Origin and meaning
"Aju" (아주) is an exclamation used in the Unification Church as a communal affirmation at the close of prayers, benedictions, and holy ceremonies. It is functionally equivalent to "Amen" in Christian worship — but carries a distinct theological meaning that sets it apart.
The word was coined in 2006, when Rev. Sun Myung Moon and Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon formally introduced it as the closing affirmation for Unification prayers. Where "Amen" derives from Hebrew and means "so be it" or "truly" — an acknowledgment of God's will — "Aju" carries a forward-facing quality: a promise to fulfill, not merely an acceptance of what has been said.
As the Family Federation explains:
"Instead of saying 'Amen' as an affirmation of God's absolute power, 'Aju' became a way of promising our Heavenly Parent that we will fulfill His will." — Family Federation for World Peace and Unification
Use in ceremonies
"Aju" appears at the close of nearly every official prayer and benediction in Unification ceremonies. It is spoken collectively by all present — a single voiced response that unites the congregation in shared commitment. The exclamation mark in its written form — Aju! — reflects this energetic, affirmative character. It is not a quiet assent but a declaration.
At the 2013 Cosmic Holy Blessing Ceremony, Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon concluded her benediction with these words:
"May laudation and praise last forevermore to the ends of the earth. Aju!" — Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, Benediction at the Cosmic Holy Blessing Ceremony, January 8, 2013
The same pattern appears throughout the official prayers archived on this site — from the earliest sermons of Rev. Moon to the most recent ceremonies of Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon.
A new age of prayer
The introduction of "Aju" reflects a broader shift in Unification teaching about the nature of prayer itself. Rev. Moon taught that the age of pleading prayer — asking God for what we need — has given way to an age of reporting prayer: declaring what we will do to fulfill God's will.
"The age of pleading through prayer is over. From now on, you should pray in alignment with your responsibility, saying I understand what I need to do, and I will do it." — Family Federation for World Peace and Unification
In this context, "Aju" is the seal of that declaration — the moment when the person praying takes personal ownership of what has been proclaimed before Heaven.
Theological significance
To say "Aju" is not a passive response but an active one. It represents the individual and collective alignment of heart with the words of the True Parents and with God's will. Where "Amen" closes a prayer by affirming God's power, "Aju" closes it by affirming the speaker's responsibility.
This distinction reflects the core Unification understanding of the relationship between God and human beings: God cannot fulfill His providence alone. He needs sons and daughters who will say "Aju" — and mean it.
Further reading
- Benediction at the Cosmic Holy Blessing Ceremony — Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, 2013
- Blessing Ceremony — the ceremony at whose close Aju is proclaimed
- Jeongseong — the sincerity with which Aju is meant to be spoken
- Shimjeong — the heart from which true Aju arises