term

Blessed Family

Korean: 축복가정 (Chukbok Gajong)
Hanja: 祝福家庭 — blessed / family
Also known as: Heavenly Family; God-Centered Family;
Chukbok Family
Primary series: Blessing and Ideal Family · Blessed Family

What is a Blessed Family?

A Blessed Family (축복가정, Chukbok Gajong) is a husband and wife — and through them, their children and descendants — who have received the Holy Marriage Blessing from True Parents, thereby entering into God's lineage, separating from Satan's lineage, and taking on the providential responsibility to build the Kingdom of Heaven on earth through their family life.

The term “Blessed Family” is not simply an honorific for a happy household. It designates a specific providential status — a family that has been grafted into the restored lineage of God through the act of the Blessing, and that carries a cosmic responsibility arising directly from that status.

Rev. Moon described this with characteristic weight:

"Blessed families are the ones who can rid God's history of sorrow. The blessed families are those who are connected to the lineage of the victorious family centering upon God." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families

And the awe that should accompany the name:

"'Blessed family' is a very frightening name and a terrifying place because they are responsible for substance, blood lineage, and heart." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families,

I. The Value of Blessed Families: What They Are and Where They Stand

Blessed Families do not exist by their own merit or decision. Their origin is providential: they are the fruit of God's 6,000-year effort to find, prepare, and restore fallen humanity to its original position as His direct children. The Blessing is not a ceremony of human origin — it is the culmination of all of sacred history converging in the union of one man and one woman.

"Blessed families do not come into existence by their power. Instead, they have historical significance coming from God the Father. They came into being not by their own decision but by another's. Right there lies God's desire." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families
"You are such precious entities that it is impossible to exchange you for even the whole history because God, despite experiencing unspeakable misery, has worked so hard to find you." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families

Starting Point: The Top of the Growth Stage

In Unification theology, the Fall of Adam and Eve occurred while they were still in the growth stage, before reaching spiritual maturity. Blessed Families, through the Blessing of True Parents, begin their family life not at the level of fallen humanity, but at the top of the growth stage — the highest point ever reached in providential history before the Blessing:

"The blessed families start at the top of the growth stage. The blessed families are in the position of being newly born, just like the True Parents' babies." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families

This means Blessed Families are not merely “better” than fallen families — they occupy a qualitatively different providential position, standing in the lineage of God as restored sons and daughters in a way that no amount of personal faith or religious practice alone could achieve.

The Holy of Holies on Earth

Rev. Moon spoke of the Blessed Family as the ultimate sanctum of the providential order — a holiness greater than any temple, altar, or religious institution:

"The blessed families are established as the holy of holies. God has been seeking blessed families for 6,000 years." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families
"The family is a heavenly altar that can horizontally indemnify the vertical history." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families,

II. The Providential Meaning: The Third Israel

From First to Third Israel

The concept of the Blessed Family cannot be separated from the broader providential framework of the Three Israels. In Unification teaching, the First Israel refers to the Jewish people who were God's chosen nation in the Old Testament era. The Second Israel refers to Christianity, the spiritual heir of that providence. The Third Israel is the community of Blessed Families: those who, through True Parents and the Blessing, enter the most advanced stage of providential history and begin fulfilling what neither Israel nor Christianity could fully accomplish.

"Blessed families in the Unification Church are in a position different from that of the Jews of the First Israel, who wished to receive the Messiah. They are one more step advanced because they have already organized new tribes through the Messiah." — The Providential Meaning of the Blessed Families

Where the First Israel was formed through Abraham's offerings and Jacob's struggle, and the Second Israel was formed through Jesus' cross, and the spread of the gospel, the Third Israel is formed specifically and exclusively through the Blessing:

"Abraham formed Israel through offerings, but the Unification Church formed Israel through the Blessing. The entry into the Third Israel is possible only through the Blessing." — The Providential Meaning of the Blessed Families

The Dispensational Meaning of Each Blessing Number

The progression of Blessed Families from small to vast numbers — 36, 72, 124, 430, 777, 1800, up to hundreds of millions — was not arbitrary. Each number carried specific providential significance in the restoration of what was lost at key moments in sacred history.

The 36 Couples represent Adam's, Noah's, and Jacob's families across three stages of history. The 72 Couples represent the restoration of the failure of Cain and Abel — the 72 disciples of Jesus who failed to unite with him. The 124 Couples opened the national and world-level foundation. The 430 Couples correspond to the 430 years of Israel's slavery in Egypt and their liberation — a national-level indemnity foundation.

"The 36 Couples represent the number 12 in three stages... The 72 Couples represent reversing the failure of Cain and Abel by restoring all the historically lost families in the fallen history." — The Providential Meaning of the Blessed Families

Each Blessed Family is therefore not just a married couple — they are a living providential fulfillment, standing on the shoulders of all who came before, and carrying responsibility for all who come after.

III. Traditions and Daily Life of the Blessed Family

The Pledge of the Families

One of the foundational documents of Blessed Family life is the Pledge of the Families (가정 맹세), which every Blessed Family affirms as the covenant of their identity and mission:

"We families, the center of the cosmos, brothers and sisters vertically connected and flesh and blood of the True Parents before the new heaven, pledge and swear before the True Parents to become worthy of possessing the glory of victors by maintaining our positions in responsible activities and by observing the family laws and traditions decreed by heaven. This I pledge." — The Life of the Blessed Family

The Family Pledge

The Family Pledge (가정맹세, Gajong Maengse), proclaimed by Rev. Moon on May 1, 1994, is recited by Blessed Families as a daily act of recommitment. It consists of eight pledges, each beginning with the declaration “Our family, the owner of Cheon Il Guk, pledges...” The eight pledges cover:

  • Pledge 1 — Seeking the original homeland and building the Kingdom of God on earth and in heaven, centering on true love
  • Pledge 2 — Attending the Heavenly Parent and True Parents, and perfecting the way of filial children, patriots, saints, and divine children
  • Pledge 3 — Perfecting the Four Great Realms of Heart, the Three Great Kingships, and the Realm of the Royal Family
  • Pledge 4 — Building the universal family encompassing heaven and earth, and perfecting the world of freedom, peace, unity, and happiness
  • Pledge 5 — Advancing daily toward the unification of the spirit world and the physical world
  • Pledge 6 — Moving heavenly fortune and conveying Heaven's blessing to the community
  • Pledge 7 — Perfecting the world based on the culture of the heart, through living for the sake of others
  • Pledge 8 — Achieving the ideal of God and human beings united in love through absolute faith, absolute love, and absolute obedience

The Family Pledge is not recited individually — it is recited as a family unit, standing together, affirming their shared providential identity.

Hoon Dok Hae: The Morning Tradition

Hoon Dok Hae (훈독회) — the daily gathering for reading and studying Rev. Moon's words — is the morning anchor of Blessed Family life. It is practiced ideally by three generations together: grandparents, parents, and children reading the word of True Parents, absorbing the teachings, and aligning the family's direction with the providence of the day. Rev. Moon described this as a tradition to be maintained for eternity:

"You should now set up the Hoon Dok Hae study tradition in your families using the books I have mentioned. That is the tradition where three generations of a family start each day by reading Heaven's word, and lead a life of practicing what they read, with a new heart." — Cosmic Assembly for the Settlement of True Parents, April 24, 2011

Tithing and Offering

Blessed Families are called to practice tithing (십일조, sibirjo) — the offering of one-tenth (or ideally three-tenths) of their income to God, through the church. This is understood not as a financial obligation but as a spiritual condition: a concrete act of returning the fallen world's possessions to God, establishing Heaven's ownership over material things.

"By offering a tithe from your material possessions to God, you can establish a condition equal to having offered all that you have... The person who tithes will never perish. As days go by, his storage room will be filled with more material blessings." — Offering Donations in Accordance with Heavenly Law

The principle underlying tithing reflects the broader Unification ethic of ownership:

"Mine is yours, and yours is the nation's, and the nation's is the world's, and the world's is God's, and God's is mine." — Offering Donations in Accordance with Heavenly Law

Keeping Pure Lineage

One of the most sacred responsibilities of a Blessed Family is the preservation of the lineage received through the Blessing — a lineage no longer rooted in Original Sin, but in God's love transmitted through True Parents. Blessed parents must do everything in their power to protect their children from the spiritual environment of the fallen world and raise them within the tradition of the Blessing:

"How to maintain the pure-blood lineage coming from God is the challenge. It is significant to keep the pure-blood lineage in an unchangeable condition, not as blood that can fall." — The Life of the Blessed Family
"The blessed parents born in the fallen world, despite their suffering, should make an unstained environment for their blessed children. It is Father's thought to prepare such an environment as quickly as possible for the second generation, no matter what sacrifices are entailed." — The Life of the Blessed Family

IV. Responsibilities of the Blessed Family

To Be a Good Example for the World

The primary outward responsibility of a Blessed Family is to be a model — a living demonstration that the Ideal Family is not a utopian fantasy but an achievable reality. Rev. Moon was emphatic that a Blessed Family that fails to live by its calling brings not only personal shame but providential harm:

"Blessed families should feel the mission to determine the future of the whole." — The Life of the Blessed Family
"A person who cannot be a good example in family life will receive worldwide and cosmic blame." — The Life of the Blessed Family

The family itself is described as a micro-church — the smallest unit through which God's Kingdom is expressed and from which it expands:

"The family is the micro-church; it should be the agency of heaven. It should be the family that God wants to visit." — The Life of the Blessed Family

The Responsibility to Avoid Secularization

A recurring and urgent warning in Rev. Moon's teaching on Blessed Family life is the danger of secularization — of a family that began with providential fire gradually becoming routine, worldly, and spiritually inert. The analogy he drew was devastating: the Israelites who entered Canaan and adopted the Canaanite way of life, losing their identity as God's chosen people and perishing.

"Don't become a slave to bad habits. Habits are the worst illness. If you lead a habitual life after marriage while rearing your children, habits become part of your body. You will no longer find time for prayer or special heartistic offerings in such an environment." — The Life of the Blessed Family

The antidote is not heroic effort alone but the consistent cultivation of what Rev. Moon called a “heartistic” life — a life genuinely oriented toward God, True Parents, and the providence, in which every day is lived with the quality of heart that was felt on the day of the Blessing itself.

"If you lead one year with the standard of sincerity that you felt on God's Day, your daily life will be influenced. And if you lead the family tradition with such a sincere heart, your offspring will never diminish." — The Life of the Blessed Family

Loyalty, Filial Piety, and Conjugal Virtue

The ethical framework of Blessed Family life is organized around three classical virtues, elevated to a cosmic dimension: loyalty (충성, chungseong) — to God, True Parents, and the nation; filial piety (효도, hyodo) — to parents and elders; and conjugal virtue (정절, jongjeol) — faithful, sacrificial love between husband and wife. These three are not abstract ideals — they are the concrete content of how a Blessed Family member lives each day.

"Blessed families shouldn't fall behind anyone in establishing loyalty, filial piety, and virtue in love. Loyalty, filial piety, and virtue in love start from the family. To be blessed is to inherit Father's wishes." — The Life of the Blessed Family

The husband-wife relationship within this framework is not one of personal fulfillment first. Rev. Moon taught that a blessed husband should love his wife more than any other husband in the world, and a blessed wife should love her husband more than any other wife in the world — not for their own sake but because their love represents the love of God for humanity:

"Men gathering here should love their wives more than any other husbands do in the world. Women also should love their husbands more than any other wives do in the world. That is the morality of love that the parents of the blessed families should keep." — The Life of the Blessed Family

Raising Children to Inherit the Tradition

The Blessed Family's responsibility does not end with the couple — it extends directly to the education and spiritual formation of their children. The children of Blessed Families are, by virtue of their birth within the restored lineage, in a position never before possible in human history: born without Original Sin, within God's direct lineage, into families consciously committed to the providence.

This creates an enormous parental responsibility:

"Parents should lead an exemplary public life to show their children the tradition and to educate them to inherit it. Human beings are originally to be educated by their parents." — The Education of Children

Rev. Moon set a demanding but precise standard: parents must not merely tell their children what to do — they must be what they want their children to become. The tradition is transmitted through living example, not instruction alone:

"If you stand on that foundation, God will automatically lead your children in the same direction. The spirit world will accuse you of irresponsibility if you do not set the right direction for your children." — The Education of Children

And the content of that education is singular in its focus:

"They should teach children to love each other as their parents love each other and to love the nation as their parents love the nation. If you can teach that, no other education is needed." — The Education of Children

The Tribal Messiah Mission

Every Blessed Family is called to serve as a Tribal Messiah — a representative of True Parents at the level of their own clan, neighborhood, and community. The Tribal Messiah mission was formally proclaimed in January 1989 and is the outward expression of what the Blessed Family does with the love and lineage it has received: it returns to its hometown, serves its relatives and neighbors, and works to bring them under God's blessing.

"The fact that you came to the Unification Church and received the Blessing means that God, after four thousand years of the providence, sent Jesus... You can inherit merit from your ancestors who made effort during four thousand years of providential restoration." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families

V. International Blessed Families: A New Race of Love

One of the most visible and theologically significant features of the Blessed Family community is its international and interracial character. Rev. Moon consistently taught that the most effective blow against the divisions of the fallen world — racial prejudice, national enmity, cultural barriers — is the interracial, intercultural, interfaith Blessed marriage.

He called the community of Blessed Families a “love race” — not defined by blood, ethnicity, or nationality but by their common connection to God's lineage through True Parents:

"Unification Church members belong to the 'love race.' What kind of love race is it? They are race-unified and connected with God's love." — The Mission of the International Blessed Families

The practical logic of interracial Blessing was not only spiritual but structural: when a Japanese woman marries an American man, and a Korean man marries a German woman, the barriers of historical enmity between those nations are dissolved at the family level — the most fundamental level of all. The world cannot be unified from the top down through politics; it can only be unified from the bottom up through families:

"The quickest shortcut to bring the unity of the races is international marriage. A man and a woman selected from two different cultural and environmental backgrounds are to become one with the love of God. This is complete harmony and unification." — The Mission of the International Blessed Families

VI. The Blessed Family and the Spirit World

Rev. Moon taught that the Blessing and the responsibilities of Blessed Family life do not end at death. The family structure — husband and wife, parents and children — continues in the spirit world, and the quality of one's life as a Blessed Family member on earth directly determines one's standing in the heavenly world.

He warned explicitly about the spiritual consequences of violations within the Blessed Family — including remarriage after a spouse's death without divine direction, failure to keep the pure lineage, and living as though the Blessing were merely a social event:

"The blessed couples shouldn't lament, even if their husband or wife dies early. They shouldn't remarry; otherwise, they will be caught up by heavenly law in the spirit world. They must report in front of God and follow what God directs them to do." — The Life of the Blessed Family

Conversely, the Blessed Family that fulfills its mission becomes, through its descendants, a dynasty of goodness — ancestors who will be honored, revered, and thanked by thousands of generations to come:

"God wants to put the blessed families in the most precious place because they are ancestors who will be cherished for thousands and thousands of years of human history, and they are also the root of roots and the seed of seeds." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families

VII. The Blessed Family as the Building Block of Cheon Il Guk

The cumulative vision underlying all teachings on the Blessed Family is this: Cheon Il Guk — the Kingdom of Heaven on earth — is not built through governments, institutions, or movements alone. It is built one Blessed Family at a time. Every family that successfully realizes the four forms of love — parental, conjugal, filial, sibling — within God's lineage is a living brick in the edifice of the Kingdom.

"Because the blessed families are cosmic families and a family compounding vertical and horizontal history, they, as heavenly children, should make perfect unity and destroy the satanic world. By doing that, the blessed families create the Kingdom of Heaven." — The Value and the Mission of the Blessed Families

Rev. Moon's final and most comprehensive statement of what a Blessed Family is and what it is for can be found in the Family Pledge itself, Pledge 2:

"Our family, the owner of Cheon Il Guk, pledges to represent and become central to heaven and earth by attending the Heavenly Parent and True Parents; we pledge to perfect the dutiful family way of filial sons and daughters in our family, patriots in our nation, saints in the world, and divine sons and daughters in heaven and on earth, by centering on true love." — Family Pledge, Pledge 2

Key Texts on tplegacy.net


Further Reading

  • Blessing Ceremony — the act that constitutes a family as "Blessed"
  • Matching — the selection of the eternal spouse
  • Ideal Family — the standard toward which every Blessed Family strives
  • True Parents — the origin and authority of the Blessing
  • The Four-Position Foundation — the structural model of the Blessed Family
  • Hoon Dok Hae — the daily tradition of the Blessed Family
  • Original Sin — what the Blessing removes from the lineage
  • Indemnity — the ongoing course of the Blessed Family
  • Home Church — the outreach mission of the Blessed Family
  • Tong Ban Kyok Pa — the grassroots breakthrough mission
  • Cheon Il Guk — the Kingdom being built through Blessed Families
  • The 36 Couples — the first blessed families in providential history
  • Cham Bumo Gyeong, Book 4 — on the Blessing and lineage change
  • Cheon Seong Gyeong, Books 6–7 — on True Family and the etiquette of Blessed Family life
  • Blessing and Ideal Family — full series on tplegacy.net