Lovin' Life Sunday Sermon Notes for July 1, 2012

In Jin Moon

1. Good morning brothers and sisters! How is everyone this morning? Congratulations to all the blessed couples that are celebrating their 30th anniversary!

2. It's amazing how quickly the years have gone, isn't it? We feel young at heart and yet we look at the date and we realize 30 years has gone by and all these strange people that we call our children now embellish and entertain our lives and we realize, this whole work of building an ideal family, the dream that we had of building an ideal family, is truly something that has taken us on a very, very intriguing and interesting journey. Has it not?

3. Our True Parents, they really want to celebrate this day with all of you and they send you their greetings from Las Vegas. It's really all of you and the Blessed Central Families who have really protected our True Parents over the years, through the years in the wilderness and many years of persecution and misunderstanding. But surely the first-generation stood by our True Parents and really protected our True Parents, like a good solid defense, so that they could continue their mission and go about the work of the Providence. And it is really because you were there, not just as brothers and sisters, not just as men and women, but you were really there as children of God, really loving your parents, not just your Heavenly Parents but our True Parents throughout the years – that has really allowed our community to grow as a worldwide movement. And all the foundation that has been laid over the last 40 and 50 years is really the firm shoulders that the second generation and third generation now stand on. It's because of your sacrifice, your dedication, and your persistence over the years that really has us well-positioned to be extremely prosperous and to lead extremely fulfilled and satisfying lives.

4. When I think about how important this day is, and in this Unification Church, Blessing is such an important, should I say, mark of our lives – in that we come to this movement as young men and women but through the grace of God and because God has given us his representative in the form of True Parents, really a true man and a woman, perfected Adam and Eve who come to share this gift of the Blessing with all of humanity, by allowing us to change our lineage from the Satanic to that of a heavenly lineage, is really something that is incredibly blessed, beautiful, and profound.

5. In a way, through the blessing we enter through the portal of something that has never been done before in the history of mankind. Jesus came 2000 years ago, in a way his mission was cut short because he was crucified on the cross. He never had the chance to meet that beautiful wife with whom he could build a wonderful family and stand in the position as the True Parents 2000 years ago. And Jesus Christ would have been quite famous for the very thing our True Parents are famous for, the mass weddings. In a way, 2000 years ago, had the people been prepared to receive the Messiah and really understand that his mission was not to die but that his mission was to find a beautiful wife and create a beautiful family and thereby encourage all of humanity, despite the barriers, despite the differences, despite the great divide that separates God's children – to really compel all of us to live as one family under God. This would've taken place 2000 years ago.

6. But fast-forward to the modern-day era and all of us are so privileged and blessed to be living in the time of our True Parents when they are going about the world and going about their business spreading this breaking news, that this is the time when we must realize that we are all children of God. And, instead of realizing that we have the power to destroy our world 100 times over, we have the technology to do so, but this is the time when, centered and united with our True Parents, we can be well poised to usher in the new millennium of peace and love – and all that we have been waiting for if we realize that the purpose of our lives is not to just celebrate ourselves, but to celebrate each other as that one family under God.

7. And that's why the whole concept of the blessing is incredibly important. Because, most people when they get married, it's really about me and my spouse, it's about my man and my woman. But here, the blessing is about honoring God, it's about honoring humanity, celebrating our humanity – and it's about honoring each other as husband and wife and celebrating each other as husband and wife.

Bar Mitzvah

Bar Mitzvah

8. Just as, in the Jewish tradition, you have the right of passage when the young man and a young woman celebrate bar mitzvah or bas mitzvah, and they become in essence a young woman and a young man instead of a young child. The blessing kind of allows us to go through another portal, or another rite of passage if you will, allowing us to become a part of this wonderful thing called a universal family. And therefore, this is not a day when we just honor each other as that spouse, that husband and wife that has lasted for 30 years, but this is really an opportunity to celebrate with humanity, with our Heavenly Parent up in heaven, with our True Parents that really brought us this gift – and to remind ourselves that we have pledged ourselves to each other and to our humanity and to God all at the same time. And that we realize, that because we've been afforded this incredible gift of a blessing, that we are going to be the kind of people working on ourselves, building ideal families, and truly leaving something beautiful behind so that our world will be better after we are done, than how he found it when we first arrived. In a way we want to leave the world better and well poised for that world of peace that we have been talking about.

9. Whenever I think about blessing and whenever I think about different anniversaries that arise in the context of my own immediate family, the True Family, I am often reminded, my father reminds me, "You know In Jin you are quite a peculiar child." That, I knew already. But he said, "You know you were very peculiar."

10. We grew up on the second floor of a church. So, we woke up to singing, we fell asleep to singing, we woke up to prayer, we fell asleep to prayer. But one of the most exciting things for all of us as children was witnessing these beautiful young man and woman all dressed up, men in suits and women in these white robes and dresses with a veil – all going into the assembly room of the church to get blessed.

11. I was only three or four years old but I wanted to attend the Blessing. I wanted to go in. And so I demanded that my nanny buy me a white dress. And so I took whatever material I could find that was on the floor from the different sisters who were preparing their wedding gowns and their veils – and I stuck it all together. I don't remember what it looked like but it must have looked quite funny. So different scraps of veil, which I believe I tied with a rubber band, I wanted to make that my wedding veil and wedding gown.

12. I asked my parents, "I really want to attend this Blessing." My father just looked at me and said, "you have a bit of waiting to do." But I didn't want to wait. I was three or four but I wanted to attend this Blessing, I wanted to be there. I didn't know who my husband was so I enlisted the help of my younger brother [Heung Jin Moon]. I said, "You're going to the Blessing with me. You're my husband. So get dressed." My poor younger brother and I, even though my father said you cannot go, we were determined to enter. So, as the people progressed into the assembly room we thought that we could follow at the tail end of it and nobody would notice. My parents were already in the room waiting for the couples to come in. And so we stood on the sidelines waiting for everyone to pass through. And different couples looked over at us thinking, "Oh how sweet, how cute – they are dressing up for us." Not realize that we fully intended to attend.

13. They passed us by and I told my younger brother, "Get in position. Get ready." We didn't know how to stand, he didn't know how to stand. I didn't have any clip to stick the veil in my hair so I remember holding onto my veil like this (demonstrates) and I said, "Let's go!" So, after the last couple went into the assembly hall I dragged my brother, while holding onto my veil, off we tried to go in. But of course, the people at the door said, "you can't go in." I asked why not. But they didn't really have an answer for me. They said, "You're too young!" And I said, "Why can't I go?" And they asked me if my father gave me permission. And I said no, "but I still want to go!" And they slowly closed the door. And I thought, they closed the door on me but they are not going to get rid of me. So I said to my brother, "we've got to cry. We've got to cry really loud. No mercy, we've got to let it rip."

14. The couples were inside the assembly hall, and we wanted to be let in. So these two pitiful children stood outside crying our eyes out. And my younger brother did a really good job of it. And so people came and said, "You can't make noise. This is a very profound hour." I said, "I want to go. I want to go in. Let me in!" They said no, and I let out a few more screams until they finally dragged me away. Later, my father called me into the room and he said, "what were you doing up there?" And I said, "they didn't let me in and I wanted to go in, but then they closed the door on me so I had to cry. And I had to be heard, so I had to cry extra loudly." My father just laughed out loud and he said to me, he said to me something I will never forget, "you know, Blessing is a beautiful thing. But the Blessing is just the beginning, it's not an end." Because you kind of think that when you go to the wedding you're gearing up for this beautiful event, and once the ceremony is done it's over. Right? Or at least that's what I thought. But my father said, "The blessing is the beginning. It's not easy you know. So you have a lot of years to work on yourself. So, stop crying."

15. So that day I was terribly, terribly disappointed. But when I look back on my married life I was thinking, "geez, my father knew a thing or two." Because it is incredibly difficult. And, when we came and we joined and we wanted to build ideal families and we prayed to God, "please give me this opportunity to build an ideal family." Well, our Heavenly Father gave us just that. He gave us an I-deal family.

16. And I always say, God delivers exactly what we asked for. And we have to do our part in making sure we specify or give a little more details – with 30 years' worth of wisdom. But 30 years ago we got what we had asked for. In a way, when we are asking for ideal families we are really asking God to give me a family that I can true rub against – where I am going to be put in a situation to 'deal' with, I deal with all the different issues that arise when we attempt to build this thing called an ideal family.

17. I was talking with one of my friends and I said, "This Sunday is really, really kind of special because it's the 30th anniversary of 8000 couples." My friend said, "oh my goodness, 30 years!" And he said, "You know what they say about 30 years of marriage." And I asked what do they say? He said, "those people who have lasted 30 years of marriage – they say the first 10 years is trench warfare, they say the next decade is a lot of kamikaze soldiers, like World War II, and the third decade is kind of like going through the Cold War. So people who have survived 30 years of marriage have survived all three world wars." And you guys are still going strong!

Forest Gump

Forest Gump

18. And I said, "That's kind of interesting. I've never heard that one before. The one I heard is from the movie Forest Gump, "life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get." In the Unification Church marriage is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get.

19. And for those of us who didn't know what we were going to get or what we got, it's been 30 years of quite a journey and quite an experience and I'm sure that many of us have garnered wisdom throughout the years. And even though maybe our hair is slightly grayer, maybe our waistline has expanded a little bit more, even though we might be a little more tired than what we were 30 years ago – nevertheless the incredible thing about our community is that we are still young at heart.

20. I don't know how many times people, who have met brothers and sisters and Blessed Couples in our community, they said to me, "oh my God! That guy is really 60? He looks 40!" Because we are young at heart, because we are infused with the Divine Spirit, because we are plugged in to this heavenly circuitry – we tend to look much younger than a lot of people out in the world. Because, regardless of how difficult life might be, we see it as a challenge, we see it as an opportunity to learn something from it, to grow and really discover something we've never really noticed or realized about ourselves. So in a way, as difficult as life might be we still have this incredible hope, this incredible feeling of inspiration – which lends itself to all of you looking much younger than you really are. In a way, God has, not only kept you externally beautiful, but internally beautiful throughout the years – throughout the last 30 years.

21. And I know that, as somebody who came from a different country, to realize the beauty of this country America – truly this is like the melting pot of all different races, all different traditions, all different cultures. I was so intrigued and inspired to see people other than just Asians or just black hair – curly hair, blonde hair, red hair, black skin, olive skin, white skin, red skin – it was such a beautiful thing to see.

22. Even as I was growing up in Korea, my father and mother have always talked about being part of a universal family. But I never really saw it, but coming here when I was eight years old it just hit me like a big tsunami, "oh my goodness! So this is what my parents were talking about all those years when I was growing up in Korea. This is what it means to look and feel like one family under God."

23. When I realized how beautiful all of you guys were, bright eyed and bushy tailed – straight out of high school or straight out of college, so infused with this spirit to change the world, to be that agent of change, not wanting to be changed by the world but wanting to basically be the one to say, "I am going to be the agent of change that is going to usher in something beautiful," there was incredible excitement, an incredible amount of hope. We were looking forward to all the different things that we'd accomplish. And we thought that in a way, the next step of getting blessed would be just like that too, full of hope and full of intrigue and full of mystery.

24. But when we have been married and raising a family for the last 30 years we realize that there is a bit of work to be done. And when we asked for ideal families God really gave us different issues to work through, when it concerns our spouses, when it concerns our in-laws, when it concerns our children. 25. When I think about our movement and how I would really like to see it blossom in the near future – one way I like to think about it is – the first generation was really about finding God. You guys joined the church in order to find God. You guys went through a process of conversion experience where you experienced something divine, like a spiritual energy or a spark that changed your life forever. And you decided, "I am going to commit myself to God. I'm going to commit myself to the Providence and I am going to commit myself to building this thing called an ideal family."

26. Well, then we start having families and children and we realized that if you look at the second generation… and if you look at the first generation it was all about finding God and you did find God in this movement, but for the second generation, for all of us who were born in the movement – we never had to go through the process of the conversion experience. We never had to be put in the situation where we actually had an opportunity to own our faith. For those of us who have not gone through the process – the second generation is really about trying to figure out who we are – finding ourselves in the context of this movement and in the context of a family where our parents actually went through a process of a conversion experience and decided to connect. In the second generation it's not so much committing, but it's realizing what kind of tradition we come from and it's realizing that we are God's eternal sons and daughters and that we have been given this blessed life, and it's really up to us to use our life as that precious opportunity to create something beautiful by living a life of gratitude.

27. In a way, each generation has its own struggle. And as a member of the second generation, what I would really like to see going forward, when I think about the third and fourth and fifth generation, in a way, I would like the third-generation and the generations coming after to really be about finding happiness. Having happiness, having fulfillment in our lives. And instead of the first generation, who went through a process of finding God, and the second generation who went through a process of finding ourselves in the context of this thing called this movement, the third-generation really needs to be about finding happiness. How do we substantiate happiness in our lives?

28. When I think about that as a mother and as somebody who has children of my own, when I think about what I would like for them in the future. Well, I would very much love for them to go to the blessing. I would very much want them to be inspired by the dream or the romance of finding that special someone. So, in preparation of finding that someone, really going through a process of working on yourself in preparation to meet that beautiful someone – and coming to a place where they can commit themselves to this other person, not like the way the first generation or many of the second generation did, like opening up a box of chocolates not really knowing what we're going to get, but taking an active participation in the process of the blessing with the help of the parents and the help of True Parents, so that the future generations have a chance to own their faith, to own their commitment, to own their blessing.

29. So, people going to the blessing are not going with question marks on top of their heads, but with a clear sense of purpose and determination and commitment to say, "Blessing is something incredibly beautiful that I waited my whole life for. This was my dream. And now that I've found my eternal partner I'm going to create something beautiful." Knowing that the other partner is fully cognizant and in agreement with my understanding of the blessing which is, once you commit, then you try your best. And you don't take each other for granted. You don't abuse each other because you think you guys are eternal partners and there is no place that our spouse can go. Provided that it is a healthy relationship and a thriving relationship and a respectful relationship, then that commitment needs to be honored with loyalty, respect, and love. This is what I want for my children. And I think all of us as parents want that for our children.

30. One of the great things about being part of a movement that has 40 or 50 years of history is that we can learn a lot from our victories. But we can also learn a lot from our mistakes and from our failures. And, going forward, we can utilize the wisdom garnered through the years to make sure that the future of our movement, or the future blessed candidates, are better prepared and are better equipped than the one when we started our family life.

31. I often like to say, the first generation found God, but we really didn't know how to make that ideal family. Nobody gave us a manual on how to raise these perfect kids, these sinless kids. In a way, the first generation kind of had to wait for the second generation to grow up. Those that were born and raised in the movement that had experienced the learning curve of our parents, to really kind of work together to create a great manual or an educational curriculum so that we understand where our parents came from and our parents understand where we came from – and so the victories we celebrated will continue to be celebrated, but mistakes and failures that we ourselves as parents or we ourselves as children do not repeat over and over and over again.

32. This is a really important time. Whenever we are faced with our anniversary, to not just celebrate, but to also take into account how we did as human beings and really learn from each other so that we can better prepare for the future.

33. And, when I think about a blessed life I often like to refer back to Genesis 33:10. This is a story about Jacob and Esau and everyone knows the story of Jacob and you saw how Jacob stole the birthright with the help of his mother and Esau was really really angry. He wanted to kill Jacob. "How dare you take my birthright! How dare you scheme and supplant my rightful birthright." And so you have this older brother who is out to kill this younger brother, and I'm sure he is exploring all his options. Which way is the best to kill or best to deal with this silly younger brother of mine who took my birthright. And I'm sure he saw spent many, many years doing so.

34. But the reason why I like Genesis 33:10 is that it contains one of the most inspiring statements that a younger brother can make towards an older brother. After years of living their separate lives they come to this reunion scene. And we all know the story, Jacob sent all his prosperous gifts forward first, his servants with his children first, his two wives Rachel and Leah first with their children – and even as he approaches Esau bows 7 times to truly show his humility and humbleness and his love for his older brother.

35. And you can imagine what Jacob must have been thinking, "Oh my goodness, this is the final reunion and it's got to go well or I'm not going to be standing in this real world much longer. Here comes Esau with 400 of his friends and buddies and his family – and what is going to happen to me?" But one of the things that Jacob says to Esau is something that inspires me because, again, this is really an example of positive thinking. And, here at Lovin' Life Ministries I often like to talk about how we are eternal sons and daughters of God. We are divine sons and daughters of God. We are that prepared son and daughter inspired and empowered to do incredible things. So much of religion and so much of the religious life has been that of this idea that we are sinners. We are awful creatures. We are from the satanic lineage. We are not worthy to lift our heads before our Lord – in dignity and knowing that we belong to our God, our Heavenly Parent. In a way the life of religion has been really quite miserable. But here at Lovin' Life Ministries we are following our True Parents tradition in emphasizing the fact that we are inspired children of God. We are the divine children of God. We are like the light bulb that is plugged into that heavenly source of light which allows us to glow our magnificent light with the rest of the world.

36. In a way, instead of feeling the weight of sin and being worthless and horrible miserable creatures, we have a chance to find our own dignity and our self-worth and become that great human being. In a way, the message that our True Parents bring is incredibly positive and in a way it gives us an incredible amount of hope because all throughout the years our True Parents are saying – you need to be better than me. You need to be a better parent than me. You need to be a better father and a better mother than me. In a way, you can be great. You can be that Nobel Prize winner. You can be that gold medalist at the Olympics, you can be the best lawyer in the state of New York. You can be whatever you want to be as long as you can decide on what your passion is, commit, dedicate, become that empowered person, be a great person and contribute back to your society. You can be an awesome agent of change.

37. The story of Jacob and Esau is extremely positively reinforcing to me. Because, the words that Jacob utters to Esau is he says, "truly when I look into your face" – it says, "if … I have seen the face of God." Basically what he is saying is, "when I look at you brother I see the face of God." In a way, it's an incredibly affirming, positive, reinforcing message.

38. Here is this older brother who he thinks is going to kill him, but what he says in that crucial moment, when the two brothers are finally locked arm in arm and finally face-to-face he says, to a brother who can so easily kill him on the spot, he says, "brother when I see your face, I see the face of God."

39. In a way Jacob is doing a couple of things here with that line. Jacob is proactively giving a positive message to his brother. He is saying, "Esau, you are like God. You are God's son. You are that divine being. If you are like God and you are God's son, are you going to kill me?" In a way Jacob is proactively reaffirming everything that Esau is, as that beautiful elder brother. In a way, Jacob is reminding Esau at this really dangerous and profound moment when the two brothers unite, "Esau, you are that beautiful face of God. You are God as far as I'm concerned."

40. And Jacob does something else that is incredibly important. When you say to somebody, "When I gaze into your face I see the face of God," it's probably one of the most beautiful compliments that we can give to each other. Is it not? It's incredibly beautiful. And it's interesting to note in what he says, the compliment is not convoluted. It doesn't have an addendum attached to it. It's a very clean complement.

41. And what I mean by a clean complement is, sometimes in the context of a family life, we find ourselves wanting to better each other. And sometimes it might be two siblings, it might be a husband and wife, and we might say to each other, or it might be between parent and child. It might be a parent saying to a child – "you know you are pretty awesome when you're doing that, when you play the piano." That's a wonderful complement. But, what I mean by a clean complement is, many times we as parents when we are talking to our children, do not stop there. "You are really awesome when you play the piano. You are really awesome when you play the piano if only you would practice a little bit more." We as parents, we have done that many times, haven't we? In a way it is not a clean complement. What we are doing is we are adding an addendum to our offering or our complement to somebody.

42. Jacob is not saying when I look into your face I see the face of God – only when you are smiling at me. He doesn't say that. He says, "when I look into your face I see the face of God." Period. It's very clean. It's without any motivation. It's without any screwdriver that you want to turn in just to make a point. It's an offering, a complement, a beautiful offering. And that's what really inspires me about what Jacob said to Esau.

43. And another thing that I realized when I read this part in the Bible – and I kind of say to myself, it's really a loving thing to say. Many times words are incredibly powerful. And I often like to say words are vehicles of emotion in that words can build, and words can destroy. Words can build up our children's self confidence in themselves, their awareness of who they are as that divine son and daughter of God. Our words as parents can truly empower them and uplift them and build them. But our words also have the power to destroy them, to discourage them, to belittle them – out of our own frustration. Perhaps out of our own misunderstanding in how to best deal with the situation at hand, or to best deal with the issue that we are dealing with, thinking that whenever an issue arises we as the parents look at our children, saying, "that issue is you! It's you!" Not realizing that many times it's us. The issues arise because there are two people involved and we need to work things out.

44. When you read this part of the Bible, you realize that Jacob is being very proactive with this positive message, and very loving, and giving a very, very clean complement. And I have often thought, "You know what? That is the key to building a beautiful family. That is really the key to building an ideal family." Because we as human beings and we, in terms of our responsible day to day affairs that we have to deal with – so many things happen, or what I like to say, "Life happens." Things that are unexpected arise. Things we did not anticipate happen. Things that we didn't want, smack us in the face and we are left wondering what the heck happened?

45. But we realize that building an ideal family is really an opportunity for us to practice positive, positive thinking, and not just thinking but positive reinforcement in that the words become that vehicle of emotion – to not destroy, but to build and empower. And through our actions really encourage people to be the best, encourage our children, encourage our spouse, encourage our siblings to be the best that we possibly can.

46. So just as Jacob, kind of stunned Esau with this incredible positive message, which must have hit Esau really hard. You know, he was looking at his brother as somebody he wanted to kill and murder for taking away his birthright. But the younger brother is being proactively positive. He is being clean with his compliments. He's being extremely loving in his words, lifting his older brother, really honoring him as that older brother that he wants to dedicate everything that he owns to.

47. And he puts Esau in a situation where he finds himself being reminded by the positiveness of Jacob that, "yes! I may want to kill my brother! But yes! I am that loving older brother. I am that divine son of God. I am that child of God. In a way, my face is like my father's, because I am the son." In a way it reminds Esau to his true potential as that beautiful elder brother. But it also, in a way, creates a healthy dissidence in his mind with what he wanted to do, with what he is dealing with in terms of being face to face with the younger brother – being hit by this positive love bomb. In a way he wants to kill Jacob, but the positivity, or the power of positive reinforcement is so great it allows him to tap into his own divinity and his own dignity as that good older brother. And so the only thing he can really do is to decide to embrace and not to kill.

48. When we reaffirm and when we reinforce each other positively it's really giving the other person an opportunity to choose what kind of a response or what kind of a person they want to be. When we give an offering of a true compliment without any baggage, in that it is clean, what we really want the other person to do is to be reminded of the true worth and the true dignity of the person that they are – so that they choose to do the right thing. In a way, even though Jacob is the younger brother, he becomes a catalyst to help his older brother Esau do the right thing and embrace his younger brother in this beautiful reunion. And that's the power of positivity and that's the power of words or language.

49. When I think about how do we build a culture of heart? How do we build a loving environment where we don't become a church that condemns, but we become a church that builds up, that empowers. We don't become a church that discriminates who's better, who's purer, who prays harder, who fasts more. But, we become a church to say, "Wow! That brother, that sister is better than me! Wow! That family is truly a family of God!"

50. I was brought to this part of the Bible and the story of Jacob and Esau because, as a senior pastor I received lots of e-mails from many brothers and sisters and one e-mail that I received was from a young man. This young man, growing up as a second-generation, he's had a long journey in terms of finding himself. His difficulty has been his relationship with his mother. He always had this incredible fear growing up of disappointing God, disappointing True Parents, disappointing his parents, and in particular disappointing his mother. But you know, life happens. He didn't take up with the best group of friends and he kind of went the roundabout way. He admitted to me, freely, that he must have caused a great deal of concern and suffering to his mother. But after a couple of years of service, he came back home, and he was so happy to see his mother. And they had a long conversation and he said, "Mom, I'm really, really sorry for all those years that I was so immature. I realize that I now have a passion, I know what I want to do with my life. And, I just really hope that you can trust me, and you can kind of give me this chance to really make it up to you. And I really want to hear you say that I didn't disappoint you." He kind of described what happened. And this was his mother's attempt at really wanting to be real with her son – and she said, "yes all those years have been extremely difficult. You were a rebellious child. You were a difficult child. And yes, you disappointed me." And this young man, who had the fear of disappointing God, True Parents, and his mother his whole life was suddenly hit with his mother, after a long confessional talk, that yes, she was disappointed. In a way it was his mother's attempt at being real, but I think his mother did not realize what an incredible weight she had with those words, in telling her son, "Yes, you know, you disappointed me."

51. In a way, I think many times in the context of a family, we as parents, and we are all guilty here, we as parents, we don't realize how incredibly painful or difficult or burdensome our words can be. In a way a lot of parents that come to me, because they have difficulty with their children – when I hear the story that they share with me about their child in particular, certain things kind of pop up that I noticed. Most of the parents when they are dealing with a difficult child, they will say things like, "He is such a headache. He just can never do anything right. He just really, really pushes us to the limit. He is so rebellious. He is such a bad child."

52. And this is what they say to me, not realizing that this has been the kind of language that has been spoken in that family for over 17, 18 years. In a way we want to raise positive, inspired, empowered children, not realizing many times we create at home, where the language is far from being that inspired and positive reinforcement to our children – we don't realize that many times we are the ones that have created a language, or perhaps created almost the belief system in the kids that, "Yes I am bad. I can never do anything right. I am rebellious." So simply what a child decides to do is take it, or accept the language the parents are using on the child and say, "Okay I will run with it, and do that even more."

53. In a way, even though the mother was disappointed in the child, if she thought about how incredibly powerful her words were, her words are, and words continue to be, she might have chosen her words a little better. Instead of saying, "you've disappointed me." She might have wanted to say, "you know, life is difficult for me and for you. And building an ideal family is a very, very difficult thing to do. But you never disappointed me in that I've always believed in you, I always trusted in your true potential, in your true capability. And what you've gone through is just a process that you needed to grow out of in order to become a much richer and a much deeper person."

54. In a way, this is an example of taking, sometimes what we want to say to each other in the family, but reminding ourselves of Jacob's wisdom in using the power of positivity and the power of affirmation and the power of reinforcing what is good. Because, what we speak builds up the emotions in our children as they adapt to it. They take it to heart, whether we like it or not. And we don't realize that the language we use when we perhaps call them, when we perhaps are frustrated with them, when we perhaps are just exasperated – because actually the lesson taught, makes them difficult children or helps them to continue the difficult process. So, in a way this is a reminder to kind of take part and think about what we are actually saying.

55. I received another e-mail. This was a wife, really at her wits end. She was so consumed with herself righteousness that she felt compelled to basically launder the dirty laundry publicly about her husband. And she basically threw out to the public arena everything that the husband has done wrong. Usually in a situation like that, when you are trashing your spouse publicly, you have to realize that you and me, we as wives, and I wanted to bring this up because I am a woman, and many times we as women, we have an incredible power to build or to destroy with our words. And you know, not all of us have ideal husbands and not all of us have ideal wives. And in the context of a larger community like ours it's never a good thing to be so self-righteous, so selfish about what we want out of life that we are willing to destroy another human being, in a way condemning another human being in the public arena. This is not what an ideal family is all about.

56. We all have our shortcomings. We all have our strengths and weaknesses. But our community is really about celebrating our strengths and working on our weakness. And so instead of trashing the husband publicly, we have to realize we have children. And when we attack or trash our spouse publicly, we are teaching our children that half of them are evil. Half of them are bad. Half of them need to be trashed publicly. In a way, we are teaching our children to condemn half of what comes from the father or from the mother. If we really love our children, and we're really building a better future for our world – regardless of how difficult a husband and wife relationship might be we cannot go around trashing each other, fighting and lashing out at each other around the kitchen sink. We cannot scream at our spouse within the earshot of our children. We cannot publicly condemn and destroy the dignity of our spouse publicly.

57. And the interesting thing about people who tend to do this is that usually the person complaining is the one with the problem. This person in particular, when I found out her story, I realized that she was trashing her husband so badly for being such a bad person – when, at the end of the day, she was the one guilty with all the problems that she was accusing her husband of.

58. I always thought it was quite funny how, you know here at the headquarters my brothers and I in Korea, Japan, and America we are all involved in this faith breaking issue in which 4300 of our Japanese brothers and sisters have been abducted and held hostage against their will in Japan, simply for wanting to be Unificationists. Of course the extreme situation of that is Mr. Goto who was abducted by his own family with the help of de-programmers and was held captive as a hostage for 12 years and five months. It's just unbelievable what is being done in Japan. But what is taking place in Japan is the fact that these de-programmers are kind of victimizing the parents to think that the children are brainwashed zombies, no longer capable of making adult decisions and therefore they have to be brainwashed back by the de-programmers after the parents pay, in the situation of Mr. Goto's family $1.5 million, to re-brainwash his child to leave the Unification Faith, to leave the church.

59. In a way the parents are being victimized by the de-programmers. They are saying awful things about our church. Many times they miss understand what we talk about when we are saying that the Blessing is the portal through which the blood lineage is changed from the Satanic to God's lineage.

60. Many times people have misunderstood that – to think, you know, when I had some Korean PhD friends they said, "We heard that you swap spouses in your church. We heard that you have this thing called the change of blood. You swap spouses in your church? And you drink blood?" I said, "No we do not." And they said, "We heard that your church is a sex cult. Rev. Moon has sex with everybody." And I said, "No, that is not the case."

61. These are the type of information that the deep programmers used on that parents and on the children. And what they are doing is basically, they're saying we are a church that wants to be pure that wants to preserve our sexual purity for the sake of that eternal partner, for the grand Hollywood romance that we are preparing ourselves for. But, de-programmers turn that story around and say that this is a corrupt sexual cult.

62. But the funny thing is – when my friends, who are creating a documentary about the faith breaking issue, we went to Japan and we did research on these Christian ministers who work in the programming of our brothers and sisters away from our faith – we realize that here are the ministers who are accusing our True Parents of being a sex cult leader and taking away our members, while at the same time, they are brainwashing our sisters to leave the church and become their girlfriends. You realize that the person who is throwing the garbage is the one that is guilty of the garbage.

63. You realize that the people who tend to accuse and persecute and tear down people publicly – why would any good person do that? Why would anyone decent try to do that? Life is tough enough as is. The only thing that we really should think about is how do we support and how do we nurture, how do we empower each other? But usually the people that want to create garbage to throw at another person publicly, is usually the one guilty of the crime. And you see that time and time again.

64. If we are going to have a beautiful community where the culture is a culture of heart, not a culture of judgment, condemnation, disappointment, and discouragement – then we really need to take stock of how we are doing as parents, as children, as brothers and sisters, as citizens of this community, of the faithful, and think about how we are going to be better positioned and better prepared for the future.

65. And then there is another case of a family that really is a wonderful family, I feel. But this family is so wonderful and they are so infused with the spirit, but many times we don't realize that we think so highly of ourselves that we don't realize that we are discriminating our own happiness our own success vis-à-vis the others in the movement. We don't realize that we are saying, "Oh, my family is so awesome – much better than yours. My family doesn't have your problems."

66. In the context of 30 years of marriage some of us have remained intact as a Blessed couple. Some of us are single parents now. Some of us have failed in our initial blessing and have gone on to be re-blessed. In a way the picture is a very different picture than when we first walked down the aisle. In a way, life happened, and we had to grow, and we had to deal with all the issues that hit us along the way – in terms of our own life of faith, in terms of our own effort at trying to build families – in a way, our family is no longer all the same. It is not homogeneous. Every family is different. Every family has their unique problems that they need to overcome. Every family has their own unique issues that they need to work out.

67. So going forward on this day, when realize our purpose in life is to create the culture of heart, we have to ask ourselves, "are we really going to be a community that spends time distinguishing who is better than the other? Whether the intact couples are better than this single parents, or the intact couple who fight like cats and dogs and scream at each other is really better than the single parent who is trying her best, or his best, to raise decent kids? Or whether that single parent is better than somebody who's Blessing didn't work out and had to try again?"

68. We have to sit back and realize that everybody, every human being is that unique and eternal and beautiful child of God. And just like every seed you plant has its own cycle as to what we need to do in order to produce the best crop or harvests, likewise – each person is like that precious seed. And God is waiting to reap the harvest of our true potential. But just because our cycle is slightly different than the other, we should not be the kind of community where we are discouraging each other by saying, "oh, my family is going faster than yours. My family is much better than yours, much purer than yours, more intact than yours."

69. In a way every family is precious. And despite the differences what unites us all is that common vision, or that common dream that we all had when we first walked down the aisle. Regardless of what our situations may be or what our particular issues may be, we are still committed, we are still trying to best – and that's what we need to affirm. That's what we need to reinforce. It's the positive that we need to reaffirm. Because, the positive re-acclamation and reinforcement will create a new language of positivity that will continue to nurture our children, that will continue to comfort our children, that will continue to empower them to be the best that they can possibly be.

70. And I don't know about you but my dream is to really raise that generation of peace. At lots of young people are trying to find out what they want to be. Are they going to be generation X? Are they going to be Y? Are they going to be Z? Are they going to be the millennials, show me the money? What I would like to see is to see this generation of peace, young, inspired, powered, young people wanting to connect with their humanity, wanting to connect with where they are coming from, their Heavenly Parent. They want to contribute to the good of society by developing their passions so that they can give back their own touch, unique touch, back to the world. And really become the kind of people that inherits the true love of God in wanting to build ideal families.

71. The generation of peace are going to be that bunch of young people that understand they come from a common parent, that they are eternal sons and daughters of God, that here we want to live a life of altruism, living for the sake of others. Here we want to live a life practicing compassion, not condemnation, not discouragement, not discrimination – but a life of compassion, in really working on ourselves so that we not only become internally excellent but we become the embodiment of everything that is good, internally excellent in our life of faith but also externally excellent in whatever we decide to do.

72. It doesn't matter what the world might think of what a Unificationist is as long as they say, "they might be a Unificationist, but oh my God, that's the best violinist I've ever heard! Oh my God, I hear he is a Unificationist, but he is the best darn Poli-sci teacher I have ever met. You know, that child might be a Unificationist, and I've heard a lot of stories about the Unification Church, but all my God! She won the gold medal for our country, the United States of America. And here, the guy running to be the next president is a Unificationist. What an incredible man! What an incredible family! What an incredible vision!"

73. If we are excellent internally we need to be excellent externally as well, because what we are needs to come out and be expressed like the light within needs to be shared with the rest of the world. And that's what being an agent of change is all about. You guys have run your course of really being there for our True Parents, protecting our True Parents. And this second generation and the generations coming there after must receive the baton of the good work and the foundation building that our first generation has done and be grateful for the basement foundation that was laid.

74. But now it is time to build the house, a beautiful house. And you know our end goal is not just to build the house, but our end goal is to learn how to live properly in that house. We need to know and learn and substantiate everything that God wanted. God didn't just want us to build a basement. God didn't just want us to build buildings forever. He wants us to build a beautiful house, be the master of that house, own it, make it yours, and live with a grateful heart, live with a sense of purpose, live with a goal in mind, and live in knowing that we belong to an awesome, awesome movement and community!

75. So brothers and sisters, I always say that we have been touched by the moon. And you know, Rev. Moon our True Father and Mrs. Moon our True Mother are a beautiful example of that incredible couple that are their best partners, best friends, their best supporters, their best positive reinforcers.

76. So as we go forward and look forward to the next anniversary, let us really think about, not just talking about a culture of heart, but actually building that culture of heart starting with our language, reminding ourselves the power of positive reinforcement and affirmation – as we saw in the magic that took place when Jacob and Esau were finally reunited. It's that power of love. It's that power of proactively wanting positive energy to be shared. It's that positive desire to give someone a clean offering, a clean complement that can really uplift and build and encourage all of us. Because, brothers and sisters, life is tough enough as it is, isn't it? We don't need to make it any tougher on each other.

77. So be proud Unificationists. Be proud thirty-year anniversary brothers and sisters. You are beautiful! You are young at heart! You've done an incredible thing of walking the walk with our True Parents! And now let's do our best to walk the walk with our children so that our children can be that generation of peace, can really claim the next millennium as their own by bringing in the world of peace.

78. God bless! Thank you

Notes:

Genesis, chapter 33

1: And Jacob lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold, Esau was coming, and four hundred men with him. So he divided the children among Leah and Rachel and the two maids.

2: And he put the maids with their children in front, then Leah with her children, and Rachel and Joseph last of all.

3: He himself went on before them, bowing himself to the ground seven times, until he came near to his brother.

4: But Esau ran to meet him, and embraced him, and fell on his neck and kissed him, and they wept.

5: And when Esau raised his eyes and saw the women and children, he said, "Who are these with you?" Jacob said, "The children whom God has graciously given your servant."

6: Then the maids drew near, they and their children, and bowed down;

7: Leah likewise and her children drew near and bowed down; and last Joseph and Rachel drew near, and they bowed down.

8: Esau said, "What do you mean by all this company which I met?" Jacob answered, "To find favor in the sight of my lord."

9: But Esau said, "I have enough, my brother; keep what you have for yourself."

10: Jacob said, "No, I pray you, if I have found favor in your sight, then accept my present from my hand; for truly to see your face is like seeing the face of God, with such favor have you received me.

11: Accept, I pray you, my gift that is brought to you, because God has dealt graciously with me, and because I have enough." Thus he urged him, and he took it.

12: Then Esau said, "Let us journey on our way, and I will go before you."

13: But Jacob said to him, "My lord knows that the children are frail, and that the flocks and herds giving suck are a care to me; and if they are overdriven for one day, all the flocks will die.

14: Let my lord pass on before his servant, and I will lead on slowly, according to the pace of the cattle which are before me and according to the pace of the children, until I come to my lord in Se'ir."

15: So Esau said, "Let me leave with you some of the men who are with me." But he said, "What need is there? Let me find favor in the sight of my lord."

16: So Esau returned that day on his way to Se'ir.

17: But Jacob journeyed to Succoth, and built himself a house, and made booths for his cattle; therefore the name of the place is called Succoth.

18: And Jacob came safely to the city of Shechem, which is in the land of Canaan, on his way from Paddan-aram; and he camped before the city.

19: And from the sons of Hamor, Shechem's father, he bought for a hundred pieces of money the piece of land on which he had pitched his tent.

20: There he erected an altar and called it El-El'ohe-Israel.  

The Power of Words

In Jin Moon
July 1, 2012

Good morning, brothers and sisters. How is everyone this morning? Congratulations to all the Blessed Couples that are celebrating your 30th anniversary. It's amazing how quickly the years have gone by, isn't it? We still feel young at heart; yet when we look at the date, we realize that 30 years have gone by and all these strange people we call our children now embellish and entertain our lives. This whole work of building an ideal family – pursuing the dream that we had of building an ideal family – has taken us on a very intriguing and interesting journey, has it not? Yes.

Our True Parents really want to celebrate this day with all of you, and they send you their greetings from Las Vegas. It's all of you and the blessed central families who have protected our True Parents over the years – through the years of the wilderness, through many years of persecution and misunderstanding. Truly, the first-generation has stood by our True Parents and protected them like a good solid fence, so they could continue their mission and go about the work of providence.

Because you were there, not just as brothers and sisters or just as men and women, but as children of God loving not only your Heavenly Parent but also our True Parents throughout the years, our community has been able to grow as a worldwide movement. The foundation that you have laid for the last 40 to 50 years is the firm shoulders that the second-generation and the third-generation now stand on. It's because of your sacrifice, dedication, and persistence over the years that we are well positioned today to be extremely prosperous and lead richly fulfilled and satisfying lives.

God's Gift of the Blessing

In our Unification Church, the Blessing is such an important mark of our lives. We come to this movement as young men and women, but through the grace of God and because God has given us his and her representative in the form of True Parents – the true man and woman, perfected Adam and Eve who come to share this gift of the Blessing with all of humanity – we are allowed to change our lineage from satanic to that of a heavenly lineage. This gift to us is marvelously blessed, beautiful, and profound.

Through the Blessing, it is as though we enter through the portal of something that has never been done before in the history of humankind. We know that the mission of Jesus, who came 2,000 years ago, was cut short when he was crucified on the cross. He never had a chance to meet the beautiful wife with whom he could build a wonderful family and stand in the position as the True Parents. If Jesus Christ had been able to marry and together with his wife become the True Parents, they would have been quite famous for the very thing that our True Parents are famous for now – the mass weddings.

If the people 2,000 years ago had received the Messiah and understood that his mission was not to die but to find a beautiful wife, create a beautiful family, and thereby encourage and compel all of humanity – despite the barriers, differences, and great divides that separate God's children – to live as one family under God, this would all have taken place 2,000 years ago.

But fast-forward to the modern-day era and all of us are so privileged and blessed to be living in the time of our True Parents. They are going about their business around the world, spreading the breaking news that this is the time when we must realize that we are all children of God. As such, we are not to apply our power to destroy the world 100 times over – we have the technology to do so. Rather, if we center on and unite with our True Parents and we realize that the purpose of our lives is not just to celebrate ourselves but to celebrate each other as that one family under God, we can be poised to usher in the new millennium of peace and love that we all have been waiting for.

That's why the whole concept of the Blessing is so wonderfully important. For most people when they get married it's really about me and my spouse. It's about "my man" and "my woman." But here the Blessing is about honoring God, honoring and celebrating our humanity, and honoring and celebrating each other as husband and wife.

Bar Mitzva

Bar Mitzva

So just as the Jewish tradition has its rite of passage when a young man or young woman celebrates bar mitzvah or bat mitzvah and they become in essence a young man or a young woman instead of a young child, the Blessing allows us to go through a portal or rite of passage, if you will, allowing us to become a part of a universal family.

Therefore, this is not just a day when we honor each other as that spouse – that husband or wife – who has lasted for 30 years; this is a day when we have an opportunity to celebrate with humanity, with our Heavenly Parent, and with our True Parents who brought us this gift. It is a day to remind ourselves that we have pledged ourselves to each other, to humanity, and to God all at the same time. It's a day when we realize that because we've been afforded this incredible gift of the Blessing, we are going to work on ourselves even as we are building ideal families, and we are going to leave something beautiful behind so that our world will be better after we're done than it was when we first arrived. We want to leave the world better and well poised for the world of peace that we have been talking about.

The Peculiar Bride

Whenever I think about the Blessing and I think about different anniversaries that arise in the context of my own immediate family or in the True Family, I am often reminded – and many times my father has reminded me – "You know, In Jin, you were quite a peculiar child." That I knew already, but he said, "You know, you were very peculiar."

As you know, we grew up on the second floor of a church, so we woke up to singing and we fell asleep to singing; we woke up to prayer and we fell asleep to prayer. One of the most exciting things for all of us as children was watching these beautiful young men and women all dressed up – men in suits and women in white robes and dresses with a veil – and all going into the church assembly room to get Blessed.

I was only three or four years old, but I wanted to attend the Blessing. I wanted to go in, so I demanded that my nanny buy me a white dress. I took whatever material I could find that was on the floor from different sisters who were preparing their wedding gowns and veil, and I stuck it all together. I don't quite remember what it looked like, but it must have looked quite funny. So I had different scraps of veil, which I believe I tied with a rubber band, and I wanted to make that my wedding veil and my wedding gown.

I asked my parents, "I really want to attend this Blessing." My father just looked at me and said, "You have a bit of waiting to do." But I didn't want to wait. I was three or four, but I wanted to attend this Blessing. I wanted to be there. I didn't know who my husband was, so I enlisted the help of my younger brother, and I said, "You're going to the Blessing with me. You're my husband. So get dressed."

My poor younger brother and I were determined to enter – even though my father said, "You cannot go." As the people progressed into the assembly room, we thought that we could follow at the tail end of it and nobody would notice. My parents were already in the room waiting for the couples to come in, so we stood on the sidelines waiting for everybody to pass through. Different couples looked over at us, and they were probably thinking, "Oh, how sweet, how cute. They are dressing up for us." But they didn't realize that we fully intended to attend and join in the Blessing.

They passed us by; then I told my younger brother, "Get in position, get ready." We didn't know how to stand. He didn't know how to stand, and I didn't know how to stand. I didn't have any clips to stick the veil in my hair, so I remember holding onto it like this, and I said, "Let's go."

So as the last couple went into the assembly hall, I dragged my brother, grabbing onto my veil, and off we tried to go in. But then of course, the people at the door said, "You cannot go in." I said, "Why not?" "Because – because." They really didn't have an answer for me because I think they were quite shocked. They said, "Well, you're too young." And I said, "Why can't I go?" They asked me, "Did your father give you permission?" And I said, "No, but I still want to go."

Then they slowly closed the door and I thought, "Okay, they closed the door on me but they're not going to get rid of me." So I said to my brother, "We've got to cry. We've got to cry really loud." You know, "No mercy. We've got to let it rip." The couples were inside in the assembly hall but we wanted to be let in. So these two pitiful children stood outside crying our eyes out. And my younger brother did a really good job of it, too.

Then people came and said, "You can't make noise. This is a really holy, very, very profound hour." I said, "Yes, that's why I want to go. I want to go. I want to go in. Let me in." And they said, "No, you need to go back to your room and wait." I said, "No, wahhh." I let out a couple more screams, until they finally dragged me away.

Later my father pulled me into the room and said, "What were you doing out there?" I said, "Well, they didn't let me in and I wanted to go in. But then they closed the door on me so I had to cry. And I had to be heard, so I had to cry extra loudly." Then my father just laughed out loud and said to me something that I'll never forget, "The Blessing is a beautiful thing, but it's just a beginning. It's not an end."

That simple point is so right. When we go to our wedding, we tend to think that we're gearing up for this beautiful event and once the ceremony is done, it's over, right? Or at least that's what I thought. But my father said, "You know, the Blessing is the beginning, and it's not easy. You have a lot of years to work on yourself, so stop crying and wait for your Blessing."

On that day I was terribly disappointed, but when I look back on my married life, I find myself thinking, "Gee, my father knew a thing or two because it is incredibly difficult. When we join in wanting to build ideal families and we pray to God, 'Please give me the opportunity to build an ideal family,' well, our Heavenly Father gave us just that. He gave us an I-deal family."

I always say, "God delivers exactly what we ask for." We have to do our part in making sure we specify or give him a little more details with 30 years' worth of wisdom, but 30 years ago we got what we asked for. In a way, when we're asking for ideal families, we're really asking God, "Give me a family that I can 'true rub' against, a family in which I am going to be put in a situation to deal with – I-deal with – all the different issues that arise when we attempt to build this thing called an ideal family."

Forest Gump

Forest Gump

Marriage Is Like a Box of Chocolates

I was talking to one of my friends, and I said, "This Sunday is really special because it's the 30th anniversary of 8,000 couples." And my friend said, "Oh, my goodness, 30 years!" He said, "You know what they say about 30 years of marriage." I said, "What do they say?" And he says, "Well, those people that have lasted 30 years of marriage say the first 10 years are trench warfare, like World War I; the next decade is a lot like kamikaze soldiers, like World War II; and the third decade is like going through the Cold War. So people who have survived 30 years of marriage have survived all three world wars." And you guys are still going strong.

I said, "That's kind of interesting. I've never heard that one before. The one that I heard was in the movie Forrest Gump, where he said, 'Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get.' In the Unification Church, marriage is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get." For those of us who didn't know what we were going to get or what we got, it's been 30 years of quite a journey and quite an experience, and I'm sure that many of us have garnered wisdom throughout the years.

Even though our hair may be slightly grayer, our waistline may have expanded a little bit more, and we might be a little bit more tired than we were 30 years ago, nevertheless, the amazing thing about our community is that we are still young at heart. I don't know how many times people who have met our brothers and sisters or blessed couples in our community have said to me, "That guy's really 60? He looks 40." Because we are young at heart, because we are infused with the divine spirit, because we are plugged into this heavenly circuitry, we tend to look much younger than a lot of people out in the world. Regardless of how difficult life might be, we see it as a challenge and an opportunity to learn something from it, to grow and discover something that we've never noticed or realized about ourselves.

Even as difficult as life might be, we still have this audacious hope, this buoyant feeling of inspiration that lends itself to all of you looking much younger than you really are. God has kept you not only externally beautiful but also internally beautiful throughout the last 30 years.

Part of a Universal Family

As somebody who came from a different country, I have realized the beauty of this country, America, which truly is like the melting pot of all different races, all different traditions, and all different cultures. I was so intrigued and inspired to see people other than just Asians, or just black hair – curly hair, blonde hair, and red hair; black skin, olive skin, white skin, and red skin. It was just such a beautiful thing to see.

As I was growing up in Korea, my father and mother always talked about being part of a universal family, but I never saw it. Then coming here when I was eight years old, it hit me like a big tsunami: "Oh my goodness. So this is what my parents were talking about all those years when I was growing up in Korea. So this is what it means to look and feel like one family under God."

I realized how beautiful all of you guys were: bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, straight out of high school or straight out of college, and so enthused with the spirit to change the world, to be the agent of change, not wanting to be changed by the world but basically being the one to say, "I am going to be the agent of change that ushers in something beautiful." There was tremendous excitement and an enormous amount of hope, and we were just looking forward to all the different things that by now we've accomplished.

We thought that the next step of getting blessed would be just like that, too – full of hope, intrigue, and mystery. But when we have been married and raising a family for the last 30 years, we realize that there's a bit of work to be done. We realize that when we asked for an ideal family, God gave us different issues to work through when it concerns our spouses, our in-laws, and our children.

So when I think about our movement and how I would like to see it blossom in the near future, one way I like to think about it is the first-generation was about finding God. You guys joined the church in order to find God. You went through a process of conversion in which you experienced something divine like a spiritual energy or a spark that changed your life forever. And you decided, "I am going to commit myself to God. I am going to commit myself to the providence. I'm going to commit myself to building this thing called an ideal family."

Then we start having children and creating families. Today we can realize if you look at the second-generation that the first-generation was all about finding God – and you did find God in this movement. But for the second-generation, for all of us who were born into the movement, we never had to go through a process of a conversion. We never had to be put in a situation where we actually had an opportunity to own our faith.

So for those of us who have not gone through the process, the second-generation is about trying to figure out who we are, finding ourselves in the context of this movement and in the context of a family in which our parents went through a process of a conversion and decided to commit. For the second-generation, it's not so much about committing as it is about realizing what kind of a tradition we come from. It's about realizing that we are God's eternal sons and daughters, that we have been given this blessed life, and that it's up to us to use our life as a precious opportunity to create something beautiful by living a life of gratitude.

The Third-Generation Needs To Find Happiness

Each generation has its own struggle, and as a member of the second-generation, when I think about the third, fourth, and fifth-generations, I would like the third-generation and the generations coming after to be about finding happiness, about having happiness and fulfillment in our lives. And instead of the first-generation, who went through a process of finding God, and the second-generation, which went through a process of finding ourselves in the context of this "movement," the third-generation needs to be about finding happiness – finding how we substantiate happiness in our life.

As a mother who has children of my own, when I think about what I would like for them in the future, I would very much love for them to go to the Blessing. I would very much want them to be inspired by the dream or the romance of finding that special someone. At the same time, I would very much want them to go through a process of working on themselves in preparation for meeting that beautiful someone and committing themselves to this other person.

I would not want them to have to experience what the first-generation or many of the second-generation experienced: a Blessing that was like opening up a box of chocolate and not knowing what we're going to have. I would want the third and later generations to be active participants in the process of their own Blessing – with the help of their parents and of True Parents – so that the future generations have a chance to own their faith, their commitment, and their Blessing.

In this way, people going to the Blessing would not go with a question mark on top of their head but with a clear sense of purpose, determination, and commitment to say, "The Blessing is something incredibly beautiful that I've waited my whole life for. This was my dream, and now that I've found that eternal partner, I'm going to create something beautiful, knowing that my partner is fully cognizant and in agreement with my understanding of the Blessing. We both understand that once you commit, you try your best, and you don't take each other for granted; you don't abuse each other just because you think you're eternal partners and there's no place that your spouse can go."

Provided that it is a healthy, thriving, and respectful relationship, then that commitment needs to be honored with loyalty, respect, and love. This is what I want for my children. And I think all of us as parents want that for our children, too.

One of the great things about being part of a movement that has 40 or 50 years of history is that we can learn a lot from our victories, but we can also learn a lot from our mistakes and our failures. Going forward, we can utilize the wisdom garnered through the years to make sure that the future blessed candidates are better prepared and are better equipped than we were when we started our family life.

I often like to say that the first-generation found God, but we didn't know how to make that ideal family. Nobody gave us a manual on how to raise these perfect, sinless kids. The first-generation had to wait for the second-generation to grow up. Those who were born and raised in the movement and who have experienced the learning curve of our parents are positioned to work together with our parents to create a great manual or an educational curriculum so that we understand where our parents came from and our parents understand where we came from. In this way, the victories that were celebrated can continue to be celebrated, but the mistakes and failures of we ourselves as parents, or we ourselves as children, do not repeat over and over again.

Whenever we are faced with our anniversary, then, it is a time not only to celebrate but also to take into account how we did as human beings and learn from each other so we can better prepare for the future.

Jacob's Message of Positivity to Esau

When I think about a blessed life, I often like to refer back to Genesis 33:10, the story about Jacob and Esau. Everybody knows the story about Jacob and Esau: how Jacob stole the birthright with the help of his mother, and Esau was really angry. He wanted to kill Jacob. "How dare you take my birthright? How dare you scheme and supplant my rightful birthright?"

Here we have this older brother who is out to kill his younger brother, and I'm sure the older brother is exploring all his options. "What is the best way to kill, or to deal with, this silly younger brother of mine who took my birthright?" I'm sure Esau spent many, many years doing so. But the reason why I like Genesis 33:10 is that it contains one of the most inspiring statements that a younger brother can make toward an older brother. After years of living their separate lives, they come to the reunion scene, and we all know the story. Jacob sends ahead of him all his prosperous gifts, his servants with their children, and his two wives, Rachel and Leah, along with their children. Even as he approaches Esau, he bows seven times to show his humility and his love for his older brother.

We can imagine what Jacob must have been thinking, "Oh, my goodness, this is the final reunion, and it's got to go well or I'm not going to be standing in this real world much longer. Here comes Esau with 400 of his buddies and his family. What is going to happen to me?"

But one of the things that Jacob says to Esau is something that inspires me because this is an example of positive thinking. As you know, here at Lovin' Life I often like to talk about how we are eternal sons and daughters of God, we are divine sons and daughters of God, we are the prepared son or daughter, inspired and empowered to do awesome things.

So much of religion and religious life has been emphasizing the idea that we are sinners: We are awful creatures; we are from the satanic lineage; we are not worthy either to lift our heads before our Lord in dignity or to know that we belong to our God, our Heavenly Parent. In a way the life of religion has been quite miserable.

But here at Lovin' Life we're following our True Parents' tradition in emphasizing the fact that we are inspired and divine children of God. We are like a light bulb that is plugged into the heavenly source of light that allows us to share our magnificent light with the rest of the world. Instead of feeling the weight of sin and seeing ourselves as worthless, horrible, and miserable creatures, we have a chance to find our own dignity and self-worth and become a great human being.

The message that our True Parents bring is profoundly positive, and it gives us immense hope because all throughout the years our True Parents have been saying, "You need to be better than us. You need to be a better parent than us. You need to be a better father and a better mother than us. You can be great. You can be that Nobel Prize winner. You can be that medalist at the Olympics. You can be the best lawyer in the state of New York. You can be whatever you want to be as long as you decide what your passion is, then commit and dedicate to becoming that empowered, great person who contributes back to your society. You can be an awesome agent of change."

The story of Jacob and Esau is extremely positively reinforcing to me because the word that Jacob utters to Esau is, "Truly when I look into your face, it's as if I see the face of God." Basically what he is saying is, "When I look at you, Brother, I see the face of God."

That's a wonderfully affirming, positive, and reinforcing message. Here is this older brother whom Jacob thinks is going to kill him, but in that crucial moment when the two brothers are finally locked arm in arm and finally face to face, Jacob says to a brother who can so easily kill him on the spot, "Brother, when I see your face, I see the face of God."

Jacob is doing a couple of things here with that line. He is proactively giving a positive message to his brother. He is saying, "Esau, you are like God. You are God's son. You are that divine being. If you are like God and you are God's son, are you going to kill or are you going to love?" Jacob is proactively reaffirming everything that Esau is as the beautiful elder brother. Jacob is reminding Esau at this dangerous and profound moment when the two brothers unite, "Esau, you are that beautiful face of God. You are God as far as I'm concerned."

Jacob's "Clean Compliment" to Esau

Jacob also does something else that's immensely important. When you say to somebody, "When I gaze into your face, I see the face of God," it's probably one of the most beautiful compliments that you can give to that person, is it not? It's wonderfully beautiful, and the interesting thing to note in what he says is that the compliment is not convoluted. It doesn't have an addendum attached to it. It's a very clean compliment.

An example of a clean compliment might be a parent saying to a child, "You know, you're pretty awesome when you're doing that, when you play the piano." That's a wonderful compliment. In the context of a family life, however, we sometimes find ourselves wanting to better each other. It might be two siblings, or a husband and wife, or a parent and child.

Then the compliment may not be clean. We as parents when we are talking to our children often do not stop with saying, "You are really awesome when you are playing the piano." Instead we corrupt the compliment. We may say, "You are really awesome when you're playing the piano; if only you would practice a little bit more." We as parents have done that many times, haven't we? Then it's not a clean compliment. We've added an addendum to our offering or our compliment.

Jacob is not saying, "When I look into your face I see the face of God – only when you are smiling at me." He doesn't say that. He says, "When I look into your face, I see the face of God." Period. It's very clean. It's without any motivation. It's without any screwdriver that you want to turn just to make a point. It's an offering, a compliment. It's a beautiful offering, and that's what inspires me so much about what Jacob said to Esau.

And another thing that I realize when I read this part in the Bible and say those words to myself is that it's truly a loving thing to say. Words can be immensely powerful, and I often like to say, "Words are vehicles of emotions. Words can build and words can destroy." Words can build up our children's self-confidence and their awareness of who they are as a divine son or daughter of God. Our words as parents can truly empower, uplift, and build our children.

But our words also have the power to destroy, discourage, and belittle our children. Out of our own frustration, perhaps out of our own misunderstanding of how best to deal with the situation or issue at hand, we as the parents may find ourselves looking at our children and saying, "That issue is you; it's you," not realizing that often it's us. The issues arise because it's two people involved who need to work things out.

When you read this part of the Bible, you can see that Jacob is being very proactive with this positive message. He is being very loving by giving a very clean compliment. And I've often thought, "You know what? That is the key to building a beautiful ideal family." We as human beings in our responsible day-to-day affairs experience so many things, or as I would like to say, "Life happens." Things that are unexpected arise. Things that we didn't anticipate happen, things that we didn't want smack us in the face, and we're left wondering, "What the heck happened?"

But we realize that building an ideal family is an opportunity for us to practice positive thinking – and not just thinking, but positive reinforcement in that our words become the vehicle of emotion not to destroy but to build and empower. And our actions encourage people, whether it's our children, our spouse, or our siblings, to be the best that we possibly can.

Jacob stunned Esau with this astonishing positive message, which must have hit Esau really hard. Esau was looking at this brother as somebody he wanted to kill and murder for taking away his birthright. But the younger brother is being proactively positive. He's being clean with his compliment; he's speaking extremely loving words; he's uplifting his older brother, honoring him as the older brother to whom he wants to dedicate everything that he owns.

It puts Esau in a situation where he finds himself being reminded by the positive message that, "Yes, I may want to kill my brother," but also, "Yes, I am that loving older brother. I am that divine son of God. I am that child of God. In a way, my face is like my Father's because I am his son." It reminds Esau of his true potential as the beautiful elder brother, but it also creates a healthy dissonance in his mind between what he had wanted to do and what he's dealing with in being face to face with a younger brother who is hitting him with this positive love bomb. He wants to kill Jacob, but the positivity, or the power of positive reinforcement, is so great that it allows him to tap into his own divinity and dignity as the good older brother.

In the end, the only thing he can do is to decide to embrace and not to kill. When we reaffirm and reinforce each other positively, it's giving the other person an opportunity to choose what kind of a response or what kind of a person he or she wants to be. When we give an offering of a true compliment without any baggage – in that it is clean – what we really want the other person to do is to be reminded of his or her true worth and dignity, so that she or he can choose to do the right thing.

Even though Jacob is the younger brother, he becomes a catalyst to help his older brother Esau do the right thing and embrace his younger brother in this beautiful reunion. That's the power of positivity, and that's the power of words or language. Our Children Adapt to What We Say

As a senior pastor, I have been asking myself, "How do we build a culture of heart? How do we build a loving environment so we don't become a church that condemns but we become a church that builds up and empowers?" I don't want us to become a church that discriminates between "Who's better? Who's purer? Who prays harder? Who fasts more?" I want us to become a church that says, "Wow, that brother, that sister is better than me. Wow, that family is truly a family of God."

I was brought to this part of the Bible in the story of Jacob and Esau because, as a senior pastor, I receive a lot of e-mails from many of the brothers and sisters. One e-mail that I received was from a young man. This young man growing up as a second-generation has had a long journey in terms of finding himself. His difficulty has been his relationship with his mother. As he was growing up, he always had an intense fear of disappointing God, True Parents, his parents, and in particular his mother. But life happens, and he didn't take up with the best group of friends. He went the roundabout way, and he admitted to me freely that he must have caused a great deal of concern and suffering to his mother. But after a couple of years of service, he came back home, and he was so happy to see his mother. They had a long conversation, and he said, "You know, Mom, I'm really sorry for all those years that I've been so immature. I have realized that I now have a passion. I know what I want to do with my life, and I just hope that you can trust me and give me the chance to make it up to you. I really want to hear you say that I didn't disappoint you."

He described what happened, and I think his mother attempted to be real with her son in her response to him. She said, "Yes, all those years have been extremely difficult. You were a rebellious, difficult child. And yes, you disappointed me." And this young man, who had the fear of disappointing God, True Parents, and his mother his whole life, was suddenly hit with his mother, after a long confessional talk, that, yes, she was disappointed. It was his mother's attempt at being real. But I think his mother did not realize what a huge weight she had with those words, in telling her son, "Yes, you disappointed me."

I think that often we as parents – and we're all guilty here – don't realize how extremely painful or difficult or burdensome our words can be. A lot of parents come to me because they have difficulty with their children, so when I hear the story that they share with me about their child in particular, certain things pop up that I notice. Most of the parents, when they're dealing with a difficult child, will say things like, "He's just such a headache. He just can never do anything right. He really pushes us to the limit. He's so rebellious. He's such a bad child." This is what they say to me, not realizing that this has been the kind of language that has been spoken in that family for over 17 or 18 years.

We want to raise positive, inspired, empowered children, not realizing that many times we create a home where the language is far from being an inspired and positive reinforcement to our children. We don't realize that we often are the ones who have created a language or perhaps created almost a belief system in the kids that, "Yes, I am that. I can never do anything right. I am rebellious."

A child takes in or accepts the language that the parents are using on the child and says, "Okay, I'll run with it, and do that even more." Even though the mother was disappointed in the child, if she thought about how extremely powerful her words were, and are, and continue to be, she might have chosen her words a little better. Instead of saying, "You've disappointed me," she might have wanted to say, "You know, life is difficult for me and for you, and building an ideal family is a very difficult thing to do. But you've never disappointed me in that I always believed in you. I always trusted in your true potential, in your true capability, and what you've gone through is just a process that you needed to grow out of in order to become a much richer and a much deeper person."

This could be an example of thinking about what we want to say to each other in the family and reminding ourselves of Jacob's wisdom in using the power of positivity, affirmation, and reinforcing what is good. What we speak builds up the emotions in our children, and they adapt to it. They take it to heart, whether we like it or not. And we may not realize that the language we use when we scold them, or when we are frustrated and exasperated with them, becomes the lesson tools that make them difficult children or push them to continue the difficult way. The story of this young man and his mother is a reminder to take pause and think about what we are actually saying.

Celebrate Strengths and Work on Weaknesses

I received another e-mail – from a wife who was at her wit's end. She was so consumed in her self-righteousness that she felt compelled to launder publicly her husband's dirty laundry. She basically threw out to the public arena everything that the husband has done wrong.

A situation like that, when a wife is trashing her spouse publicly, provides us with the opportunity to reflect on two important points. To the women – and I wanted to bring this up because I'm a woman – you and me, we as wives and as women, have an tremendous power to build or destroy with our words. Not all of us have ideal husbands, and not all of the men have ideal wives. In the context of a larger community like ours, however, it's never a good thing to be so self-righteous and selfish about what we want out of life that we are willing to destroy another human being by condemning another human being in the public arena. This is not what an ideal family is all about.

We all have our shortcomings; we all have our strengths and weaknesses. But our community is really about celebrating our strengths and working on our weakness. So instead of trashing the husband or the wife publicly, we have to realize that we have children, and when we attack or trash our spouse publicly, we are teaching our children that half of them is evil, half of them is bad, and half of them needs to be trashed publicly. In essence, we're teaching our children to condemn that half of them that comes from the father or the mother.

If we really love our children and we're really building a better future for our world, regardless of how difficult a husband-and-wife relationship might be, we cannot go around trashing each other, fighting and lashing out at each other around the kitchen sink. We cannot scream at our spouse within the earshot of our children. We cannot condemn and destroy the dignity of our spouse publicly.

The interesting thing about people who tend to do this is that usually the person complaining – like the wife who reported she was at her wit's end – is the one with the problem. When I found out this wife's story, I realized that she was trashing her husband for being such a bad person when in the end of the day she was the one guilty with all the problems that she was accusing her husband of.

"Guilty of the Garbage"

Here at Headquarters, as you know my brothers and I – in Korea, Japan, and America – are all involved in this faith-breaking issue in which 4,300 of our Japanese brothers and sisters have been abducted and held hostage against their will in Japan simply for wanting to be Unificationists. Of course, the extreme example of that is Mr. Goto, who was abducted by his own family with the help of deprogrammers and held captive for 12 years and five months. It's just unbelievable what is being done in Japan.

These Japanese deprogrammers are victimizing the parents to think that their children are brainwashed zombies who are no longer capable of making adult decisions, and therefore the children have to be brainwashed back by the deprogrammers after the parents have paid, in the situation of Mr. Goto's family, $1.5 million to rebrainwash their child to leave the Unification faith, to leave the church. I have always thought this is quite tragically funny.

The parents are being victimized by the deprogrammers, who are saying awful things about our church. People often misunderstand what we mean when we say that the Blessing is a portal through which the blood lineage is changed from satanic lineage to God's lineage. I had a couple of Korean Ph.D. friends who said to me, "We hear that you swap spouses in your church. You have this thing called the change of blood. You swap spouses in your church and you drink blood?" I said, "No, we do not." And they said, "Well, we hear that your church is a sex cult, that Reverend Moon has sex with everybody." And I said, "No, that is not the case."

This is the type of information that the deprogrammers use on the parents and on the children. The deprogrammers are saying, "Your Unification Church may say publicly that it wants to be pure, it wants you to preserve your sexual purity for the sake of that eternal partner, for the grand Hollywood romance that you're preparing yourself for, but actually your Unification Church is a corrupt sexual cult."

I learned a tragically funny thing when I went to Japan with my friends who were creating a documentary about the faith-breaking issue and we did some research on these Christian ministers who work in deprogramming our brothers and sisters away from our faith. We realized that while these ministers are accusing our True Parents of being a sex cult leader, at the same time they are brainwashing our sisters to leave the church and become their girlfriends. So here is another example of the person who is throwing the garbage being the one who is guilty of the garbage, the person who tends to accuse and persecute and tear down people publicly. Why would any good person do that? Why would anyone decent try to do that? Life is tough enough as it is.

The only thing that we should think about is how to support, nurture, and empower each other. But usually the person who wants to create garbage to throw at another person publicly is the one guilty of the crime. We see that, time and time again.

If we're going to have a beautiful community whose culture is a culture of heart, not a culture of judgment, condemnation, disappointment, and discouragement, then we need to take stock of how we are doing as parents, as children, as brothers and sisters, and as citizens of this community of the faithful, and we need to think about how we're going to be better positioned and better prepared for the future.

"Be the Best of Generation Peace"

Then there is another case of a family that is a wonderful family. This family is so wonderful, so infused with the spirit. But often we don't realize that we may think so highly of ourselves that we don't realize that we are comparing our own happiness and our own success vis-à-vis the others in the movement. We don't realize we're saying, "Oh, my family is so awesome, much better than yours. My family doesn't have your problem."

In the context of 30 years of marriage, some of us have remained intact as a blessed couple, some of us are single parents now, and some of us have failed at our initial blessing and have gone on to be reblessed. The picture today is very different than when we first walked down the aisle. Life happens, and we have to grow and to deal with all the issues that hit us along the way in terms of our own life of faith and our own effort at trying to build families.

Our family is no longer all the same. It's not homogeneous. Every family is different. Every family has its unique problems that it needs to overcome. Every family has its own unique issues that it needs to work at.

So going forward on this day when our purpose in life is to create the culture of heart, we have to ask ourselves, "Are we going to be a community that spends time distinguishing who is better than the other: Whether the intact couples are better than the single parents? Whether the intact couple who fights like cats and dogs and screams at each other is really better than a single parent who is trying her best or his best to raise decent kids? Or whether that single parent is better than somebody whose blessing didn't work out and had to try again?

We have to sit back and realize that everybody, every human being, is a unique, eternal, and beautiful child of God. And just as every seed we plant has its own cycle as to what we need to do in order to produce the best crop or harvest, each person is like a precious seed for whom God is waiting to reap the harvest of our true potential.

But just because our cycle is slightly different from every other cycle, we should not be the kind of a community that discourages each other by saying, "Oh, my family is going faster than yours. My family is much better than yours, much purer than yours, more intact than yours." In its own way, every family is precious. Despite the differences, what unites us all is that common vision or that common dream that we all had when we first walked down the aisle. Regardless of what our situations may be or what our particular issues may be, we are still committed, we are still trying our best, and that's what we need to affirm and reinforce.

It's the positive that we need to reaffirm because the positive reaffirmation and reinforcement will create a new language of positivity that will continue to nurture, comfort, and empower our children to be the best that they can possibly be. I don't know about you, but my dream is to really raise that Generation of Peace.

A lot of young people are trying to find out what they want to be. Are they going to be Generation X? Are they going to Y? Are they going to be Z? Are they going to be the Millennial: "Show me the money?" What I would like to see is this Generation of Peace: Inspired and empowered young people connecting with their humanity, with where they come from, and with their Heavenly Parent, and wanting to contribute to the good of society by developing their passion so they can give their own unique touch back onto the world and inherit the true love of God in working to build ideal families.

The Generation of Peace is going to be that bunch of young people who understand they come from a common parent and they are eternal sons and daughters of God who want to live a life of altruism, living for the sake of others. Here we want to live a life practicing compassion, not condemnation, discouragement, or discrimination; we want to live a life of compassion by working on ourselves so that not only do we become internally excellent but also we become an embodiment of everything that is good – both internally excellent in our life of faith and also externally excellent in whatever we decide to do as a career.

It doesn't matter what the people of the world might think an Unificationist is, as long as they say, "She might be an Unificationist, but she is the best violinist I've heard." "I hear he's an Unificationist, but he is the best darned poli-sci teacher I have ever met." "You know, that child might be an Unificationist, and I've heard a lot of stories about the Unification Church, but she won the Gold Medal for our country, for the United States of America." And, "I hear that the guy running for the next presidency is an Unificationist, but what an incredible man, what an incredible family, what an incredible vision."

If we are excellent internally, we need to be excellent externally as well because what we are needs to come out and be expressed, just as the light within needs to be shared with the rest of the world. That's what being an agent of change is all about. So you guys of the first-generation have run your course of being there for our True Parents, protecting our True Parents. The second-generation and the generations coming thereafter must receive the baton of the good work and the foundation building that our first-generation has done and be grateful for the basement foundation that was laid. Now it is time to build the house, a beautiful house.

But our end goal is not just to build a house. Our end goal is to learn how to live properly in that house. We need to know and learn and substantiate everything that God wants. God didn't just want us to build a basement. God didn't just want us to build buildings forever. God wants us to build that beautiful house, be the master of that house, own it, make it ours, and live with a grateful heart, with a sense of purpose, and with a goal in mind, knowing that we belong to an awesome, awesome movement and community.

So brothers and sisters, I always say that we have been touched by the moon – and Reverend Moon, our True Father, and Mrs. Moon, our True Mother, are a beautiful example of that marvelous couple who are each other's best partner, best friend, best supporter, and best source of positive reinforcement.

As we go forward looking toward the next anniversary, let us not just talk about a culture of heart but actually work on building that culture of heart, starting with our language, reminding ourselves of the power of positive reinforcement and affirmation as we saw in the magic that took place when Jacob and Esau were finally reunited. It's that power of love. It's that power of proactively wanting positive energy to be shared. It's that positive desire to give someone a clean offering, a clean compliment that can uplift, build, and encourage all of us.

Life is tough enough as it is, isn't it? We don't need to make it any tougher on each other. Please be proud Unificationists, be proud 30-year anniversary brothers and sisters. You are beautiful; you are young at heart; you've done an astounding thing of walking the walk with our True Parents. Now let's do our best to walk the walk with our children so that our children can be the Generation of Peace that claims the next millennium as its own by bringing in the world of peace.

So God bless. Thank you.

Notes:

Genesis, chapter 33

1: And Jacob lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold, Esau was coming, and four hundred men with him. So he divided the children among Leah and Rachel and the two maids.

2: And he put the maids with their children in front, then Leah with her children, and Rachel and Joseph last of all.

3: He himself went on before them, bowing himself to the ground seven times, until he came near to his brother.

4: But Esau ran to meet him, and embraced him, and fell on his neck and kissed him, and they wept.

5: And when Esau raised his eyes and saw the women and children, he said, "Who are these with you?" Jacob said, "The children whom God has graciously given your servant."

6: Then the maids drew near, they and their children, and bowed down;

7: Leah likewise and her children drew near and bowed down; and last Joseph and Rachel drew near, and they bowed down.

8: Esau said, "What do you mean by all this company which I met?" Jacob answered, "To find favor in the sight of my lord."

9: But Esau said, "I have enough, my brother; keep what you have for yourself."

10: Jacob said, "No, I pray you, if I have found favor in your sight, then accept my present from my hand; for truly to see your face is like seeing the face of God, with such favor have you received me.

11: Accept, I pray you, my gift that is brought to you, because God has dealt graciously with me, and because I have enough." Thus he urged him, and he took it.

12: Then Esau said, "Let us journey on our way, and I will go before you."

13: But Jacob said to him, "My lord knows that the children are frail, and that the flocks and herds giving suck are a care to me; and if they are overdriven for one day, all the flocks will die.

14: Let my lord pass on before his servant, and I will lead on slowly, according to the pace of the cattle which are before me and according to the pace of the children, until I come to my lord in Se'ir."

15: So Esau said, "Let me leave with you some of the men who are with me." But he said, "What need is there? Let me find favor in the sight of my lord."

16: So Esau returned that day on his way to Se'ir.

17: But Jacob journeyed to Succoth, and built himself a house, and made booths for his cattle; therefore the name of the place is called Succoth.

18: And Jacob came safely to the city of Shechem, which is in the land of Canaan, on his way from Paddan-aram; and he camped before the city.

19: And from the sons of Hamor, Shechem's father, he bought for a hundred pieces of money the piece of land on which he had pitched his tent.

20: There he erected an altar and called it El-El'ohe-Israel.  

Lovin' Life Sunday Sermon Notes for June 24, 2012

In Jin Moon

1. Good morning brothers and sisters. How is everyone this morning? I bring you greetings from our True Parents in Korea. I had the great fortune to spend Day of All Things with them. You know whenever I see True Father and True Mother you know, lots of emotions run through my body, run through my memory banks. It really makes me realize how incredibly lucky I am to be living at this time with True Parents, who are really the Second Coming and who have come as representatives of our Heavenly Parent up in Heaven, to really share the breaking news with us and share in the gift of this wonderful thing called the Blessing, through which we can change our lineage from Satan's to God's lineage.

2. As I was looking at this man while were having the events I realized that you know, he is 90 some years old and he is just that ever consistent, never changing, unique, eternal son of God. And you know, he gazes upon all of his children with great love and great affection and certainly we've come to (we meaning my brothers and sisters) experience a lot more parental love in his later years than when he was a young robust man, because he was always so busy with mission work and so busy in terms of pushing forward the Providence at hand.

3. And you know, sometimes he's quite cute. He will say things that I wish I could've heard maybe 30 years ago, but now it's being said and now it's being shared. And I realized that life is really a journey. The life we have with our parents, the life that we have with our family is really a journey, in that you never know what lies around the corner and you never know when you're going to hear those beautiful words and you never know when you're going to have that experience that you've been waiting for, but I find myself sharing those lovely and you know surprising moments with my father and mother and I am so grateful to have them in my life. I think we all feel so grateful to have them in our lives.

4. And, of course you know, my father cannot finish an event without a song. So, when he's calling different people up to sing, it kind of gets a little bit daunting, because you're sitting in the front row and Father keeps on looking at you and he's calling out different people to sing, but he keeps on looking at you. And it's early in the morning, you really don't feel like singing, but nevertheless, after asking different leaders to sing, he asked my younger brother to get up and sing. So, I thought I was off the hook. But when Lovey got up to sing, he looked around, Lovey, and said YOU. And so I was called forward and I was in no mood to sing. Lovey helped me a great deal to sing a rendition of some of my father's favorites.

5. You know, I thought to myself, you know music is everywhere; in our lives and in our church. I don't know if some of you have visited the old home where I grew up. It was basically a church, it was the second floor of a church where I and my brothers grew up. And we basically woke up to singing and praying and we fell asleep to singing and praying. And now I find myself in the presence of my father and mother and they are always singing and they are always praying.

6. And so, this music ministry or Lovin' Life is incredibly important to me because here we delight and we experience and we share in the universal language and it becomes a conduit through which we can experience God's love for us and we can experience our own divinity and feel incredibly inspired and empowered to do something about our lives.

7. And so, as I bid my farewell to my father, you know, I found him seated on this little, tiny chair in front of this little pond down by the training center at Chung Pyung. And he had five fishing poles out on this tiny little pond and he was manning these five fishing poles. So, I came to say goodbye and Father said "sit, sit" and so I sat behind him. And he wanted to catch a fish. And so Father had quite a few grandchildren around him and some people who were taking care of him and Lovey and my husband. Father was saying "shush, be quiet" and so all of us we kind of sat there quietly, waiting. But then Mother said "you know, Father why don't you say goodbye to your daughter because she really needs to get going." Because once my father gets sitting, when Father gets fishing there is really no end. I think my mom was a little bit afraid that I might miss some of the meetings that I had back in Seoul. And so my mother said "Father, please get up and let's wave goodbye to our daughter and let's get her on her way."

8. You know, Chung Pyung is on a hill and so the roads are really quite winding. But in this fishing area they created for my father, he doesn't like to take a car because he likes to kind of feel the nature, feel the wind in his hair, so to speak. So he rides the golf cart down these winding roads. And so when he said goodbye he got into his golf court and he said "Oh, have a good trip; where are you going? So I said, well father, I'm going to Seoul" and Father said "Seoul, Seoul". And you know, Seoul is the capital of Korea. It kind of sounds like 'soul' in English, does it not? But when you say 'Seoul-Hada', when you make it into an active verb, it means "I'm sad", so Father was saying, Seoul Hadamika, Seoul Hada, that means " You're going to Seoul, but somehow I feel sad." I said "yes, Father but I will see you shortly because you're coming back to Las Vegas." And then Father says ….(in Korean) which means "That's right, that's right, that's right" and then Mother said "shall we go, shall we go?"

9. So, the person seated next to Father stepped on the gas and he kind of stopped the guy and said "Wait" and he looked at me and he kind of broke into a kind of song in Korean. (she sings a few bars in Korean) it means "you're beautiful" and he started singing "you're beautiful". I don't know what melody he was singing, but he was singing and he was waving and he was saying "you're beautiful, you're beautiful"

10. And then he kicked the guy to step on the pedal, so the guy hit the pedal and off they went. And I saw my father disappear into the distance into the mountains of Chung Pyung. And he was singing (in Korean)…. "You're beautiful, everything is beautiful" And then he kind of launched into one of his favorite Korean songs. So my vision of my father, as I bid farewell and as I said goodbye, is this cute little old man seated with his wife in a golf cart disappearing into the mountain and I said "Wow, I wonder what people would say if I told them, there goes the Messiah, there goes True Parents" and I realized that, you know, God works in mysterious ways.

11. And that vision of an old man and his wife riding off into the sunset in a golf cart might not be the likely vision of what the Messiah would be like, what True Parents would be like. And perhaps, just like the way the Israelites were expecting the Son of God to come with a band of Angels, with trumpets blaring everywhere, the Son of God descending from the heavens all majestic, all grand and loud and big! But that is not the way Jesus Christ came 2000 years ago; he came very humbly in a natural way you know, in a barn somewhere, full of dung and not the most holiest of places, but that's how he came.

12. And so I realized that we as people, as children of God have lots of expectations about different things in life and certainly you know, maybe lots of people's ideas of what a Messiah should be or what True Parents should be, might not quite fit with what was given to us. You know, perhaps they wouldn't ever expect a man from North Korea. Perhaps they expected a white man, perhaps they expected a white man with blue eyes and blond hair like Hollywood led us to believe. But here comes our True Parents, quite different from what we expected but nonetheless they continue to intrigue us, to inspire us, sometimes mystify us and sometimes leave us dumbfounded. But nevertheless, they are who they are and they have come to share with us the breaking news.

13. So when I thought about our own expectations, of our own visions of what something should be, but many times in reality it is not so and many times reality you know, sometimes plays tricks on us and makes us feel ungrateful or makes us feel unloved and unappreciated, or lost, but nevertheless it's really God's way of reminding us that He and She does work in mysterious ways and it's really an opportunity for us, you know, to not keep our own expectations on things, not always demand things of life and demand things of our Heavenly Parent, but kind of sit back and relax, remain open and sensitive to the voices that are speaking to us in many, many different ways.

14. And this reminds me of a passage in the Bible in First Kings, Chapter 19, verses 11 to 12. The Bible says that the Lord was not found in the powerful winds, not found in this incredibly fearful earthquake, He was not found in this all-consuming blazing fire, but First Kings says God was found in a still small voice.

15. In a way many times what I wanted, when I was going through my adolescence and I was wrestling with my own identity, finding my own identity, of wanting to figure out who I wanted to be; whether I wanted to believe this thing called the Divine principle; whether I wanted to believe in who my parents were. You know. I, like anybody else, went through a lot of searching and lots of praying and lots of crying. But at the same time, I was always hoping to hear the words of God. I said to God "if you exist, I want to see you, I want to hear you, I want to smell you. You know, I want to feel you. I want to know you, so answer me! This is kind of my passion that I had many times. Life is difficult and you just want God to say something; you just want to hear God and that all powerful consuming voice up from the heavens, saying "this is what I want you to do." I wanted somebody to tell me, you know, that everything was going to be all right; I wanted somebody to tell me this is what you should do with your life. I wanted someone to say I am here; I exist and therefore you can believe in me. Because you know that I'm here.

16. I wanted some kind of a sign. And I don't know how many times I yelled out in my prayers "I want to see you, I want to hear you!"

17. But you know, there was this one occasion in my life when I was really, really struggling with different things that were put before me and, you know, the temptations are always there and opportunities are always there. And I wanted God to appear to me and tell me, "don't do it. or just believe in me. or just do this little bit longer and I will have a solution for you." I wanted God to kind of fix my problem; I wanted God to give me the strength, you know, to do the right thing. I wanted God to be there for me, hold my hand. I was really kind of searching and I was really struggling. I was at wits end and I was really kind of asking myself "is life really worth it, because what I see before me and around me is quite miserable" and I couldn't get a sense that there was hope around the corner and I couldn't feel that there is something I could look forward to. And I said "God, just give me a sign, just give me a sign, just let me know that you are there, let me know that I can feel you, that I can hear you. I just want to see you." And I was kind of saying these things over and over again in my struggles.

18. You know, there was a time when I was so desperate I refused to come out of my room. I didn't want to come out until I got some kind of an answer. And something really interesting happened to me, you know. I was waiting to kind of have this vision or revelation; I was waiting for God to appear before me on a cloud, looking like the picture of that big burly grandmother that was almost a Santa Claus figure and I wanted Him to just come and embrace me. And I wanted him to tell me everything is all right, you know; "that I love you, that you're going to do many, many great things." I wanted this commanding presence of a voice and I wanted to hear certain commandments from him telling me exactly what to do, telling me exactly how to solve my problem.

19. And I was waiting and I was waiting desperately and desperately. I waited for many, many days but then I didn't hear anything. I didn't see the Santa Claus figure come down from the clouds with this all-consuming voice to tell me that everything was going to be all right. And so I remember coming out of my room just really, really despondent and terribly hungry, because I had not eaten, because I wanted to find God, I wanted to feel, wanted to see and hear God and I was just so beaten, so crushed. And I was saying to myself, I guess God does not care for me to hear the commanding voice telling me that everything is going to be all right. And He didn't come. But because I was so hungry, so hungry I walked down to the kitchen and started to fix something for myself.

20. Then my younger brother came into the kitchen and he had this kind of tiny radio that he carried around, and a certain song was playing. And in the beginning I wasn't really listening to it. When my brother said Hi, I just simply ignored him because I was so angry that God did not appear in front of me. But he kind of set that radio down on the table in the island of the kitchen where we were sitting many times and ate a plate full of food. I sat down totally devastated, totally crashed; I started to hear this song that was playing and at first, I was like, I just wanted to get rid of any sound; I just wanted to turn it off and I was almost on the brink of telling my brother to turn the darn thing off, but then the song kind of got to the chorus and it was "How deep is your love" by the Bee Gees. And this song kind of hit off on the chorus saying "how deep is your love, how deep is your love?"

21. At that moment I realized, "oh my God, here I am – I wanted to hear God loud and clear. I was kind of expecting this mystical manifestation to appear and to occur in front of my eyes; I was expecting something big, something majestic, something all-consuming. But I realized God spoke to me in a very gentle and very small voice of the Bee Gees… you don't expect God to sound like that; you don't expect God to be coming through a radio being sung by the Bee Gees, the three brothers. You're kind of expecting like a band of angels, like a Mormon Tabernacle choir set to some kind of a band or something and you're expecting something loud and big. But he had this radio on really, small, small volume – "how deep is your love, how deep is your love?"

22. And I was thinking "is this the way God is talking to me? but it just kept on singing and every once in a while (she imitates the music). And I said, "this is not God, it can't possibly be God, because it's the Bee Gees." But guess what, in my devastation, in my moment of utter obliteration and destruction, God spoke to me in that still small voice. And instead of, you know, giving me these commandments like, "In Jin Nim I will solve your problems." Like the 10 Commandments that he gave to Moses, I wanted my 10 Commandments that is going to solve all my problems. But instead of giving me this powerful commanding commandments, He gave me the Bee Gees. And instead of a commandment, he gave me a question. He asked me "how deep is your love?" Meaning, what is your capacity to love, what is your capacity, or the depth, or the width, or the magnitude through which you will journey on through life and experience this thing called love in its multifaceted ways.

23. Many times when we think of love we think it's like this one thing, all lovely, all beautiful. But you realize that love can be experienced in many different ways: sometimes love can be experienced in the most bizarre situations or in the most ugly situations or sometimes in the most holiest ways or sometimes in the most jubilant ways and sometimes in the saddest of ways. You realize that love is multifaceted and that's why it intrigues us and it compels us to learn more and more about it each day and each moment of our lives.

24. And I realized that God was speaking to me, not giving me an answer, but He was asking me the question "how deep is your love, how deep is your love, is your love?" So instead of a band of angels I got two brothers, "how deep is your love, how deep is your love?" And they were asking me this question, that really made me think You know, well how deep is my love? Do I really love the people that I profess to love? Do I really care about the people that mean something to me? Or if I do, how do I express this love?

25. So I realized in that moment, just like the way the Bible says " it's not the earthquakes or the wind or the fire that is going to reveal to us the power and the magnitude and the majesty of God, but sometimes it's in the small quiet voice and sometimes it's in a way that we least expect it. I did not expect to meet God through the Bee Gees. But in that moment of my life when I was utterly desperate, utterly searching, really in need of some kind of a sign, I got a sign from God. I got the voice of God in the most unexpected of ways. And I realized that that's kind of the beauty of life. God continues to mystify us and be mysterious, but nevertheless finds ways of letting us know that He and She loves us, cares about us, and wants the best for us.

26. I realize that not only was God experienced for me, for the first time, not through a set of commandments, through this majestic big picture, but through the small still voice of a song that was coming out of my younger brother's radio. I realized that many times when we least expect it, that's when God reveals Him or Herself to us. So, in a way, when God asked me 'how deep is your love?' he was asking me this question in the context of my all-consuming expectation of what I wanted God to do, but I also realized that God many times has touched me, continues to touch me and will, in the future, touch me in ways that sometimes I least expect.

27. And so, you know, I realize that sometimes, you know, music has been such an incredible important part of my life. And so when I was thinking about the sermon topic, I realized that "wow!" at these crucial moments of my life God has spoken to me through songs. It is quite incredible. You know, that in my first desperate attempt to see God, to feel God, to hear God, and out comes the Bee Gees. And out comes this question "how deep is your love?"

28. And the next time in my life when I was really kind of struggling, because it just felt like my whole world was coming to an end… you know, when I experienced God with the Bee Gees I was single'…but you know, in the throes of my marriage, the next level of my life – everybody knows that building an ideal family is not automatic, it's not a natural process. A great deal of effort needs to go into it. And certainly I am no different, so in dealing with all the things that I had to deal with, I was just ready to give up again. And (I was) not really looking forward to the next sunrise. Really, really down. I just felt incredibly down and I remember when I first heard Chris Cornell sing this song. I was like, "wow! that's exactly what I feel, like you know right now I'm in the throes of feeling like I'm down all the time. I can't possibly shake this burden; shake this responsibility it's just crushing me. You know, I feel like "I'm just down, there's just no up anywhere. How am I going to get through another day?"" And again I was praying and I was talking to God saying "you know, I just wish, I just wish I could find the strength to go on. I just wish that there was something that I could cling on to. And you know this song came on and it just kind of hit me, it just got me, and I just couldn't stop crying.

29. I was thinking, "oh my God, I've often felt that if God was a musician and if God was a musician he'd probably be viewed to be the world's best, the universe's best, the cosmos' best blues singer or player." Because you know you sing the blues because you've suffered, your life is miserable and lots of difficulty has hit you and smacked you in the face. But you have the strength to sing about it and by singing about it your kind of sharing with everybody what you've been going through. But in singing about it you're, in a way, saying, "but I've got to go on. I'm going to make it through with my buddies in the band here. Or I'm going to make it through because this song makes me feel so good, I'm going to sing me another blues."

30. And so, I felt like if God was given a musician's chair he'd probably be like the greatest blues singer. And He'd probably be singing about how He lost his children, how He lost his son and daughter and, all those years of waiting, all His years of suffering, trying to really prepare a way for the son of God to appear. And then again having to wait another 2000 years before enough preparation could be made to really invite the Second Coming or the Messiah, to really take on the mission of being the victorious son and daughter of God.

31. God has been singing the blues for an awful long time. I am sure many times Jesus Christ sang the blues. We never know what music was playing in his head when he was being crucified on the cross. But, when I have those visions, the kind of music that I hear when I see, like the movie of Jesus Christ's crucifixion, when he was dying on the cross alone, with no disciples anywhere in sight. You know, I often ask myself, if one disciple stood by his side and said, "crucify me instead." What would've happened? How would Jesus Christ have felt? But not one volunteered to take Jesus' place. They all disappeared. They all ran away. And Jesus was left to die on the cross alone.

32. And I've often asked myself the question, how many times did Father, when he first realized the magnitude of the mission at hand, how many times must he have cried the blues, because – the people did not understand him, or people did not realize who he was and what he came to do?

33. And I've often felt kind of like, this Chris Cornell song – "When I'm Down." Because, sometimes in the context of this community where our goal is to build ideal families, you realize that there is so much suffering, and so much pain, and so much misery going on. You sometimes have to wonder, is there really going to be a tomorrow, is there really going to be an opportunity for me to finally accomplish what I would like to accomplish? I've often found myself singing the blues too.

34. When I heard this song, again God spoke to me in the still small voice, in the small voice of a song, but it was God nonetheless. And it was a message that I needed to hear. Because the song goes on, "I only love you when I'm down, but I am down all the time."

35. At that moment in my life, I felt like there was nothing but down. But in a way God was telling me, whether you are down or feeling like floating in this perpetual sea of downess, I'm still going to be there. Even when you're feeling like you're in this universe, feeling down, I'm still a part of your universe because I'm your parent. And guess what, I love you. You think I only love you when I'm down, but I really love you all the time, because I am down all the time.

36. In a way God is taking the unexpected. I expect God to tell me that he loves me and show me in the ways that I expect what a loving gesture is supposed to be. Perhaps He loves me when I'm feeling jubilant, when I'm feeling really great about myself. But, in this least expected, or unexpected way, God was saying – kind of playing word tricks on me. God was saying I love you all the time.

InJinMoon-120624_e.jpg

37. John Lennon wrote a song [Beautiful Boy]a while back and one of the lyrics says, "life is what happens when you're making other plans." Many times our life is kind of like that. We are constantly making plans for our children, constantly making plans for our family – and there are all these wonderful things that we would like to accomplish. But then life happens. You know, things go wrong. Our children are led astray. Our children fall down and nick their knees. Things that are unexpected fall by the wayside and we are left wondering, "where is God?"

38. But I realize that in the depth of my despair, God again was telling me through song, "look, I am there." And the real question you need to ask yourself, instead of being crushed by the sheer weight of life as it happens, what are you going to do about it? In other words, how are you going to love? To kind of take yourself out of this misery, to kind of pull yourself up by the bootstraps – be your own agent of change. That's the message that God sent to me. "You feel like life has kept you down and you are down all the time. But, you need to know that I love you nonetheless and I've always loved you."

39. But the real question is, what are you going to do about it? And so I realized in hindsight that sometimes God pushes us to our limit. Sometimes God kind of forces us, or compels us, to experience what we really don't like to experience. Because through that experience comes a new found understanding of how to bend to love somebody.

John Walsh, creator of America's Most Wanted

John Walsh, creator of America's Most Wanted

40. As weird as it sounds, the founder of the TV program, "America's Most Wanted," [John Walsh]-- he became the spokesperson for this program, "America's Most Wanted," Because he suffered the brutal death of his child. And, instead of being devastated, instead of being destroyed, instead of being obliterated by life as it happens, while we are making other plans – I am sure he had plans for this child to go on to a fantastic school, perhaps be a fantastic musician, perhaps be a fantastic professor or artists. I'm sure he had other plans. But his child was murdered, and he really had to ask himself the question, "I'm really down and I'm not feeling the love. But am I going to be crushed or am I going to be my own agent of change and create something beautiful out of my suffering? Perhaps because I have suffered this incredible, brutal murder of my child – maybe I can help other people in similar situations." And so one man's misery has turned into a life giving hope for a lot of parents in similar situations.

41. So I realize that that moment, as long as I could find the strength in myself, and I realize whenever I wanted God to solve something for me, to fix something, He or She always pushes back with a question, that makes me think about how I can be that contributing factor to make things better. Perhaps I suffered with what I've suffered, I've dealt with what I've dealt with, because in the experience of going through those throes of pain and suffering, perhaps it puts me in a better situation to help other people.

42. I never realized that, in the course of my life, I never really had dreams of being a senior pastor or be put in the situation to help a lot of people. But I find myself tapping in to all those times when I've suffered, when I felt like I just couldn't go on anymore, when I felt totally helpless. But somehow God has helped me along the way so that I can last long enough to help other people who might be in similar situations.

43. Again, I realize, you know, God doesn't come riding on this brilliant white horse like a prince and just sweeps me off my feet. God really expects me to deal with my problems, with my life. But at the same time letting me know in many many different ways, in those still small voices that He and She are there always, and helping me and guiding me.

44. And I realize that when, "how deep is your love?" was sung by the Bee Gees, for me, because I came from a Korean background and learned English – words are incredibly fascinating for me. I like to look at the words, turn it around, sometimes reverse the letters, sometime use the word or the letters as an acronym. So, when I saw the word Bee Gees, that was a time I was really suffering and doubting God. The song was being played, "how deep is your love" sung by Bee Gees (Be G (God)) it was a reminder to me to continue to believe in God – believe in God.

45. And when Chris Cornell was singing, "I only love you when I'm down" for me Chris Cornell was a nice reminder – center your core, no matter where you're going, center and be true to your core.

46. The next song, "in the name of love" that helped me a great deal in terms of dealing with some of the things I had to deal with, was sung by U2. So in a way God was saying to me, "believe in God" "center your core" then "U2" can experience the kingdom of heaven by building this ideal family, or one family under God.

47. And, "in the name of love," that song was another level in my life. Now it wasn't just marriage it was kids! As a mother we want to create an incredibly wonderful environment for the kids. And, I want the best for my kids. I look at my kids like a precious diamond, like a precious diamond uncovered deep beneath the Earth's surface. So when you first take out a chunk of diamond it is encrusted with a lot of other things. In order for you to reveal the brilliance of the diamond it has to go through a process of being cleaned, of being cut, of being polished. It's a long process. So you realize that a child, in coming to their own, in coming to realize the real true value, the divine value, it's going to take some time – no matter how quickly you want it to happen. Every child has its own time, just like the way when you want to plant corn, you plant corn in the spring. But no matter how much you want to eat it in the spring, you wait for the harvest in the fall. Everything has that time and every person is different, in that every person has a different time or a cycle on which they realize who they are. And they realize that, "I am that incredible diamond and it's my duty to share my brilliant light with the rest of the world, and not just keep it for myself."

48. In one of the things that I was struggling with my children, was how do I really teach, or how do I educate my kids to really want to have this thing called the Blessing. You know, to really want to dedicate themselves to this one spouse, eternal spouse. It's so beautiful. And how do I get them to prepare and wait for something good? There is just so much temptation all around, so much static in the air saying, "why wait? Experiment! Enjoy yourself! Go through different processes and sooner or later if you want the Blessing, then go to the Blessing." A lot of people are saying a lot of things. Some kids might be good and some kids might be saying, "the Blessing, why is that important? Maybe it's not so important. We just take whatever we can at the moment."

49. As a mother you want your child to have the best in life. Meaning, I know that the most important thing when you ask somebody, "What is the most important thing for you?" It boils down to one thing most of the time in conversations – is that person's desire to love and to be loved. Everybody wants to love and to be loved. Everybody wants to experience true love. Everybody wants to be appreciated, respected, adored, loved. And, nobody wants to be hurt, nobody wants to suffer the pain of people not treating you in the best way when it comes to the subject of love. And I certainly don't want my children to have numerous relationships and go through the throes of different things that a lot of young people – just throw themselves to. I don't want my kids to throw themselves to the wind. I want them to wait and prepare themselves for that special someone so that something precious is shared on that first night that they are together. I want my kids to have that.

50. When I thought about how do I inspire my child to want that, I realized one thing in the course of my growing up in the movement. And that is, in order to love somebody you really need to have the courage to love. Life is so difficult for young people, because your friends are telling you, "do this, do that, do drugs, have sex, have numerous relationships, love doesn't matter." Magazines are telling you that, friends are telling you that, sometimes people in your family are telling you that. In a way, it's difficult to love. You realize if you want to accomplish or really create an ideal family are finally substantiate something beautiful at hand – you really have to be courageous enough to say, "no, I'm not going to throw my life to the wind, because I want something better. Yes you are telling me all these things – let's go do this let's go do that. But I need to be courageous enough to stand up for what I believe in, for what I want to accomplish in my life. And to remain steadfast in my desire and in my dream, to accomplish what I want to accomplish."

51. In a way it takes tremendous courage to withstand all the temptations and all the wind and all the earthquake and fire that's going on that wants to consume you, that wants to burn you, that wants to wreak havoc on you.

52. I realize as a parent, I think a lot of parents in the audience, when we have kids we kind of make the same mistake that took place in the Garden of Eden. When I think about the fall and when I think about Adam and Eve going astray – you know God gave them a fearful commandment. God told them, "if you eat of the fruit of the tree you will die." That's like telling your kids, "if you have sex you are going to have cancer." That's pretty scary. God wanted to scare them. And many times we as parents want to scare our kids into obedience.

53. But guess what? Trying to scare our kids into obedience doesn't work. Telling them all the things they cannot do, because all these horrible things will happen to them, is not inspiring. In fact when I look at my own life I realize, when I truly ask myself the honest question, "why did I wait for the Blessing? Why did I want to wait? It's not that there wasn't opportunity. Of course there is opportunity. It's not that there wasn't temptation. Of course there is temptation."

54. But it's not the fear of getting in trouble that kept me away. It's not the fear of going to hell. When you're an adolescent you think hell is kind of cool. You think life is really bad, so hell, maybe I should try it out. You want to test the extreme frontier. And for a law to religious minded community settings like ours, hell is that extreme frontier that adolescents will test, time and time again. Fear is not going to protect our kids. The fear of hell, everlasting fire burning, is not going to scare our kids. It certainly did not scare me. I thought, "I'm living in hell so it can't be that much worse." And I'm sure a lot of young people feel that way.

55. But what really inspired me, what really kept me empowered in the courage to love is this dream that I had. If I were to really honestly ask myself, "yeah, I could do those things, I could do everything that everyone else does, but if I wanted to ask myself what is the most important thing that I want in my life – I honestly have to say, the most important thing in my life is really to be loved and to love. And to have a beautiful family." I wanted, "it's a wonderful life" kind of a family. I wanted a family where everyone is happy to see each other at Thanksgiving, at Christmas. And I wanted a family where my parents would be there, because they were never there, they were so busy. I wanted an intimate setting, a nice quiet setting filled with small and lovely voices. That's what I wanted.

56. It's the dream of wanting something. It's the vision of what I wanted to accomplish in my life that kept me waiting and kept me hopeful that kept me wanting to prepare for that big day and not a fear of being condemned to hell. Then I realized that, just like Adam and Eve, they were not consumed by fear of dying. In fact, fear didn't really hold water to the kind of thing are the kind of promise that Lucifer portrayed or painted for Eve. He said to her, "you will be as powerful as God, you'll be as knowledgeable as God, you'll be omniscient, omnipotent." It's this dream or vision of being like God that gave Eve the courage to do what she should not have done. In a way, it's the act of being inspired that caused Eve to follow Lucifer. And he inspired her in the wrong way.

57. So, if fear of dying did not deter Eve from falling and Adam from falling, what makes us as parents think that it's going to work with our kids?

58. Here at Lovin' Life Ministries' I encourage the parents, I encourage the family, do not give your kids a list of things that they cannot do. Because the list is really long. But give them a dream, give them a vision of what they can be, of what they can have, of what they accomplish in the name of love – living a life of sacrifice, living the life for the sake of others, in a way, preparing your life for the sake of the other who is going to be your eternal partner for the rest of your life. Geez, that's kind of romantic isn't it? Everybody wants a great romance. Well, Heavenly Father has given it to us, so how about it?

59. I realize that even with my own children, the minute I gave them a list of things they cannot do, the next thing I know they've done them. And they will do them. So, I've had to take a different approach – not surround them with fear and all the horrible things that will happen in their lives, but I've decided to paint a vision, or paint a picture of all that they can have in their life, if they learn to wait and if they learn to develop this courage to love. Because, it's hard. It's hard to stand up for what you believe in and to fight for what you want out of life.

60. And so again, when I was confronted with my own maternal duties and how to deal with my kids, how to raise my kids, this song came into my mind and into my heart – and again it reminded me that God is in all the small things that sometimes we don't listen to, because we haven't trained ourselves to be open and sensitive.

61. My younger sister, [Un Jin Moon] she's an equestrian sportswoman. Because she was so into riding we all grew up riding horses. And one of the things you realize about horses is that they are controlled by a bit and bridle and also by the way you flex in the way you pressure your feet into the horse, in the different directions you want to go. So there are a lot of command centers on the horse that are operating at the same time.

62. But the finest horses, the horses that do extremely well, that have this incredible unity with the rider – they have what we call the reining ear. What the rider means by that is, yes the horse is given the command to go left to go right to go fast or slow or to stop – with the bit and the bridle, because the hand of the rider is controlling the bit and the bridle. At the same time the horse that is trained and highly adept at doing things with the rider in a uniform fashion so that they become almost like one body – they utilize the "reining ear." What that means is that one ear of the horse is always tuned in to the master's voice or the trainer's voice. So even though a lot of noise is taking place, a lot of directions and commands are taking place – external commands through the bit and bridle and through the legs telling the horse of what it should do – the horse leaves one ear open constantly to listen to the master's voice. And many times the direction from the master is told in a very very small still voice. Many times it's just a sound (she made a clicking sound) and it tells the horse – do this or do that. The master trainer and the horse have their own little language. And it's the reining ear that is always on, that is always open and is always sensitive to the master's trainer's voice – that tells the horse exactly what to do. So even if the bridle says one thing or the bit might say one thing or the leg might say something, if the reining ear is saying slow down a little bit more or wait or be cautious – then the horse adjusts whatever it's doing to that voice.

63. I realize that in the course of our lives, lots of external pressures – try to conform us, trying to pressure us into doing many different things, there are a lot of different command centers everywhere – but I think we as God's children, we as His and Her divine sons and daughters, must, just like a horse, keep that reining ear open – and that we keep our hearts open and sensitive to the voice, many times a very small voice that translates, or that Heavenly Father or Heavenly Mother wants to share with all of us.

64. In the course of my life God spoke to me in many many different ways, but one of the ways that He and She spoke to me was through these three songs, in these three different episodes or phases in my life. And so I realize again my own preconceptions, my own expectations might not be exactly sound – and that sometimes it's the least expected or the least anticipated or sometimes it's in the most quiet of ways that God lets us know that we are loved and that we are cared for and that God wants us to do our best, wants us to really be that agent of change to usher in the next millennium.

65. As I saw my father, kind of disappear into the distance, singing one of his favorite Korean songs – again it was a song set to my ears and God spoke to me, "isn't this a beautiful picture? This is so unlike what you envisioned a Messiah to be, right?" That's what God said to me.

66. And again I felt this incredible warmth, incredible love, and incredible energy to take me back home and to continue doing what I do each and every day. And I realized that just as the Bible said, it's not the wind, it's not the earthquake, it's not the fire. In other words don't look for the big stuff, for the superficiality of life, for the loud stuff, for the things that cause you to tremble. But really look deep within and keep our reining ears open, because when we do we realize that the master trainer, or the Master guide, or our master Heavenly Parent is always speaking to us, always guiding this, and always loving us.

67. So brothers and sisters in that way keep your reining ear open to our True Parents love because they are here guiding us, leading us, and wanting the best for us as Gods eternal sons and daughters.

68. There is a lot of static in the air all the time. A lot of people saying a lot of silly things, but keep that reining ear open. Keep your heart open and sensitive to God's serious ways. And you will realize, if we do, that God is speaking to us all the time.

69. God bless and have a great week! Thank you.

Notes:

1 Kings, chapter 19

1: Ahab told Jez'ebel all that Eli'jah had done, and how he had slain all the prophets with the sword.

2: Then Jez'ebel sent a messenger to Eli'jah, saying, "So may the gods do to me, and more also, if I do not make your life as the life of one of them by this time tomorrow."

3: Then he was afraid, and he arose and went for his life, and came to Beer-sheba, which belongs to Judah, and left his servant there.

4: But he himself went a day's journey into the wilderness, and came and sat down under a broom tree; and he asked that he might die, saying, "It is enough; now, O LORD, take away my life; for I am no better than my fathers."

5: And he lay down and slept under a broom tree; and behold, an angel touched him, and said to him, "Arise and eat."

6: And he looked, and behold, there was at his head a cake baked on hot stones and a jar of water. And he ate and drank, and lay down again.

7: And the angel of the LORD came again a second time, and touched him, and said, "Arise and eat, else the journey will be too great for you."

8: And he arose, and ate and drank, and went in the strength of that food forty days and forty nights to Horeb the mount of God.

9: And there he came to a cave, and lodged there; and behold, the word of the LORD came to him, and he said to him, "What are you doing here, Eli'jah?"

10: He said, "I have been very jealous for the LORD, the God of hosts; for the people of Israel have forsaken thy covenant, thrown down thy altars, and slain thy prophets with the sword; and I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away."

11: And he said, "Go forth, and stand upon the mount before the LORD." And behold, the LORD passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and broke in pieces the rocks before the LORD, but the LORD was not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but the LORD was not in the earthquake;

12: and after the earthquake a fire, but the LORD was not in the fire; and after the fire a still small voice.

13: And when Eli'jah heard it, he wrapped his face in his mantle and went out and stood at the entrance of the cave. And behold, there came a voice to him, and said, "What are you doing here, Eli'jah?"

14: He said, "I have been very jealous for the LORD, the God of hosts; for the people of Israel have forsaken thy covenant, thrown down thy altars, and slain thy prophets with the sword; and I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away."

15: And the LORD said to him, "Go, return on your way to the wilderness of Damascus; and when you arrive, you shall anoint Haz'ael to be king over Syria;

16: and Jehu the son of Nimshi you shall anoint to be king over Israel; and Eli'sha the son of Shaphat of A'bel-meho'lah you shall anoint to be prophet in your place.

17: And him who escapes from the sword of Haz'ael shall Jehu slay; and him who escapes from the sword of Jehu shall Eli'sha slay.

18: Yet I will leave seven thousand in Israel, all the knees that have not bowed to Ba'al, and every mouth that has not kissed him."

19: So he departed from there, and found Eli'sha the son of Shaphat, who was plowing, with twelve yoke of oxen before him, and he was with the twelfth. Eli'jah passed by him and cast his mantle upon him.

20: And he left the oxen, and ran after Eli'jah, and said, "Let me kiss my father and my mother, and then I will follow you." And he said to him, "Go back again; for what have I done to you?"

21: And he returned from following him, and took the yoke of oxen, and slew them, and boiled their flesh with the yokes of the oxen, and gave it to the people, and they ate. Then he arose and went after Eli'jah, and ministered to him.

How Deep Is Your Love - Songwriters: Gibb, Maurice Ernest; Gibb, Robin Hugh; Gibb, Barry

I know your eyes in the morning sun
I feel you touch me in the pouring rain
And the moment that you wander far from me
I wanna feel you in my arms again

And you come to me on a summer breeze
Keep me warm in your love, then you softly leave
And it's me you need to show
How deep is your love

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

I believe in you
You know the door to my very soul
You're the light in my deepest, darkest hour
You're my savior when I fall

And you may not think, I care for you
When you know down inside that I really do
And it's me you need to show
How deep is your love

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

And you come to me on a summer breeze
Keep me warm in your love, then you softly leave
And it's me you need to show
How deep is your love

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

When I'm Down by Chris Cornell

What say you now?
The door is, opening,
on your vigil,
and I'm in my usual way.
I'll save my breath, knowing,
what you're wanting me to say,
"I only love you, when I'm down"

You say that midnight,
opens it's song for me,
leaving you alone,
and then I fly so far away,
until the light blurs my vision,
and I have nowhere to roam,
I only love you when I'm down...
[chorus]
And I only love you when I'm down.
And I'm only near you when I'm gone.
But one thing for you to keep in mind, you know,
that I'm down, all the time,
all the time...
[bridge]

I know you're reaching out,
and you need to feel my hand,
you wanna be loved,
yeah, well I understand.
I know you hold,
precious little hope for me,
and in your happiness,
I'm always drowning in my grief.
[chorus]

Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy) by John Lennon

Close your eyes
Have no fear
The monster's gone
He's on the run and your daddy's here

[Chorus:]

Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
Beautiful boy
Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
Beautiful boy

Before you go to sleep
Say a little prayer
Every day in every way
It's getting better and better

[Chorus]

Out on the ocean sailing away
I can hardly wait
To see you come of age
But I guess we'll both just have to be patient
'Cause it's a long way to go
A hard row to hoe
Yes it's a long way to go
But in the meantime

Before you cross the street
Take my hand
Life is what happens to you
While you're busy making other plans

[Chorus]

Before you go to sleep
Say a little prayer
Every day in every way
It's getting better and better

Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
Beautiful boy
Darling, darling, darling
Darling Sean

Pride (In The Name Of Love) by U2

One man come in the name of love
One man come and go
One come he to justify
One man to overthrow

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love

One man caught on a barbed wire fence
One man he resist
One man washed on an empty beach.
One man betrayed with a kiss

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love

(nobody like you...)

Early morning, April 4
Shot rings out in the Memphis sky
Free at last, they took your life
They could not take your pride

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love...  

Finding God in Unexpected Ways

In Jin Moon
June 24, 2010

Good morning, brothers and sisters. How is everyone this morning? I bring you greetings from our True Parents in Korea, where I had the great fortune to spend Day of All Things with them. Whenever I see our True Father and True Mother, a lot of emotions run through my body and my memory banks. It makes me realize how incredibly lucky I am to be living at this time with True Parents, who are really the Second Coming and who have come as a representative of our Heavenly Parent to share with us the breaking news and the gift of this wonderful thing called the Blessing, through which we can change our lineage from satanic to God's lineage.

As I was looking at my father while we were having the event, I realized that even though he's 90-some years old, he is still that ever-consistent, never-changing, unique, eternal son of God. He gazes upon all his children with great love and affection. Certainly we've come to -- we, meaning my brothers and sisters -- experience a lot more parental love in his later years than when he was a young, robust man, because he was always so busy with mission work and so busy pushing forward the providence at hand.

"Moments with My Father"

Sometimes he's quite cute. He will say things that I wish I could have heard 30 years ago, but now it's being said and it's being shared. I realized that life really is a journey and the life that we have with our parents, the life that we have with our family, is a journey in that you never know what lies around the corner. You never know when you're going to hear those beautiful words, and you never know when you're going to have that experience that you've just been waiting for.

I find myself sharing those lovely and surprise-ridden moments with my father and mother, and I am so grateful to have them in my life. I think we all feel so grateful to have them in our lives.

Of course, my father cannot finish an event without a song, so when he starts pulling different people up to sing, it gets a little bit daunting for me because I'm sitting in the front row, and Father keeps on looking at me as he's pulling out different people to sing. He keeps on looking at me, and it's early in the morning; I really don't feel like singing. But nevertheless, after asking different leaders to sing he asked my younger brother to get up and sing, so I thought I was off the hook.

But when Lovey [Hyung Jin Moon] got up to sing, he, Lovey, looked around and said, "You." So I was called forward, and even though I was in no mood to sing, Lovey helped me to share a rendition of some of my father's favorites. I thought to myself, "Music is everywhere in our lives and in our church." I don't know if some of you have visited the old home [in Korea] where I grew up, but it was basically a church. It was the second floor of a church where my brothers and I grew up. We basically woke up to singing and praying, and we fell asleep to singing and praying. And now I find myself in the presence of my father and mother, and they're always singing and they're always praying.

This music ministry of Lovin' Life is extremely important to me because here we delight in, we experience, and we share in the universal language. It becomes a kind of conduit through which we can experience God's love for us, and we can experience our own divinity, and feel supremely inspired and empowered to do something about our lives.

An Unlikely Image of the Messiah

As I bid my farewell to my father, I found him seated on a tiny chair in front of a little pond down by the training center at Chung Pyung. He had five fishing poles out on this tiny pond, and he was manning these five fishing poles. I came to say my good-bye, and Father said, "Sit, sit." So I sat behind him and he wanted to catch a fish. Father had quite a few grandchildren around him and some people who were taking care of him. Lovey and his wife were there, and Father was saying, "Shh, shhh. Be quiet."

So all of us sat there quietly, waiting. But then Mother said, "Father, why don't you say good-bye to your daughter because she really needs to get going." Once my Father starts sitting and fishing, there's really no end. I think my mom was little bit afraid that I might miss some of the meetings that I had back in Seoul. So my mother said, "Father, please, please get up, let's wave good-bye to our daughter and let's get on our way."

As you know Chung Pyung is on a hill, so the roads are really quite windy. But in this fishing area that they created for my father, he doesn't like to take a car because he likes to feel the nature -- to feel the wind in his hair, so to speak. So he rides a golf cart down these winding roads. When he said good-bye, he got into his golf cart and said, "Oh, have a good trip. Where are you going?" I said, "Father, I'm going to Seoul." Father said, "Seo-ul. Seo-ul."

You know, Seoul is the capital of Korea, and it kind of sounds like soul in English, does it not? But when you say "Seoul ha da," when you make it into an active verb, it means "I'm sad." So Father was saying, "Ohh, Seoul lo-kan-i-ka (ph). That means, "You're going to Seoul, but somehow I feel sad." And I said, "Yes, Father, but I will see you shortly because you're coming back to Las Vegas." Father said, " Ku-re, ku-re," which means, " That's right."

Then Mother said, "Shall we go?" So the person seated next to Father stepped on the gas pedal, but Father stopped the guy: "Wait." He looked at me and broke into a song. In Korean arum-dap-da means you're beautiful. And he started singing, "You're beautiful, you're beautiful." I don't know what melody he was singing to, but he was singing. He was waving, and he was saying, "You're beautiful, you're beautiful." Then he kicked the guy to step on the pedal, so the guy hit the pedal, and off they went.

I saw my father disappear into the distance, into the mountains of Chung Pyung, but he was singing, "Arum-dap-da, arum-dap-da. You're beautiful. Everything is beautiful." Then he launched into one of his favorite Korean songs.

So my vision of my father as I bid farewell is of this cute little old man seated with his wife in a golf cart, disappearing into the mountains. I said, "Wow! I wonder what people would say if I told them, 'There goes the messiah. There go True Parents.'" I realized again that God works in mysterious ways. That vision of an old man together with his lovely wife, riding off into the sunset in a golf cart, might not be the likely image or vision that we might have of what a messiah would be like, or what a True Parent would be like.

Overcoming Expectations

We have learned that the Israelites were expecting the Son of God to come descending from the heavens accompanied by a band of angels with trumpets blaring everywhere -- all majestic, grand, loud, and big -- but that is not the way Jesus Christ came. He came very humbly, in the natural way -- in a barn somewhere, full of dung and not the most holy of places.

Similar to the Israelites 2000 years ago, we today as children of God have a lot of expectations about different things in life, and certainly there may be a lot of people holding an idea about what a messiah should be or what a True Parent should be that may not quite fit with what has been given to us. Perhaps they do not expect a man from North Korea. Perhaps they expected a white man. Perhaps they expected a white man with blue eyes and blonde hair, as Hollywood has led us to believe.

But here come our True Parents, quite different from what we expected. They continue to intrigue and inspire, and sometimes to mystify us, leaving us dumbfounded. But nevertheless they are who they are, and they have come to share with us in the breaking news.

We often have our own expectation or vision of what something should be, but in reality it is not so. And often reality plays tricks on us, making us feel ungrateful, unappreciated, or lost. But nevertheless, it's God's way of reminding us that he and she do work in mysterious ways. It's an opportunity for us not to heap our own expectations on things and not always to demand things of life and of our Heavenly Parent, but to sit back, relax, and remain open and sensitive to the voices that are speaking to us in many different ways.

This reminds me of a passage in the Bible, I Kings 19:11 – 12. The Bible says that the Lord was not found in the powerful winds. Nor was the Lord found in the horrendously fearful earthquake or the all-consuming, blazing fire. Instead it says in I Kings that God was found in a "still, small voice."

The Bee Gees' "How Deep Is Your Love?"

When I was going through my adolescence I wrestled with the issue of my own identity -- finding my own identity, figuring out who I wanted to be, deciding whether or not I wanted to believe the Divine Principle, and believe in who my parents were. Like anybody else, I went through a lot of searching and praying -- and a lot of crying. But at the same time I was always hoping to hear the words of God.

I said to God, "If you exist, I want to see you, I want to hear you, I want to smell you. I want to feel you. I want to know you, so answer me." This is the kind of passion that I had. We often find that life is difficult, and we just want God to say something. We just want to hear God in that all-powerful, consuming voice from the heavens, saying, "This is what I want you to do."

I wanted somebody to tell me that everything was going to be all right. I wanted somebody to tell me, "This is what you should do with your life." I wanted somebody to say, "I am here; I exist; and therefore you can believe in me because you know that I'm here." I wanted some kind of a sign. I don't know how many times I yelled out in my prayers, "I want to see you; I want to hear you."

On one occasion in my life when I was really struggling with the ever-present temptations and opportunities that were put before me, I wanted God to appear to me and tell me, "Don't do it." Or, "Just believe in me." Or, "Just do this a little bit longer, and I will have a solution for you." I wanted God to fix my problem. I wanted God to give me the strength to do the right thing. I wanted God to be there for me, to hold my hand.

I was desperately searching and struggling, and I was almost at wit's end -- to the extent that I was asking myself, "I s life really worth it? Because what I see before me and around me is quite miserable." I couldn't get a sense that there was hope around the corner. I couldn't feel like there was something that I could look forward to.

I said, "God, just give me a sign. Just give me a sign. Just let me know that you are there. Let me know that I can feel you, that I can hear you. I just want to see you." I was saying these things over and over and over again in my struggles. There was a time when I was so desperate that I refused to come out of my room. I didn't want to come out until I got some kind of an answer.

Then something really interesting happened to me. I was waiting to have a vision or a revelation. I was waiting for God to appear before me on a cloud, looking like the picture of a big, burly grandmother, or almost like a Santa Claus figure. I wanted him to come and embrace me. I wanted him to tell me, "Everything is all right. I love you and you're going to do many great things." I wanted this commanding presence of a voice, and I wanted to hear certain commandments from him, telling me exactly what to do in order to solve my problem.

I was waiting and waiting, desperately and desperately. I waited for many days, but I didn't hear anything. I didn't see this Santa Claus figure come down from the clouds with this all-consuming voice to tell me that everything was going to be all right. I remember coming out of my room, being just so despondent and terribly hungry because I had not eaten because I wanted to find God. I wanted to feel, I wanted to see, I wanted to hear God. I was just so beaten and so crushed, and I was saying to myself, "I guess God does not care for me." I wanted to hear that resounding, commanding voice telling me that everything is going to be all right, but he didn't come.

But because I was so hungry, I walked down to the kitchen and started to fix something for myself. Then my younger brother came in to the kitchen, and he had a tiny radio that he carried around. A certain song was playing, and in the beginning I wasn't really listening to it. When my brother said, "Hi," I simply ignored him because I was so angry that God did not appear in front of me. He set that radio down on the island of the kitchen where we sat around many times and ate.

As I brought my plate full of food and sat down, totally devastated, totally crushed, I started to hear the song that was playing. At first I just wanted to get rid of any sound. I just wanted to turn it off, and I was almost on the brink of telling my brother, "Turn the darned thing off." But then the song got to the chorus and it was "How Deep is Your Love," by the Bee Gees. The song hit off on the chorus, saying, "How deep is your love? How deep is your love?"

At that moment I realized, "Here I am. I wanted to hear God loud and clear, and I was expecting some kind of mystical manifestation to appear in front of my eyes. I was expecting something big, something majestic, something all-consuming." But I realized that God was speaking to me in the very gentle and small voice of the Bee Gees. I didn't expect God to sound like that. I didn't expect God to be coming through a radio, being sung by the Bee Gees, the three brothers. I was kind of expecting a band of angels like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, set to some kind of a band or something. I was expecting something loud and big.

But he had this radio set to a very low volume. "How deep is your love, is your love? How deep is your love?" And then I was thinking, "I s this the way God is talking to me? Is that God?" They just kept on singing. And I said to myself, "This is not God. It can't possibly be God because it's the Bee Gees." But guess what? In my devastation and in my moment of utter obliteration and destruction, God spoke to me in that still, small voice, instead of giving me commandments like, "In Jin, I will solve your problems" -- like the Ten Commandments God gave to Moses.

I wanted my ten commandments that were going to solve all my problems. But instead of giving me powerful, commanding commandments, he gave me the Bee Gees. And instead of a commandment, he gave me a question. He asked me a question. He asked me, "How deep is your love?" Meaning, "What is your capacity to love? What is your capacity or the depth or the width or the magnitude through which you will journey on through life and experience this thing called love in its multi-faceted ways?"

Many times when we think of love, we think it's all lovely and beautiful. But love can be experienced in many different ways. Sometimes love can be experienced in the most bizarre or the most ugly situations, or sometimes in the holiest ways, the most jubilant ways, or even the saddest ways. Love is multi-faceted, and that is why it intrigues and compels us to learn more and more about it each day and each moment of our lives.

I realized that God was speaking to me. He was not giving me an answer; he was asking me a simple question, "How deep is your love?" Instead of a band of angels, I got three brothers: "How deep is your love?" They were asking me this question that really made me think, "W ell, how deep is my love? "Do I really love the people that I profess that I'm loving? Do I really care about the people who mean something to me? And if I do, how do I express this love?"

So I realized at that moment, just as the Bible says, it's not the earthquakes or the wind or the fire that's going to reveal to us the power, the magnitude, and the majesty of God; sometimes it's in the small, quiet voice. And sometimes it's in a way that we least expect it. I did not expect to meet God through the Bee Gees. But in that moment of my life, when I was utterly desperate, utterly searching, utterly in need of some kind of a sign, I got a sign from God. I got the voice of God in the most unexpected of ways.

That's the beauty of life. God continues to mystify us and be mysterious, but nevertheless finds ways of letting us know that he and she loves us, cares about us, and wants the best for us.

I experienced God for the first time through the small, still voice of a song that was coming out of my younger brother's radio. Often when we least expect things, that's when God reveals him or herself to us.

Chris Cornell's "When I'm Down"

When God asked me, "How deep is your love," he was asking me this question in the context of my all-consuming expectation of what I wanted God to do. I now know that God has touched me, continues to touch me, and will in the future touch me in ways that sometimes I least expect. Music has been such an amazing and important part of my life and just recently when I was thinking about this sermon topic, I realized, "Wow, at crucial moments of my life, God has spoken to me through songs." It's quite astonishing. In my first desperate attempt to see God, to feel God, to hear God, out came the Bee Gees. And out came this question, "How deep is your love?"

When I experienced God with the Bee Gees, I was single. The next time in my life when I was struggling because it felt like my whole world was coming to an end, I was in the throes of my marriage, the throes of the next level of my life. Everybody knows that building an ideal family is not automatic. It's not a natural process. A great deal of effort needs to go into it, and certainly I am no different. So in dealing with all the things that I had to deal with, I was just ready to give up again and was not looking forward to the next sunrise. I was really down. I just felt overwhelmingly down.

I remember when I first heard Chris Cornell sing this song that we just heard. I was, like, "Wow, that is exactly what I feel like. Right now I'm in the throes of feeling like ' I'm down all the time. ' I can't possibly shake this burden, shake this responsibility. It's just crushing me. I feel like I'm just down. There's no up in sight anywhere. How am I going to get through another day?"

And again I was praying and talking to God, saying, " I just wish, I just wish I can find the strength to go on. I just wish that there was something that I can cling onto." Then this song came on. It just hit me and got to me, and I just couldn't stop crying. I was thinking, "I've often felt that God is a musician, and if God is a musician, he's probably the world's best -- the universe's, the cosmos' -- best blues singer or player.

You sing the blues because you've suffered and your life is miserable. A lot of difficulty has hit you and smacked you in the face, but you have the strength to sing about it. B y singing about it, you're sharing with everybody what you've been going through; in singing about it, you're saying, "But I've got to go on. I'm going to make it through with my buddies in the band here." Or, "I'm going to make it through because this song makes me feel so good. I'm going to sing me another blues."

I felt that if God were given a musician's chair, he'd probably be the greatest blues singer. He'd probably be singing about how he's lost his children, how he lost his son and daughter, and all those years of waiting and suffering, trying to prepare the way for the Son of God to appear -- and then having to wait another 2,000 years before enough preparation could be made to invite the Second Coming or the messiah to take up the mission of being a victorious son and daughter of God. God has been singing the blues for an awful long time.

I'm sure many times Jesus Christ sang the blues. We don't know what music was playing in his head when he was being crucified on the cross. When I have those visions, when I see like a movie of Jesus Christ's crucifixion, of him dying on the cross alone, with no disciples anywhere in sight, I've asked myself, "I f one disciple stood by his side and said, ' Crucify me instead,' what would have happened? How would Jesus have felt?" But not one volunteered to take Jesus' place. They all disappeared. They all ran away, and Jesus was left to die on the cross alone.

I've often asked myself the question, "When Father first realized the magnitude of the mission at hand, how many times must he have cried the blues because the people did not understand him or did not realize who he was and what he came to do?"

Chris Cornell

Chris Cornell

I've often felt kind of like this Chris Cornell song, "When I'm Down," because sometimes in the context of this community wherein our goal is to build ideal families there's so much suffering, pain, and misery. You sometimes have to wonder, "Is there really going to be a tomorrow? Is there really going to be an opportunity for me to finally accomplish what I would like to accomplish?" I've often found myself singing the blues, too.

When I heard this song, God spoke to me again in this still, small voice, in the small voice of a song -- but it was God nonetheless. And it was a message that I needed to hear, because the song goes on, "I only love you when I'm down, but I'm down all the time." At that moment in my life, I felt like there was nothing but down. But in a way God was telling me, "Whether you are down or feeling like you're floating in this perpetual sea of down-ness, I'm still going to be there. Because even when you're feeling like you're in this universe feeling down, I'm still a part of your universe, because I'm your parent. And guess what? I love you? You think I only love you when I'm down, but I really love you -- all the time -- because I'm down all the time."

God is taking the unexpected way. I want God to tell me that he loves me and show that to me in the ways that I expect a loving gesture to be. Perhaps he loves me when I'm feeling jubilant, when I feel really great about myself. But in this least expected or unexpected way, God was playing word tricks on me, but God was saying, "I love you all the time."

John Lennon with his baby boy

John Lennon with his baby boy

John Lennon wrote a song [Beautiful Boy] in which one of the lyrics says, " Life is what happens while you're making other plans." Many times our life is kind of like that. We're constantly making plans for our children or for our family. There are all these wonderful things that we'd like to accomplish, but then life happens. Things go wrong. Our children are led astray. Our children fall down and nick their knees. Things that are unexpected fall by the wayside, and we're left wondering, " Where is God?"

In the depth of my despair God again was telling me through a song, "Look, I am here, and the real question that you need to be asking yourself, instead of just being crushed by the sheer weight of life as it happens, is, 'What are you going to do about it?' In other words, how are you going to love? You need to take yourself out of this misery by pulling yourself up by the bootstraps. Be your own agent of change." That's the message that God said to me.

In hindsight I can realize that sometimes God pushes us to our limit. Sometimes God forces us or compels us to experience what we really don't like to experience because through that experience comes a newfound understanding of how better to love somebody.

John Walsh creator and host of America's Most Wanted

John Walsh creator and host of America's Most Wanted

The founder of a TV program called America's Most Wanted [John Walsh] became the spokesperson for this program because he suffered the brutal death of his child. But he wasn't devastated, destroyed, and obliterated by life as it happened to him while he was making other plans. I'm sure he had plans for this child to go on to a fantastic school, perhaps be a fantastic musician, perhaps be a fantastic professor or an artist. I'm sure he had other plans.

But his child was murdered, and he had to ask himself the question, "I'm really down and I'm not feeling the love, but am I going to be crushed or am I going to be my own agent of change and create something beautiful out of my suffering? Perhaps because I have suffered this horrific, brutal murder of my child, maybe I can help other people in similar situations." One man's misery has turned into a life giving hope for a lot of parents in similar situations.

When God spoke to me through Chris Cornell's song, "When I'm Down," I realized that whenever I wanted God to solve something for me, to fix something, he always pushes back, or she always pushes back, with a question that makes me think about how I can be the contributing factor to make things better. Perhaps I suffered what I've suffered or I've dealt with what I've dealt with because in the experience of going through those throes of pain and suffering, perhaps it puts me in a better situation to help other people.

The Bee Gees, Chris Cornell and U2

Certainly in the course of my life, I never had dreams of being a senior pastor or being put in the situation to help a lot of people. But today as senior pastor I find myself tapping in to all those times when I've suffered, when I've felt like I just couldn't go on any more, when I felt totally hopeless. But somehow God has helped me along the way so that I can last long enough to help other people who might be in similar situations. It has become so clear to me that God doesn't come riding on a brilliant white horse like a prince who just sweeps me off my feet. God really expects me to deal with my problems, with my life, but at the same time God lets me know in many different ways, in these still small voices that he and she are there always, helping me and guiding me.

Because I came from a Korean background and then learned English, words are utterly fascinating for me. So I like to look at words and maybe turn them around. Sometimes I reverse a letter; sometimes I use the words and letters as an acronym. So when I heard "How Deep is Your Love" and saw the word Bee Gees, at a time when I was suffering and doubting God, it was kind of a reminder for me, continue to Believe in God, Believe in God.

And when Chris Cornell was singing, "I only love you when I'm down," for me Chris Cornell was a nice reminder: "Center your core. No matter what you're going, center and be true to your core."

And the next song, "In the Name of Love," helped me a great deal in terms of dealing with some of the things that I've had to deal with. It was sung by U2. God was telling me, "Believe in God; center your core; then you too can experience the Kingdom of Heaven by building this ideal family, or One Family Under God."

That song, "In the Name of love," spoke to me when I was at another level in my life. Now it wasn't just marriage; it was kids. As mothers, we want to create a supremely wonderful environment for the kids; we want the best for my kids. So I look at each of my kids as a precious diamond deep beneath the earth's surface. When you first take out a chunk of diamond, it's encrusted with a lot of other things, and in order for you to reveal the brilliance of the diamond, it has to be cleaned, cut, and polished. It's a long process.

Similarly a child, in realizing his or her true value or divine value, is going to take some time. No matter how quickly you want it to happen, every child has his or her own time, just like corn, when you plant it, has its own time. You plant corn in the spring, but no matter how much you want to eat it in the spring, you have to wait for the harvest in the fall. Everything has its own time, and all people are different in that they have a different time or a cycle in which they come to realize who they are, and that, "Yeah, I am that marvelous diamond and it's my duty to share my brilliant light with the rest of the world and not just keep it for myself. "

The Courage To Love

One of the things that I was struggling with in raising my children was, "How do I educate my kids to want to have this thing called the Blessing -- to really want to dedicate themselves to one eternal spouse? It's so beautiful, but how do I get them to prepare and wait for something good? There's just so much temptation all around, so much static in the air, saying, "Why wait? Experiment. Enjoy yourself. Go through different processes, and sooner or later, if you want the Blessing, then go to the Blessing."

A lot of people are saying a lot of things. In their age group, some kids might be good, but some kids might be saying, "Blessing, why is that important? Maybe it's not that important. We should just take in whatever we can at the moment."

A mother wants her child to have the best in life. I know that when you ask somebody, "What is the most important thing for you," it boils down most of the time in conversations to that person's desire to love and to be loved. Everybody wants to love and to be loved. Everybody wants to experience true love. Everybody wants to be appreciated, respected, adored -- loved.

Nobody wants to be hurt. Nobody wants to suffer the pain of people not treating you in the best of ways when it comes to the subject of love. And I certainly don't want my children to have numerous relationships and go through the throes of different things that a lot of young people just throw themselves into. I don't want my kids to throw themselves to the wind. I want them to wait and prepare themselves for that special someone so that something precious is shared on the first night that they're together. I want my kids to have that.

So when I thought about, "How do I inspire my child to want that?" I recalled one thing that I learned in the course of my growing up in the movement. That is, "In order to love somebody, you need to have the courage to love." Life is so difficult for young people because your friends are telling you, "Do this, do that. Do drugs, have sex, have numerous relationships, love doesn't matter." Magazines are telling you that. Your friends are telling you that. Sometimes people in your family are you telling you that. This all makes it difficult to love.

But if you want to create an ideal family or finally substantiate something beautiful at hand, you really have to be courageous. You have to be courageous enough to say, "No, I am not going to throw my life to the wind because I want something better. Yes, you're telling me all these things, 'Let's go do this, let's go do that.' But I need to be courageous enough to stand up for what I believe in, for what I want to accomplish in my life. I need to remain steadfast in my desire or in my dream to accomplish what I want to accomplish."

Teaching Children Not To Fear, But To Dream

It takes tremendous courage to withstand all the temptation -- all the winds, all the earthquake and fire -- that wants to consume you, to burn you, and to wreak havoc on you. As a parent, I have realized, and I think a lot of parents in the audience have realized, that when we have kids we can easily make the same mistake that took place in the Garden of Eden.

When we think about the Fall, we remember about Adam and Eve being led astray after God gave them a fearful commandment. God said, "I f you eat of the fruit of the tree, you will die." That's like telling your kids, "If you have sex, you're going to have cancer." You know, it's pretty scary. God wanted to scare them, and many times we as parents want to scare our kids into obedience.

But guess what? Trying to scare our kids into obedience doesn't work. Telling them all the things that they cannot do because all these horrible things will happen to them is not inspiring. When I look at my own life and ask myself the honest question, "Why did I wait for the Blessing? Why did I want to wait?" it's not that there wasn't opportunity. Of course there was opportunity. It's not that there wasn't temptation. Of course there was temptation.

But it's not the fear of getting in trouble that kept me away. It's not the fear of going to hell. When you're an adolescent, you think hell is kind of cool. You think life really is bad, so maybe you should try out hell. Young people want to test the extreme frontier, and for a lot of religious-minded community settings like ours, hell is the extreme frontier that adolescents will test time and time again. Fear is not going to protect our kids. The fear of hell, everlasting fire burning, is not going to scare our kids. It certainly didn't scare me. I thought, I'm living in hell, so it can't be that much worse. And I'm sure a lot of young people feel that way.

What really inspired me, what kept me empowered in the courage to love is this dream that I had. If I were to honestly ask myself, I would have to answer that, "Yeah, I could do those things. I could do everything that everyone else was doing." But if asked myself, "What is the most important thing that I want for my life," I honestly had to say that the most important thing in my life was and is to be loved and to love, and to have a beautiful family. I wanted an It's a Wonderful Life kind of family. I wanted a family in which everybody is happy to see each other -- at Thanksgiving and at Christmas. And I wanted a family in which my parents would be there, because they were never there. They were so busy. I wanted an intimate setting, a nice quiet setting filled with small and lovely voices. That's what I wanted.

So it's the dream of wanting something, the vision of what I wanted to accomplish in my life that kept me waiting, that kept me hopeful and wanting to prepare for that big day. I didn't wait because of the fear of being condemned to hell. I realize that this is like Adam and Eve, who were not consumed by fear of dying. In fact, fear didn't really hold water to the kind of things or the kind of promise that Lucifer painted for Eve.

Lucifer said to Eve, "You will be as powerful as God. You will be knowledgeable as God. You will be omniscient, omnipotent." It's this vision or the dream of being like God that gave Eve -- almost like the courage to love -- the courage to do what she should not have done. It's the act of being inspired that caused Eve to follow Lucifer. But he inspired her in the wrong way.

So, if fear of dying did not deter Eve and Adam from falling, what makes us as parents think that it's going to work with our kids? Here at Lovin' Life I've encouraged the parents not to give your kids a list of things they cannot do, because the list is really long. But give them a dream. Give them a vision of what they can be, what they can have, what they can accomplish in the name of love -- living a life of sacrifice, living a life for the sake of others, and in this way preparing their life for the sake of the other who is going to be their partner for the rest of their eternal life.

Gee, that's kind of romantic, isn't it? Everybody wants a great romance. Well, Heavenly Father has given it to us, so how about it? Even with my own children, I noticed that the minute I gave them a list of things they could not do, the next thing I knew they'd done them and they will do them. So I've had to take a different approach. Instead of surrounding them with fear and all the horrible things that were going to happen in their life, I've decided to paint a vision or a picture of all that they can have in their life if they learn to wait and develop the courage to love. It takes courage because it's hard. It's hard to stand up for what you believe in and to fight for what you want out of life.

When I was confronted with my own maternal duties and how to deal with and raise my kids, this song came into my mind and my heart. And again, it kind of reminded me that God is in all the small things -- the things that sometimes we don't listen to because we haven't trained ourselves to be open and sensitive.

Listening with the "Reining Ear"

My younger sister [Un Jin Moon] is an equestrian sportswoman, and because she was so into riding, we all grew up riding horses. Through that experience one of the things I learned about horses is that they are controlled by a bit and a bridle and also by the way you flex and the way you pressure your feet into the horse, in the different directions you want it to go. There are a lot of command centers on the horse that are operating at the same time.

The horses that do extremely well or that have an uncanny unity with the rider have what we call the reining ear. To the riders this term means that, "Yes, the horse is given the command to go left, go right, go fast, or go slow, or stop with a bit and a bridle because the hand of the rider is controlling the bit and the bridle. But at the same time, some horses are so trained and highly adept at doing things with the rider in such a uniform fashion that the two of them move almost like one body. Those horses utilize the reining ear.

This means that one ear of the horse is always tuned in to the master's voice or the trainer's voice. So even though there is a lot of noise and a lot of external directions, and commands are being given through the bit and the bridle and through the legs telling the horse what it should do, the horse leaves one ear open constantly to listen to the master's voice.

Often the voice or the direction from the master is told in a very small and a still voice. Many times it's just a sound, perhaps a few clicks, that tell the horse to do this or to do that. The master and the horse have their own little language, and the horse's reining ear is always open and sensitive to the master voice that tells the horse exactly what to do. So even if the bridle or the bit say one thing, or the leg says something, if the reining ear is hearing, "Slow down a little bit more," or just, "Wait," or "Be cautious," then the horse adjusts whatever it's doing to that voice.

So, too, with us. In the course of our lives, a lot of external pressures try to conform and pressure us into doing many, many different things. Like the horse, we are receiving a lot of different commands through a lot of different command centers. Then also like the horse, we as God's divine sons and daughters must keep that reining ear open in that we leave our hearts open and sensitive to the voice -- often a very small voice -- that tells us what Heavenly Father or Heavenly Mother wants to share with us.

In the course of my life, God has spoken to me in many different ways, but one of the ways that he and she have spoken to me is through songs, such as these three songs, in these three different episodes or phases of my life. Thus I have realized again that my own preconceptions or expectations might not be exactly accurate in that sometimes it's the most unexpected, or the least anticipated, or the quietest of ways that God speaks to us. In these ways God can let us know that we are loved and cared for, that God wants us to do our best, and to be the agent of change to usher in the new millennium.

So as I saw my father disappear into the distance singing one of his favorite Korean songs, again, it was a song said to my ears, and God spoke to me, "Isn't this a beautiful picture? This is so unlike what you envision the messiah to be, right?" That's what God said to me. And again I felt this incredible warmth, love, and energy to take me back home and to continue doing what I do every day.

I realized that, just as the Bible has said, "It's not the wind. It's not the earthquake, and it's not the fire." In other words, "Don't look for the big stuff, for the superficiality of life, for the loud stuff, the things that cause you to tremble. But look deep within and keep our reining ear open because when we do, we will hear the master trainer or the master guide or our master Heavenly Parent speaking to us, always guiding us, and always loving us.

Brothers and Sisters, in that way, keep your reining ear open to our True Parents as well because they are here guiding us, leading us, and wanting the best for us as God's eternal sons and daughters.

There's a lot of static in the air all the time. A lot of people are saying a lot of silly things. But keep that reining ear open. Keep your heart open and sensitive to God's mysterious ways, and if you do, if we do, we will find that God is speaking to us all the time.

So God bless, have a great week. Thank you.

Notes:

1 Kings, chapter 19

1: Ahab told Jez'ebel all that Eli'jah had done, and how he had slain all the prophets with the sword.

2: Then Jez'ebel sent a messenger to Eli'jah, saying, "So may the gods do to me, and more also, if I do not make your life as the life of one of them by this time tomorrow."

3: Then he was afraid, and he arose and went for his life, and came to Beer-sheba, which belongs to Judah, and left his servant there.

4: But he himself went a day's journey into the wilderness, and came and sat down under a broom tree; and he asked that he might die, saying, "It is enough; now, O LORD, take away my life; for I am no better than my fathers."

5: And he lay down and slept under a broom tree; and behold, an angel touched him, and said to him, "Arise and eat."

6: And he looked, and behold, there was at his head a cake baked on hot stones and a jar of water. And he ate and drank, and lay down again.

7: And the angel of the LORD came again a second time, and touched him, and said, "Arise and eat, else the journey will be too great for you."

8: And he arose, and ate and drank, and went in the strength of that food forty days and forty nights to Horeb the mount of God.

9: And there he came to a cave, and lodged there; and behold, the word of the LORD came to him, and he said to him, "What are you doing here, Eli'jah?"

10: He said, "I have been very jealous for the LORD, the God of hosts; for the people of Israel have forsaken thy covenant, thrown down thy altars, and slain thy prophets with the sword; and I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away."

11: And he said, "Go forth, and stand upon the mount before the LORD." And behold, the LORD passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and broke in pieces the rocks before the LORD, but the LORD was not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but the LORD was not in the earthquake;

12: and after the earthquake a fire, but the LORD was not in the fire; and after the fire a still small voice.

13: And when Eli'jah heard it, he wrapped his face in his mantle and went out and stood at the entrance of the cave. And behold, there came a voice to him, and said, "What are you doing here, Eli'jah?"

14: He said, "I have been very jealous for the LORD, the God of hosts; for the people of Israel have forsaken thy covenant, thrown down thy altars, and slain thy prophets with the sword; and I, even I only, am left; and they seek my life, to take it away."

15: And the LORD said to him, "Go, return on your way to the wilderness of Damascus; and when you arrive, you shall anoint Haz'ael to be king over Syria;

16: and Jehu the son of Nimshi you shall anoint to be king over Israel; and Eli'sha the son of Shaphat of A'bel-meho'lah you shall anoint to be prophet in your place.

17: And him who escapes from the sword of Haz'ael shall Jehu slay; and him who escapes from the sword of Jehu shall Eli'sha slay.

18: Yet I will leave seven thousand in Israel, all the knees that have not bowed to Ba'al, and every mouth that has not kissed him."

19: So he departed from there, and found Eli'sha the son of Shaphat, who was plowing, with twelve yoke of oxen before him, and he was with the twelfth. Eli'jah passed by him and cast his mantle upon him.

20: And he left the oxen, and ran after Eli'jah, and said, "Let me kiss my father and my mother, and then I will follow you." And he said to him, "Go back again; for what have I done to you?"

21: And he returned from following him, and took the yoke of oxen, and slew them, and boiled their flesh with the yokes of the oxen, and gave it to the people, and they ate. Then he arose and went after Eli'jah, and ministered to him.

How Deep Is Your Love - Songwriters: Gibb, Maurice Ernest; Gibb, Robin Hugh; Gibb, Barry

I know your eyes in the morning sun
I feel you touch me in the pouring rain
And the moment that you wander far from me
I wanna feel you in my arms again

And you come to me on a summer breeze
Keep me warm in your love, then you softly leave
And it's me you need to show
How deep is your love

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

I believe in you
You know the door to my very soul
You're the light in my deepest, darkest hour
You're my savior when I fall

And you may not think, I care for you
When you know down inside that I really do
And it's me you need to show
How deep is your love

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

And you come to me on a summer breeze
Keep me warm in your love, then you softly leave
And it's me you need to show
How deep is your love

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

How deep is your love, how deep is your love
I really mean to learn
'Cause we're living in a world of fools
Breaking us down when they all should let us be
We belong to you and me

When I'm Down by Chris Cornell

What say you now?
The door is, opening,
on your vigil,
and I'm in my usual way.
I'll save my breath, knowing,
what you're wanting me to say,
"I only love you, when I'm down"

You say that midnight,
opens it's song for me,
leaving you alone,
and then I fly so far away,
until the light blurs my vision,
and I have nowhere to roam,
I only love you when I'm down...
[chorus]
And I only love you when I'm down.
And I'm only near you when I'm gone.
But one thing for you to keep in mind, you know,
that I'm down, all the time,
all the time...
[bridge]

I know you're reaching out,
and you need to feel my hand,
you wanna be loved,
yeah, well I understand.
I know you hold,
precious little hope for me,
and in your happiness,
I'm always drowning in my grief.
[chorus]

Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy) by John Lennon

Close your eyes
Have no fear
The monster's gone
He's on the run and your daddy's here

[Chorus:]

Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
Beautiful boy
Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
Beautiful boy

Before you go to sleep
Say a little prayer
Every day in every way
It's getting better and better

[Chorus]

Out on the ocean sailing away
I can hardly wait
To see you come of age
But I guess we'll both just have to be patient
'Cause it's a long way to go
A hard row to hoe
Yes it's a long way to go
But in the meantime

Before you cross the street
Take my hand
Life is what happens to you
While you're busy making other plans

[Chorus]

Before you go to sleep
Say a little prayer
Every day in every way
It's getting better and better

Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
Beautiful boy
Darling, darling, darling
Darling Sean

Pride (In The Name Of Love) by U2

One man come in the name of love
One man come and go
One come he to justify
One man to overthrow

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love

One man caught on a barbed wire fence
One man he resist
One man washed on an empty beach.
One man betrayed with a kiss

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love

(nobody like you...)

Early morning, April 4
Shot rings out in the Memphis sky
Free at last, they took your life
They could not take your pride

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love...  

Lovin' Life Sermon Notes for June 17, 2012

In Jin Moon

1. Good morning! (Loud applause) Everyone must have had some breakfast this morning! Happy Father's Day to all the fathers in the audience.

2. This day has deep meaning for me, because my journey in terms of my relationship with my father has been a long and a blessed one. On this day when I got up I thought about some of those special moments that I had with my father, and I know that many of you in the audience have had that special moment with your father too. But, having come back from Japan, to really celebrate the Commencement Gala with our kids, I realized our movement is really awesome!

3. Despite all those years in the wilderness when we suffered and when we cried and when we really shed our blood, sweat, and tears together, walking this wilderness course for many many years, I realize that something beautiful came out of it. Beautiful children came out of it. Beautiful promise of a brilliant future came out of it for our children.

4. When I saw their beautiful faces, when I saw their beautiful faces performing here this morning (the GPA choir sang before her sermon), I realized that we really do have a lot to look forward to. As long as we continue on this, really coming together as that one family of God, as that one community of God, as long as we can really truly support each other and encourage each other and empower each other, there is really nothing that we cannot accomplish or that we cannot do.

5. For me it's an incredible sense that there is always something exciting around the corner. That's really the reason why I love being a mom, because every brand-new day brings another sweet surprise –that's good, and that's bad, and everything in between – but surprise nonetheless. And we grow together from going through those experiences, and we realize that we can finally truly understand the heart of God as a parent when we come to experience life, as we call it, together with our family.

6. Having come back from Japan, where as the mother nation she carried the weight of the financial responsibility when it came to the Providence, I realize that so many brothers and sisters in Japan are tired and are so burdened with so much responsibility and so much expectation. And so, what I really want to do through the youth concert series was to highlight what's truly beautiful – that despite the suffering, despite the hardship, despite a life of denial and misery, many times, we somehow managed to give birth and really raise these beautiful children, in the midst, that represent extreme good fortune in the future for our movement. In a way these kids are precious in their handiwork, very unique, very different handiwork of God, and when you see them perform in a choir, as magnificent as the choir that we saw here, we realize that they are really tapped in to the spirit of something profound, something moving, something beautiful, that truly inspires all of us to want to be better.

7. And so, highlighting the beauty of these children I felt is the greatest gift, or a nice wonderful reminder of why we do what we do, why we continue to walk the path, why we continue to struggle and to overcome hardships, and grow together as a family. Because we really have something worthwhile, something worth investing in. It is our future; it is the future of Japan.

8. And so, this time when I went, after having a 12 year history of running these Youth Concerts for World Peace, I really wanted to share what we do here at Lovin' and Life and share the breaking news with our brothers and sisters. I think the Eve nation, for such a long time, thought that it had to be a sacrificial mother for the rest of their lives, for all of eternity. In a way, the words indemnity and restoration are the prominent words in their minds, and whatever needs to be done in order to indemnify, in order to restore, in order to fulfill the Providence – this has been their motto, their mantra for the last 40 years. But as we come out of the wilderness era and look towards the era of settlement, when we really need to start thinking about building the family, ideal families, building the communities and societies that we've been talking about, that we've been teaching other people about – you realize that there has to be a shift in our mental understanding or in our perspective, or in our opinions of how life should be.

9. Sharing these wonderful video clips of these beautiful kids being energized, being enthusiastic, being inspired by their faith, being proud of being a Unificationist, truly having dreams and having goals, of seeing life, really as an opportunity to leave something beautiful behind. When these tired Japanese members saw pictures and video clips of our kids they were so inspired. And they realized that, "yes we've suffered," but I encouraged them that their suffering is not in vain. In a way, it was laying down the foundation, it was laying down the basement foundation for a beautiful house to be built.

10. Therefore, the second generation, and generations coming after, need to be incredibly grateful to that first generation who have gone through a life of sacrifice and have accomplished something incredible, in the context of history. Unlike the other disciples of Jesus Christ 2000 years ago, who left him stranded, crucified on the cross – none of you, none of our first-generation brothers and sisters who walked the path with our True Parents, left or abandoned our True Parents – and therefore accomplished the incredible task of really protecting the Messiah and protecting our True Parents so that we can truly share the breaking news with the rest of the world, so that you could be there together with our True Parents when we come out of the era of the wilderness and we look forward to an era of the settlement. In a way that transition was made because of the foundation laid by the first generation. And therefore we need to honor them as the great heroes that they are because they accomplished something that the disciples of Jesus could not do 2000 years ago.

11. But we shouldn't just stand and pat ourselves on the back for having done something incredible. We need to move forward, we need to move on, we need to continue transitioning and actually work on substantiating what the era of the settlement is all about. And so, as we go about doing this great work, we realize that in the time of the wilderness everything was kind of mission oriented, everything was very fast – it was almost like blitzkrieg. You go in for the mission, you come out, you go on for the next one. And it was one mission after another. We had no time to settle down, we had no time to raise families, we had no time to think about ourselves. But in this time of the settlement we are actually planting a harvest. Our children are like these beautiful seeds. But the thing about a plentiful harvest, or for those of us, whoever has planted anything in our lives or did a bit of gardening, you realize that no matter how much or how quickly we want that seed to sprout, the sprouting as its own time frame. And we realize that, in order to reap a huge harvest come fall, we have to go through spring, summer, and the winter months as well – in preparation for the spring when we actually plant the seeds.

12. We realize that there is a cycle of sorts, there is a time and place for different things, and we realize that in order to reap that harvest we have to slow it down, we can't be like the blitzkrieg unit in the time of the wilderness. We have to slow down. In essence, in order to progress faster, in terms of Providence, we need to do the reverse, we need to slow down. We need to start appreciating life, we need to start taking root, we need to start building families, we need to start appreciating each other and the time given to all of us.

13. In a way, we realize that life is something so much more than something that's just mission oriented. We realize that instead of what we thought, or what the Japanese nation of brothers and sisters thought, that their life was a life of indemnity, restoration, and suffering – we realize that in order to really substantiate the breaking news in the time era of the settlement, we can only do that in a healthy and in a prosperous way, and in a successful way, – if we really start loving life.

14. We realize that we have to, kind of, recall everything that we thought it should be, or perhaps all the things that we thought we took for granted, we need to kind of rethink, we need to re-brand, we need to re-educate ourselves to understand that this is a different time.

15. As we transition, from the time of the wilderness to the time of the settlement, and I had the great fortune of really being able to congratulate all the graduates that were there at the commencement gala, the question that we need to be asking ourselves and young people and as graduates, is that question I often ask myself from time to time – we need to be asking ourselves as we transition, as you progress, as we move forward – "is the world changing us or are we the ones changing the world?"

16. One thing I recognize, being a mother of child prodigies, when you try to perfect your art, when I was practicing with my children for their piano concertos, for their piano competitions, we realize that in order to go faster, the key to playing faster is not to tense up, it's not to become more rigid, is not to become so intensified that you're not relaxed. In a way, the secret to playing faster on the piano or more natural on the piano, doing those incredible arpeggios at lightning speed, you realize that you could only do that, you can only move faster on the piano if you relax. The center and the core need to be absolutely clear, and you condition yourself through practice as to what notes you're going to play. But, in order to truly be that master artist, to truly express in divine language, in a beautiful way, you realize that all your limbs, your elbows, your wrists, your fingers, need to be incredibly relaxed. When you touch a pianist's hands while they are playing incredibly lightning speed arpeggios, you realize it's incredibly fluid. It's very very relaxed.

17. In a way, we realize that as we move towards the age of the settlement, all that age of rigidity, that army mission mentality where everything is controlled, everything is so intense and focused, we need to give way to a more natural expression of living, or a slower way of living, or more relaxed so that we can be moving faster – like the way we move on the piano.

18. And it's no different from a race car driver. One of my friends is a famous race car driver. He told me, the faster you drive, the faster you go, the more you have to sit in your seat, the more the body has to be relaxed. Of course your brain and your mental faculties are at an edge, its focused, its alert, it's looking at everything. But, the actual body is incredibly relaxed and is incredibly fluid, in order to accommodate the speed at hand.

19. Likewise, our movement, I think for a lot of people who've kind of been used to a very very controlling command-obey kind of relationship. "Don't know what to do with this Lovin' Life mentality where everything seems too relaxed for comfort." "What?! We're not separating girls and boys anymore? Worse than that, we're actually encouraging them to have healthy relationships? What?! You're not telling them about the 3 foot rule, where a boy and a girl cannot sit within 3 feet of each other? What?! They're creating frames on the ballroom dance floor? They're actually touching? Oh my goodness what is the world coming to? What is happening to our church, it's so relaxed? What happened to that clear command-obey central station type of a relationship? Everything seems a little bit too natural. Is not supposed to be natural. Being a divine son and a daughter of God is not supposed to be natural, it's supposed to be miserable. It's supposed to be a life of suffering. What the heck is going on at Lovin' Life Ministries?!"

20. But we realize that if we cannot be natural in what we believe, if we cannot be relaxed, that confident relaxed Unificationist, who is incredibly inspiring – then the natural witnessing that I've talked about often, cannot take place.

21. But I realize, you know I've been a teacher for many many years, and I realize that the most effective way to teach is when a student feels like they are in a natural environment. When you're trying to cram something down their throat, when you're trying to constantly ply them with facts and figures, nothing goes in. But I realize when you start telling them a story that has facts and figures and information woven in – and then they are all ears. They start to listen. And in the context of hearing a good story they realize that they retain more of the facts and figures that I try to teach. So I realize that in order to get their attention it has to be interactive, and has to be exciting, it has to be something that is fun. Learning needs to be fun.

22. So at Lovin' Life Ministries we are not afraid to have fun! But look at these kids. They are having a great time, but they are also working hard. But look how incredible they are. You work hard, but you also need to play hard. And, you stay on the path and before you know it you turn around and you say, "Oh my God, we won the gold medal at the choir competition!" "Oh my God! I know what I want to do with my life! Oh my God I haven't really given my passions much thought, but now I have, now I have a clear goal, now I have a clear focus." In a way, our kids are more well positioned in terms of knowing what they want, understanding that we are not going to ask this question – "is the world going to change us or are we changing the world?" They know the answer. We are going to change the world. And we are going to be that agent of change!

23. In Japan, when I met a lot of the blessed children, you know they are so heavily burdened by the weight of this suffering of the first generation. They see their parents who have given up everything for the sake of the Providence. Here in America we have an understanding that tithing is 10%, and a higher percent if you can allow it – being financially responsible people. But in Japan they've been tithing 120 or 200%. And the children coming up the ladder, watching their parents literally wither away, living this miserable life – basically they say, "No, I don't want this, I don't want to be a part of this community." Not realizing that what they saw was really the time of the wilderness. And right now we are in a transition stage where we are turning the corner and looking toward ushering in that era of the settlement. And, it's during this transition time that we've lost a lot of our children, because we were so mission oriented, we were so focused on what needed to be accomplished. We didn't take the time to really take root and think about how we are going to prepare for this incredible harvest. We didn't really give much thought, what kind of parents we are going to be, how are we going to be raising our children, how are we going to prepare a child that is not going to be changed by the world but is actually going to be the change in the world. We haven't really thought much about it.

24. So a lot of the second generation in Japan, and also in Korea, but also in the United States, have really dealt with and struggled with this world. This world that "I have come to hate." From many of the young people I hear this all the time – "I hate my life! I don't love my life, I hate my life! I don't love the world, I hate the world! My life has not been good to me. The world has not been good to me. The world has been incredibly cruel. The world has been incredibly unkind, the world is incredibly ugly. It's not beautiful. I hate the world!"

25. But we realize that, when we think of our community as that community where the foremost philosophy is really living for the sake of others, in a way we are supposed to be loving others, were supposed to be loving life and really being in service to others – we realize that the young people's understanding of not – kind of not loving the world by claiming or articulating their hatred for the world, is really something that needs to be grown out of, needs to be helped out of.

26. Because, I think a lot of people think of the word hate and think that the word hate is the opposite of love. But if you really think about it, hate is not the opposite of love. The real opposite of love is selfishness. And when you hate something you are hating something because it's really about you. " The world was unjust to me. The world was unkind to me. The world is not beautiful, it's ugly to me. The world is cruel to me." In a way when we kind of hate the world, basically we're saying, "it's not we who are going to change the world, but it is the world changing us, it is the world causing us to hate, it is the world causing us to be selfish."

27. But if we are to really live a life of altruism, living for the sake of others, we kind of have to start with ourselves. It's very difficult to love another human being if you don't love yourself. You've gotta take care of yourself so that your living, you're actually thriving, you're prospering – and in so doing your living your life in gratitude and therefore you are extremely inspired to be helping other people.

28. We see that when we are dealing with the young people who feel like the world does not understand them and therefore they are going to hate it, in essence what they are doing is they are practicing selfishness in their lives, because they're not thinking, "I need to be the change, I need to be that agent of change, so regardless of how my life is – beautiful or not, it's really up to me, I become that secret ingredient, or I become that loving ingredient that changes the world."

29. When you look at these young people who are kind of in the throes of hating the world, or hating my life, hating my family – again, it's all about me, me, myself, and I. You realize that they're kind of going through what I call, "digging it" and let me explain what I mean digging it.

30. There are a couple of things that a child does when they feel like they hate the world. Number one they become extremely disillusioned about everything around them. They become disillusioned about themselves, they become disillusioned about their family, friends, the world, their school, and everything. In a way, everything is wrong. In a way, everything is out there and is flooding this person's psyche, this person's world, and this person is drowning in this disillusionment. Because, the person has no focus. It's really not clear as to why they are many times depressed or many times disillusioned. It's an amalgamation of a lot of factors, but they cannot really pinpoint exactly what it is. Many times the children, are in a way, hating the world or exercising what I call selfishness, because they are disillusioned.

31. And another thing that you see in a child when they are going through hating the world is this thing called escape. You know a lot of young men and women escape to fantasy worlds, they escape to virtual worlds. Many times when you play these video games you suddenly, instead of being an unknown X or Y. or Z. in a sea of people, when you play these games you can create your own character, you can create your own identity, you can create your own reality, and you realize that, unlike the real world where you feel totally outweighed by everything in your life, in these virtual worlds you realize that you can almost be like God. You create everything. You control everything. You become a master of the universe.

32. So when a young person is going difficult adolescent and teenage years, we ourselves are so insecure about who we are and what we want to be, in a way these kinds of virtual worlds create a safe haven for lots of young people, because it's a world they can control. It's a world where they are masters of the universe.

33. And a lot of young people, don't just escape into virtual realities, but many times they escape into what we consider to be the spiritual life. In a way, this world is so ugly and so cruel and so unjust, it's awful. But the other world, the spiritual world, seems like a world of peace where everything is beautiful, where things are not ugly, where you feel like you can control your life – because it's a perfect world that is waiting for us. So a lot of young people have this constant temptation in wanting to escape their reality into the virtual world or into the spiritual.

34. And so, we, being a movement that emphasizes the importance of the spiritual world must not forget also to emphasize the importance of the physical world and doing the work that needs to be done in the physical world. Because sometimes the spiritual world is too attractive. Why wait? Why suffer it out? Why struggle? Why not just leave? Why not take my own life – be my own master of the universe and escape to the other world? In a way, this is a constant temptation. You realize when you look at young people, not only are they dealing with disillusionment and the desire to escape, but many times there is almost like this finality that they want in their life, they want a solution, they want an answer. In that way, by feeling like they are responsible, they suddenly decide to give up. They don't want to do it anymore.

Sun Myung and Hak Ja Han

Sun Myung and Hak Ja Han

35. If we were to look at our True Father's life, since today is Father's Day, and we ask ourselves, "what was father thinking when he asked himself the question, "is it the world that is changing you or me or us, or is it you, me, or us that is going to change the world?"" Well when you look at our True Father 's life and realize that he has gone through a life of extreme severe incredibly difficult persecution, six times being thrown in prison, so much misunderstanding, so much accusation – in a way this is a man who legitimately has a right to hate the world, that legitimately as a reason to not love the world. But, when you look at Father I'm sure he has felt the feelings of disillusionment, I'm sure he's felt that he wanted to escape sometimes. We all do. I'm sure he felt, maybe that he wants to give up. After all he is human. The great thing about the Messiah being human and not some kind of super alien who doesn't experience these feelings, is that when we look at our True Father 's example and realize that he's a man. He can feel disillusionment. He can feel a desire to escape. He can feel a desire to give up, but this man is not disillusioned. He doesn't let disillusionment get to him. He remains focused instead of being disillusioned. This man might want to escape into perhaps the virtual reality or even the spirit world. But this man is committed to the work at hand. He is committed in the work of substantiating something that God longed for in this reality. And even though I'm sure True Father wanted to give up many times – all of us do. I wanted to give up. And life is too difficult. Spirit world looks much more attractive, the virtual world looks much more attractive. The work at hand is incredibly difficult. You want to give up.

36. But what does father do? Instead of giving up he laughs, he relaxes, he takes those three breaths. He relaxes and gears up and deals with building an ideal family. And so you realize when you look at Father's example, this is a man who could hate the world, that could really live a life of selfishness – "I deserve to feel this way, I deserve to feel negative, I deserve to criticize everybody around me day in and day out." But he doesn't. He remains focused. He remains committed. And in that relaxed, natural – you know he is such a natural man. It does not matter if you put him in front of a president or if you put him in front of a homeless person, he is himself. He is natural. There is nothing artificial about him. He will always wear his polyester 70s, what I call Saturday Night Live really big collared shirts in front of presidents and in front of homeless people. Of course my mother thinks it's ghastly, and she wants him to be up on the fashion phase. But this is a man – it doesn't really matter what he is wearing. He is his own person. He is that natural self, that relaxed person. That's why we all love him.

37. If I were to ask the first-generation, "why did you join this church? Why was my father such an attractive leader for you or a father figure for you?" Well, I think a lot of people never knew you could laugh at church. Did you? Or even joke or have fun about love. You know, all these stories True Father gave – when I was talking to some of the mothers, one of the required things you have to do when you home school your kids is sex education. I told the superintendent of Lexington, "You don't need to really worry about that because in our church we are very open. And starting with their grandfather we talk openly about these things. So they are pretty well-versed in that, you don't have to worry about that."

38. In that sense we are an incredibly relaxed community. It's a very different type of service than a Catholic mass. Isn't it? We are not sitting down, standing up, singing hail Mary's, and everything is so serious. One of the things about Father, you realize that he is laughing all the time. And he is singing all the time. And now he is dancing all the time. And so even just by looking at the man, "what?! He laughs?! He dances?! He sings?!"

39. Isn't that what we do at Lovin' Life Ministries? In a way we are carrying on the best of the tradition. But, in terms of moving forward, yes, a lot of old habits are falling by the wayside. But that does not mean that all hell is going to break loose and there's going to be chaos. There is an extremely clear center and core, or our spiritual core.

40. But in terms of our movement, as a human being, we need to be more natural. I don't know about many of you, but I remember when growing up there was a certain kind of physicality that you had to carry around if you wanted to be respectful towards somebody. You couldn't look at a leader. You all had to listen like this (head bowed down). Or the way we moved was very – subject – and object – four position foundation. You know, like this (she gestured), like as … and I realized that … Jesus, our movement is full of Americans but they are all speaking Konglish and Janglish. What happened to the good English? There was this, almost like military… short … cut … sentences, no full sentences, no cadence in the language, no intonation. (She demonstrated) we… have to move … we have mission … we must fulfill… providential duty.

41. I don't know about you but that's not inspiring for me. I want to be able to talk to my Heavenly Parents. I don't want to pray to my Heavenly Parents – this mission… this week… this much … but now … that much. I don't want to talk like that. I want to say Father, Mother, can I report to you how my day was? And I want to be able to converse with God the way I would love to converse with my parents. And I think most parents want their children to converse in that way.

42. Do we really want to raise kids who say, "today … I finished … seven-day course of my homework … but next month …. I'm going to work on … Cain versus Abel … struggle of Cain versus Abel … I am going to make sure I'm not Cained out … I'm going to control my Isaac." Why do we have to do that? Why can't we be natural? Why can't we be relaxed? Be proud of who we are.

43. Hey, I'm a Unificationist. I don't have to speak like that to prove that I am religious, to prove that I am faithful. If you are really faithful or religious you don't have to prove it, just be yourself, be yourselves. Because that's what every parent wants from a child and that's what God wants from all of us.

44. So, in a way, as we move forward asking ourselves the question, "are we going to be the kind of people who are changed by the world or are we going to be the kind of people that change the world." What we realize is that a lot of the things we took for granted, for instance, living for the sake of others – that we understood in the time of the wilderness as – dying for the sake of others and suffering for the sake of others – we realize that, in a way, this is the time when we need to express ourselves – just like the way Rachmaninoff, one of my favorite composers.

45. He wrote this piece called Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini. It's a beautiful piece. It has 24 variations. But really the crème de la crème of the 24 variations is variation 18 where it sings a beautiful melody. Once you hear it you cannot forget. He wrote it … slowly, like singing. The incredible thing about Rachmaninoff, he was a brilliant Russian composer. And I have this thing for Russian music, and he happens to be one of my favorite. But, he wrote this piece, and there are 24 variations on the theme. So, as a composer he chooses a certain melodic phrase for a theme that he is going to play around with and express in 24 different ways. That's why, this piece for a pianist, is an incredibly challenging one. Because, how do you express musically 24 variations or 24 facets of our feelings or our expressions? So many times this piece is asked to be performed for international competitions because – anybody can be like a Terminator on the piano with no mistakes. But, what you want to hear is musicality. What you want to hear is that the fine language flowing through the fingers of the artist. And so this piece in particular is extremely difficult, because you have to play 24 variations in 24 different ways. You cannot play them the same. And so you have to be an extremely adept or capable artists or a master artist to fully express yourself in this piece.

46. But, in this piece, the melody that comes from variation 18, is that Rachmaninoff took the theme that he was playing around with when he was writing this piece, but on variation 18 what he does is something remarkable. He takes that theme and reverses it. He reverses it and he slows it down. So, he slows it down to the level where you can actually sing the harmony. He takes the original theme, he reverses it, and he slows it down.

47. In essence what we are trying to do here at Lovin' Life Ministries is be that memorable, indelible melodic line that will travel through time. What we are doing is, we're taking the original theme, everything that's good that our True Parents brought to our organization, to our communities, to our lives. But in essence, we're kind of playing around with it and reversing it. So, in essence, what a loft of the Japanese brothers and sisters thought – was that their life was a life of indemnity, restoration, life of denial, life of suffering, life of misery.

48. We are reversing it to say, that is not really the purpose why God created us. It's something that we had to go through in order to dig, dig the basement floor. But what God really wants all of us to do is to build something beautiful.

Somewhere in Time movie

Somewhere in Time movie

49. So how do you build something beautiful from the original theme that Rachmaninoff came up with? You slow down. You sing that melody. And then it turns into a melody that one Hollywood producer put to his film called, Somewhere in Time. It's one of these romantic classics. I don't know why, but Koreans seem to love it. Every time I get on KAL to go to Korea, and I had to go back on Monday, you realize that this kind of romantic other worldly tale is something that is so beautiful to a lot of people. But, it uses this variation 18 from Rhapsody on the theme of Paganini by Rachmaninoff. And of course the movie Somewhere in Time is about this young successful playwright called Richard ---- who happens to come across this beautiful picture of a woman and falls madly in love with her. And he travels back in time to be with her. Pretty romantic, huh? It got me you know. I see it over and over again. He travels back in time to meet her, to be with her. But he realizes that he can't stay in that reality, because one of the things he brought with him is a coin from the modern day. When he flips the coin he realizes that it's 1970. In a way he is dragged back forward in time to his current reality that he no longer wants to be a part of. In a way, it's a tragic love story because he takes his own life so that he can be with his beloved. It's this whole notion that something beautiful cannot be had here and therefore we need to either die, or want something else to kind of experience it.

50. But what our True Parents, with the breaking news, are saying and sharing with us is that, "look, we as a movement have gone through the time of the wilderness. Yes, it was difficult. It was a life of suffering. It was difficult – digging a trench like basement floor all of those years." But we don't have to be otherworldly to try to build something beautiful. In fact we can do it in our lifetime as long as we remain focused like our True Father, as long as we remain committed to our reality, like our True Father. And, as long as we remain relaxed and natural in dealing with all that we have to deal with, to build ideal families. We realize that if we follow our True Father 's example we don't have to be other worldly – to have or experience loving life. We can actually create it for ourselves, starting with ourselves.

51. When we ask our question, are we going to be the kind of people who are changed by the world? Are we going to be the kind of people that are constantly tempted, that really don't know what we want out of life? "Whup, my friends are taking drugs, whup I'm going to take drugs. My friends are partying so I'm going to party. My friends are just taking off and not doing anything with their lives so that's what I'm going to do." Are we going to be that kind of people?

52. Or are we going to make something of our lives starting with ourselves, because we realize all of us are agents of change, we are all divine sons and daughters of God. We were put on earth to change our world, and that's the most incredibly exciting thing about it. It is that the world is waiting for us to change it – in a good way, waiting for us to guide in a good way, waiting for us to share the breaking news in a wonderful way so that we can really build a family of God. So that we can really be brothers and sisters, and not just talk about it.

53. When the Bible in Romans chapter 12:2 says, "do not be conformed to this world but be transformed." In a way, transformation – there is an implicit understanding that transformation requires growth. And, when we are conformed to something there is, kind of like, a sense that we have been changed, but then again we are kind of stuck, we are kind of petrified. But being that divine son and daughter of God we need to be continually growing. We need to be continually experiencing, we need to be continually learning. In a way, we need to be our own transformation, we need to work on ourselves and work on not being disillusioned, work on not always wanting to escape, work on not always giving up, but work on focusing and committing to the reality at hand, to the responsibility at hand. And, being relaxed in dealing with the different issues that come up.

54. And so, you realize, in a way, when God gave us this life – God promised us several things. In the book of Ezekiel 11:19 it says, "I will give them one heart. And I will put a new spirit in them." And it says, "I will take out the stony heart from their flesh and give them a new heart in the flesh." And if you think about this, what the Bible is saying – Ezekiel was a great prophet. He was sharing the prophetic message about God's unending and unwavering and unbreakable covenant with his children. And even the name Ezekiel means strong for God. In a way, the whole book is about being strong for God – this insistence on this extremely strong bond that the people have with God. And you realize that he was preaching and sharing this prophetic message against the pagan culture. So, smack in the midst, he wasn't escaping, he wasn't giving up – but smack in the midst of all the idolatry and all the sin that is taking place, he was teaching about the unending, unbreakable, unwavering covenant that God has with his children.

55. When God says, "I want to give them one heart." In a way, what God is promising is – I want to give my children one, or a new heart, or a unified heart. And, when he says that I want to put a new spirit – in a way he wants to give these people, he wants the people to be infused with an inspired spirit. In a way, the spirit of loving life, and a heart of a unified family. That's what God was promising.

56. And God was saying, "I want to take out the stony heart of the flesh." Meaning, the stone-like heart. The heart that cannot pump anymore, because it's hardened so much it can no longer beat, it can no longer feel, it can no longer be inspired. In a way, God wants to remove the hardened heart, diseased with disillusionment and the desire to escape and the desire to give up. And he wants to give us a new heart, a one heart, a unified heart – that is infused with the spirit, enthusiastic spirit of being grateful, a spirit of truly loving life. And he wants this to be the new heart in the flesh – meaning, he wants the heart that is responsive, that will be sensitive enough to the touch of God, to be in each and every one of us.

57. A lot of us in many many different ways have been hardened by the world, have been hardened by our experiences of the past in the movement. And many of us have wasted our time being critical, being accusatory, being, in a way, not the most positive people in the midst of our community. But God is saying, I want to take those stony hearts, those hardened hearts out. Because these stony hearts are not deserving of you and me, of my children. You deserve a unified heart that is infused with the new spirit.

58. This is what Lovin' Life is all about. It's about taking out the hardened stony heart that doesn't beat anymore, that is not excited anymore, that doesn't feel any more. We are just numb to our life. That doesn't feel enthusiastic or hopeful about the future, because we don't know what to expect. But what we are trying to do here at Lovin' Life is to say, life is exciting. Your heart is worth beating. We need to feel and love our children because they are our future. We cannot be numb to our families. We cannot be numb to our kids, because they are going to be the future of our world.

59. And, instead of just saying, "Oh, there is nothing that I can do." God is saying, "I am going to put a new heart in you and a new spirit. So do something about it. Be responsive!" Be responsive! Be sensitive! Be loving. And instead of hating, which is really about me, myself, and I – we are here to practice loving, we are here to practice uplifting, supporting, caring about each other.

60. Because, you know, life is tough enough as it is. We don't need to make it any tougher on each other. So we need to create a new culture of heart, a heart of a unified family. And how do we do that? Not by being disillusioned, not by wanting to escape, not by wanting to give up – but we do that by deciding to change the world, in deciding to change our selves and say, "We're going to be focused. We're going to be committed. And, we are going to be naturally beautiful children of God in dealing with all the things that we deal with to build ideal families.

61. On this beautiful Father's Day, what greater gift is there than to really thank our Heavenly Father and Mother – "Thank you for our lives. Thank you for giving us each other. Thank you for this incredibly supportive community. Thank you for introducing to all of us this culture of heart. It's beautiful. And the future is beautiful. And we are going to live our lives being that beautiful, empowered, divine, eternal sons and daughters of God."

62. So, brothers and sisters, and to all in America, is the world going to change us or are we going to change the world?

63. Thank you. God bless!

Notes:

Romans, chapter 12

1: I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.

2: Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

3: For by the grace given to me I bid every one among you not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think, but to think with sober judgment, each according to the measure of faith which God has assigned him.

4: For as in one body we have many members, and all the members do not have the same function,

5: so we, though many, are one body in Christ, and individually members one of another.

6: Having gifts that differ according to the grace given to us, let us use them: if prophecy, in proportion to our faith;

7: if service, in our serving; he who teaches, in his teaching;

8: he who exhorts, in his exhortation; he who contributes, in liberality; he who gives aid, with zeal; he who does acts of mercy, with cheerfulness.

9: Let love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good;

10: love one another with brotherly affection; outdo one another in showing honor.

11: Never flag in zeal, be aglow with the Spirit, serve the Lord.

12: Rejoice in your hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.

13: Contribute to the needs of the saints, practice hospitality.

14: Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse them.

15: Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.

16: Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly; never be conceited.

17: Repay no one evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.

18: If possible, so far as it depends upon you, live peaceably with all.

19: Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God; for it is written, "Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord."

20: No, "if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him drink; for by so doing you will heap burning coals upon his head."

21: Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Ezekiel, chapter 11

1: The Spirit lifted me up, and brought me to the east gate of the house of the LORD, which faces east. And behold, at the door of the gateway there were twenty-five men; and I saw among them Ja-azani'ah the son of Azzur, and Pelati'ah the son of Benai'ah, princes of the people.

2: And he said to me, "Son of man, these are the men who devise iniquity and who give wicked counsel in this city;

3: who say, `The time is not near to build houses; this city is the caldron, and we are the flesh.'

4: Therefore prophesy against them, prophesy, O son of man."

5: And the Spirit of the LORD fell upon me, and he said to me, "Say, Thus says the LORD: So you think, O house of Israel; for I know the things that come into your mind.

6: You have multiplied your slain in this city, and have filled its streets with the slain.

7: Therefore thus says the Lord GOD: Your slain whom you have laid in the midst of it, they are the flesh, and this city is the caldron; but you shall be brought forth out of the midst of it.

8: You have feared the sword; and I will bring the sword upon you, says the Lord GOD.

9: And I will bring you forth out of the midst of it, and give you into the hands of foreigners, and execute judgments upon you.

10: You shall fall by the sword; I will judge you at the border of Israel; and you shall know that I am the LORD.

11: This city shall not be your caldron, nor shall you be the flesh in the midst of it; I will judge you at the border of Israel;

12: and you shall know that I am the LORD; for you have not walked in my statutes, nor executed my ordinances, but have acted according to the ordinances of the nations that are round about you."

13: And it came to pass, while I was prophesying, that Pelati'ah the son of Benai'ah died. Then I fell down upon my face, and cried with a loud voice, and said, "Ah Lord GOD! wilt thou make a full end of the remnant of Israel?"

14: And the word of the LORD came to me:

15: "Son of man, your brethren, even your brethren, your fellow exiles, the whole house of Israel, all of them, are those of whom the inhabitants of Jerusalem have said, `They have gone far from the LORD; to us this land is given for a possession.'

16: Therefore say, `Thus says the Lord GOD: Though I removed them far off among the nations, and though I scattered them among the countries, yet I have been a sanctuary to them for a while in the countries where they have gone.'

17: Therefore say, `Thus says the Lord GOD: I will gather you from the peoples, and assemble you out of the countries where you have been scattered, and I will give you the land of Israel.'

18: And when they come there, they will remove from it all its detestable things and all its abominations.

19: And I will give them one heart, and put a new spirit within them; I will take the stony heart out of their flesh and give them a heart of flesh,

20: that they may walk in my statutes and keep my ordinances and obey them; and they shall be my people, and I will be their God.

21: But as for those whose heart goes after their detestable things and their abominations, I will requite their deeds upon their own heads, says the Lord GOD."

22: Then the cherubim lifted up their wings, with the wheels beside them; and the glory of the God of Israel was over them.

23: And the glory of the LORD went up from the midst of the city, and stood upon the mountain which is on the east side of the city.

24: And the Spirit lifted me up and brought me in the vision by the Spirit of God into Chalde'a, to the exiles. Then the vision that I had seen went up from me.

25: And I told the exiles all the things that the LORD had showed me.  

Slowing Down to Speed Up

In Jin Moon
June 17, 2012

Good morning. Everyone must have had some breakfast this morning. Let me wish a happy Father's Day to all the fathers in the audience.

This day has a deep meaning for me because my journey in terms of my relationship with my father has been a long and blessed one. When I got up today I thought about some of those special moments that I have had with my father -- and I know that many of you in the audience have had special moments with your father, too.

Having returned from Japan to celebrate the Commencement Gala with our kids, I was reminded again just how awesome our movement is. I realized that despite all those years in the wilderness when we've suffered, we've cried, and we've shed our blood, sweat, and tears together, something beautiful has come out of it. Beautiful children came out of it, and through them we see the promise of a brilliant future.

When I saw their beautiful faces at the gala and some of them again performing here this morning, I realized that we really do have a lot to look forward to. As long as we continue on this path of coming together as one family of God, one community of God, supporting, encouraging and empowering each other, there's nothing that we cannot accomplish.

This most recent experience sustains in me a powerful sense that there is always something exciting around the corner. That's the reason why I love being a mom -- because every brand-new day brings another sweet surprise. The surprise may be good or bad or somewhere in between, but it will be a surprise. We grow together from going through those experiences, and we realize that we can finally truly understand the heart of God as a parent when we come to experience life together with our family. Honoring the First-Generation as Heroes

Having just returned from Japan where, as the mother nation she has carried the weight of the financial responsibility when it came to the providence, I realized that so many brothers and sisters in Japan are tired and burdened with so much responsibility and expectation placed upon them. Through the youth concert series, I have wanted to highlight what's truly beautiful in our Japanese families despite their life of suffering, hardship, denial, and misery: that they have somehow managed to give birth to and raised these beautiful children who embody the promise of extreme good fortune in the future for our movement.

These kids are precious, and they are each a unique and different handiwork of God. When we see them perform in a choir as magnificent as the choir that we saw here, we realize that they tap into the spirit of something profound, moving, and beautiful that inspires all of us to want to be better. So highlighting the beauty of those Japanese children, I felt, is the greatest gift as a wonderful reminder of why we do what we do, why we continue to walk the path, why we continue to struggle to overcome hardships and grow together as a family. We do this because we have something worthwhile, something worth investing in: It is our future, the future of Japan.

This time when I went there -- after having a 12-year history of running these youth concerts for world peace -- I wanted to share what we do here at Lovin' Life and share the breaking news with our brothers and sisters. Our members in the Eve nation for such a long time thought that they just had to be in the position of a sacrificial mother for the rest of their lives, for all of eternity. The words indemnity and restoration seem to be the most prominent words in their minds. So, "Do whatever needs to be done to indemnify, restore, and fulfill the providence," has been their motto. This has been their mantra for the last 40 to 50 years.

But as we come out of the Wilderness Era and look toward the Era of Settlement, we need to start thinking about building the ideal families, the communities, and the societies that we've been talking about and teaching other people about. To do this, we need to have a shift in our mental understanding, our perspective or our opinions of how life should be.

In Japan we shared wonderful video clips of our beautiful kids in the United States being energized, enthusiastic and inspired by their faith, being proud of being an Unificationist, and having dreams and goals -- seeing life as an opportunity to leave something beautiful behind. When these tired Japanese members saw pictures or video clips of our kids, they were so inspired, and they realized, "Yes, we've suffered but," as I encouraged them to think, "our suffering has not been in vain." They realized that they have been laying down the basement foundation for a beautiful house to be built.

Therefore, the second- and further generations coming after need to be immensely grateful to those first-generation who have gone through a life of sacrifice and accomplished something unprecedented in the context of history. Unlike the disciples of Jesus Christ 2,000 years ago who left him stranded and crucified on the cross, none of you, none of our first-generation brothers and sisters who still walk the path with our True Parents left or abandoned them. These first-generation brothers and sisters accomplished the awesome task of protecting the messiah and our True Parents. On that foundation, we can share the breaking news with the rest of the world today as, together with our True Parents, we come out of the Era of the Wilderness and look forward to an Era of Settlement.

That transition could be made because of the foundation laid by the first-generation. Therefore we need to honor them as the great heroes that they are because they accomplished something that the disciples of Jesus could not do 2,000 years ago.

Slow Down and Love Life

However, we shouldn't just stand and pat ourselves on the back for having done something amazing. We need to move forward. We need to go on. We need to continue transitioning and work on substantiating the promise of the Era of Settlement. As we do this great work, we need to remember that in the Time of the Wilderness, everything was mission-oriented, everything was very fast -- almost like a blitzkrieg. You go in for the mission; you come out; you do the event and you come out; you go on to the next one. It was one mission after another. We had no time to settle down. We had no time to raise families. We had no time to think about ourselves.

But in this Time of Settlement, we are actually preparing a harvest. Our children are like seeds germinating and growing to produce beautiful flowers and delicious fruits. But anyone who has ever planted seeds or done a bit of gardening, realizes that no matter how much or how quickly we want that seed to sprout, the sprouting has its own time frame. In order to reap a huge harvest come fall, we have to go through the seasonal cycles including the winter months in preparation for the spring, when we plant the seeds and then watch the plants grow through the summer. We realize that there's a time and place for different things.

In order to reap the harvest, we have to slow down. We can't be blitzkrieg units like we were in the Time of the Wilderness. We have to slow down. In order to progress faster in terms of providence, in essence, we need to do the reverse: We need to slow down. We need to start appreciating life. We need to start taking root. We need to start building families. We need to start appreciating each other and the time given to all of us.

Life is so much more than just a mission-oriented work. Instead of what we thought, and what the Japanese nation of brothers and sisters thought, that a meaningful and valuable life was to be a life of indemnity, restoration and suffering, we need in the Era of Settlement to substantiate the breaking news. And we can only do that in a healthy, prosperous, and successful way if we really start loving life.

We have to re-haul everything that we thought a meaningful and valuable life should be; or perhaps we need to re-think all the things that we took for granted. We need to re-brand. We need to re-educate ourselves to understand that this is a different time.

The Key to Speed is Relaxation

I had the great fortune of being able to congratulate all the graduates who joined us at the Commencement Gala. I spoke to them about how, as we transition from the Time of the Wilderness to the Time of Settlement, the question that we need to be asking ourselves as young people and as graduates is the big question that I often ask myself. We need to ask ourselves as we transition, progress, and move forward: "Is the world changing us, or are we the ones changing the world?"

One thing I recognize through being a mother of child prodigies is that when you try to perfect, your art, such as when I was practicing with my children for their piano competitions, the key to playing faster is not to tense up. It's not to become more rigid; it's not to become so intensified that you're not relaxed. The secret to playing faster or to being more natural on the piano and being better able to play those fantastic arpeggios at lightning speed is to relax.

The center and the core need to be absolutely clear. You've already conditioned yourself through practice as to what notes you're going to play. But in order to truly be that master artist who expresses divine language in a beautiful way, all the limbs -- the elbows, the wrists, and the fingers -- need to be supremely relaxed. When you touch a pianist's hand while it's playing lighting-speed arpeggios or scales, you notice that it's amazingly fluid. It's very, very relaxed.

As we move toward the Age of Settlement, all that rigidity or that army mission mentality -- in which everything is so controlled, intense, and focused -- needs to give way to a more natural, slower, or more relaxed way of living so that, when we need to, we can move even faster, like the way we move on the piano.

And it's no different for a racecar driver. One of my friends who is a famous race car driver told me, "The faster you drive, the more you have to sit in your seat, the more the body has to be relaxed. Of course, your brain and your mental faculties are at an edge. They're focused, alert and looking at everything, but the body itself is incredibly relaxed and fluid in order to accommodate the high speed."

"We're Not Afraid to Have Fun"

In our movement, I think that a lot of people who have been used to a very controlling command-obey kind of a relationship don't know what to do with this Lovin' Life mentality in which everything seems a little bit too relaxed for comfort. "What? We're not separating boys and girls anymore? Worse than that, we're actually encouraging them to have healthy relationships?" "What? You're not telling them about the three-foot rule that a boy and a girl cannot sit within three feet of each other?" "What? They're creating frames on the ballroom dance floor? They're actually touching?" "Oh my goodness, what is the world coming to?"

"What is happening to our church? It's so relaxed. What happened to that clear command-obey central-station type of a relationship? Everything seems a little bit too natural. Faith is not supposed to be natural. Being a divine son and a daughter of God is not supposed to be natural; it's supposed to be miserable. It's supposed to be a life of suffering. What the heck is going on at Lovin' Life?"

But if we cannot be natural and relaxed in what we believe, if we cannot be a confident, relaxed Unificationist who is infectiously inspiring, then the natural witnessing that I've talked about often cannot take place. Having been a teacher for many years, I know that the most effective way to teach is when students feel like they're in a natural environment.

When you're trying to cram something down their throats, when you're trying to constantly ply them with facts and figures, nothing goes in. But when you start telling them a story that has facts, figures, and information woven in, they're all ears; they start to listen. In the context of hearing a good story, they retain more of the facts and figures that I try to teach.

I realized that in order to get their attention, it has to be interactive, it has to be exciting, and it has to be something that's fun. Learning needs to be fun, so at Lovin' Life we're not afraid to have fun. Look at these kids. They are having a great time, but they're also working hard -- and look how awesome they are. They work hard, but they also play hard and stay on the path. And before they knew it, they turned around and said, "Omigod, we won the Gold Medal at the choir competition." "Omigod, I know what I want to do with my life." "Omigod, I haven't really given my passions much thought, but now I have. Now I have a clear goal and a clear focus."

Our kids are better positioned than we parents in terms of knowing what they want and knowing that they don't need to ask, "Is the world going to change us or are we changing the world?" They know the answer. "We are going to change the world; we are going to be that agent of change."

The Opposite of Love Is Selfishness

In Japan I met a lot of the blessed children, who are heavily burdened by the weight of the suffering of the first-generation. They see their parents, who have given up everything for the sake of providence. Here in America we have an understanding that tithing is 10 percent and a higher percent if you can afford it, but in Japan they've been tithing 120, even 200 percent. And the children coming up the ladder watching their parents literally wither away living this miserable life basically are saying, "No, I don't want this. I don't want to be a part of this community."

As they say this, they are not realizing that what they saw was the Time of the Wilderness, and right now we are in the transition phase of turning the corner and looking toward ushering in the Era of Settlement. It's during this transition time that we've lost a lot of blessed children because we were so mission-oriented and so focused on what needed to be accomplished that we didn't take the time to take root and think about how we are going to prepare for this amazing harvest. We didn't give much thought to what kind of parents we were going to be: How we were going to raise our children and prepare them so they won't be changed by the world but rather they will be the change in the world. We haven't thought much about it.

So a lot of the second-generation in Japan -- and also Korea and here in the United States -- have dealt with and struggled with "This world that I've come to hate." I hear this all the time from many of the young people, "I hate my life." "I don't love my life; I hate my life." "I don't love the world; I hate the world." "My life has not been good to me. The world has not been good to me. The world has been fiendishly cruel and unkind. The world is horribly ugly. It's not beautiful. I hate the world."

But in our community with its foremost philosophy being "living for the sake of others," we are supposed to love others; we are supposed to love life and to be in service to others. If our young people are focused not on loving the world but on claiming or articulating their hatred for the world, we as a community need to help draw them out of this way of viewing the world.

A lot of people, I believe, think of the word hate as being the opposite of love. But if you really think about it, hate is not the opposite of love. The opposite of love is selfishness. When you hate something, you are hating something, but it's really about you. "The world was unjust to me." "The world was unkind to me." "The world is not beautiful, it is ugly to me." "The world is cruel to me." When we hate the world, basically we're saying "It's not we who are going to change the world, but it is the world changing us. It is the world causing us to hate. It is the world causing us to be selfish."

But if we are to live a life of altruism, living for the sake of others, we have to start with ourselves. It's very difficult to love another human being if you don't love yourself. If you go take care of yourself so that you're living, thriving and prospering, and in so doing live your life in gratitude, then you can be extremely inspired to help other people.

We see that when young people feel like the world does not understand them and therefore they're going to hate it, in essence what they're doing is practicing selfishness in their lives. They're not thinking, "I need to be the change. I need to be the agent of change, so regardless of how my life is, beautiful or not, it's really up to me. I can become that secret, loving ingredient that changes the world."

"Degging It"

For these young people who are in the throes of hating the world or hating my life, hating my family, it's all about me, myself, and I. They are going through what I call degging it. Let me explain what I mean by degging it. There are a couple of things that children do when they feel like they hate the world.

Number One, they become extremely disillusioned about everything around them. They become disillusioned about themselves, their family, their friends, their world, their school, and everything. Everything is wrong. Everything out there is flooding these people's psyches, these people's worlds, and they are drowning in disillusionment because they have no focus. It's really not clear as to why they're often depressed or disillusioned. It's an amalgamation of a lot of factors. They often can't pinpoint exactly what it is that is affecting them, but nonetheless they are often busy hating the world, or exercising what I call the selfishness of the disillusioned.

Number Two, you see in children who hate the world is escape. A lot of young men and women escape to fantasy world, a virtual world. When you play these video games you can often create your own identity, your own reality, so that suddenly instead of being an unknown X or a Y or a Z in a sea of people, you can be some awesome new character. And then, unlike the real world, where you feel totally outweighed by everything in your life, in these virtual worlds, you can be almost like God. You create everything. You control everything. You become the master of the universe.

When young people are going through a difficult adolescence in the teenage years, when we are so vulnerable to being insecure about who we are and what we want to be, these kinds of virtual worlds create a safe haven for a lot of young people because it's a world that they can control as masters of the universe. A lot of young people don't just escape into virtual realities; many times they escape into what we consider the spiritual life.

This world of daily life in which we live can be so ugly, cruel, and unjust that it's just awful, but the other world or the spiritual world seems like a world of peace, where everything is beautiful, where things are not ugly, where you feel like you can control your life because it's a perfect world that is waiting for us.

A lot of young people have this constant temptation to escape their realities into the virtual world or the spiritual realm. So we, being a movement that emphasizes the importance of the spiritual world, must not forget also to emphasize the importance of the physical world and doing the work that needs to be done in the physical world because sometimes the spirit world is too attractive. "Why wait?" "Why suffer it out?" "Why struggle?" "Why not just leave?" "Why not take my own life, be my own master of the universe and escape to the other world?" This can be a constant temptation.

Young people are dealing not only with disillusionment and a desire to escape, but also they are often dealing with an urgent need for finality in their life. They want a solution; they want an answer; and feeling like they're being responsible, they may just suddenly decide to, Number Three, give up. They may decide they don't want to do it anymore.

Sun Myung Moon holds In Jin Moon, Hak Ja Han holds Hyo Jin Moon and Won Pok Choi with Ye Jin Moon

Sun Myung Moon holds In Jin Moon, Hak Ja Han holds Hyo Jin Moon and Won Pok Choi with Ye Jin Moon

The Nature of True Father

But we can gain some perspective when we look at our True Father's life, since today is Father's Day, and ask ourselves, "What was Father thinking when he asked himself the question 'Is it the world that is changing you or me or us, or is it you, me or us that is going to change the world?'" When we look at our True Father's life in which he has endured extreme, severe, incredibly difficult persecution -- six times being thrown in prison -- and so much misunderstanding and accusation, we have to acknowledge that this is a man who legitimately could have a right to hate the world, a reason not to love the world.

I'm sure Father has felt the feelings of disillusionment and wanting to escape sometimes. We all do. I'm sure he may have felt that he wants to give up. After all, he is human. The great thing about the messiah being human and not some kind of a super-alien who never experiences these feelings is that when we look at our True Father's example and realize that because he's a man, he can feel disillusionment, he can feel a desire to escape, and he can feel a desire to give up, but he is not disillusioned. He doesn't let disillusionment get him. He remains focused instead of being disillusioned.

This man might want to escape into perhaps the virtual reality or even the spirit world, but he is committed to the work at hand. He is committed to the work of substantiating something that God longed for in this reality, even though I'm sure he must have wanted to give up many times. All of us do. I've wanted to give up. Life is too difficult. The spirit world looks much more attractive. The virtual world looks much more attractive. The work at hand is ponderously difficult. You want to give up.

But what does Father do? Instead of giving up, he laughs. He relaxes. He takes three breaths. He relaxes and gears up to deal with building an ideal family. When you look at Father's example, you see that this is a man who could hate the world, who could live a life of utmost selfishness, saying, "I deserve to feel this way. I deserve to be negative. I deserve to criticize everybody around me day in and day out." But he doesn't. He remains focused.

Father remains committed in his relaxed, natural manner. He's such a natural man. It does not matter whether you put him in front of a president or a homeless person. He is himself. He is natural. There's nothing artificial about him. He will always wear his polyester 1970s, what I call Saturday Night Live-type, shirts in front of both presidents and homeless people. Of course, my mother thinks it's ghastly, and she wants him to be up on the fashion plate. But this is a man for whom it really doesn't matter what he's wearing. He is his own person. He is that natural self, that relaxed person. That's why we all love him.

If I were to ask a first-generation, "Why did you join this church? Why was my father such an attractive leader for you or a father figure for you," I think a lot of them would say that they never knew you could laugh so much at church, or even joke or have fun about love. There were all these stories that True Father gave. One of the required things that you have to do when you're home schooling your kids is sex education. I told the superintendent in Lexington, "Well, you don't need to worry about that because in our church we're very open. Starting with their grandfather, we talk openly about these things so they're pretty well versed in that. You don't have to worry about it."

In that sense, we are an extremely relaxed community. It's a very different type of a service than a Catholic mass, isn't it? We're not standing up, singing Hail Mary's, and having everything be so serious. One of the things about Father is that he's laughing all the time, he's singing all the time, and now he's dancing all the time. So even just by looking at the man, "Whoops, he laughs; he dances: he sings." Isn't that what we do at Lovin' Life Ministries?

"We Need To Be More Natural"

In a way, we are carrying on the best of the tradition. In terms of moving forward, yes, a lot of old habits are falling by the wayside, but that does not mean that all hell is going to break loose and it's going to be chaos. There is an extremely clear center and a core, our spiritual core. But in terms of our movement as human beings, we need to be more natural.

I don't know about you, but I remember when I was growing up there was a certain kind of a physicality that you had to carry around if you wanted to be respectful toward somebody. You couldn't look at a leader. You all had to listen like this [with head bowed]. And the limbs, or the way we moved, was very subject and object, Four Position Foundation.

Back then, our movement was full of Americans but they were all speaking Kenglish, or Jenglish. What happened to good English? There was this almost military-like way of speaking in short, cut sentences. No--full-- sentences. No--cadence--in--a--language, no--intonation. It was like, we--have--to--move, we--have--mission. We--must--fulfill. Providential--duty.

I don't know about you, but that's really not inspiring to me. I want to be able to talk to my Heavenly Parent. I don't want to pray to my Heavenly Parent, "This--mission, this--week, this--much, but--not--that--much." I don't want to talk like that. I want to say, "Father, Mother, can I report to you how my day was?" And I want to be able to converse with God in the same way I would love to converse with my parents. I think most parents want their children to converse in that way. Do we really want to raise kids to say, "Mom, today--I--finished--7--day--course--of--my--homework, but--next--month--I--am--going--to--work--on--Cain--versus--Abel, struggle--over--Cain--versus--Abel. And--I'm--going--to--make--sure--I--am--not--Cained--out. I'm--going--to--make--sure--I--control--my--Isaac." Why do we have to do that?

Why can't we be natural? Why can't we be relaxed and proud of who we are? "Hey, I'm an Unificationist and I don't have to speak like that to prove that I am religious, to prove that I am faithful." If you're really faithful and religious, you don't have to prove it. Just be yourself, be ourselves, because that's what every parent wants from a child, and that's what God wants from all of us.

As we move forward asking ourselves, "Are we going to be the kind of people who are changed by the world, or are we going to be the kind of people who change the world," we realize that we may have to re-think a lot of the things that we have taken for granted -- like, for instance, living for the sake of others that we understood in the time of the wilderness as dying for the sake of others, as suffering for the sake of others. This is a time when we each need to express our distinct selves.

Rachmaninoff's "Variation 18"

A musical example helps to make this point. You may know that I have a thing about Russian music. Rachmaninoff was a brilliant Russian composer who happens to be one of my favorites. He wrote a piece called "Rhapsody on the Theme of Paganini." It's a beautiful piece in which he chose a certain melodic phrase or a theme that he played around with and expressed in 24 different ways, or 24 variations. But the crËme de la crËme of all the 24 variations is Variation 18, a beautiful melody that "sings" to you so once you hear it you cannot forget it. Rachmaninoff wrote in andante contabile. That means slowly, like singing.

This piece, for a pianist, is a supremely challenging one because how do you express musically 24 variations or 24 facets of your feelings or your expression? So this piece is often required for international competitions. Anybody can be like a Terminator on a piano with no mistakes. But what you want to hear is musicality. You want to hear that divine language flowing through the fingers of the artist.

So this piece in particular is extremely difficult because you have to play 24 variations in 24 different ways. You cannot play each variation in the same way, so you have to be an extremely adept or capable artist, even a master artist, to fully express yourself in this piece. What I call the soaring melodic line or the memorable melody that comes from Variation 18 emerges because Rachmaninoff does something remarkable with the theme he has been playing around with. He reverses the theme. He reverses it and slows it down to the level at which you can actually sing the harmony. So he takes the original theme, reverses it, and slows it down.

In essence, what we are trying to do here at Lovin' Life Ministries is be that memorable, indelible melodic line that will travel through time. We're taking the original theme -- everything good that our True Parents have brought to our organization, our community, and our lives -- but in essence we're playing around with it and reversing it.

So we're taking a lot of what the Japanese brothers and sisters thought, that their life was necessarily one of indemnity restoration, denial, suffering, and misery, and we're reversing it to say that is really not their purpose, that is not the reason God created us. That life is something we had to go through in order to dig the basement floor, but God wants all of us to build something beautiful.

How do you build something beautiful from the original theme that Rachmaninoff came up with? You slow it down; you sing that melody, and then it turns into the melody that one Hollywood producer put in his film called Somewhere in Time. It's one of those romantic classics. I don't know why, but Koreans seem to love it, so it seems like I see it every time I get on KAL to go to Korea -- and I have to go back on Monday. This kind of a romantic, otherworldly tale is something that's just so beautiful to a lot of people, and it uses Variation 18 from "Rhapsody on the Theme of Paganini" by Rachmaninoff.

Somewhere in Time

Somewhere in Time

The movie Somewhere in Time is about a young, bright, successful playwright named Richard Collier who happens to come across a picture of a beautiful woman, falls madly in love with her, and travels back in time to be with her. Pretty romantic, huh? Yeah. It got me. I see it over and over again.

He travels back in time to meet her and be with her. But he realizes that he can't stay in that reality because one of the things that he brought with him was a coin from the modern day. When he flips the coin and realizes that it's dated 1970-something, he is dragged back -- actually forward -- in time to his current reality that he no longer wants to be a part of. It's a tragic love story in that he takes his own life because he wants to be with his beloved.

The movie is dealing with the notion of something beautiful that cannot be had here and therefore either we need to die or we want something else in order to experience something like it. But what our True Parents with the breaking news are saying and sharing with us is, "Look, we as a movement have gone through the time of the wilderness, when, yes, it was difficult. It was a life of suffering. It was miserable digging a trench-like basement floor all those years. But we don't have to be otherworldly to try to build something beautiful."

In fact, we can do it in our lifetime, as long as we remain focused and committed to our realities, like our True Father, and as long as we remain relaxed and natural in dealing with all that we have to deal with to build ideal families. If we follow our True Father's example, we don't have to be otherworldly to have or experience loving life. We can actually create it for ourselves, starting with ourselves.

People Who Will Change the World

So, let's ask ourselves again, "Are we going to be the kind of people who are changed by the world?" Are we going to be people who are constantly tempted, not knowing what we want out of life? "Well, my friends are taking drugs, so I'm going to take drugs." "My friends are partying, so I'm going to party." "My friends are just taking off and not doing anything with their lives, so that's what I'm going to do." Are we going to be that kind of people?

Or are we going to make something of our lives, starting with ourselves, because we realize all of us are agents of change? We are all divine sons and daughters of God who were put on earth to change our world. That's the most exciting thing about it: that the world is waiting for us to change it in a good way, waiting for us to guide it in a good way. The world is waiting for us to share in the breaking news in a wonderful way so we can build a family of God, so that we can really be brothers and sisters and not just talk about it.

When the Bible, in Romans 12:2 says, "Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed," it carries an implicit understanding that transformation requires growth. When we are conformed to something, there's a sense that we have been changed, but then again we're kind of stuck, we're kind of petrified.

But being a divine son or daughter of God, we need to be continually growing, continually experiencing, and continually learning. We need to be our own transformation. We need to work on ourselves -- to work on not being disillusioned, not always wanting to escape, and not always giving up. We need to focus and commit to the reality and responsibility at hand, and to be relaxed in dealing with the different issues that come up.

Ezekiel's Prophetic Message of Heart

When God gave us this life, God promised us several things. The Bible tells us in Ezekiel 11:19, "I will give them one heart. And I will put a new spirit in them. I will take out the stony heart from their flesh and give them a new heart in the flesh."

Ezekiel was a great prophet who was sharing the prophetic message about God's unending, unwavering, and unbreakable covenant with his children. The name Ezekiel means "strong for God." The whole book is about being strong for God with its insistence on this extremely strong bond that the people have with God.

He was preaching and sharing this prophetic message against the pagan culture. He wasn't escaping or giving up, but smack in the midst of all the idolatry and sin of his community, he was preaching about the unending, unbreakable, unwavering covenant that God has with his children.

When God says, "I will give them one heart," God is promising to give God's children a new heart, or a unified heart. When God says, "I want to put a new spirit in them," God is telling us that he wants these people to be infused with an inspired spirit, the spirit of loving life and the heart of a unified family. That's what God was promising.

God was also saying, "I want to take out the stony heart of the flesh," meaning the stone-like heart, the heart that cannot pump anymore because it's hardened so much that it can no longer beat; it can no longer feel or be inspired. God wants to remove that hardened heart, diseased with disillusionment, a desire to escape and a desire to give up, and he wants to give us a new heart, or one heart, a unified heart, that is infused with the enthusiastic spirit of being grateful and truly loving life.

God wants this to be the new heart in the flesh, meaning God wants the heart that is responsive, that will be sensitive enough to the touch of God to be in every one of us. A lot of us in many different ways have been hardened by the world and by our experiences of the past in the movement. Many of us have wasted our time being critical and accusatory, and being not the most positive people in the midst of our community.

But God is saying, "I want to take those stony, hardened hearts out because they are not deserving of my children and me. You, my children, deserve a unified heart that is infused with the new spirit." And this is what Lovin' Life is all about. It's about taking out the hardened, stony heart that doesn't beat any more, that is not excited any more, that doesn't feel any more, that is just numb to life, and doesn't feel enthusiastic or hopeful about the future because it doesn't know what to expect.

What we were trying to do here at Lovin' Life is to say, "Life is exciting. Your heart is worth beating. We need to feel and love our children, because they're our future. We cannot be numb to our families. We cannot be numb to our kids, because they are going to be the future of our world." And instead of just basically saying, "Oh, there is nothing I can do," God is saying, "I'm going to put a new heart in you and a new spirit, so do something about it. Be responsive."

So, let's be responsive, sensitive, and loving. Instead of hating -- which is about me, myself, and I -- we are here to practice loving. We are here to practice uplifting, supporting, and caring about each other because life is tough enough as it is. We don't need to make it any tougher on each other.

We need to create a new culture of heart, a heart of a unified family. And how do we do that? Not by being disillusioned, wanting to escape, and wanting to give up. We do that by deciding to change the world, deciding to change ourselves, and saying "We are going to be focused; we're going to be committed; and we're going to be naturally beautiful children of God dealing with all the issues and challenges of building ideal families."

On this beautiful Father's Day, what greater gift is there than to thank our Heavenly Father and Mother? "Thank you for our lives. Thank you for giving us each other. Thank you for this wonderfully supportive community. Thank you for introducing this culture of heart to all of us. It's beautiful, the future is beautiful, and we are going to live our lives being beautiful, empowered, divine, eternal sons and daughters of God.

So, Brothers and Sisters, and to all in America, "Is the world going to change us, or are we going to change the world?" Yes. Thank you. God bless.

Notes:

Romans, chapter 12

1: I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.

2: Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

3: For by the grace given to me I bid every one among you not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think, but to think with sober judgment, each according to the measure of faith which God has assigned him.

4: For as in one body we have many members, and all the members do not have the same function,

5: so we, though many, are one body in Christ, and individually members one of another.

6: Having gifts that differ according to the grace given to us, let us use them: if prophecy, in proportion to our faith;

7: if service, in our serving; he who teaches, in his teaching;

8: he who exhorts, in his exhortation; he who contributes, in liberality; he who gives aid, with zeal; he who does acts of mercy, with cheerfulness.

9: Let love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good;

10: love one another with brotherly affection; outdo one another in showing honor.

11: Never flag in zeal, be aglow with the Spirit, serve the Lord.

12: Rejoice in your hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.

13: Contribute to the needs of the saints, practice hospitality.

14: Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse them.

15: Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.

16: Live in harmony with one another; do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly; never be conceited.

17: Repay no one evil for evil, but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all.

18: If possible, so far as it depends upon you, live peaceably with all.

19: Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God; for it is written, "Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord."

20: No, "if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him drink; for by so doing you will heap burning coals upon his head."

21: Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.

Ezekiel, chapter 11

1: The Spirit lifted me up, and brought me to the east gate of the house of the LORD, which faces east. And behold, at the door of the gateway there were twenty-five men; and I saw among them Ja-azani'ah the son of Azzur, and Pelati'ah the son of Benai'ah, princes of the people.

2: And he said to me, "Son of man, these are the men who devise iniquity and who give wicked counsel in this city;

3: who say, `The time is not near to build houses; this city is the caldron, and we are the flesh.'

4: Therefore prophesy against them, prophesy, O son of man."

5: And the Spirit of the LORD fell upon me, and he said to me, "Say, Thus says the LORD: So you think, O house of Israel; for I know the things that come into your mind.

6: You have multiplied your slain in this city, and have filled its streets with the slain.

7: Therefore thus says the Lord GOD: Your slain whom you have laid in the midst of it, they are the flesh, and this city is the caldron; but you shall be brought forth out of the midst of it.

8: You have feared the sword; and I will bring the sword upon you, says the Lord GOD.

9: And I will bring you forth out of the midst of it, and give you into the hands of foreigners, and execute judgments upon you.

10: You shall fall by the sword; I will judge you at the border of Israel; and you shall know that I am the LORD.

11: This city shall not be your caldron, nor shall you be the flesh in the midst of it; I will judge you at the border of Israel;

12: and you shall know that I am the LORD; for you have not walked in my statutes, nor executed my ordinances, but have acted according to the ordinances of the nations that are round about you."

13: And it came to pass, while I was prophesying, that Pelati'ah the son of Benai'ah died. Then I fell down upon my face, and cried with a loud voice, and said, "Ah Lord GOD! wilt thou make a full end of the remnant of Israel?"

14: And the word of the LORD came to me:

15: "Son of man, your brethren, even your brethren, your fellow exiles, the whole house of Israel, all of them, are those of whom the inhabitants of Jerusalem have said, `They have gone far from the LORD; to us this land is given for a possession.'

16: Therefore say, `Thus says the Lord GOD: Though I removed them far off among the nations, and though I scattered them among the countries, yet I have been a sanctuary to them for a while in the countries where they have gone.'

17: Therefore say, `Thus says the Lord GOD: I will gather you from the peoples, and assemble you out of the countries where you have been scattered, and I will give you the land of Israel.'

18: And when they come there, they will remove from it all its detestable things and all its abominations.

19: And I will give them one heart, and put a new spirit within them; I will take the stony heart out of their flesh and give them a heart of flesh,

20: that they may walk in my statutes and keep my ordinances and obey them; and they shall be my people, and I will be their God.

21: But as for those whose heart goes after their detestable things and their abominations, I will requite their deeds upon their own heads, says the Lord GOD."

22: Then the cherubim lifted up their wings, with the wheels beside them; and the glory of the God of Israel was over them.

23: And the glory of the LORD went up from the midst of the city, and stood upon the mountain which is on the east side of the city.

24: And the Spirit lifted me up and brought me in the vision by the Spirit of God into Chalde'a, to the exiles. Then the vision that I had seen went up from me.

25: And I told the exiles all the things that the LORD had showed me.