믿음 · 신앙 · 信仰 · midum · sinang · also: Foundation of Faith · Absolute Faith
What is Faith?
Faith (믿음, midum / 신앙, sinang) is one of the most foundational and multidimensional concepts in the theology of Rev. Sun Myung Moon. In Unification teaching, faith is not simply an intellectual assent to doctrinal propositions.
It is the living connective tissue between God and the human being—the active, personal trust that enables a person to pass through the Realm of Indirect Dominion, fulfill his or her Portion of Responsibility, and ultimately enter into the Realm of Direct Dominion in full union with God.
Faith operates at multiple levels simultaneously. It is the primary content of the human Portion of Responsibility in the individual life. It is the structural condition required to establish the Foundation to Receive the Messiah in the Providence of Restoration. And in its highest expression — Absolute Faith (절대신앙, jeoldae sinang) — it is one of the three attributes with which God Himself created the universe.
It is dangerous to fall into a routine life of faith. Such a life of faith becomes a condition for Satan, who is always busy trying to find reasons to accuse us.
— The Foundation of Faith and the Foundation of Substance, Sun Myung Moon
This opening warning captures the Unification understanding of faith as something urgent, alive, and always at stake — not a settled possession but a dynamic orientation of the whole person toward God and the providence.
Section I—Etymology and Terminology
The concept of “faith” in Unification theology is expressed through several distinct Korean terms, each carrying a different shade of meaning.
믿음 (midum) is the most intimate term. It derives from the verb mitda (믿다), meaning “to trust,” “to rely upon,” or “to believe in.” It conveys personal, relational trust — the faith of a child in a parent, or of a person in God. This is the faith that is the content of the human Portion of Responsibility during the growing period: the simple, direct act of trusting God's Word and acting accordingly.
신앙 (sinang, 信仰) is the classical Sino-Korean compound for religious faith and devotion. The Hanja break down as 信 (sin, faith, trust) and 仰 (ang, to look upward, to revere). Together they mean “to look upward with trust” — a beautiful image of the soul orienting itself toward God. This term refers more broadly to one's life of spiritual practice, the sustained orientation toward the divine.
신앙기대 (sinang gidae, 信仰基臺) means the Foundation of Faith — a precise technical term in the Exposition of the Divine Principle. It describes the specific providential condition that a central figure must establish before the Foundation to Receive the Messiah can be laid. This is faith as a structural element of history, not merely an inner attitude.
절대신앙 (jeoldae sinang, 絕對信仰) means Absolute Faith—the unconditional, unshakeable faith that God Himself exercised at the moment of creation and that the True Parents have restored as the standard for all humanity.
The movement from midum (personal trust) through sinang (religious devotion) to sinang gidae (providential condition) to jeoldae sinang (absolute attribute) mirrors the entire theological arc of Unification thought: from the individual heart all the way to the cosmic structure of creation and restoration.
Section II — Faith in the Exposition of the Divine Principle
The Exposition of the Divine Principle introduces faith at two critical structural points: within the Principle of Creation and within the Providence of Restoration.
Faith is the content of the Portion of Responsibility. The Principle of Creation teaches that all created beings grow through the inherent governance of God's Principle automatically, but human beings must also fulfill their own Portion of Responsibility. The paradigmatic example is God's commandment to Adam and Eve: “On the day you eat of it you shall surely die” (Genesis 2:17). Obeying or disobeying this commandment was entirely Adam and Eve's decision. Their responsibility was to trust God's Word—to have faith—and to act accordingly.
Faith, in this foundational sense, is simply the human act of trusting the Word of God and living by it.
No matter how great the saving grace of the cross of Christ, the salvation knocking at our door will be for naught unless we fortify our faith, which is our portion of responsibility.
— The Realm of Indirect Dominion, Sun Myung Moon
The Foundation of Faith in the Providence of Restoration. The Providence of Restoration requires, at each stage, the establishment of a Foundation of Faith (신앙기대) as its first structural component. A central figure, representing Adam's position, must set an indemnity condition that symbolically restores the faith Adam failed to maintain. This condition always involves three elements: a person standing in the central position, an object of devotion symbolizing the Word, and an indemnity period during which absolute fidelity must be maintained.
The pattern runs throughout providential history. Noah built the ark for 120 years — this was his Foundation of Faith. Abraham's three offerings at God's direction established his Foundation of Faith. Moses' 40-day fasts and his faithfulness through trials were Foundations of Faith. Without the Foundation of Faith, the Foundation of Substance cannot be laid, and the Foundation to Receive the Messiah cannot be established. Faith is therefore not merely an individual virtue — it is the load-bearing pillar of providential history.
In order to go the way of restoration, you must first establish a foundation of faith. The foundation of faith is necessary in order to create a solid foundation upon which you can secure your place and stand in the subject position.
— The Foundation of Faith and the Foundation of Substance, Sun Myung Moon
The relationship between the Foundation of Faith and the Foundation of Substance is sequential and non-reversible. Faith must come first — without it, no genuine transformation of character is possible, no Cain and Abel unity can be achieved, and no door opens to the Messiah. This sequence has repeated itself at every level of providential history, from the individual to the national.
Section III—Absolute Faith: The Divine Standard
Among all the dimensions of faith in Unification theology, Absolute Faith (절대신앙) carries the most cosmic weight. Rev. Moon taught that God created the entire universe through the exercise of three absolute attributes: Absolute Faith, Absolute Love, and Absolute Obedience.
God did not create reluctantly or conditionally. He invested Himself totally — in Absolute Faith that His creation would respond, in Absolute Love that poured out without reservation, and in Absolute Obedience to the laws of love and life that He Himself had established. Rev. Moon described this as God reaching “the zero point” — emptying Himself so completely in the act of creation that nothing was held back.
The Fall of Adam and Eve was, from this perspective, a failure of Absolute Faith. They did not trust God's Word absolutely. They allowed doubt and deviation to enter their hearts, and they acted against the commandment. The restoration of humanity, therefore, requires the restoration of Absolute Faith — first modeled by True Parents in their own lives, and then transmitted to Blessed Families as the standard of their daily practice.
I have been consistent in everything I have done throughout my entire life of suffering. The words I spoke fifty years ago are the same as the words I am speaking today. That is why I am telling you to practice absolute faith, absolute love, and absolute obedience.
— Preparation for the Spirit World, Sun Myung Moon (329-264, 08/11/2000)
Absolute Faith is enshrined in the Family Pledge, verse 8, which Blessed Families recite daily:
“Our family pledges, as we enter the Completed Testament Era, to achieve the ideal oneness of God and humankind in love through practicing absolute faith, absolute love, and absolute obedience.”
Every morning, recitation of this pledge is a concrete act of realigning oneself with the original standard of creation.
Rev. Moon clarified that Absolute Faith is not blind faith. It is not the suppression of reason or conscience. It is faith in the absolute subject — God — and in the absolute principles of love and creation that He established. It is faith that has been tested in the crucible of suffering, purified of self-interest, and grounded in direct experience of God's Heart.
Section IV — The Four Great Truths and the World of Faith
Rev. Moon taught that he brought four foundational clarifications to the world of faith — insights without which genuine faith cannot be properly anchored:
The first was the clarification of the relationship between God and human beings — revealing God as a personal Parent, not merely an abstract deity, and establishing the parent-child relationship as the model for all human-divine connection.
The second was the clarification of the human Portion of Responsibility and the law of indemnity — concepts that had never been clearly articulated before, yet without which the failures of providential history remain incomprehensible and faith becomes unmoored from reality.
The third was the explanation of why conscientious, faithful people often suffer while evil people prosper — resolved through the understanding of the Cain and Abel dynamic and the providential necessity of the sacrificial position.
The fourth was the revelation of the problem of lineage — that humanity's fundamental suffering is rooted in inherited blood ties to Satan rather than to God, a condition that only the Blessing Ceremony can ultimately resolve.
These four truths do not merely inform faith — they make genuine faith possible. Without understanding why one suffers, why God seems distant, and why history has been so painful, faith easily collapses into superstition or despair. Rev. Moon's theological clarity was intended to give faith a rational foundation strong enough to withstand the full weight of lived human experience.
Section V — Providential Context across the Three Ages
Old Testament Age
In the age of the Law, faith expressed itself primarily through obedience to the commandment and fidelity in offering. The central figures were tested above all in their willingness to trust God's Word even when it contradicted natural human instinct — Abraham raising his knife over Isaac, Moses striking the rock in the desert, the Israelites marching silently around the walls of Jericho. Each of these was a test of faith as absolute trust in the Word of God.
The Foundation of Faith required in this age was primarily symbolic and material: sacred numbers (21 days, 40 days, 120 years), physical objects of devotion, and acts of separation from Satan. The Word in the Old Testament Age was the Law — Torah —, and faith meant living in faithful observance of its commands.
New Testament Age
In the age of the Son, the object of faith shifted from the Law to the person of Jesus Christ. Faith was now demanded not only as adherence to a code but as recognition of and personal devotion to the Messiah. Rev. Moon taught that John the Baptist's failure was ultimately a failure of faith — he lost certainty about Jesus' identity at the critical moment (Matthew 11:3). The consequence was catastrophic for the entire providential timeline.
The Apostle Paul's formulation — “we are justified by faith” (Romans 5:1) — reflected the New Testament Age's deepest structure. But Unification theology qualifies this: faith in Christ justifies spiritually, grafting the believer into Christ's spiritual lineage. Physical lineage, however, was not yet restored because Jesus could not complete his full mission. The faith of the New Testament Age remained incomplete until it could be anchored in the True Parents' blessing.
Completed Testament Age
In the Completed Testament Age, the object of faith is the True Parents — the living embodiment of God's love, life, and lineage. Rev. Moon taught: “We say in the Unification Church, 'Let us have faith in True Parents' and 'Let us believe in True Parents.'” This is not idolatry but the recognition that in the Completed Testament Age, God works through the True Parents as His substantial representatives on earth.
Faith in this age is qualitatively different from the two preceding ages. It is not primarily the faith of the servant (following the Law) nor of the adopted child (believing in Jesus spiritually). It is the faith of the direct child — the intimate, warm, relational trust of a son or daughter in their own parents. It is personal, familial, and ultimately expressed through attendance.
Section VI — Comparative Religious Perspectives
Christianity
Classical Protestant theology distinguishes fides historica (historical faith — believing the facts of the Gospel), fides salvifica (saving faith — personal trust in Christ's redemptive work), and fides formata (formed faith — faith active in love, per Catholic thought).
The Unification understanding resonates most strongly with fides formata: faith that is not an isolated act but a living orientation of the whole person that produces fruit in love and action. However, Unification theology departs from Reformed theology by insisting that faith is not the entirety of salvation — it must be complemented by the change of lineage through the Blessing, which goes beyond anything faith alone can accomplish.
Judaism
The Hebrew concept of emunah (אֱמוּנָה) — often translated as faith but more accurately meaning faithfulness or steadfastness — comes very close to the Unification understanding of faith as an orientation of the whole person over time, not merely a momentary decision. The Shema (“Hear, O Israel: the Lord is our God, the Lord is one” — Deuteronomy 6:4) represents the daily affirmation of emunah — structurally parallel to the daily recitation of the Family Pledge. Jewish tradition also emphasizes bitachon (בִּטָּחוֹן), trustful reliance on God, as distinct from intellectual belief — again resonating with midum's sense of deep personal trust.
Islam
The Arabic concept of iman (إيمان) — faith — is described in the Hadith as “to believe in Allah, His angels, His books, His messengers, the Last Day, and divine decree.” This comprehensive, structured faith has a strong structural parallel to Unification theology's understanding of faith as encompassing both personal trust and knowledge of the providential framework. The Islamic emphasis on tawakkul (تَوَكُّل) — placing complete reliance on God after doing one's part — parallels the Unification understanding of faith in relation to the Portion of Responsibility: the human being does his 5%, then trusts God with the remaining 95%.
Buddhism
In Mahayana Buddhism, saddha (Pāli: faith) or śraddhā (Sanskrit) is understood not as blind acceptance but as confidence gained through wisdom. The Zen tradition's emphasis on direct experience as the ground of faith closely parallels Rev. Moon's insistence that faith must be based on personal spiritual encounter with God. Rev. Moon taught that faith without direct experience of God's presence is ultimately fragile: “Unless your faith is based on such experiences, you cannot apply the resultant realm of God's great will to the field or sphere of your daily life.”
Confucianism
The Confucian virtue of xinyi (信義, faithfulness and righteousness) involves keeping one's word, maintaining integrity, and being trustworthy in relationships. While Confucianism does not speak of faith in God in a theistic sense, its emphasis on relational fidelity and the cultivation of trustworthiness aligns with the Unification ideal of a life of faith as a life of principled consistency — being the same person in private as in public, the same in suffering as in prosperity.
Section VII — Practical Dimension for Blessed Families
For a Blessed Family, faith is expressed concretely in five primary practices:
Hoon Dok Hae
The daily practice of reading True Parents' words is the most foundational practice of faith in the Completed Testament Age. Rev. Moon taught that his words were spoken not from himself but in a state of resonance with God and the spirit world. To receive them faithfully each morning is an act of recognizing the Word of the Completed Testament Age — structurally equivalent to the way the Israelites received the Torah or early Christians received the Gospel.
Prayer
Prayer is faith in action — the direct orientation of the whole person toward God and True Parents. Rev. Moon taught that the gate of the mind must be aligned with the gate of heaven; prayer is the daily practice of finding and maintaining that alignment. When prayer becomes deep and consistent, spiritual experiences naturally follow — revelations, guidance, and an increasingly vivid sense of God's presence.
Jeongseong (정성)
Jeongseong means sincere devotion — the offering of one's best to God without reservation or calculation. It is faith expressed as investment. Any act of sincere dedication — a night of prayer, a fast, a sacrificial service — is an expression of faith that opens conditions for God to work more freely in one's life and family.
Attendance (모심)
To attend to True Parents and to serve others as if serving God is the highest expression of faith in the Completed Testament Age. Rev. Moon taught that this is the “age of justification by attendance” — the era in which salvation comes not merely through believing but through the lived practice of serving and attending.
Living for others
Rev. Moon consistently taught that a person who truly lives for others cannot be invaded by evil — because selflessness leaves no foothold for Satan. This principle makes the life of faith simultaneously a spiritual practice and a social ethic: faith that does not express itself in sacrificial love for others is, in Unification theology, incomplete.
A life of faith until now has been a quest to find the true self. It has been a quest to rise from the position of fallen Adam and Eve and create the original sinless self.
— The Foundation of Faith and the Foundation of Substance, Sun Myung Moon
This statement reframes the entire life of faith as a quest for restored identity — not merely for doctrinal correctness or moral improvement, but for the recovery of the original person God intended each human being to be.
Section VIII — Academic Note
In New Religious Movements scholarship, the Unification theology of faith has been examined through several analytical lenses.
Eileen Barker (The Making of a Moonie, 1984) noted that Unification members' high level of commitment and personal investment differs markedly from the nominal faith typical of many mainline Christian communities. She traced this partly to the theology's insistence that faith must be active, costly, and productive of concrete results — particularly in evangelism and mission. This active, demanding conception of faith is inseparable from the movement's theological framework.
Massimo Introvigne has analyzed the Unification concept of Absolute Faith as a distinctive contribution to modern theological discourse. He notes that its grounding in the act of creation — rather than in human psychology or soteriology — gives it a cosmological scope rarely found in Protestant or Catholic understandings of faith. This cosmological dimension, Introvigne argues, is characteristic of the movement's attempt to develop a comprehensive theology that bridges science, history, and spirituality.
Lorne Dawson has analyzed the role of experiential faith in new religious movements and noted that Unification theology, unlike many NRMs, explicitly addresses the relationship between doctrinal knowledge and direct spiritual experience. Rev. Moon's insistence that faith must be grounded in personal encounter with God represents a sophisticated middle position between fideism (faith as pure trust) and rationalism (faith as reasoned conviction).
Critics have raised the concern that the concept of Absolute Faith, as it has sometimes been implemented institutionally, risks becoming an instrument of unquestioning obedience to religious authority. Unification theologians respond that Rev. Moon himself consistently emphasized: “Conscience before teacher, conscience before parents, conscience before God.” Absolute Faith, properly understood, is not obedience to any human being but to the Absolute — to God and to the original principles of love and truth that He established. It is faith measured not by institutional loyalty but by the inner alignment of one's heart with God's shimjeong (heart).
Key Texts on tplegacy.net
- The Foundation of Faith and the Foundation of Substance — Cheon Seong Gyeong
- The Realm of Indirect Dominion — Exposition of the Divine Principle, Section 5.2.2
- The Predestination of the Way in Which God's Will Is Fulfilled — Exposition of the Divine Principle
- Preparation for the Spirit World — Cheon Seong Gyeong
- Sermons on Faith — primary sermon collection
- The Human Fall — Exposition of the Divine Principle, Chapter 2
- Cheon Seong Gyeong — primary teachings