Its former capabilities were merged into the non-denominational paper The Christian News, but the two separated again in 1910, and it used the Korean name 그리스도회보.
[2] The newspaper's staff included George Heber Jones, Louisa Christina Rothweiler, Ch'oe Pyŏng-hŏn [ko], and Song Ki-yong (송기용; 宋奇用).
[2] The paper was closely related to The Christian News, another Korean-language newspaper which was founded shortly afterwards by Presbyterian missionaries and printed by the same publisher (Trilingual Press).
[6] The newspaper covered a variety of topics, including non-religious,[6] which led to it having non-Christian subscribers.
[10] It had a circulation of around 800 copies,[6] which represented significant market share among weekly periodicals in Korea at the time, which totalled 2,500 around 1898.
Correspondingly, the paper rarely wrote critically about Korean traditional religious practices.
[2] The paper split off of The Christian News in 1910, and was published under the Korean name 그리스도회보.