Jeung San Do
Jeung San Do | |
Hangul | 증산도 |
---|---|
Hanja | 甑山道 |
Revised Romanization | Jeung San Do |
McCune–Reischauer | Chŭngsando |

Jeung San Do (Korean: 증산도), occasionally called Jeungsanism, meaning "The Dao/Tao of Jeung-san", although this term is better reserved for a larger family of movements,[citation needed] is a new religious movement founded in South Korea in 1974. It is one of more than 100 Korean religious movements that recognize Gang Il-sun (also known as Kang Jeungsan, or Chungsan), an early 20th century religious leader, as the incarnation and personification of Sangjenim (上帝任, the "governing spirit of the universe") and performed a "reordering of the universe" through his mission and rituals.[1] The religion is characterised by a universal message, millenarianism, and a method of healing meditation.[2]
History
A number of branches of
Jeungsanism is often understood as having stemmed from Korean Sinism and Chinese millenarian Taoism,[8] and is defined as one of the Korean indigenous religions.[9]
Etymology
Jeung San Do means "the Way [dao/do/Tao, 道] of the Jeung(甑)[siru] San(山)[mountain]". The word "jeung" is siru in Korean, which is Korean food streamer vessel for cooking Korean rice cakes, Tteok (떡). It signifies a vast vessel by metaphor that can contain everything in the world. To conclude, "jeung" (甑) denotes the process of rising, maturation, fruition or growth.
"Jeung san" is also a traditional Korean descriptive term for the highest mountain in a region or "steamer mountain".[10] "Do" (道) denotes Tao, the way. Considered as a whole, therefore, the name "Jeung San Do" signifies the highest truth that surpasses all existing religions and teachings.[11]
Teachings
Sangjenim means "Highest Emperor", and is cognate of the Chinese Shangdi.[12] It is the governing spirit of the universe, and Jeung San Do believe he was incarnated as Gang Il-sun,[13] although God for Jeung San Do also exists as God the mother, incarnated on earth as Goh Pan-Lye.
Jeung San Do teaches that, at the age of seven, Sangjenim attained a sudden spiritual awakening while watching a performance of traditional music and dance. When he was twenty-four, he witnessed the tumultuous events of the
He traveled for three years to observe human behavior and the shape, qi, and spirit of the land. In 1901, after a period of intensive meditation he attained perfect enlightenment into the affairs of Heaven, Earth, and humanity. About this he said:
Since ancient times, a few have mastered the writing of the Heavens, a few have mastered the principles of Earth, but no one has mastered the nature of humans. I am the first to master the nature of humans.
- - Dojeon 2:13:4-5
In that year, Sangjenim began a spiritual work that cannot be easily explained or understood. It was called the work of renewing Heaven and Earth (天地公事). For 9 years, he conducted works of renewal in the form of rituals, proclamations, and conversations with humans and spirits and utilized the qi of various places and people. He established a federation of gods called the Creative Government, composed of regional gods, the founding spirits of family lines, gods that founded and advanced civilizations, enlightened spirits, spirits with unresolved bitterness and grief, and the spirits of revolutionaries. With this assembly of spirits, he intended to correct the wrongs of the past and chart a new course for the future. His work of renewing Heaven and Earth shifted the course of Heaven, Earth, and humanity and planted the seeds for a new enlightened and harmonious world of humans and gods.
According to his followers, Sangjenim differed from other prophets in that he not only spoke about the future but, through his spiritual work, actually transformed it. One way of understanding this is the Butterfly Effect in
About the method he used in the work of renewal, Sangjenim said:
There are opportunities for human action ... There is a program for each heavenly principle. The work of renewal is based on creating the opportunity and establishing the program. If I were to abandon this method and perform the work forcibly, it would bring disaster upon the world and kill multitudes. That is not My intention.
- - Dojeon 2:55:7-8
Cosmic year

According to Jeun Sang Do, Gang Il-sun revealed to humanity that the universe embodies a four-fold cycle. A "cosmic year" contains four cosmic seasons corresponding to birth, growth, harvest, and rest.[14]
Views on Korean history
According to Jeung San Do, the
Vocabulary
- Sangjenim
- Taemonim (太母)
- Gaebyeok
- Taeeul ju
- Wonsibanbon (returning to the origin)
- Haewon (resolution of bitterness and grief)
- Sangsaeng (mutual life-giving)
- Boeun(offering gratitude and repayment)
- Dojeon
- Dojang (temple) - Dao center
- Cosmic year - Shao Yung(AD 1011–1077)
- Euitong (to heal and to unite)
- Cheonjigongsa (renewal of Heaven and Earth) 天地公事
- Nam Sa-go
- Hwacheonjeol (化天節):The death day of Gang Il-sun.[16]
See also
- Sinism
- Taoism
- Gang Il-sun
- Bocheon-gyo
- Daesun Jinrihoe
References
- ^ Massimo Introvigne, "Daesoon Jinrihoe", World Religions and Spiritualities Project, Virginia Commonwealth University.
- ^ Lee Chi-ran, p. 21
- ^ See Lee Kang-o, "Chungsan-gyo: Its History, Doctrine and Ritual," Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch 43 (1967), 28-66 (21); Introvigne, "Daesoon Jinrihoe," cit.
- ISBN 978-01-953010-5-2, 326-347 (335).
- ^ "Taesang Jongdosanism" Archived 2017-12-16 at the Wayback Machine, official Web site of Jeung San Do.
- ^ See "Sahng-jeh-nim and Tae-mo-nim", official Web site of Jeung San Do.
- ^ See Introvigne, "Daesoon Jinrihoe," cit.
- ^ Lee Chi-ran, p. 21
- ^ Lee Chi-ran, p. 3
- ^ "Jeung San do: A Truth That Transcends Religions | 증산도 JeungSanDo (English)".
- ^ Lee Chi-ran, p. 22
- ^ Lee Chi-ran, p. 23
- ^ Lee Chi-ran, p. 23
- ^ Lee Chi-ran, p. 24
- S2CID 145784087.
- ^ 화천절(化天節) (in Korean). Encyclopedia of Korean culture. Retrieved 2021-01-20.
Sources
- Jeung San Do Dojeon Publication Society, The Jeung San Do Dojeon
- Jeung San Do Dojeon Publication Society, The Cosmic Autumn Approaches: Select Passages From the Dojeon: "The Holy Scriptures of Dao"
- Jeung San Do Dojeon Publication Society, The illustrated dojeon: An Abridged Introduction to the Jeung San Do Dojeon, 2009
- Ahn Gyung-jun, Autumn Calling, 2001
- Readings in JeungSanDo homepage: Dao Talk I, Dao Talk II
- Introduction of Jeung San Do Dojeon.
Further reading
- Flaherty, Robert Pearson (March 2004). "JeungSanDo and the Great Opening of the Later Heaven: Millenarianism, Syncretism, and the Religion of Gang Il-sun". Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions. 7 (3): 26–44. doi:10.1525/nr.2004.7.3.26. Archived from the originalon March 27, 2020. Retrieved March 27, 2020.
- Hong Beom Rhee, Asian Millenarianism: An Interdisciplinary Study of the Taiping and Tonghak Rebellions in a Global Context, Cambria Press, 2007
- Lee Chi-ran. Chief Director, Haedong Younghan Academy. The Emergence of National Religions in Korea.
External links
- Jeung San Do - English homepage
- Jeung San Do - Korean homepage
- The Dojeon - English