메시아 (Mesia) · 구세주 (救世主, Gusejo) · 재림주 (再臨主, Jaerimju) · The Anointed One · Savior · Lord of the Second Advent · True Parent
What Is the Messiah?
In Unification Theology, the Messiah (메시아, Mesia) is not primarily a political deliverer, a spiritual guide, or a moral exemplar — the Messiah is the person who comes to accomplish what humanity's first ancestors, Adam and Eve, failed to complete: to become True Parents of all humanity, restore God's original lineage, and establish the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
The Messiah must complete salvation in both the spiritual and the physical dimension — a task that Jesus, the first Messiah of the New Testament Age, was unable to finish because the people of Israel failed to receive him.
Rev. Sun Myung Moon taught that the entire purpose of God's Providence of Restoration across all human history has been the preparation of the conditions necessary to receive the Messiah:
Although he comes as an individual, when the Messiah appears on earth, he is not just an individual. He is the fruit of faith, hope, and love that the whole world desires. All the paths of history are connected to this fruit. Past, present and future are all connected to it, and both heaven and earth are connected to it.
— Sun Myung Moon (13-143, 01/01/1964) The Messiah, the True Parent
The Messiah is thus not merely a religious figure within one tradition — the Messiah is the convergence point of all human history, the one in whom the unfulfilled hopes of every religion, every philosophical tradition, and every longing heart find their final answer.
The Exposition of the Divine Principle devotes an entire chapter to this subject, treating it as the hinge upon which the entire understanding of Providence turns.
Section I — Etymology and Names
Hebrew: מָשִׁיחַ (Māšîaḥ) — the Anointed One
Greek: Χριστός (Christos) — translation of the Hebrew term
Korean: 메시아 (Mesia) — transliteration from Greek
Synonym 1: 구세주 (救世主, Gusejo) — Savior of the World; literally “one who saves the world”
Synonym 2: 재림주 (再臨主, Jaerimju) — Lord at the Second Advent; literally “Lord who comes again”
Related: 참부모 (Cham Bumo) — True Parents (the ultimate title of the Messiah in Unification Theology)
The Hebrew verb māšaḥ (מָשַׁח) means “to anoint” — to pour oil over a person as a sign of divine appointment to a holy office: priest, prophet, or king. In ancient Israel, kings were anointed at their inauguration (1 Samuel 16:13), a ceremony signifying that the Spirit of God had come upon them and designated them as God's representative ruler.
The Messianic expectation that developed from the prophetic literature — particularly Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Daniel — was the hope that God would send an ultimate Anointed One who would restore the Davidic kingdom, redeem Israel from its oppressors, and inaugurate an age of universal justice and peace.
In Unification Theology, this expectation is affirmed but fundamentally reinterpreted. The Messiah is indeed an anointed one, set apart by God for an extraordinary mission — but that mission is not merely national or political.
The Messiah comes to restore the original family of Adam and Eve — the broken starting point of human history — and from that restored family, extend the Kingdom of God to all of humanity.
The title 구세주 (Gusejo, Savior of the World) reflects the cosmic scope of this mission: not the salvation of one nation or religion, but of the entire human race, and ultimately the liberation of God Himself.
Section II — Why the Messiah Is Necessary
The necessity of the Messiah flows directly from the nature of the Fall and the structure of God's Creation Principle.
God's original plan did not include a Messiah. If Adam and Eve had completed their Portion of Responsibility — growing to full spiritual maturity, receiving God's blessing in marriage, and establishing the first True Family — then the lineage of God's love, life, and truth would have flowed naturally to all their descendants.
There would have been no Original Sin, no broken lineage, no separation between humanity and God. No Savior would have been needed.
The Fall, changed everything. By entering a false love relationship with the Archangel before reaching maturity, Eve — and then Adam — corrupted the lineage of the human family at its very root. Every subsequent human being was born into a lineage connected not to God but to Satan.
As the Exposition of the Divine Principle states, fallen human beings need not just spiritual improvement but a fundamental change of lineage — a restoration of the very blood connection to God that was severed through the Fall.
The human fall means the spreading of the false love, false life, and false lineage of Satan. Peace on earth cannot be realized without removing such false love, life, and lineage. Therefore, Rev. Moon comes with the ideal of True Parents.
— Sun Myung Moon, Messiah and True Parents
This is the unique teaching of Unification Theology: the Messiah's mission is not merely to offer forgiveness of sins, teach moral truth, or inspire spiritual awakening — essential as those functions are.
The Messiah must come with a new lineage: a biological, spiritual, and providential connection to God that can be transmitted to all of humanity through the Blessing ceremony. Without this, the original sin can be managed and suppressed, but never actually removed.
The Exposition of the Divine Principle states clearly: “Since the Fall implies the failure to accomplish God's purpose of creation, before we can clarify the significance of the Fall, we must first understand the purpose of creation. God's purpose of creation was to be fulfilled with the establishment of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.”
Section III — The Three Adams: A Framework for Messianic History
One of the most original and comprehensive frameworks in Unification Theology is the doctrine of the Three Adams — the three stages of providential history in which God attempts to fulfill the original purpose of creation through a central representative figure.
The First Adam — The Creation That Failed
Adam was created directly by God as His first and most beloved son — the intended progenitor of an unfallen human family and the embodiment of God's design. Yet Adam failed to complete his Portion of Responsibility.
Seduced by the fallen Eve, he formed a four-position foundation centered on Satan rather than on God. Humanity's lineage was corrupted at its root. The First Adam became the source of the false lineage — the origin of all subsequent suffering.
The Second Adam: Jesus — Spiritual Salvation, Physical Incompletion
Jesus came as the Second Adam — born without Original Sin through the providential preparation of four thousand years of Israelite history — to restore what the First Adam had lost. His mission was to receive a bride in God's name, establish the True Family that Adam and Eve should have been, and from that foundation extend the Kingdom of God across Israel and the world.
The people of Israel, led by the religious establishment, rejected him. Crucified before he could complete his family mission, Jesus was able to accomplish only the spiritual dimension of salvation.
Through his death and resurrection, he laid the foundation for the forgiveness of sins and spiritual rebirth — a profound gift. But the physical lineage was not restored. The Original Sin was not eradicated at its root.
The Exposition of the Divine Principle makes this explicit:
No matter how devout a believer may be, he cannot attain physical salvation through redemption by the cross of Jesus. His original sin, which has been passed down through the lineage from Adam, is not eliminated at its root. Even the most devout Christian still has the original sin and gives birth to children who also carry the original sin.
— Sun Myung Moon The Limit of Salvation through Redemption by the Cross and the Purpose of Jesus' Second Advent
Two thousand years of Christianity represent the fruits of Jesus' spiritual foundation — an immense achievement of faith, grace, and love. But the Kingdom of Heaven on earth was never established. The family, the basic unit of the Kingdom, was never fully restored. The need for a Second Advent remained.
The Third Adam: The Lord of the Second Advent — Full Restoration
The Third Adam — the Lord of the Second Advent, the Jaerimju — comes to complete what both the First and Second Adams could not. His mission encompasses the totality of what was lost through the Fall: the restoration of true lineage, the establishment of True Parents, the creation of the ideal family as the model for the Kingdom, and — most profoundly — the liberation of God from the anguish of His imprisonment.
The Third Adam does not come to repeat Jesus' path but to go further: to fight all the conditions that led to Jesus' failure, to overcome them, and then to accomplish on the physical and familial level the complete salvation that Jesus was unable to achieve. Rev. Moon described this as a mission of eight stages — from the individual level through family, clan, people, nation, world, cosmos, and ultimately to God — an arc of indemnity and victory that had to be walked in the physical world before it could be extended to the spiritual world.
At the Second Coming, the Lord will come and right all things to what they were originally meant to be. In this way, the world must be one and nations must be one: everything must be one. God has been preparing for this for two thousand years.
— Sun Myung Moon (66-277, 05/16/1973) The Second Coming and the True Parents
Section IV — The Messiah as True Parents: The Paradigm Shift
Perhaps the most theologically revolutionary teaching in the Unification doctrine of the Messiah is the identification of the Messiah with True Parents — and the insistence that the Messiah must come not as a single individual but as a husband-and-wife couple.
The logic is precise: since the Fall occurred through the misuse of conjugal love between Adam and Eve, and since it was the false parenthood of Adam and Eve that transmitted the corrupted lineage to all humanity, the restoration must proceed through the establishment of true conjugal love and true parenthood. A single individual — even the most spiritually realized — cannot fulfill the messianic mission, because the unit of restoration is the couple, the family. As the Exposition of the Divine Principle states: “Therefore, Jesus was to receive a literal bride. This marriage of a true man and woman was to establish the True Parents of humankind.”
The Messiah is the True Parent and we are to be true children. We must stand in the same realm of destiny and participate in it.
— Sun Myung Moon (55-97, 04/23/1972) The Messiah, the True Parent
This teaching carries extraordinary implications. It means that the Messiah is not primarily a savior who rescues humanity from above — he is a parent who restores humanity from within the family structure itself.
The relationship between the Messiah and humanity is not primarily the relationship of master to servant, or even of teacher to student, but of parent to child.
The Messiah gives birth, spiritually and providentially, to a new generation of human beings — children of God through a restored lineage, connected to the divine heart for the first time since the Garden of Eden.
This is why the Blessing Ceremony stands at the center of the Messianic mission. The Blessing is not a religious ceremony in the conventional sense — it is the providential act through which True Parents transmit their restored lineage to fallen humanity. Those who receive the Blessing are, in the most profound sense, born again — not merely forgiven for past sins, but reconnected to the divine lineage at the root.
Section V — Conditions for the Messiah's Appearance
The Messiah does not appear arbitrarily or suddenly. The Exposition of the Divine Principle teaches that God must prepare a Foundation for the Messiah before the Messiah can appear and be effective. This foundation consists of two elements, established across providential history through the cooperation of central figures and prepared peoples:
The Foundation of Faith — a condition established through faithful adherence to God's Word over a specified period of time, demonstrating that a people can trust and obey God even without seeing immediate results.
The Foundation of Substance — a condition established through the successful resolution of the Cain-Abel relationship: the younger, Abel-type figure must win the respect and love of the older, Cain-type figure, reversing the pattern of Cain's murder of Abel and establishing a unified foundation of brotherly love.
Only when both foundations are established at the required level — individual, family, tribal, national, and world — can the Messiah come and be received with the cooperation necessary to complete his mission.
The entire history of the patriarchal era (from Abraham through Jacob and Joseph), the Israelite nation, and the two-thousand-year development of global Christianity are understood in Unification Theology as successive attempts to create this foundation, at ever-expanding levels.
The critical insight is that the people's reception of the Messiah is as important as the Messiah's coming. Jesus came to a prepared people, but those people ultimately rejected him.
The result was that the mission was split between spiritual completion (through the cross and resurrection) and physical completion (deferred to the Second Advent).
History will not repeat this failure: the Completed Testament Age is the age in which humanity must finally receive and unite with the Messiah to allow the full restoration to be accomplished.
Section VI — Providential Context: Three Ages and the Messiah
The Messiah's role and mission shift significantly across the three ages of God's Providence.
The Old Testament Age — the age of law and sacrifice — was the four-thousand-year preparation for the First Coming. God worked through Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, and the prophets to establish the foundations on which Jesus could come. Israel was the “chosen people” not because of ethnic privilege, but because God needed a nation that had internalized His Word deeply enough to receive and cooperate with the Messiah.
The New Testament Age — the age of faith and grace — was the two-thousand-year period following Jesus' resurrection, during which Christianity prepared a global foundation for the Second Coming. Just as Judaism was meant to receive Jesus, global Christianity was meant to receive the Lord of the Second Advent. The failure of post-World War II Christianity to fulfill this role — to unite with the one God had sent — meant that the work of restoration had to be carried forward through greater suffering and a longer indemnity path.
The Completed Testament Age — the age of restored lineage — is the period in which the Lord of the Second Advent, having established the foundation of True Parents, extends the Blessing to all of humanity and builds the conditions for the Kingdom of Heaven on earth and in the spirit world simultaneously. This age is characterized not by law or faith alone but by the direct parent-child relationship between God, True Parents, and all of humanity — the realization of God's original vision before the Fall.
Section VII — Three Levels of Messiah
One of the most practically important teachings in Unification Theology is that the messianic mission does not remain confined to one person. Through the Blessing, the messianic inheritance is shared. Blessed Families are called to become messiahs at three levels, extending the restoration that True Parents accomplished outward into every domain of human life.
Family Messiah (가정적 메시아):
Every Blessed husband and wife is called to restore their immediate family — to embody true love, true lineage, and the pattern of the True Family within their own home. This is not metaphorical; it is the literal messianic mission of each couple to become the True Parents of their children and household.
Tribal Messiah (종족적 메시아):
Each Blessed Family is sent to their home community and extended clan with the mission of blessing and restoring their relatives and neighbors — transmitting the lineage of True Parents outward from the nuclear family to the wider tribe. This is the concept of the Tribal Messiah, one of the most distinctive practical missions of Unification movement members.
Cosmic Messiah (천주적 메시아):
At the level of all humanity, True Parents themselves fulfill the role of the Cosmic Messiah — the ones whose victory over Satan and whose establishment of the True Family creates the providential axis around which all other levels of restoration can unfold. This level of messiahship cannot be delegated; it belongs uniquely to the central figures of the Providence.
There are messiahs on the individual level, family level and tribal level. In the position of the tribal messiah, Jesus needed to restore his parents and relatives. The time has come for us to dedicate the nation as an offering. The era after the coming of heaven is a family era. We need family messiahs now.
— Sun Myung Moon Called to Be Messiahs
This teaching represents a radical democratization of the messianic concept: the Messiah is not merely an object of worship or a distant figure of reverence, but the origin of a commission that extends to every Blessed Family on earth. Every member of the Unification Movement is, in a real sense, called to participate in the messianic mission.
Section VIII — Comparative Perspective: The Messiah in Philosophy and World Religions
The concept of a coming savior, redeemer, or world-renewer is among the most universal in human religious and philosophical thought. Every major tradition has some version of this hope.
What distinguishes the Unification teaching is its insistence on the specific nature of what must be accomplished — not spiritual inspiration alone, but the physical restoration of lineage — and its confidence that history has reached the moment when this completion is possible.
Judaism: The Davidic Messiah
The Hebrew Bible's messianic expectation centers on a descendant of David who will restore Israel to its original covenant relationship with God, gather the scattered exiles, build the Third Temple, defeat Israel's enemies, and inaugurate a universal era of peace and justice (Isaiah 11; Micah 4; Zechariah 9). This is an essentially this-worldly vision: the Kingdom of God is to be established on earth, in history, in political and social terms. Orthodox Judaism continues to await this figure and explicitly rejects Jesus' messianic claim because he did not accomplish these tasks.
Unification Theology agrees that these tasks remain unaccomplished — but traces the reason to the failure of reception, not to the inadequacy of Jesus himself.
Christianity: Christ the Redeemer
Mainstream Christianity understands Jesus as the Messiah who fulfills and radically transcends Israel's expectations. Through his death and resurrection, he atones for the sins of humanity, conquers death itself, and opens the way for eternal life. The Kingdom he inaugurates is primarily spiritual — interior, transcendent, and eschatological. The Second Coming will complete this kingdom at the end of history.
Unification Theology shares Christianity's understanding that Jesus is the Messiah and that the cross accomplished a real and profound spiritual salvation. It diverges in arguing that the cross was not the original or necessary plan — that a completed physical salvation was always intended and remains to be accomplished through the Second Advent.
Islam: The Seal of Prophecy and the Mahdi
Islam does not use the term “Messiah” in the same technical sense, though it recognizes Jesus (Isa) as a great prophet and confirms his virgin birth and miraculous ministry. The Prophet Muhammad is understood as the Khatam al-Anbiya' — the Seal of the Prophets — the final divine messenger whose revelation completes what was previously given. Many streams of Islamic tradition also await the Mahdi (Guided One) — a figure who will appear at the end of times to restore justice on earth, defeat the forces of evil, and usher in a period of universal peace.
Shia Islam specifically awaits the return of the Hidden Imam. These expectations structurally parallel the Unification teaching about the Lord of the Second Advent.
Buddhism: The Maitreya
Mahayana Buddhism predicts the coming of Maitreya (彌勒, Mireuk in Korean), the “Future Buddha” or “Buddha of Loving-Kindness” — a cosmic Bodhisattva who will appear in the world when the dharma has declined, re-establish the teaching of the way, and usher in an age of compassion and spiritual renewal. In East Asian tradition, the expectation of Maitreya was frequently merged with political and social messianism — hope for a transformative figure who would renew society, not merely spiritual life.
The Korean Mireuk tradition, in particular, was a significant cultural background to the emergence of the Unification Movement. Unification Theology sees these traditions as providential pointers — different civilizations' ways of naming the universal human longing for the one who would restore God's original intention.
Hinduism: The Kalki Avatar
Hindu eschatology predicts the coming of Kalki, the tenth and final avatar of Vishnu, who will appear at the end of the present cosmic age (Kali Yuga), riding a white horse, destroying evil, and inaugurating a new golden age (Satya Yuga). As with other traditions, this expectation combines military and moral dimensions: Kalki is not a quiet spiritual teacher but an active cosmic agent who will transform the entire world.
The image of the age ending and a new, pure world beginning resonates with the Unification teaching about the completion of history's fallen cycle and the inauguration of the Kingdom of Heaven.
Zoroastrianism: The Saoshyant
Among the oldest messianic traditions is the Zoroastrian expectation of the Saoshyant — the future savior born of the seed of Zarathustra, who will appear to defeat the forces of darkness (Angra Mainyu), raise the dead, renovate the world, and establish eternal righteousness. Zoroastrianism contributed enormously to the development of Jewish and early Christian apocalypticism, and many scholars trace the very concept of the Messiah in its developed form partly to Zoroastrian influence during the Babylonian exile.
Unification Theology sees this as evidence that the messianic hope is not the property of one people or tradition, but a universal spiritual intuition planted by God across all civilizations.
Confucianism and the Sage-King
East Asian political philosophy — particularly the Confucian tradition — developed a concept of the ideal ruler (Sheng Wang, 聖王) whose virtue (de, 德) would be so perfect that the entire social order would align with Heaven's Will without coercion. Mencius taught that Heaven sends such figures at critical moments in history to renew civilization.
This Confucian ideal of the Sage-King resonates with the Unification teaching that the Messiah must succeed not only spiritually but on the level of governance — building the actual institutions and structures of the Kingdom on earth, not merely announcing its arrival.
Plato and the Philosopher-King
In Plato's Republic, the ideal state can only be governed by a Philosopher-King — one who has ascended from the cave of appearances, grasped the eternal Form of the Good, and returned to guide the community from that knowledge.
This figure is not naturally willing to rule (the genuine philosopher prefers contemplation) but is called by a sense of justice to serve the community.
The parallel with the Messianic figure who comes not for personal power but for the restoration of all is structurally significant. Both Plato and the Unification Messiah doctrine hold that the transformation of society requires a specific, uniquely prepared individual — not just better institutions or moral education.
What emerges from this panoramic survey is a universal human conviction, expressed across cultures and millennia, that history's present broken condition is not its final state — that someone will come, has come, or is coming who will restore what was lost and fulfill what was always intended.
Unification Theology names this universal hope the Messiah, grounds it in a specific providential history, and insists that the restoration must be accomplished not in the clouds but in the physical world of families, communities, and nations.
Section IX — Practical Dimension: Receiving the Messiah in the Life of a Blessed Family
For members of the Unification Movement, the concept of the Messiah is not a doctrine to be believed from a distance — it is a relationship to be actively lived.
Attendance as the Foundation of Relationship
The Korean concept of 시봉 (sibon, attendance) captures the primary practical orientation toward the Messiah. To attend True Parents is not merely to acknowledge them intellectually or to follow their teachings selectively — it is to place one's entire life in proper alignment with the messianic axis of history. Just as a child's relationship with good parents shapes every dimension of character and life direction, attendance toward True Parents is understood as the relational foundation from which all other aspects of faith and practice flow.
Blessing as Reception of the Messianic Gift
The most concrete way a person receives the Messianic mission is through the Blessing Ceremony. To receive the Blessing from True Parents is to receive a new lineage — to be, in the most literal providential sense, grafted onto the true olive tree. This is not a passive reception; it requires the preparation of the Foundation of Faith (a period of spiritual preparation) and the Foundation of Substance (the resolution of Cain-Abel relationships within one's family and community).
Tribal Messiahship as Active Co-Creation
No member of a Blessed Family is merely a beneficiary of the Messiah's work. Each is called to participate in extending that work — to become, in their own sphere, a source of restoration and blessing for others.
The Tribal Messiah mission concretizes this calling: returning to one's roots, blessing relatives and neighbors, and weaving the restored lineage through the fabric of one's community and nation.
The Messiah comes as the new Adam to establish a family as True Parents, with a new Eve, a literal bride, restoring true love, life, and lineage for all humankind. The Messiah, as True Parents, is a human being. The Messiah must be parents, not a single individual.
— Sun Myung Moon The Messiah and the Completed Testament Age
This understanding transforms the relationship between every Blessed Family and the Messiah into a partnership — not passive dependence, but active co-creation. True Parents have established the axis; Blessed Families rotate on that axis, extending the Kingdom outward from the family to the tribe to the nation to the world.
Section X — Academic Note
Scholars of New Religious Movements have engaged the Unification doctrine of the Messiah from multiple angles, addressing both its theological originality and its sociological significance.
The Messianic Claim
The central academic challenge is Rev. Moon's explicit claim — made publicly from 1992 onward — to be the Lord of the Second Advent, the Messiah of the Completed Testament Age.
Eileen Barker (The Making of a Moonie, 1984) and Frederick Sontag (Sun Myung Moon and the Unification Church, 1977) both explored the theological foundations of this claim before its explicit public announcement, noting that the internal logic of the Unification doctrine pointed toward a specific living individual as the fulfillment of the messianic expectation.
Sontag, in particular, offered a careful philosophical assessment of the claim's coherence and noted that it was structurally more consistent than most critics acknowledged.
Messianism as Sociological Category
Max Weber's concept of charismatic authority — leadership grounded in the perceived extraordinary spiritual gifts of an individual, rather than in tradition or rational-legal structures — provides the standard sociological framework for analyzing messianic movements.
The Unification Movement has been extensively studied through this lens. Ninian Smart and other comparative religionists emphasized that the Unification doctrine of the Messiah represents a serious theological system rather than a mere personality cult — one that engages the full weight of global religious tradition, Jewish-Christian eschatology, Korean shamanism, and Confucian political philosophy in a single integrated vision.
Christology and Interfaith Issues
The Unification reinterpretation of Jesus — as a Messiah who succeeded spiritually but could not complete the physical, familial dimension of salvation — has generated significant controversy within Christian theology. Critics argue that this teaching undermines the sufficiency of Christ's atonement and contradicts the New Testament's declarations of Jesus' complete salvific work (Hebrews 10:14; John 19:30).
Unification theologians respond that the New Testament itself contains prophecies pointing toward a Second Advent that must accomplish what the First Coming could not — and that a truly sovereign God is not limited to a single historical opportunity.
The Question of Lineage
The teaching that the Messiah comes to restore the lineage of God — and that this restoration is accomplished through a literal marriage and the Blessing of subsequent couples — has attracted scrutiny from scholars of gender, sexuality, and religious authority.
Susan Palmer, David Bromley, and others have examined how the centrality of the married couple in Unification soteriology positions the female Messianic figure (True Mother) alongside the male, creating a theological structure that differs significantly from most patriarchal monotheistic traditions.
This dual messianism — the insistence that “True Parents” is a couple, not an individual — is among the most theologically distinctive and academically discussed aspects of Unification thought.
Key Texts on tplegacy.net
The Messiah: His Advent and the Purpose of His Second Coming — EDP Chapter 4
The Purpose of Jesus' Coming as the Messiah
The Limit of Salvation through Redemption by the Cross
The Messiah, the True Parent Messiah and True Parents
The Messiah and the Completed Testament Age
The Second Coming and the True Parents Called to Be Messiahs
The Value of Knowing the Messiah
What Is the Messiah to Come Again?