Pyeong Hwa Shin Gyeong · 平和神經

Messages of peace

Seventeen ceremonial addresses delivered by Sun Myung Moon during his worldwide speaking tours of 2005 to 2009. Moon placed them among his Eight Great Textbooks — the corpus he set down as his definitive bequeathal to humankind — and called the work “the draft for the constitution of Cheon Il Guk.”

Originally titled Pyeong Hwa Hoon Gyeong (Peace Training Scripture), the work was renamed Pyeong Hwa Shin Gyeong (Peace Divine Scripture) on August 30, 2008, when the sixteenth address was added; the seventeenth and final address completed the canon in June 2009.

The addresses range across the ideal family, the providence of the Pacific Rim era, the value of the Family Pledge, and the founding mission of a True Parent United Nations.

17

addresses

2005–2009

period of delivery

worldwide

multi-continent tours

God’s Ideal Family and the Kingdom of the Peaceful, Ideal World

The True Owners in Establishing the Kingdom of Peace and Unity in Heaven and on Earth - II

God’s Model Ideal Family and Nation, and the Peace Kingdom

The True Owners in Establishing the Kingdom of Peace and Unity in Heaven and on Earth I

The Mission of the Clan Messiah in the Revolutionary Era After the Coming of Heaven

Address at the Groundbreaking Ceremony of the Times Aerospace Industrial Complex

Cheon Il Guk is the Ideal Heavenly Kingdom of Eternal Peace

God’s Ideal Family and the Kingdom of the Peaceful, Ideal World - II

God’s Ideal Family and the Kingdom of the Peaceful, Ideal World - III

The Family is Rooted in Absolute Sexual Ethics, Which is the Model for God’s Absoluteness, Peace, and Ideal, and the Global Kingdom

The Mission of Ambassadors for Peace at the Dawn of the Era after the Coming of Heaven

God’s Ideal Family and the Responsibility the Citizens of Cheon Il Guk Are Called to Fulfill

A Providential View of the Pacific Rim Era in Light of God's Will The United States and the Future Direction of the United Nations and the World

The Value and Significance of the Family Pledge

The Three Great Subject Partners Principle from the Viewpoint of God’s Providence

A Providential View of the Pacific Rim Era in Light of God’s Will: The United States and the Future Direction of the United Nations and the World

Truly Peaceful World of the True Parent UN

Concept browser

Key concepts of the Peace Messages

Eighteen terms grouped into three thematic threads. Click any term to see where it lives in the seventeen messages.

Foundational doctrine · 8

Family and Blessing · 6

Cosmic Peace · 4

↓ selected: True Parents ↓

True Parents

271 mentions across the canon

“The True Parents are the embodiment and encapsulation of all glory in heaven and earth.”

— Peace Message 14, "The Value and Significance of the Family Pledge"

Vocabulary fingerprint

The vocabulary fingerprint

Top twelve content words and theological compounds across the corpus, by raw count.

God
1,102
Family
655
Heaven
515
Peace
472
True love
369
True Parents
271
Lineage
259
Blessing
154
Providence
142
Adam and Eve
140
Spirit world
122
Cain–Abel
111
The amber bar marks True Parents — Moon's canonical title for himself and Hak Ja Han as the central messianic figures of the providential era. The category has no equivalent in mainstream Christian theology and appears 271 times — an emphasis specific to this canon.

Distinctive terms

Concepts unique to this canon

Terms that carry the Peace Messages' signature and rarely appear elsewhere.

36× Family Pledgeall in Msg 14
74× Cheon Il Gukpeaks in Msg 5
38× Pacific Rimin Msgs 13 and 16
63× Era after Coming of Heavenpeaks in Msg 11

Corpus lengths

Where the corpus spends its time

Each address sized by word count, ranked from longest to briefest.

Msg 10
6,781
Msg 14
6,694
Msg 9
6,631
Msg 8
5,509
Msg 13
5,506
Msg 16
5,506
Msg 1
5,404
Msg 3
5,325
Msg 7
4,769
Msg 12
4,521
Msg 11
3,690
Msg 2
3,331
Msg 4
2,713
Msg 15
2,468
Msg 17
2,455
Msg 5
2,062
Msg 6
857
The longest address (Msg 10) on absolute sexual ethics is nearly eight times the length of the briefest (Msg 6), the only secular ceremony in the corpus. The doctrinal tier averages 5,000+ words; ceremonial and gathering addresses average 2,000–3,000.