ORDER NUMBER
84-08-11
REVEREND SUN MYUNG MOON
FOUNDER'S ADDRESS
THE FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON
GOD: THE CONTEMPORARY DISCUSSION
August 11, 1984
Hotel Lotte
Seoul, Korea
Honorable Chairperson, distinguished scholars and clergy,
participants in the Youth Seminar on World Religions. ladies and
gentlemen:
I welcome you to Korea, the site of the fourth conference on God:
The Contemporary Discussion, and the final destination of the third
Youth Seminar on World Religions.
It is natural and appropriate for the Conference and the Seminar to
be convening together here in Korea. Korea has historically been a
unique meeting place of the world's religions. Here, Buddhism and
Confucianism took deep root, maintaining harmony with each other in the
context of the native Korean Tan-gun tradition and the Korean folk
belief. Christianity has flourished in Korea: 1984 marks the 200th
anniversary of the arrival of Catholicism, and the l00th anniversary of
the arrival of Protestantism. Within our culturally homogeneous
society, religions have coexisted and cross-fertilized one another, and
the precepts of these diverse religious traditions are embedded
together in the people and society of the "hermit kingdom."
From this soil has sprung the Unification movement, a movement seeking
unity-within-diversity on the world-wide level, and striving to
establish a world of love, sympathy, and harmony based on the religious
affirmation of the familyhood of all people under our common parent,
God.
To create this ideal world we must have an overall model or
blueprint. An important Unification image is that of a mature or
perfected person, with mind and body united.
From the mental and spiritual life of a person, centered on God,
spring ideals and purposes. The nervous system transmits the resulting
directives of the mind to the cells, and relays information from the
physical body back to the mind. When this exchange occurs smoothly we
say that the individual is in harmony. The mental and spiritual life of
humanity can be likened to the mind, the economic life of humanity to
the body. The spiritual ideals, aspirations, and love of God are
manifested through religion, around which theology, philosophy, art,
and all culture revolve. Religious leaders and theological and
philosophical thinkers, then are a central nervous system,
transmitting, interpreting, and developing impulses from God for the
whole body of humanity.
I view religious leaders and scholars as vitally important for the
betterment of the world and the creation of a new cultural revolution.
Such leaders have always been the vanguard of cultural development - in
ancient China, India, Africa, the Middle East, and Greece; in the rise
of Christianity and the world of Islam; in the Renaissance, the
Reformation, and the Enlightenment.
Today, however, with the great success of science and technology,
and the failure of religion to speak to the realistic problems of the
world, those taking the lead in social change are often under the
anti-religious banner of Communism. But Communism welcomes violence as
the means for change; it ultimately denies God, turns against
religions, and tries to restrict our perspective to the material
world.
I know that many supporters of Communism have high ideals, not
limited by the confines of nation, race, and culture; but their energy
and idealism must be complemented by God-centered thought and action.
Accordingly, the world needs religious leaders and scholars as
sacrificial pioneers. The God Conference, the Youth Seminar on World
Religions, and all the activities of the International Religious
Foundation exist as a forum and structure for the fulfillment of this
ideal.
As individuals, you are called to a renewed dedication of
yourselves and your disciplines to the world. As representatives of
the world's religions, you are called to bring your churches, mosques,
synagogues, shrines, and temples into a cooperative unity for the sake
of world peace and human freedom, centered on God. Many people ask what
religions can do in this secular age. I answer: the world's religions
must provide a stable, universal foundation of values upon which
governments can build true peace and harmony, science and technology
can be fully utilized for the happiness of mankind, and the world's
cultures can be purified, exalted, shared, celebrated.
Truly, the ideal I am espousing is nothing other than the kingdom
of God on earth. I see it as a realistic goal toward which we can
realistically work. People have been telling me that I am too utopian.
I recognize that I am extremely idealistic, but I have no choice: God
has called me directly, personally, to this task and responsibility.
I have been concentrating not only on teaching people about the
ideal of God, but also on promoting the accomplishment of that ideal on
earth. It is for this purpose that I have undertaken all of my
activities, including missionary work, education, challenges to
Communist ideology, an ecumenical movement, and social services. Among
these, I put greatest emphasis on the ecumenical movement.
A major problem facing humanity today is the lack of spiritual
unity among and within each of the world's religions. Despite all
efforts to the contrary, divisions and animosities among various
religious groups continue. Religious wars are still being waged, as
they have been for centuries. In spite of various ecumenical movements,
religious arrogance, intolerance, and bigotry are still prevalent among
devout believers. Thus, although most religions have professed the same
God and often even the same views for centuries, followers of those
great religious traditions have continually persecuted and warred with
one another.
We must realize that God is beyond denominationalism, doctrinalism,
and factionalism. God's purpose is and always has been to save the
entire world, and not merely a certain race, nation, or religious
group. As religious people, we cannot help God in the task of salvation
when we fight among ourselves. This idea is not new, but for numerous
reasons it has been difficult to achieve.
The essence of my teaching is that inter-religious harmony is a
necessary condition for world peace. Since no single religion has
manifested God completely, religious differences have been inevitable.
Yet, as many great religious leaders have taught, because we are all
children of the same Heavenly Parent we are all brothers and sisters in
one great family, and inter-religious conflict and divisive hatred are
unnecessary.
In my years of spiritual search and struggle I encountered God many
times, and I also spiritually encountered the founders of all the
world's great religions. I feel the continual presence and inspiration
of God every day in my life. Without God, how would it have been
possible for a man born in an isolated farming village in a small,
oppressed, and destitute nation to be able now to sponsor and address
this august assembly of world religious leaders? I testify that the
teachings of the Unification movement, its goals, and its projects, are
the result of God's direction to me. They are not my personal theory
and activity, they are God's.
The International Religious Foundation is planning to sponsor a
Parliament of World Religions in 1993. That parliament will
commemorate the 100th anniversary of the 1893 World Parliament of
Religion held in Chicago in conjunction with the first World's Fair.
Prior to the 1993 event, two preparatory meetings will be convened, one
in mid-November 1985 near New York City, and the other some time in
1989. Each of these gatherings will bring together more than seven
hundred spiritual teachers, scholars, lay leaders, artists, and young
people. It is hoped that the three planned events will lead to other
such programs in the future.
The 1993 Parliament of World Religions and the two preparatory
meetings are designed to provide a new environment for global
ecumenical contact. The objective is to move toward disclosing the
Universal Principles that underlie all life throughout the world and to
promote with equal vigor the fullest diversity of its possible
expressions. In so doing the Parliament will seek to advance and
develop the aims of international peace and harmony for which the world
longs. Participants will be offered an opportunity to share their
perspectives on our present spiritual condition and on the challenges
of our present age.
The purpose will not be to legislate, either politically or
doctrinally, but to promote mutual respect among the world's religions
and to foster inter-religious cooperation on projects initiated by
them. A variety of issues will be discussed, but the overall theme will
be the renewal of spirituality and the establishment of world peace
under God.
I thank you again for coming. I hope this conference will be
centered not on human thoughts of God but on God's original ideal. I
truly believe that your study and discussion will bring about
tremendous progress in accomplishing the ideal of God on earth.
Thank you