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Ancestors

조상 · 祖上 · Josang · 선조 · Seonjo · Forebears · Ancestral Spirits · Tribal Forebears

What Are Ancestors?

Ancestors, in Unification theology, are the spiritual forebears of a living family — the deceased members of a bloodline who now reside in the spirit world and remain in active, consequential relationship with their descendants on earth. They are not memories, symbols, or psychological influences; they are real persons whose providential situation directly shapes the lives of the living family members who inherit their lineage.

The Unification teaching treats ancestors as a specific theological category, distinct from both the generic “dead” and from the figures of ancestor veneration in Confucian and folk tradition.

An ancestor in the Unification sense is a person who lived under the inherited conditions of the Fall, whose life fulfilled or failed to fulfill a portion of providential responsibility, and whose relationship with God and with Satan continues to matter after physical death because the lineage they transmitted still operates in their descendants.

Two structural teachings frame the Unification understanding of ancestors.

First, because every human being before the Blessing was born into a lineage connected to Satan through Original Sin, ancestors in the spirit world do not automatically reach the Kingdom of Heaven — their situation remains incomplete until both they and their descendants accomplish what the providence of restoration requires.

Second, because the spirit of a person cannot grow or mature after physical death without cooperating with a living person on earth, ancestors depend on their descendants for the completion of their own spiritual development, while descendants, in turn, depend on the cooperation of their ancestors to carry out the providential work of their generation.

This mutual dependence, developed systematically in Chapter 5 of the Exposition of the Divine Principle under the doctrine of Returning Resurrection, is the core structure within which ancestors must be understood.

Your ancestors in the spirit world are like the angels in the angelic world. The world in which you now live corresponds to the world of Adam and Eve, and the coming generations correspond to the future world. Because the spirit world must assist Adam and Eve, your ancestors in the spirit world cooperate with you, who stand in the position of Adam and Eve, as they fulfill the mission of angels. Through such cooperation, liberation finally takes place. This is the Principle.

— Sun Myung Moon (119-045, 07/03/1982) Cham Bumo Gyeong

This passage captures the structural inversion that shapes the entire Unification teaching on ancestors. In the natural order of filial piety, descendants honor ancestors; in the providence of restoration, ancestors assist descendants.

The living family stands in the position Adam and Eve originally occupied, and the ancestors in the spirit world stand in the position originally held by the angels.

Restoration proceeds upward through history when ancestors support their descendants in fulfilling the providential work that was left undone in earlier generations.

Etymological Analysis

The Korean word 조상 (josang) is written with the Hanja 祖上.

The first character 祖 combines 示 (the radical for sacred rites, altar, or divine signs) with 且 (a pictograph sometimes read as a ritual stone or ancestral tablet), and classically denotes the founding ancestor or grandfather.

The second character, 上, means “above” or “higher” and indicates those who have gone before in time and now stand above the living in generational sequence. The compound 祖上 therefore carries a precise meaning — “those above at the altar” or “the higher generations before us” — that locates ancestors simultaneously in a temporal relation (earlier than the living) and a sacred relation (linked to the altar of the family).

An alternative Korean term, 선조 (seonjo, 先祖), replaces 祖 with 先 (earlier, foremost) to emphasize the temporal priority of ancestors over the living.

Both terms are used in Unification discourse, with 조상 more common in liturgical contexts (ancestor liberation ceremonies) and 선조 more common in historical and providential discussions.

In everyday Korean, 조상 carries the full weight of Confucian filial tradition — the duty to remember, honor, and offer rites to those who came before.

In Unification theological usage, this traditional sense is preserved but set within a larger providential framework: the duty to ancestors is not only remembrance but participation in their restoration, and the altar of the ancestors is not merely the family shrine but the altar of the four position foundation that includes God, the Blessed Family, the restored lineage, and the ancestors themselves.

Theological Definition: Ancestors in the Providence of Restoration

In the Exposition of the Divine Principle, ancestors are treated within Chapter 5, “Resurrection,” and particularly in the doctrine of Returning Resurrection (재림부활, jaerim burhwal).

The doctrine states that because a spirit cannot grow or be resurrected apart from a physical body, spirits of people who died before attaining spiritual completion must return to earth and cooperate with living persons who are pursuing the same mission.

Through this cooperation, the ancestor receives the same benefit that the descendant achieves — when the living person rises to a higher spiritual state through providential work, the cooperating ancestor rises with them.

The Principle distinguishes three stages in this process corresponding to three stages of spirit development: form-spirit (형상성, hyeongsang seong), life-spirit (생명성, saengmyeong seong), and divine-spirit (신령성, shinryeong seong).

Spirits who lived faithfully under the Old Testament Age rose to the form-spirit level and then returned at Jesus' coming to assist faithful people on earth in reaching the life-spirit level, by which cooperation the ancestors themselves were raised to the life-spirit level and entered Paradise.

At the Second Advent, life-spirits from Paradise descend to cooperate with the believers who are pursuing the divine-spirit level, so that the ancestors may also attain that final stage and enter the Kingdom of Heaven.

The mechanism is reciprocal at every stage: ancestors cannot rise without descendants, and descendants cannot rise without ancestors.

This theological structure has a decisive implication. Because the Kingdom of Heaven has been empty throughout history — no human being reached it under the conditions of the Fall — and because spirit growth requires cooperation with physical life on earth, the providential work of the living at any moment is not a private matter but a matter of vast ancestral consequence.

A single Blessed Family, through the faithful exercise of its providential responsibilities, opens the way for thousands of generations of ancestors to complete the spiritual development they could not finish in their own lifetimes.

The spirit world must be mobilized. How can heaven be formed without mobilizing the spirit world? Heaven is supposed to begin from the True Parents, not from fallen descendants. Just as the angelic world helped when Adam was created, the spirit world should return to earth and help in the re-creation. Without doing so, it is not possible to build heaven on earth. Is that not the Principle of Resurrection?

— Sun Myung Moon (162-115, 03/30/1987) Cheon Seong Gyeong

The mobilization of ancestors is therefore not an optional extra to the providence; it is the providence itself in its completed form.

What is accomplished on earth is knit together with what must be accomplished in the spirit world, and the Kingdom of Heaven as a concrete reality begins only when the two are united into a single integrated work through the mediation of True Parents and the Blessed Families.

Ancestors in Unification Thought: Three Generations and the Family Tradition

Unification Thought, the systematic philosophy developed by Dr. Sang Hun Lee, addresses ancestors primarily through its treatment of the family as the foundational social unit and through its theory of education and tradition.

Unification Thought holds that the ideal family is a four-position structure spanning three generations — grandparents, parents, and children — because only such a family embodies the full temporal structure within which the human heart and personality mature.

Grandparents represent the ancestral generation whose accumulated wisdom, love, and providential experience are transmitted to the present; parents represent the creative and responsible generation who receive and pass on, and children represent the future generation in whom the family tradition will be continued.

The role of ancestors in Unification Thought is therefore not limited to deceased forebears but extends to the living grandparent generation, who stand as the visible bridge between the ancestors proper and the children.

This tripartite structure reflects, at the social level, the three temporal dimensions that Unification Thought identifies in history itself — past, present, and future — with each dimension carrying its own distinct contribution to the development of persons and communities.

A family cut off from its ancestors has lost its past; a family not producing children has lost its future; a family whose parents have not integrated both is at best half a family.

This anthropological analysis connects to the axiological teaching on value: the values of truth, beauty, and goodness are transmitted between generations through the concrete environment of the three-generation family, and the theory of education in Unification Thought accordingly places great weight on the role of grandparents as educators of the heart.

Ancestors in this view are not merely a religious category but a philosophical and social one — they are the guarantors of the temporal continuity that makes human life as such possible. Without them, the present collapses into itself.

Ancestors and Bloodline: The Inheritance of Providential Conditions

Because the providence of restoration operates through bloodline, ancestors transmit to their descendants not only genes and family culture but also providential conditions — both positive and negative — that actively shape the descendant's life.

Positive conditions include the accumulated merit of ancestors who lived sacrificially, suffered for a righteous cause, or established traditions of faith and service; these create a spiritual foundation on which the descendant can stand, and explain in Unification teaching why some individuals are born with unusual spiritual openness, readiness for providential work, or capacity for sacrifice.

Negative conditions include the unresolved debts of ancestors who committed serious sins, engaged in idolatry, betrayed trusts, or harmed innocents; these create patterns of difficulty that the descendant inherits and may be required to resolve through indemnity conditions offered on behalf of the bloodline.

This is what the Unification teaching on hereditary sin names — the sin transmitted specifically through direct ancestors in the bloodline, distinct from the universal Original Sin transmitted from Adam and Eve.

The biblical formula that “the sins of the parents will be visited upon the descendants” is read in this light not as arbitrary divine punishment but as the natural consequence of a bloodline that has not been cleansed.

The Blessing begins the cleansing at its root by restoring the lineage to the heavenly side, but the accumulated hereditary sin of specific ancestors still requires specific indemnity conditions offered by their Blessed descendants.

The positive side of this teaching is equally important. Because ancestors who lived faithfully in their own generation accumulated providential merit, their descendants inherit an opening — a readiness, a conducive environment, a disposition of the heart — that makes their own pursuit of the providence more natural.

Many of those drawn to the Unification Movement are, in this framework, descendants of ancestors who themselves sought God faithfully in whatever religious or moral tradition was available to them.

The providence of the present generation is thus carried forward on the accumulated work of all the generations that preceded it, just as the failures of ancestors weigh on the descendants of those bloodlines.

Ancestor Liberation and Blessing: The Cheongpyeong Providence

The most distinctive practical teaching of the Unification Movement regarding ancestors is the programme of ancestor liberation (조상해원, josang haewon) and ancestor Blessing (조상축복식, josang chukbok-sik) administered primarily at the Cheongpyeong Training Center.

This programme was formally inaugurated on February 12, 1999, and expanded through a sequence of declarations by Rev. Moon that opened the way for ancestors across successive generations to receive liberation from their entanglements with Satan and then the Blessing that restores them to the heavenly lineage.

The sequence Rev. Moon prescribed unfolds in defined stages. The first stage covered seven direct generations of ancestors, then was extended to cover 120 generations in connection with the providential pattern of the 120 nations established by Jesus.

Ultimately, in the Completed Testament Age, the scope was extended to 180 generations, then to 210 generations and beyond, so that the entire bloodline of a Blessed Family could be systematically liberated and Blessed.

Each stage requires the descendant to offer specific conditions — financial offerings (the tithe and additional dedication offerings to cover the weight of each generation), participation in the Cheongpyeong prayer and devotional workshops, and ongoing jeongseong (devotional sincerity) in family life — through which the ancestors are led from their separated condition into liberation and then into the Blessing.

Ancestor liberation must be done. The descendants must resolve it. The sons and daughters of Adam and Eve must carry out the restoration. Adam and Eve cannot do it themselves; it is the principle that the second generation, in oneness with Adam and Eve, carries out the restoration. The ancestor liberation ceremony has appeared for the first time in six thousand years of history. Because the time has come, I am instructing that it be done.

— Sun Myung Moon (412-119, 07/16/2003) Cham Bumo Gyeong

The theological logic underneath this practice is the same logic expressed in Chapter 5 of the Exposition of the Divine Principle: ancestors cannot resolve their own situation because they no longer have physical bodies through which to offer the necessary conditions, and they must therefore work through descendants who are living in physical bodies and doing the providential work of the present.

The Cheongpyeong programme is the concrete institutional form in which this principle is applied at scale — tens of thousands of Blessed Families have liberated and Blessed their ancestors through the programme since 1999, systematically clearing the providential debt of entire bloodlines.

A further dimension of the Cheongpyeong practice concerns spirit world infestation. According to Rev. Moon's teaching and the revelations received through the programme, unresolved ancestors often attach themselves to their living descendants in ways that produce illness, emotional disturbance, family conflict, and patterns of failure.

The liberation ceremony separates these ancestors from the descendants, sends them to the appropriate training institutions in the spirit world for education, and then brings them to the Blessing through which they are established in the heavenly lineage.

This teaching provides the Unification framework for understanding generational patterns of suffering that other traditions attribute variously to family karma, curses, or unexplained misfortune.

Ancestors and Tribal Messiahship

The providential role of ancestors intersects directly with the mission of the Tribal Messiah. Because the Tribal Messiah is responsible for restoring 430 families in their tribe, and because that restoration extends to the ancestral bloodline of each family, the Tribal Messiah becomes the point of convergence at which entire tribes — across generations of ancestors and toward generations of descendants — are brought back into the heavenly lineage.

Every Tribal Messiah, in carrying out their mission, is simultaneously liberating and blessing their own ancestors, restoring their living tribe, and establishing conditions for descendants who will inherit the completed providence.

After the ancestors are liberated, they must be Blessed. Because the ancestors entered the spirit world without having exchanged their lineage, the Abel family on earth must do this work on their behalf. The Abel family then becomes the elder brother, and the ancestors become the younger brother, and they receive the grafting of all the family standards prepared by True Parents. This is how the tribal messianic realm carries out the transfer of positions.

— Sun Myung Moon (444-297, 04/08/2004) Cham Bumo Gyeong

The inversion Rev. Moon names here — the Blessed descendant becoming the elder brother to ancestors who become younger brothers — reverses the natural order of ancestral seniority for providential reasons.

Because the Blessing restores the lineage and establishes the descendant in the heavenly position, and because the ancestors remain in the unrestored position until they receive the Blessing through the descendant, the descendant functions providentially as the means by which the ancestors enter the restored lineage.

This does not diminish the honour due to ancestors in the natural order; it adds a providential order in which Blessed descendants bear a spiritual elder-brother responsibility toward the ancestors whose bloodline they now carry forward under heaven.

Providential Context: Ancestors Across the Three Ages

The role and situation of ancestors have evolved across the three providential ages in ways parallel to the development of the providence itself. In the Old Testament Age, ancestors were honored through filial piety, sacrificial rites, and the maintenance of family continuity, but no means existed for resolving their providential situation in the spirit world; those who lived faithfully under the Mosaic Law rose to the form-spirit level and waited for the providence to advance.

In the New Testament Age inaugurated by Jesus Christ, a new possibility opened: form-spirits of the righteous descended to cooperate with earthly believers in pursuing the life-spirit level, and through this cooperation, both the earthly believers and the ancestors rose to Paradise.

Yet Paradise is not the Kingdom of Heaven; the ancestors remained in a waiting state because the lineage had not been restored, and no human being had yet entered the Kingdom. The ancestor veneration of Christian and other traditions during this age has providential value but structural limits — it keeps the relationship open without being able to complete it.

In the Completed Testament Age inaugurated through the ministry of True Parents, the providence of ancestors at last becomes complete.

The Blessing restores the lineage at its root; the Cheongpyeong programme liberates and blesses the bloodline of ancestors generation by generation; Returning Resurrection reaches its full divine-spirit form; and the Kingdom of Heaven, which was empty throughout history, begins to be populated for the first time as Blessed Families and their Blessed ancestors settle into it together.

Rev. Moon repeatedly stated that this is the age in which the spirit world cooperates unconditionally with the earth, because the providential structure has finally been completed at the level where such cooperation becomes possible.

Practical Dimension for Blessed Families

For a Blessed Family, the teaching on ancestors translates into daily, weekly, and long-term practice. Daily practice includes gratitude to ancestors — named or unnamed — during prayer and Hoon Dok Hae, recognition of inherited gifts and inherited difficulties as they show up in family life, and the conscious offering of present sacrifices as conditions that benefit the bloodline.

Weekly practice includes the traditions built into the family's rhythm — Pledge service, ancestor remembrance, and the intergenerational sharing of stories and values that keep the bloodline present in the children's consciousness.

Long-term practice centres on the Cheongpyeong programme — the sequential participation in ancestor liberation and Blessing ceremonies that systematically address the generations of the bloodline.

Blessed Families typically work through the first seven generations early in their providential life and continue through the successive programmes as they are announced, treating this not as one among many optional activities but as a central providential responsibility comparable in importance to the Blessing itself.

For families with particularly difficult ancestral patterns — histories of violence, broken marriages, addiction, or religious betrayal — the ancestor liberation work can be the difference between a family that continues to repeat inherited patterns and a family that breaks them.

Parents in Blessed Families also bear the responsibility of teaching children about ancestors in a way that is providentially grounded rather than merely sentimental.

Children should come to understand that the gifts in their lives — their health, their opportunities, their spiritual openness — flow in part from the faithful conditions offered by ancestors they never met, and that the difficulties in their lives may reflect unresolved ancestral work for which they share responsibility.

This framework gives children a sense of belonging to a providence larger than themselves, and it equips them to receive their own Blessing as the natural continuation of a generational work that stretches backward to the first human ancestors and forward to Blessed descendants not yet born.

Academic Note

In studies of New Religious Movements, the Unification teaching on ancestors is regularly examined as a distinctive case of the integration of East Asian ancestor traditions with a Christian-derived theological framework.

George Chryssides, in The Advent of Sun Myung Moon (1991) and later work, treats the Unification practice of ancestor liberation as a genuinely innovative synthesis — not Confucian ancestor veneration reimported into Christianity, but a new theological practice that presupposes Christian eschatology (resurrection, Kingdom of Heaven) and specifies the cooperation of ancestors within it.

Eileen Barker, writing across several decades on the Unification Church, has observed that the ancestor-liberation dimension of the movement is central to its self-understanding as a providential religion rather than merely a moral or devotional one, and she has noted how the Cheongpyeong programme functions as a significant institutional expression of the movement's belief in ongoing revelation.

Massimo Introvigne, through the Center for Studies on New Religions (CESNUR), has documented the scale of ancestor-liberation participation and its effects on Unification members' religious life, framing it as an important datum in understanding how the movement understands the relationship between the living and the dead.

More critical treatments, including aspects of Bromley and Shupe's earlier work, have raised questions about the financial dimensions of ancestor-liberation practice and whether the tithing connected to the programme is theologically grounded or institutionally driven.

Defenders within the movement, drawing on the systematic teaching in Cham Bumo Gyeong and Cheon Seong Gyeong, respond that the offerings are conditional in the classical indemnity sense — providential conditions that carry real spiritual weight — rather than payments for services, and that the relationship between the conditions and the results is explicitly theological in the movement's own framework.

Comparative Religion and Philosophy

Confucianism — The Confucian tradition elaborated the most systematic account of ancestor reverence in world religious history, centring on filial piety (xiao, 孝; hyo in Korean), the maintenance of ancestral rites (li, 禮), and the continuity of the family line.

Confucian teaching holds that the deceased continue to depend on their descendants for proper rites, and that the descendants draw moral and spiritual nourishment from their connection with ancestors.

The Unification teaching preserves the core Confucian insight into the continuing reality of ancestors and their connection with the living, and extends it into a specifically Christian providential framework in which ancestors actively participate in the providence of restoration rather than simply receiving the honour and offerings of descendants.

Judaism — Biblical and rabbinic Judaism honors the “merits of the fathers” (zekhut avot), particularly the merits of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, which are understood to avail the descendants of Israel.

The concept of a righteous person whose merit extends across generations resonates with the Unification teaching on positive providential conditions accumulated by faithful ancestors. Judaism also developed the practice of yahrzeit (memorial observance) and Kaddish (prayer recited by mourners), which maintains the relationship between living descendants and deceased ancestors.

The Unification framework shares the conviction that this relationship is real and consequential while locating it in the broader structure of Returning Resurrection.

Christianity — Christian tradition has handled ancestors in varied ways. Catholic and Orthodox traditions developed the doctrine of the communion of saints, the practice of praying for the souls of the departed (particularly through the Mass offered for the dead and the doctrine of Purgatory in Catholic theology), and the reverence of specific holy ancestors as saints whose intercession is sought.

Protestant traditions largely rejected prayers for the dead, emphasising that the eternal destiny of the departed is settled at death.

The Unification teaching on ancestor liberation has closer formal resonances with Catholic and Orthodox practice — particularly in the conviction that the living can affect the situation of the departed — while its specific framework of Returning Resurrection and lineage restoration distinguishes it from both.

Islam — Islamic tradition teaches that the dead benefit from the prayers (du'a) of their living descendants and from ongoing charity (sadaqah jariyah) given in their name.

The Prophet is reported to have said that three things continue to benefit a person after death: ongoing charity, beneficial knowledge they left behind, and a righteous child who prays for them.

This structural parallel — that descendants can affect ancestors through their actions — resonates with the Unification teaching, though Islam does not develop the idea into a structured programme of ancestor liberation parallel to the Cheongpyeong practice.

Buddhism — Buddhist traditions, particularly in East Asia (Pure Land, Ch'an/Zen, and folk Buddhism), developed elaborate practices for assisting the dead, including the transfer of merit (pariṇāmanā), the dedication of meritorious acts to the benefit of deceased relatives, and festivals such as Ullambana (Ghost Festival) in which descendants make offerings on behalf of ancestors who may be suffering in lower realms.

The Unification parallel to these traditions lies in the shared conviction that the living can meaningfully affect the situation of the dead through appropriate conditions and dedications, with the key difference being that Unification places this within the framework of lineage restoration and the personal relationship with God rather than karmic transfer.

African and Indigenous traditions — Many African and indigenous religious traditions treat the ancestors as actively present in the life of the community, providing protection, guidance, and correction in exchange for proper remembrance and ritual.

The Unification teaching shares the conviction that the ancestors are present and active rather than simply past, and names the specific mechanism of this activity (Returning Resurrection) while framing the overall relationship within the providence of God rather than within an autonomous ancestral realm.

Western philosophy — Contemporary Western thought has largely lost the category of “ancestors” as a live theological or philosophical concept, reducing the dead either to psychological memory (in post-Freudian thought), to historical influence (in hermeneutic and historicist traditions), or to genetic inheritance (in scientific materialism).

The Unification teaching on ancestors provides a theological counterweight to this reduction, affirming that ancestors are real people in a real spirit world, related to the living through real providential connections, and participants in a real work of restoration that proceeds across generations.

What makes the Unification concept of ancestors distinctive is its integration of three dimensions that most traditions separate. From Confucianism, it retains the depth of filial relation and the continuity of family tradition. From Christianity, it retains the eschatological frame of resurrection, the Kingdom of Heaven, and lineage salvation.

From the specific Unification teaching on lineage, Blessing, and providence, it adds the providential mechanism — Returning Resurrection plus ancestor liberation plus the blessing—by which the ancestors are actively brought into the completed work of restoration.

The result is a theology of ancestors that is simultaneously more ritually structured than most Protestant frameworks, more theologically articulated than most folk traditions, and more providentially active than most philosophical accounts.

Key Takeaway

  • Ancestors in Unification theology are real people in the spirit world whose providential situation is integrally connected to the lives of their living descendants through the bloodline and through the mechanism of Returning Resurrection.
  • Chapter 5 of the Exposition of the Divine Principle teaches that spirits cannot grow or be resurrected apart from physical life on earth, so ancestors must cooperate with descendants who are pursuing providential work, and both rise together.
  • Unification Thought situates ancestors within the three-generation structure of the ideal family — grandparents, parents, children — and treats them as guarantors of the temporal continuity of personal and social life.
  • The Cheongpyeong program of ancestor liberation and ancestor Blessing, formally inaugurated on February 12, 1999, systematically restores the ancestral bloodline through seven, 120, 180, 210, and further generations.
  • The Tribal Messiah carries out ancestor restoration as a structural part of tribal restoration, functioning as the providential elder brother through whom the ancestors enter the heavenly lineage.
  • The Completed Testament Age is the first age in human history in which the Kingdom of Heaven can be populated by Blessed ancestors united with Blessed descendants, completing a providential arc that stretches from Adam and Eve to the present generation.

What is the difference between honoring ancestors and ancestor liberation in Unification teaching?

Honouring ancestors is the traditional filial duty of remembrance, gratitude, and cultural continuity that the Unification Movement shares with Confucian and other traditions; ancestor liberation is the specific providential work of freeing ancestors from their spiritual entanglements and bringing them to the Blessing through the Cheongpyeong program, made possible only in the Completed Testament Age through True Parents.

How does ancestor liberation relate to Original Sin?

Original Sin is the lineage-level corruption inherited from Adam and Eve and resolved at its root through the Blessing; ancestor liberation addresses the accumulated hereditary sin of specific direct ancestors — the particular sins and unresolved conditions that successive generations left in the bloodline — and is therefore a distinct but related dimension of the same overall restoration of the bloodline.

Can ancestors who were not members of the Unification Movement be liberated and Blessed?

Yes. The ancestor liberation and Blessing programme extends to all ancestors of a Blessed Family regardless of the religious tradition they followed in their earthly life; the Blessing given through True Parents in the Completed Testament Age is providentially universal, and the Cheongpyeong program applies it to the ancestors of every bloodline whose descendants offer the required condition.

Key Texts on tplegacy.net

  • Exposition of the Divine Principle — Chapter 5: Resurrection — The foundational teaching on Returning Resurrection and the cooperation of ancestors with descendants.
  • Cheon Seong Gyeong — Book 5: Earthly Life and the Spirit World — Extensive teaching on the relationship between ancestors in the spirit world and descendants on earth.
  • Cham Bumo Gyeong — Ancestor Liberation and the Blessing of the Spirit World — Rev. Moon's systematic teaching on the Cheongpyeong programme and its providential significance.
  • The Declaration of Ancestor Liberation — February 12, 1999 — Primary source material on the formal inauguration of the ancestor liberation providence.
  • The Blessing of the Spirit World — 1997 and Subsequent Ceremonies — The providential declarations opening the Blessing to spirits.

Further Reading

  • Spirit World — The realm in which ancestors reside and from which they cooperate with their living descendants.
  • Resurrection — The providential process by which ancestors and descendants together rise through the stages of spirit growth.
  • Lineage — The bloodline through which providential conditions, both positive and negative, are transmitted across generations.
  • Original Sin — The root inherited corruption that the Blessing addresses at the level of lineage.
  • Sin — Including the specific category of hereditary sin transmitted from direct ancestors.
  • Blessing — The sacrament through which lineage is restored for both the living and their ancestors.
  • Tribal Messiah — The providential role that includes the restoration of the ancestral bloodline of the tribe.
  • Blessed Family — The social unit through which ancestor liberation is actually carried out.
  • Indemnity — The providential law that structures the conditions offered on behalf of ancestors.
  • Completed Testament Age — The providential age in which the full liberation and Blessing of ancestors first becomes possible.
  • Three Generations — The ideal family structure in which ancestors, living generation, and descendants are integrated.
  • Hoon Dok Hae — The daily practice in which gratitude to ancestors is expressed and maintained.
  • Cheongpyeong — The institutional centre of the ancestor liberation providence.
  • Jeongseong — The devotional sincerity that sustains the conditions offered on behalf of ancestors.
  • Unification Thought — The philosophical treatment of the three-generation family as the social and educational unit in which ancestors are present.