives in Responding to Sexual Violence in Faith-Based Community (tentative title) (Pickwick, 2025, planned release date).
  • Self, co-author (Pastoral Counseling Society Publishing, Seoul, S. Korea, 2009).

Articles

  • “Comparing Wesley’s Doctrine of Sanctification to the Concept of Cohesive Self in Self Psychology” (Asian American Theological Forum,  2014).

Scholarship

  • Dissertation
    • The Power of Communal Empathy: Moral Implications of Empathy from Psychological and Care Ethics Perspectives in Responding to Sexual Violence in Faith-Based Community (Drew University, 2022).
  • Theses
    • “Pastoral Care for Sexually Traumatized Women” (Emory University, GA, 2010).
    • “Eclipse and Re-emergence of Maternity in Psychoanalysis from Freud to Kristeva” (Methodist Theological University, Seoul, South Korea, 2007).

Presentations

  • “When Empathy Meets Digital Activism” (American Academy of Religion Annual Conference: Women and Religion Unit, 2020).

Public activities

  • “Dare to be Different” (New Jersey Summit Branch of the Association of American University Women, NJ, 2016).
  • “International Students and Scholars, An Honest Conversation” (Feminists Talk Religion Podcast in Feminist Studies in Religion, 2023).