Wansong Sidae · 완성시대 · 完成時代 · also: Age of Completion, Age of the Second Advent
What Is the Completed Testament Age?
The Completed Testament Age (Wansong Sidae, 완성시대, 完成時代) is the third and final era of God's Providence of Restoration — the age that fulfills the promises left incomplete by both the Old Testament Age and the New Testament Age.
Where the Old Testament Age sacrificed the things of creation as conditions of indemnity, and the New Testament Age sacrificed the children of God as conditions of indemnity, the Completed Testament Age requires the sacrifice of the Parents themselves — the True Parents of Heaven and earth—to restore the original family and lineage lost at the Fall of Adam and Eve.
In Unification theology, each age is defined by what is offered to God as an indemnity condition: animals and material offerings in the Old Testament period, the body of Jesus and the faith of his followers in the New Testament period, and the full sacrificial course of the True Parents—their heart, their body, and their lineage—in the Completed Testament period.
The Completed Testament Age is therefore not merely a chronological third chapter but the qualitative fulfillment of the entire providential narrative.
The Old Testament Age was the age of offering the things of creation, the New Testament Age was the age of offering the children, and the Completed Testament Age is the age of offering the parents. This is the formula of restoration.
— Sun Myung Moon, God's Will and the World
This passage anchors the entire theological logic of the era: each age is defined by what is sacrificed, and the Completed Testament Age closes the providential cycle by offering what is most precious—the Parents themselves, through their course of suffering and victory.
Section I—Etymological and Terminological Analysis
The Korean term Wansong Sidae (완성시대) is composed of three elements: wan (완, 完) meaning “complete” or “whole”; seong (성, 成) meaning “to accomplish” or “to achieve”; and sidae (시대, 時代) meaning “era” or “age.”
Together they denote “the age of accomplished completion” — a period in which the providential goal is not merely approached but fully realized.
In everyday Korean usage, wansong refers to the completion of a building, a musical composition, or a project. In Unification theology, however, the word carries the weight of cosmic fulfillment: the completion of God's creation ideal, which was blocked at the Fall and has been the goal of the entire providential history. The Hanja reinforces this: 完 (wan) implies wholeness and integrity, while 成 (seong) implies active accomplishment rather than passive arrival.
The term stands in contrast to Gu-Yaksiidae (구약시대, 舊約時代, Old Testament Age, literally “old promise age”) and Shin-Yaksiidae (신약시대, 新約時代, New Testament Age, literally “new promise age”). In this framework, the Completed Testament Age may also be understood as the “fulfilled promise ”age”—the era in which all promises, old and new, are finally kept. Rev. Moon sometimes also used the phrase Wansong Bokmangui Sidae (완성 복망의 시대), the “age of the completion of blessed hope,” to describe the eschatological character of the era.
Alternative translations in Unification literature include “Age of Completion,” “Age of Fulfillment,” and “Age of the Second Coming.” Each translation captures a different facet: the first emphasizes the providential telos, the second the fulfillment of scriptural promises, and the third the central providential event—the advent of the True Parents.
Section II—Theological Definition within Exposition of the Divine Principle
The Exposition of the Divine Principle establishes the Completed Testament Age as the culmination of the Three Great Eras (Sam Sidae) that structure providential history. The DP presents these three ages as a progressively ascending spiral: each era sets a new foundation, fulfills a portion of the restoration, and bequeaths an indemnity condition for the next.
In DP's framework, the Old Testament Age runs from Abraham to Jesus. The Mosaic Law, the Temple sacrifices, and the entire Levitical system served as a “shadow” (cf. Hebrews 8:5) of the original ideal—an external structure of conditions designed to prepare the chosen people for the Messiah. The New Testament Age runs from Jesus to the Second Advent. Jesus, unable to complete the physical salvation of humanity because Israel failed to fully receive him, bequeathed the spiritual foundations of the New Testament—forgiveness, grace, the Holy Spirit—as a partial but incomplete fulfillment.
The EDP states explicitly that because Jesus was crucified before he could establish the family of God, the blessing of physical salvation and the restoration of lineage remained for the Completed Testament Age:
The original sin can be liquidated only through the Messiah, who comes with God's pure lineage. He must purify the lineage, changing Satanic lineage into God's lineage through the Blessing.
— Exposition of the Divine Principle, Sun Myung Moon
This is the theological heart of the Completed Testament Age: whereas the New Testament Age accomplished spiritual salvation through faith in the cross, the Completed Testament Age accomplishes both spiritual and physical salvation through the Blessing Ceremony (Chookbok Shik), which transfers lineage. The Holy Wine Ceremony and the Marriage Blessing, administered by the True Parents, are the central sacramental acts of this age.
The Divine Principle also speaks of the “Completed Testament” in terms of the fulfillment of the Three Blessings given to Adam and Eve in Genesis 1:28—“Be fruitful, multiply, and have dominion.” These blessings were never realized at the family level due to the Fall.
The Completed Testament Age is the age in which they are finally established: individual perfection through the growth of shimjeong (divine heart), family perfection through the Blessing, and dominion perfection through the building of Cheon Il Guk (the Kingdom of God on earth).
Section III—Providential Context: The Three Ages as a Single Arc
Understanding the Completed Testament Age requires tracing the logic of the three providential eras as a unified arc of restoration.
The Old Testament Age (from Adam to Jesus) was characterized by the covenant of law and sacrifice. Humanity, having fallen into the lineage of Satan, required external structures—the Ten Commandments, the sacrificial system, and prophetic intercession—to maintain a fragile connection with God. The central figure was the nation of Israel, chosen as a providential foundation for the coming Messiah. The offering of the things of creation—animals, grain, oil—constituted the indemnity condition of this age. The purpose of the entire Old Testament era was to prepare the environment for the birth and mission of the Messiah.
The New Testament Age (from Jesus to the Second Advent) was characterized by faith in the crucified and resurrected Christ and the work of the Holy Spirit. Jesus came as the Second Adam, intending to establish the family of God by taking a bride (the Second Eve) and, through the Blessing, restoring the lineage. His crucifixion, while not God's original will, nonetheless accomplished spiritual salvation—the forgiveness of sin—and prepared a spiritual foundation for the Second Advent. The New Testament Age thus fulfilled a portion of the promise but left the physical dimension of restoration—lineage, family, dominion—still unaccomplished.
The Completed Testament Age begins with the advent of the True Parents. According to Unification theology, Rev. Sun Myung Moon and Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon arrived in the providential position of the True Adam and True Eve—the first perfected couple in human history since the Fall. Through their course of indemnity, suffering, and victory, they established the spiritual and physical conditions required to offer the Blessing to all of humanity.
We are now in the era of the Completed Testament Age. This is the time when the True Parents have come to restore all families and all nations back to God. It is the age of the fulfillment of all the promises of history.
— Cheon Seong Gyeong, Sun Myung Moon
The three ages together form what Rev. Moon called the “vertical history of restoration” — a history that moves from external conditions (things of creation), through internal conditions (children/faith), to the most intimate and central condition of all: the parents themselves. The Completed Testament Age is therefore not simply the third chapter of a story but its resolution—the fulfillment for which all of previous history was preparation.
From Servant to Adopted Child to Son: The Rank of Each Age
The CSG provides the most precise language available for the distinction between what the three ages accomplish in terms of human status before God — a dimension the article's Section III covers providentially but does not state in the CSG's own direct terms.
In the Old Testament Age, even the greatest figures of faith — Abraham, Moses, Jacob — triumphed as God's servants, not as His sons. The entire age's spiritual ceiling was the servant's position, from which humanity could look toward God but could not call Him Father in the full sense. The Mosaic law was given to servants, not to children.
In the New Testament Age, Jesus accomplished a revolutionary step: he revealed God as Abba — Father — and opened the path for fallen humanity to be engrafted as God's adopted children. Rev. Moon notes that Romans 8:23 — “we wait eagerly for adoption as sons” — captures the precise spiritual status of New Testament believers: adopted children, not children of direct lineage. The difference is ontologically decisive:
When Jesus was elevated to the ancestor's position, the Israelites could be engrafted as God's adopted sons and receive the right of inheritance. Adopted children have a different lineage.
— Sun Myung Moon (154-337, 10/05/1964) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
The adopted child inherits the estate but carries a different lineage. No matter how devout, no New Testament believer could claim the lineage of God's direct son or daughter — only the inheritance granted by grace through faith. This is the crucial provisionality of the New Testament Age that the Completed Testament Age is designed to resolve.
No matter how devout you may be, in the New Testament Age you absolutely cannot be God's son. You should be restored and rise up, beginning from all things, through the victorious realm of the adopted son, through the victorious realm of the son, to the parents' position.
— Sun Myung Moon (48-95, 09/05/1971) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
The Completed Testament Age is therefore the age in which the adopted child finally becomes a child of direct lineage — not through better faith or more sincere devotion, but through the Blessing Ceremony, which performs a literal change of lineage (혈통교환, hyeoltong gyohwan). The grace of the New Testament Age was free but partial: it gave the right of inheritance without changing the bloodline. The grace of the Completed Testament Age is total: through True Parents, the bloodline itself is restored to God.
This three-tier progression — servant (OT), adopted child (NT), direct lineage child (CTA) — is the CSG's most compact theological statement of why the Completed Testament Age is not merely the New Testament Age continued, but its qualitative completion and transformation.
Section IV — The True Parents as the Central Reality of the Age
The Completed Testament Age is impossible to understand apart from the figure of the True Parents. In Unification theology, the True Parents are not merely spiritual guides or religious founders; they are the ontological axis around which the Completed Testament Age revolves.
Rev. Moon taught that God's deepest grief (han, 한) since the Fall has been the absence of true parents — parents who could love their children with God's own heart and transmit God's lineage, untainted by the Fall. Every providential figure—Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus—stood in the position of an ancestor of the True Parents, preparing the conditions for their eventual arrival.
The True Parents are the ones who can give new life to all people. Without the True Parents, no one can be reborn. The Completed Testament Age is the age in which the True Parents have come to accomplish this.
— Sun Myung Moon (243-146, 01/01/1993), Exposition of the Divine Principle Series
The CSG chapter on God's First Manifestation (Book 1, Chapter 3, Section 5) adds a dimension to this teaching that is among the most theologically radical in the entire corpus: the Completed Testament Age is the age in which God finally acquires a body and appears for the first time in history.
God, as an incorporeal being, has never been able to relate directly to the physical world without a mediator — first through angels in the OT Age, then through His son in the NT Age. The purpose of creating Adam and Eve was precisely to give God a body through which He could govern the spiritual and physical worlds simultaneously. But because Adam and Eve fell, that body was never available to God. For six thousand years, God remained an invisible presence, known through law, prophecy, and spiritual experience—but never through direct embodied presence:
The Completed Testament Age of justification through attendance is the age of directly attending God in our life. Since that is the time when God's tabernacle remains with us and the new Jerusalem in heaven comes down to earth, the form of the true God will finally appear to us then. This will happen for the first time since the creation of the world. Until now, God has not been able to appear in history, which has remained at an uncompleted stage since the Fall.
— Sun Myung Moon (138-105, 01/19/1986) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
This is an extraordinary claim: the visible God — God with a form — appears for the first time in the Completed Testament Age, in the persons of the True Parents. Rev. Moon states this explicitly in the CSG:
Since the invisible God has no substantial body, the True Parents represent His form. The True Parents are Parents of the individual, family, tribe, ethnic people, and nation. In the future, God will appear in the form of the True Parents in the spirit world.
— Sun Myung Moon (98-224, 08/01/1978) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
This teaching transforms the theological status of the True Parents from “religious founders” or “messianic figures” into something far more precise: they are the embodied form of the invisible God — the means by which God finally achieves what He intended at creation, a body through which He can relate to the physical world directly. The Completed Testament Age is therefore the age of God's own fulfillment, not only of humanity's restoration.
The role of True Parents in the Completed Testament Age involves three dimensions:
Restoration of Lineage. Through the Holy Wine Ceremony and the Blessing, the True Parents transfer God's lineage to Blessed Families, severing the satanic lineage inherited from the Fall. This is described in DP as the “change of blood lineage” (hyeoltong gyohwan, 혈통교환) and is the central sacramental act of the Completed Testament Age.
Restoration of the Family. The Completed Testament Age is fundamentally an age of the family. Whereas previous ages centered on the individual (Old Testament) or the community of believers (New Testament), the Completed Testament Age centers on the family as the basic unit of the Kingdom of God. Rev. Moon consistently taught that “the family is the school of love” and that the perfection of the four-position foundation—God, husband, wife, and children—is the primary mission of Blessed Families in this age.
Restoration of All Nations. Through the worldwide expansion of the Marriage Blessing—eventually extended to hundreds of millions of couples across all religions and nations—the True Parents work to build Cheon Il Guk: the nation where God is the sovereign, the family is the cell, and true love is the law.
The Completed Testament Age is the era of completing the family. It is the era in which the True Parents have set the standard of the ideal family and are extending this standard to all families in the world.
— The Blessing and Ideal Family, Sun Myung Moon
This passage situates the Completed Testament Age squarely in the practical domain of family life—not in ecclesiastical structures or doctrinal systems but in the daily practice of love, sacrifice, and attendance within the Blessed Family.
Section V—The Completed Testament Age and the Three Generations
One of the distinctive theological developments of the Completed Testament Age in Rev. Moon's later teaching is the emphasis on three generations: the True Parents, the True Children (the children of Rev. and Dr. Moon), and the True Grandchildren. This three-generational structure mirrors the providential pattern of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob—the first three-generation family to establish a foundational lineage in God's providence.
In the Completed Testament Age, the restoration of the three-generational family becomes a providential model for all Blessed Families. Rev. Moon taught that the True Family must be a “textbook family”—a “living embodiment of the ideal against which all other families can measure themselves.”
The courses of the True Children—their sacrifices, their public mission, and their participation in the Blessing—became providential conditions for the liberation of all families.
In the Completed Testament Age, parents must love their children as God loves humanity, and children must honor their parents as they would honor God. This is the three-generational ideal of heart.
— Cheon Seong Gyeong, Sun Myung Moon
Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon, as the True Mother, has spoken specifically about the role of the Completed Testament Age in terms of the fulfillment of the feminine dimension of providence—the emergence of the True Eve who stands beside the True Adam in full equality and partnership:
This is the Completed Testament Age — the age in which the True Mother stands beside the True Father and together they call all of humanity back to God's family.
— Cham Bumo Gyeong, Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon
The emergence of Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon as the co-equal True Parent—the True Mother—is itself one of the defining theological innovations of the Completed Testament Age. In previous providential ages, the female dimension of Providence was suppressed or peripheral.
The Completed Testament Age restores the full partnership of man and woman, husband and wife, True Father and True Mother, as the foundational reality of God's Kingdom.
Section VI—Providential Chronology: When Did the Completed Testament Age Begin?
A recurring question in Unification theology concerns the precise moment at which the Completed Testament Age commenced. Rev. Moon offered various formulations at different points in his ministry, reflecting the dynamic and processual character of providential fulfillment.
An early formulation places the beginning of the Completed Testament Age with Rev. Moon's own declaration of his messianic mission — traditionally dated to April 17, 1935, when, according to Unification teaching, Jesus appeared to the sixteen-year-old Sun Myung Moon on a Korean mountainside and commissioned him to complete the unfinished mission of the cross.
A second formulation places the inauguration of the Completed Testament Age with the first Holy Wedding of Rev. and Dr. Moon on April 11, 1960 (Manse, the day of the establishment of the True Parents). This wedding is understood as the first moment in human history when a couple stood before God in the position of sinless True Parents, initiating the age of the Blessing.
A third and widely cited formulation places the beginning of the Completed Testament Age with Rev. Moon's declaration on August 31, 1989, at a major gathering in Seoul, when he formally proclaimed the inauguration of Wansong Sidae and called on all Blessed Families to take responsibility as tribal messiahs (Jokguk Chamsbumo).
Today I proclaim the beginning of the Completed Testament Age. From this time forward, you must go out as tribal messiahs. You must restore your 160 families and establish the Kingdom of God at the tribal level.
— Sun Myung Moon (08/31/1989), The Tribal Messiah
This proclamation is particularly significant because it marks the moment when the responsibility of the Completed Testament Age was formally transferred to the Blessed Family as a whole. The True Parents had laid the foundation; now the members were called to extend it to their families, tribes, and nations.
A fourth formulation, prominent in Rev. Moon's later teaching, associated the Completed Testament Age with specific providential milestones: the fall of the Berlin Wall (1989) and the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union (1991), which Rev. Moon interpreted as the providential victory over atheistic materialism and the opening of the world to God's sovereignty.
Section VII—Indemnity, Lineage, and the Sacramental Structure of the Age
The Completed Testament Age has a distinctive sacramental structure that sets it apart from both the Old and New Testament Ages. Whereas the Old Testament Age centered on the ritual laws of Moses and the New Testament Age centered on the sacraments of baptism and communion, the Completed Testament Age centers on the Marriage Blessing (Chookbok Shik) as its primary sacrament.
The theological logic is precise: the Fall was fundamentally a violation of the marriage relationship—the misuse of love outside of God's order by Adam and Eve. The restoration of this violation requires a corresponding condition in the domain of marriage and family.
The Marriage Blessing, administered by the True Parents, is therefore the providential sacrament of the Completed Testament Age: it restores what the Fall destroyed, and it is available to all of humanity regardless of race, nationality, or prior religious affiliation.
The Blessing is the most important thing in the Completed Testament Age. Through the Blessing, we can receive God's lineage and establish true families. Without the Blessing, we cannot enter the Kingdom of God.
— The Blessing and Ideal Family, Sun Myung Moon
The concept of indemnity (탕감, tanggam) is equally central to the sacramental structure of this age. In EDP theology, indemnity is the condition by which a prior violation of God's law is “paid back”—not ”in a punitive sense but in the sense of re-establishing the original standard.
The Completed Testament Age does not abolish the need for indemnity; rather, it provides the means by which all accumulated indemnity can be settled, through the course of the True Parents and through the conditions undertaken by Blessed Families.
The Holy Wine Ceremony (Seonghwa Shik) that precedes the Marriage Blessing is particularly significant: it represents the symbolic restoration of the bloodline, as participants receive wine prepared by the True Mother—wine that carries the symbolism of the unpolluted lineage of the True Eve. This ceremony has no equivalent in either the Old or New Testament Ages.
Section VIIb — Justification through Attendance: The New Soteriology of the Completed Testament Age
One of the most theologically distinctive — and least widely discussed — doctrines of the Completed Testament Age is Rev. Moon's teaching on justification through attendance (侍天主義, Sicheonjuui, literally “attending-Heaven-ism”). This concept stands in direct parallel to the Protestant doctrine of justification through faith and the Catholic doctrine of justification through sacraments, offering the Completed Testament Age's own answer to the question: how does a person enter into right relationship with God?
In the Old Testament Age, the path to God ran through sacrifice — the offering of animals, grain, and blood conditions that maintained the fragile connection between fallen humanity and God's providence.
In the New Testament Age, the path ran through faith — personal belief in the crucified and risen Christ, through which the Holy Spirit could dwell within the believer and confer the status of adopted child.
In the Completed Testament Age, the path runs through attendance — the direct, daily practice of living with God as the present Parent, in the family, in the community, and in every dimension of life:
From now on, you should live a life of attendance. Up until now, a life of faith brought salvation through faith, but from now on you attain salvation through attendance. Originally, if we had not fallen, we would be following our normal path by attending God. You should attend Him in your daily life, and with your heart.
— Sun Myung Moon (150-213, 04/15/1961) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
This is not merely a change in religious emphasis — it is a soteriological revolution. Faith, in the New Testament sense, is directed toward an absent, crucified, and resurrected Christ mediated through scripture, sacrament, and community. Attendance, in the Completed Testament sense, is directed toward a present God who dwells within the family — who can be encountered directly in the daily life of those who have received the Blessing and entered God's lineage.
The theological ground of this shift is precise: faith was necessary because God could not yet be directly present. The Messiah came first in a spiritual dimension (the Holy Spirit following the resurrection), and believers could only approach God through Christ as intermediary. In the Completed Testament Age, True Parents have laid the physical and lineage foundation for God's direct descent into the family:
Justification through attendance signifies the age of realizing the Kingdom of Heaven in daily life. God is the absolute Father, absolute True Parent, and the unique, unchanging and eternal True Father. The families in which they settle peacefully are absolute, unique, unchanging, and eternal families. Such families can live together with God, and constitute the eternal base of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
— Sun Myung Moon (161-218, 02/15/1987) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
The practical consequence is that the Completed Testament Age is not primarily a doctrinal age or a sacramental age — it is a lifestyle age. The question it poses is not "what do you believe?” or "have you received the sacraments?” but "are you living in daily attendance to God, within your family, in the manner of a true son or daughter?” The Blessed Family's morning Hoon Dok Hae, their daily prayer, their treatment of each other and their children — all of this is the content of justification through attendance, the primary soteriological act of the Completed Testament Age.
The Three Ages and the Restoration of Ownership
The CSG adds a further structural dimension to the three-age schema that the existing article does not address: the question of ownership (주권, jugwon). Rev. Moon taught that the Fall did not merely corrupt the relationship between God and humanity — it transferred ownership of the creation from God to Satan. The three ages of providential history are therefore simultaneously three ages of indemnity conditions by which ownership is progressively reclaimed:
You should stand in the position representing the mother and father. The sons and daughters are the New Testament Age, and all things of creation are the Old Testament Age. Because the Old Testament, New Testament, and Completed Testament ages have all deviated from God's true love, Satan has become the owner. Now, however, we must indemnify all this and bring everything to the original owner.
— Sun Myung Moon (208-345, 11/21/1990) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
The Old Testament Age offered the things of creation as indemnity — restoring, symbolically, God's ownership over the material world. The New Testament Age offered the children — restoring, spiritually, God's relationship with His sons and daughters through adoption. The Completed Testament Age offers the parents — restoring, physically and lineage-wise, God's ownership over the most intimate of all domains: the family itself, the lineage, and the capacity to transmit God's blood.
The Completed Testament Age is the age of accomplishment. We will accomplish as individuals, families, tribes, peoples, nations, and on the worldwide level. These are linked through God's love, God's life, and God's lineage. This is the tradition of one lineage, one love, and one life. When this happens, Satan will have to leave.
— Sun Myung Moon (226-275, 02/09/1992) Cheon Seong Gyeong, Book 1, Chapter 3
This framing — “one lineage, one love, one life” — is perhaps the CSG's most compact doctrinal statement of what the Completed Testament Age achieves. Satan's claim over humanity rests on the lineage established through the Fall. When the lineage is fully restored through the Blessing — individual by individual, family by family, tribe by tribe — Satan loses his legal ground, and God's ownership over His creation is definitively recovered. The Completed Testament Age does not end until this restoration is complete at every level: individual, family, tribe, nation, world.
Section VIII—Comparative Perspectives: Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism
Christianity
The concept of the Completed Testament Age engages directly with Christian eschatology. In mainstream Christian theology, the Second Coming of Christ represents the end of history, the Last Judgment, and the establishment of a new heaven and new earth. Unification theology shares the eschatological structure but diverges in content: the Second Coming is not the end of history but a new beginning within history—the advent of the True Parents who complete the unfinished mission of Jesus by establishing the family of God on earth.
Christian theologians have noted both resonances and sharp disagreements with this framework. The resonances include the understanding of Jesus's ministry as incomplete in its physical dimension, the emphasis on family as the primary unit of the Kingdom, and the eschatological hope for the unification of all humanity under God's sovereignty.
The sharp disagreements include the Unificationist claim that the True Parents, not Jesus alone, are the central salvific figures of the Completed Testament Age, and the sacramental centrality of the Marriage Blessing over baptism and the Eucharist.
Judaism
The Completed Testament Age resonates with aspects of messianic Judaism, particularly the prophetic tradition of Isaiah (chapters 60–66) and Ezekiel (chapters 40–48), which describe a messianic age of world peace, restored family life, and the sovereignty of God over all nations. The Unificationist vision of the Completed Testament Age as an age of restored families and global reconciliation finds natural points of contact with the Jewish messianic hope. However, the identification of Rev. Moon as the messiah and the centrality of the Marriage Blessing as a new covenant sacrament represent profound departures from Jewish theology.
Islam
Islamic eschatology envisions a final age (Yawm al-Qiyāmah, Day of Resurrection) in which justice is established on earth, the Mahdi and Jesus return, and God's sovereignty is universally acknowledged. The Completed Testament Age shares the vision of a universal, just, God-centered civilization but differs in its identification of the messianic figure and in its theological anthropology. Rev. Moon taught that Islam had preserved the monotheistic tradition through the New Testament Age and thus prepared a significant portion of humanity for the Completed Testament Age; he frequently included Muslim scholars and leaders in interreligious initiatives such as the Universal Peace Federation.
Buddhism
Buddhist eschatology, particularly in the Mahayana tradition, includes the concept of Maitreya—the future Buddha who will restore dharma and establish a world of compassion and wisdom. Rev. Moon saw the Completed Testament Age as fulfilling the universal hope represented by the Maitreya concept. Buddhist participants in Unification-sponsored interreligious events have noted points of resonance in the emphasis on heart (shimjeong) as the fundamental reality, paralleling the Buddhist emphasis on compassion (karuṇā) as the heart of enlightenment.
Section IX—The Completed Testament Age in the Life of the Blessed Family
The Completed Testament Age is not only a theological and eschatological concept; it has direct and practical implications for every Blessed Family. Rev. Moon consistently taught that the inauguration of the Completed Testament Age placed new responsibilities on Blessed Families that had not been required in previous ages.
Tribal Messiah Mission
The most significant practical responsibility of the Completed Testament Age is the Tribal Messiah mission (Jokguk Chamsbumo). Each Blessed Family is called to stand in the position of “tribal messiah” for their extended family and community — to bless 160 families, to establish Hoon Dok Hae in their home, and to build a foundation for God's sovereignty at the family and tribal level. This mission is understood as the Completed Testament Age's equivalent of the New Testament Age's evangelical mission: not proclamation alone but the actual establishment of Blessed Families.
In the Completed Testament Age, you are all tribal messiahs. You must go back to your hometown, bless your 160 families, and establish the Kingdom of God at the tribal level. This is the mission of the Completed Testament Age.
— The Tribal Messiah, Sun Myung Moon
Hoon Dok Hae
Another central practice of the Completed Testament Age is Hoon Dok Hae (훈독회, Reading and Learning Meeting) — the daily practice of reading the words of the True Parents as a family, together with scripture from various religious traditions. Rev. Moon introduced Hoon Dok Hae formally in 1997 as the primary spiritual discipline of the Completed Testament Age, stating that in this age, the words of the True Parents serve as the “true word of God” (참말씀) through which families can align themselves with God's heart.
Attendance Toward Heaven
The Completed Testament Age introduces the concept of Simseongsaenghwal (심성생활) — a life of attending God and the True Parents in the heart, in the family, and in the community. Unlike the New Testament Age, in which the believer's primary relationship was with the spiritual Christ mediated through the church, the Completed Testament Age envisions a direct, unmediated relationship with God within the family—“living “with God in the family” as the normal experience of the Blessed Family.
In the Completed Testament Age, the family is the palace of God. You must build a family in which God can dwell, a family in which True Parents can rest. This is the meaning of the Completed Testament Age for every Blessed Family.
— Cham Bumo Gyeong, Sun Myung Moon
Section X—Foundation Day and the Cosmic Sabbath
A crucial landmark within the Completed Testament Age is Foundation Day (Cheon Il Guk Wongu Pyeonghwa Tongil Gukgyeong Nal), celebrated on January 13, 2013 (by the heavenly calendar, corresponding to February 22, 2013), proclaimed by Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon following the transition of Rev. Moon on September 3, 2012.
Foundation Day was declared as the formal beginning of Cheon Il Guk—the Heavenly Kingdom on Earth—and as the cosmic sabbath of God's providence. In the same way that the seventh day of creation was meant to be a day of rest and joy for God and humanity, Foundation Day was proclaimed as the moment of God's liberation (haebang) and the beginning of a new cosmic era within the Completed Testament Age.
The significance of Foundation Day within the Completed Testament Age is immense: it marks the moment when the providential foundation laid by the True Parents is formally transferred to all of humanity. Whereas the Completed Testament Age as a whole spans the ministry of the True Parents and the worldwide expansion of the Blessing, Foundation Day represents the “dawn of the new heaven and new earth” within that era—the moment of formal cosmic registration of the Kingdom.
Foundation Day is the day on which God's liberation is complete. From this day, the history of restoration through indemnity ends, and the history of Cheon Il Guk begins. This is the fulfillment of the Completed Testament Age.
— Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon (02/22/2013), Benediction at the Cosmic Holy Blessing Ceremony
Section XI—Academic Note: Scholarship on the Completed Testament Age
Within the academic study of New Religious Movements (NRM), the Unification Church's concept of the Completed Testament Age has attracted attention primarily in three areas: eschatology, sacramentology, and the sociology of messianism.
Eschatological Studies
Scholars such as George Chryssides (Exploring New Religions, 1999) have analyzed the Unification Movement's three-age schema as a form of progressive revelation theology—a schema with deep roots in Western religious history (Joachim of Fiore's three ages of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit being the most famous precedent). The Unification schema differs from Joachimite theology in that it centers the third age not on the Spirit but on the True Parents as embodied people, and in that it situates the fulfillment of all ages in the domain of the family rather than the monastery or the church.
Sacramentology
The Marriage Blessing, as the central sacrament of the Completed Testament Age, has been studied by sociologists of religion interested in ritual and transformation. Nancy Ammerman and other scholars of lived religion have noted the distinctive character of the Unification Blessing as a “macro-ritual”—a ”sacrament designed to operate at a civilizational scale, transforming entire lineages rather than individual souls. The ambition of the Blessing—to reach all of humanity regardless of religious background—represents a genuinely novel development in the history of religious sacraments.
Sociology of Messianism
The claim that the Completed Testament Age represents the definitive arrival of the messianic era has been analyzed by scholars, including Eileen Barker (The Making of a Moonie, 1984) and James Beverley. These scholars note the sociological significance of a living messianic figure: unlike movements centered on a past messiah (Christianity, Islam) or an anticipated future messiah (mainstream Judaism), the Unification Movement in Rev. Moon's lifetime offered a present messianic reality—the True Parents as living figures whose marriage, family life, and public teaching could be directly observed and participated in by members. The transition following Rev. Moon's passing in 2012 and the emergence of Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon as the sole living True Parent has generated considerable scholarly interest regarding questions of succession, authority, and the ongoing definition of the Completed Testament Age.
Academically, the Unification concept of the Completed Testament Age represents a sophisticated synthesis of Christian eschatology, Korean shamanic concepts of cosmic restoration, and modern universalist idealism—a synthesis that deserves more sustained scholarly attention than it has yet received.
Key Texts on tplegacy.net
- Exposition of the Divine Principle — foundational theological text defining the three ages
- The Blessing and Ideal Family — sermons on the Marriage Blessing as the central sacrament of the age
- Cheon Seong Gyeong — anthology of Rev. Moon's teachings including the Completed Testament Age
- Cham Bumo Gyeong — the official biography of the True Parents including Foundation Day proclamations
- The Tribal Messiah — sermons on the practical mission of Blessed Families in the Completed Testament Age
- True Mother's Benediction at the Cosmic Holy Blessing Ceremony — Foundation Day proclamation by Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon
Further Reading
- Cain and Abel — the providential archetype that structures the indemnity conditions of all three ages
- Tribal Messiah — the primary mission of Blessed Families in the Completed Testament Age
- Blessed Family — the basic unit of the Kingdom of God in the Completed Testament Age
- Holy Wine Ceremony — the central sacrament of lineage restoration in the Completed Testament Age
- Home Church — the Completed Testament Age practice of building God's Kingdom from the home
- Universal Peace Federation — the interreligious organization through which the True Parents extended the Completed Testament Age vision to world affairs
- Providence of Restoration — the overarching providential framework within which the Completed Testament Age is the final chapter