Huisaeng (희생 / Sacrifice): The Ontological Ground of Self-Giving Love in Unification Doctrine
희생 · 犧牲 · Sacrifice, Self-Giving
What Is Huisaeng (Sacrifice)?
Huisaeng (희생) is the Unification theological term for sacrifice understood not as loss but as self-giving investment for the sake of a greater whole.
In everyday Korean, the word names a victim or a casualty; in the teaching of Rev. Sun Myung Moon, it names the deliberate act by which a person expends the self for others and, precisely by that expenditure, becomes generative rather than diminished.
The Exposition of the Divine Principle grounds this in the doctrine of creation, where God brings the cosmos into being through an outpouring of heart and energy that the created order is then meant to return and multiply.
The reading defended below is that huisaeng in Unification teaching is not primarily the fallen-world instrument of indemnity but the ontological form of love itself—the self-investment by which any being becomes a subject and a center—so that God is described in sacrificial terms even though God never fell, and the fallen experience of sacrifice as painful loss is the distorted mode of what, in its origin, is joyful self-giving.
This thesis is specific; it is defensible from the primary corpus; it is falsifiable against a rival reading that treats sacrifice as a purely transitional device of restoration; and it is confessionally permissible because it rests on the canonical claim that God Himself lives for the sake of others.
We must sacrifice. Sacrificing is the only way to find love.
— Sun Myung Moon (Cheon Seong Gyeong, May 19, 1997) Cheon Seong Gyeong
The claim here is unusually strong. Sacrifice is not offered as one route to love among several; it is named as the only route. Everything that follows in this entry is an attempt to show why that identification is not rhetorical exaggeration but a structural claim about how love is constituted.
The Exposition of the Divine Principle supplies the framework in its account of the give-and-take that binds every subject to its object and its account of the reversal that the Fall introduced into that flow.
Methodology Note
This entry reads the English Cheon Seong Gyeong as its principal source of dated teaching, together with the title-level record of the local Korean speech archive covering the full corpus from 1956 to 2010, and the doctrine of creation and restoration as set out in the Exposition of the Divine Principle. The canonical texts are read as authoritative within the tradition, attending to their historical and rhetorical setting; the aim is doctrinal clarification, not external evaluation. The entry does not attempt a philological history of the Sino-Korean compound outside its theological redeployment, nor does it survey the offering (제물) system in full, treating it only where it bears on the argument. Passages drawn from the English Cheon Seong Gyeong are quoted from the official English edition and cited by date; the fourteen sermon titles cited as diachronic evidence are verified at the level of the local-archive filename for date, Korean title, volume, and sermon sequence.
The Sacrificial Victim Becomes the Self-Giver
The move Unification teaching makes on this word begins in its characters. Huisaeng is written as 犧牲, a compound whose two graphs—犧 and 牲—both carry the ox radical and both belonged, in classical Chinese ritual vocabulary, to the slaughtered animal presented at the altar.
The Book of Rites uses 犧牲 for the pure, unblemished victims offered in the ancestral and state sacrifices (Book of Rites, Legge). The everyday modern Korean inheritance of this sense is passive and grim: a 희생자 is a victim, a casualty, one to whom something is done.
Unification usage inverts the grammar of the word without discarding its content.
The victim is no longer the animal to which sacrifice happens, but the person who performs sacrifice as an act, and the direction of the act is not toward death but toward generation.
Where the classical victim is consumed and gone, the Unification self-giver is consumed and thereby multiplied. This is the semantic gap a reader must hold in view: the theological term keeps the ritual gravity of blood and cost while transferring agency from the offered thing to the offering person and reorienting the whole event from termination toward increase.
People who follow the path of goodness always face sacrifice.
— Sun Myung Moon (Cheon Seong Gyeong, May 4, 1975) Cheon Seong Gyeong
Goodness and sacrifice are here made to coincide, and the coincidence is not incidental.
If the good is what lives for the sake of a whole larger than itself, then to be good just is to expend the self outward, and expenditure outward is what the word huisaeng now names.
The ritual victim has become the moral agent, and the altar has become the ordinary field of a life lived for others.
Sacrifice Is the Form Love Takes, Not the Price Love Pays
The center of the argument is a distinction the tradition insists on but that casual reading collapses. Sacrifice is easily heard as the cost of love—the toll one pays to secure a good one wants.
Unification teaching relocates it: sacrifice is the internal structure of love, the very shape self-giving takes, so that a love that did not invest and expend itself would not be love at all but its counterfeit. This is why the doctrine of creation is load-bearing. God creates by pouring out heart, energy, and self into the object, and the Exposition of the Divine Principle describes the created being as receiving existence from that outpouring and returning it amplified.
Read against creation, sacrifice is simply the creative act performed by a creature.
To give oneself for another is to re-enact, at the human scale, the divine expenditure that made the world. From this, the tradition draws a conclusion that sounds paradoxical only until the creation frame is in place.
Sacrifice is inevitable.
— Sun Myung Moon (Cheon Seong Gyeong, January 31, 1976) Cheon Seong Gyeong
The word inevitable does the work. Sacrifice is inevitable not because the world is fallen and must be repaired at a price, but because re-creation follows the pattern of creation, and creation is self-investment. A being that wishes to bring anything new into existence—a family, a community, a restored relationship—has no path to it except the path God took, which is to expend the self into the object and forget the expenditure so that it can be repeated. Here, the fallen-era reading and the ontological reading briefly touch, and the entry returns to their difference in the Analytical Synthesis below.
The One Who Sacrifices Becomes the Center
If sacrifice were mere loss, the sacrificer would end depleted and peripheral.
Unification teaching claims the opposite outcome with striking consistency: the one who expends the self for the whole is drawn, by the response of that whole, into its center.
The logic is relational rather than moralistic. A being that lives for others generates in them a corresponding desire to live for it, and this reciprocal pull, accumulating, seats the self-giver at the middle of an ever-widening circle.
The person who lives for the sake of others surely becomes the center.
— Sun Myung Moon (Cheon Seong Gyeong, February 18, 1979) Cheon Seong Gyeong
This is the pivot on which the entry's thesis turns. Becoming the center is not a reward bolted onto sacrifice from outside; it is what sacrifice is, seen from the side of its effect.
The same act that looks like self-loss from within is, in the structure of relationships it creates, self-establishment. And the being who occupies the center of all things by this route is God, who holds that place, the tradition says, precisely because He has lived for the sake of others more than any other.
Sacrifice thus names not a fallen detour from divinity but the very manner of being divine, which is why a creature who sacrifices is said to stand where God stands and, in a real sense, to resemble Him.
Sacrifice Runs the Providence Because the Fall Reversed the Flow of Giving
The providential dimension explains why, in history, sacrifice wears the face of pain. The Fall, in Unification teaching, was a reversal of the direction of giving: the self that was made to pour outward turned to draw everything inward, and this inversion is the root of what the tradition calls the satanic pattern of taking.
Restoration therefore cannot proceed except by reversing the reversal, and reversing an inward-turned self is experienced, from inside that self, as wound and expenditure.
This is the register in which the offering (제물) and the shedding of blood belong: the Cain-and-Abel pattern requires an offering because a self bent toward itself cannot be straightened without cost.
The archive shows Rev. Moon returning to this exact nexus under sermon titles that pair Abel with sacrifice in 1987 and again in 2006 (Moon 1987, vol. 169; Moon 2006, vol. 526).
Across the three providential ages, the meaning deepens rather than shifts: what the Old Testament offered in the blood of animals and what was asked of the New Testament in the cross, the Completed Testament Age asks of the Blessed Family as a lived and ascending self-donation.
Those who spare no effort in sacrificing themselves become the light of their families.
— Sun Myung Moon (Cheon Seong Gyeong, February 18, 1996) Cheon Seong Gyeong
The ascending scale is deliberate. One who sacrifices for the family becomes its light; one who sacrifices for the nation is called a patriot; one who sacrifices for the world, a saint; one who sacrifices for heaven and earth, a divine son or daughter.
The providence is, in this reading, nothing apart from sacrifice climbing the ladder of ever-larger wholes, and its terminus is the point at which the whole being served is God Himself.
In the Blessed Family, Sacrifice Ascends Rather Than Descends
The practical shape of huisaeng for a Blessed Family reverses the ordinary intuition that love begins at home and radiates outward only as surplus.
Unification teaching directs that the smaller be offered up for the sake of the larger—the individual for the family, the family for the tribe and nation, and the nation for the world—and it warns that a family that loves only itself severs the very channel through which it could survive.
The counsel is concrete: a couple secures its future not by hoarding its devotion but by spending it on the people beyond its walls.
Those at the center always sacrifice and serve.
— Sun Myung Moon (Cheon Seong Gyeong, August 31, 1986) Cheon Seong Gyeong
In daily terms, this cashes out as the ordinary disciplines of a life for others: caring for the guest and the stranger, carrying burdens that are not one's own, and treating the parents, spouse, and children of a family as the first and nearest field on which the outward habit is trained before it is extended.
The practice is not self-erasure. Its promised fruit is precisely the centrality described above—the family that gives itself away becomes the one the wider circle gathers around and will not let fall.
Sacrifice as a Sermon Topic Intensifies in the Cheon Il Guk Era
A title-level scan of the full local corpus of 6,118 indexed sermons yields fourteen whose titles contain the word 희생.
Fourteen occurrences sit below the threshold at which a decade chart communicates more than a sentence, so the evidence is best read as a timeline rather than an aggregate. Its shape is nonetheless diagnostic.
The word appears as a sermon title only twice before the late 1980s—in 1971 and 1972—surfaces intermittently through the 1990s, and then clusters sharply from 2002 onward, with nine of the fourteen titles falling in the years 2002 to 2008.
The clustering is not merely quantitative. The late titles bind sacrifice to the founding of the fatherland (2002), to the heart-realm of Abel (2006), to the life of an heir (2007), and—in a pairing that a reader of this encyclopedia should note—to jeongseong, devoted sincerity, on July 12, 2007 (Moon 2007, vol. 568).
Where the earliest titles treat sacrifice as a general spiritual necessity, the Cheon Il Guk titles treat it as the concrete labor of establishing and inheriting a settled realm.
This supports the entry's thesis: as the providence moves from restoration toward settlement, sacrifice is spoken of less as a wound to be endured and more as the ordinary economy of a kingdom being built and handed on.
Inter-Religious Resonance
Sacrifice is one of the terms on which the world's traditions most nearly converge, and precisely for that reason, the Unification distinctive is best seen against genuine parallels rather than manufactured ones.
Christianity gives the theme its most familiar Western form. The Gospel of John ties love directly to the laying down of life, and the apostolic writings ask the believer to become an offering while still alive.
Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.
The historic Christian language of self-emptying, in which the divine descends and pours itself out (Phil 2:5–8 KJV), sits close to the Unification claim that God Himself lives for others.
Yet the divergence is real: where much of the Christian tradition reads the decisive sacrifice as a once-for-all atoning death, Unification teaching reads sacrifice as a continuing ontological law binding on God and human beings alike and locates its completion not in a single death but in the reversal of self-centered giving across the whole of a life and lineage.
Judaism holds the ritual and the personal together. The korban system of the Tanakh (Lev 1–7 JPS) makes offering the ordered means of drawing near, and the binding of Isaac (Gen 22 JPS) makes the willingness to give up the dearest thing the very test of faith, while the suffering servant bears the cost of others (Isa 53:5 JPS).
Unification teaching affirms the drawing-near logic but reframes the victim as the self-investing agent rather than the substitute.
Islam preserves both the ransomed victim and the self-sold soul. The Qur'an narrates the ransoming of the son by a mighty sacrifice, commemorated in the feast of offering, and it praises the one who spends the self seeking God's pleasure (Q 2:207, Pickthall).
Then We ransomed him with a tremendous victim.
Confucianism supplies the etymological home ground and a moral parallel at once. The sacrificial victims (犧牲) of the ancestral rites are Confucian ritual vocabulary (Book of Rites, Legge), and the Confucian discipline of subduing the self to return to propriety—the answer given to the question about perfect virtue (Analects 12.1, Legge)—offers a self-overcoming that Unification teaching can read as sacrifice in the register of ritual and character. Buddhism carries the theme to its furthest reach in the perfection of giving, the dāna by which the bodhisattva relinquishes even the body, as in the account of the prince who offers himself to a starving tigress (Conze).
What is distinctive in the Unification concept is the fusion of two claims that these traditions tend to hold separately: that sacrifice is a cost paid for others and that sacrifice is the manner in which one becomes a center and a subject, as God is.
The traditions largely agree that the self-giver is good; Unification teaching adds that the self-giver is, by the same act, established rather than expended—that the altar and the throne are the same place.
Analytical Synthesis
The thesis of this entry is that huisaeng names an eternal ontological law—self-investment as the form of love—and not merely a fallen-world instrument of repair. The strongest internal objection comes from the tradition's own doctrine of indemnity.
A well-grounded reader might argue that sacrifice belongs properly to the vocabulary of restoration through indemnity (탕감복귀): the Fall reversed the flow of giving, indemnity reverses the reversal, and sacrifice is simply the felt cost of that reverse course.
On this rival reading, sacrifice is transitional by definition. In the completed, unfallen world, there would be giving and joy but no sacrifice, because sacrifice presupposes the resistance of a self-centered self that, once healed, no longer resists.
The word would then belong to the age of restoration and would have no purchase on the original creation or on God.
The evidence assembled above tells against this restriction, though it also shows why the rival reading is tempting. It is tempting because the providential and practical sections are saturated with the language of cost, blood, and offering, all of which are indemnity-shaped. But two lines of evidence break the identification.
First, the tradition applies sacrificial language to God, who never fell: God is said to invest Himself for the sake of humankind and to hold the central position because He has lived for others more than anyone.
If sacrifice were only the felt cost of reversing a fallen self, it could not be predicated of God at all; that it is so predicated shows that the core of the concept is self-investment, not the pain that, under the Fall, attends it.
Second, the creation frame makes re-creation continuous with creation so that the claim that sacrifice is inevitable is derived not from the Fall but from the structure of bringing-into-being as such (Cheon Seong Gyeong, January 31, 1976).
The synthesis, then, is a distinction the rival reading misses. What the Fall added to sacrifice was not its structure but its dimension of loss—the wound, the blood, the offering that a self-turned-inward requires before it can be straightened.
Strip that added pain away, as it is stripped in God and in the perfected order, and what remains is nothing but the pure act of self-giving that seats the giver at the center. Huisaeng in its fallen mode is an investment that hurts; huisaeng in its original mode is an investment that is joy.
The word is one; the ache is historical. This is why the entry can affirm both the indemnity texts and the ontological texts without strain, and why the diachronic evidence matters: as the providence moves toward settlement in the Cheon Il Guk titles, the discourse of sacrifice audibly shifts from wound toward the ordinary economy of a kingdom, exactly as the thesis predicts.
The argument does not entail that the pain of sacrifice is unreal or dispensable now—under the conditions of a still-fallen world, it is both real and required. Nor does it collapse the distinction between huisaeng and the offering (제물): the offering is the presented object, huisaeng the interior act that presents it.
What the argument does entail is that sacrifice is not something the completed order leaves behind but something it perfects—the same self-giving, at last without the ache.
Key Takeaway
- Huisaeng (희생) is sacrifice understood as self-giving investment for the sake of a greater whole, and this entry argues it is the eternal form of love rather than merely a fallen-world device of repair.
- The character 犧牲 names the slaughtered ritual victim of the classical rite, and Unification usage transfers agency from the offered thing to the offering person and reorients the act from death toward generation.
- Sacrifice is presented as the only way to find love, because re-creation follows the pattern of creation, and creation is God's outpouring of self into the object.
- The one who sacrifices for a whole is drawn into its center by the whole's response, so the same act that looks like self-loss is, structurally, self-establishment.
- God is described in sacrificial and self-investing terms, though God never fell, which shows the core of the concept is investment, not the pain that attends it under the Fall.
- The Fall reversed the flow of giving, so restoration proceeds by a reverse course whose felt cost is the offering, blood, and Cain-and-Abel pattern of the providence.
- Across the corpus, the word appears as a sermon title only fourteen times, clustering sharply from 2002 to 2008, where sacrifice is bound to national founding, the heart of Abel, and jeongseong.
- Distinctively, Unification teaching fuses sacrifice-as-cost with sacrifice-as-becoming-a-center, so that in its account the altar and the throne are the same place.
References
Cheon Seong Gyeong: Selections from the Speeches of Sun Myung Moon. 2003. 2nd ed. Exposition of the Divine Principle. 1996
Moon, Sun Myung. 1971. "희생과 사랑과 은혜." Sermon delivered May 2, 1971, vol. 43, sermon 10.
Moon, Sun Myung. 1987. "탕감노정과 아벨의 희생." Sermon delivered October 29, 1987, vol. 169, sermon 4.
Moon, Sun Myung. 2006. "아벨의 희생과 본연의 심정권." Sermon delivered May 18, 2006, vol. 526, sermon 10.
Moon, Sun Myung. 2007. "희생과 정성." Sermon delivered July 12, 2007, vol. 568, sermon 4.