Life Grounded in Faith
Topic: Belief & Faith
Compare faith and observable reality. Faith looks intangible and unreal, but it is in fact eternal and substantial. The reality of this world is vivid and evident to our senses, but it cannot be trusted; it is ephemeral and inconstant. Life grounded in faith in God has the quality of constancy.
Sun Myung Moon (born January 6, 1920, in Jeongju, in what is now North Korea – died September 3, 2012, in Gapyeong, South Korea) was a Korean religious leader, entrepreneur, and founder of the Unification movement. Raised in a rural Confucian-Christian household during the Japanese occupation of Korea, Moon’s early life was shaped by hardship, devotion, and a strong sense of spiritual calling. As a teenager, he experienced a profound vision in which he believed Jesus commissioned him to complete the work of restoring humanity to unity with God. This revelation became the foundation of his lifelong ministry, devoted to the ideal of universal peace and the healing of the relationship between the divine and human families.
In 1954, after enduring persecution and periods of imprisonment under both Japanese and communist authorities, Moon founded the Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity in Seoul. His teachings—later presented systematically in the Exposition of the Divine Principle—offered a reinterpretation of Christian theology emphasizing God’s parental love, human responsibility, and the sanctity of marriage and family. Central to his vision was the belief that love is the creative force of the universe and that humanity’s purpose is to build a world reflecting the oneness of God’s heart. Through international missions, interfaith dialogue, and mass wedding ceremonies symbolizing global reconciliation, Moon sought to transcend divisions of race, religion, and nationality.
Beyond his religious work, Moon established numerous organizations in education, media, culture, and humanitarian service, aiming to foster dialogue, moral renewal, and peace. He and his wife, Hak Ja Han Moon, were regarded by followers as the “True Parents,” embodying the ideal of restored unity between men and women, heaven and earth. While his movement inspired both devoted commitment and significant controversy, Moon’s influence on global religion, culture, and peace initiatives remains substantial. His life reflected an unwavering pursuit of the vision of one human family under God—a vision he advanced with conviction, discipline, and enduring faith in the transformative power of divine love.
Wilson, Andrew, editor. World Scripture II. Universal Peace Federation, 2011, p. 774 [Sun Myung Moon, 66:49, March 18, 1973].
Sun Myung Moon
Theme: Belief and Faith


About This Sun Myung Moon Quotation [Commentary]
Sun Myung Moon begins by asking us to “compare faith and observable reality,” and the meaning of the passage depends on that order. What “looks intangible and unreal” is, he says, “eternal and substantial,” while the world that is “vivid and evident to our senses” “cannot be trusted” because it is “ephemeral and inconstant.” The contrast is direct and clear. He is leading us away from what merely appears solid and toward what truly endures.
From there, the central line follows naturally: “Life grounded in faith in God has the quality of constancy.” Sun Myung Moon does not treat faith as less real because it cannot be seen. He says the opposite. Faith may seem less immediate than observable reality, yet it is more lasting and more substantial. What the senses grasp is changeable; what is grounded in God remains. In this way, “constancy” means more than steadiness of mood or circumstance. It means a life resting on what does not pass away.
That is why the quotation has such force within Belief and Faith. Sun Myung Moon keeps the sequence plain: first, faith only “looks intangible and unreal”; second, visible reality “cannot be trusted”; and finally, life in God has “the quality of constancy.” His words place the passing world in its proper place without denying its vividness. What is “ephemeral and inconstant” cannot serve as a lasting foundation. What is “eternal and substantial” can.
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