On The Improvement Of The Self

I noted as I thumbed through last month's Unification News that a great number of articles were dealing with the healing and/or improvement of the self. John Williams, Camas Lamond, something about finances, Dan Fefferman's workshop, etc. At this time members such as Richard Cohen, Beatrix Steeghs, David Fastiggi and Ellen Goldstein are attracting a good deal of attention and appreciation for their work in this area.

This is reflecting a trend in our society, in fact. I read an interview with the actor Michael Douglas, in which he explained that his period at a recovery and healing center in Arizona was not indicative of a serious problem, but that simply he had gone for twenty years without therapy, and it was high time to obtain some. Pity the billions of individuals who went to their graves not only never receiving therapy, but never realizing their need for it!

It seems to me we can categorize types of therapy and self-healing approaches.

1. Substance addiction-oriented: I want to separate myself from drugs, cigarettes, alcohol, or dependency-relationships.

2. Relationship-oriented: I want to make friends, learn to communicate my feelings, learn how to say no, learn how to lead, etc.

3. Healing-oriented: I want to work out my phobias, inhibitions, neuroses; I want to find myself and love myself for who I find myself to be, to be a true man or true woman, etc.

4. Healing family relations and sexuality: I want to be able to have a fulfilling sexual life according to the proper orientation, to have a successful marriage, to resolve my relationship with my parents, etc.

5. Improvement or success-oriented: I want to be a success make more money, manage my time better, identify and fulfill my goals, etc.

These therapies share the presupposition that the answer lies within, that each person has the truth within, at least the truth as it applies to oneself, and, in relationship to the self, there is no higher truth than one's own. Even the success-oriented therapies tell us that we each have the power within ourselves. There is no heteronymous authority; no god above the self which dictates how "I" am to be or what "I" am to do. In our general society, this is considered a secularist alternative to traditional religious life, because traditionally the answers to these questions came from God.

The Protestant Heritage

As a student of American church history, I can see that this approach to life is the current stage of a trend within Protestantism which has developed over the centuries, and which has moved beyond the context of Christianity. Martin Luther, by his break from Rome, decisively brought the focus of authority over religious life to the individual conscience. Although he subjected the conscience to the service of Christ, it was the Christ as defined by the conscience within the guidelines of the Bible.

This left a great deal of room for individuals to find their own truth, and religious sects proliferated. The Quakers called people to the Christ within, overturning even biblical and church authority. Famous early American separatist Roger Williams declared that he and his wife constituted the only true church. Emersonian Transcendentalism rejected Christianity and found Christ within nature and the liberated self.

By the latter nineteenth-century, Christians working with the scientific assumptions of Darwinism determined that God is immanent in history, which is to say immanent in the human mind and accomplishments of civilization. The next step, called "new thought", integrated this open-ended Christianity with the Theosophy and various other strands of spiritualism and esoteric studies introduced in the context of the World's Parliament of Religions in 1893, and the ground was set for Sigmund Freud and the psychoanalytic movement of the twentieth century. But it was all implicit in Martin Luther's placement of the individual conscience as the supreme authority.

Of course, Luther and his society strongly believed in God; hence the authority of the conscience was implicitly in relation to God. However, a world in which many question the existence of God leaves the conscience as authority unto itself.

Thus, there is an ideological foundation to the healing solution, and the ideology is Protestant individualism. There are a lot of fine aspects to Protestant individualism, such as the high valuation of individual responsibility and self-reliance. There are other not-so- laudable aspects: social alienation, family breakdown, free sex. These normally attend the direct implication of Luther's stance: that I will decide my own destiny, or vocation, in front of God.

Now, the healing approach emphasizes that it is on-ideological (and thus asserts that it is non-judgmental), that whatever you desire to do or to be, therapy will help you find it and accomplish it. In other words, therapy is a tool. However, I believe that it can be argued that healing is not just teaching means, but that the ideological substratum, the individualistic presuppositions which give rise to the entire approach, influences the determination of ends and goals themselves. The very placement of the individual self at the center, called to make all decisions, has made the fundamental decision for the individual already, whether or not the client realizes it.

Therapy deals with the deepest emotions and passions of human life: one's relationship with one's parents, spouse, body and soul. These are arenas of life which are beyond reach of reason and conscientious judgment. They do not submit easily to, well, to therapy. To simply set forth the proposition that the individual is the final end, or even the complete beginning, is to send the ship of healing in a specific direction. No matter how far one travels along that course, one is building upon this individualistic foundation.

Westerners, Americans in particular, follow the way of individualism by instinct; this is the result of our Protestant foundation and this foundation has shaped every religious tradition which came to these shores, be it Catholicism, Islam, Judaism or Buddhism. This American way of life, certainly not a bad one in light of historical alternatives, Reverend Moon likes to call "brotherism", because it is a social fabric bereft of parents, in which brothers and sisters must work things out for themselves. However, brotherism is a temporary view of life; it must be surpassed by, and give way to, parentism.

What is Parentism?

Parentism is distinct from brotherism, as parents are distinct from brothers. Consider, for example, the relationship between Joseph and his brothers, compared to that between him and his father, Jacob. Parentism means placing one's parents in the subject position, and ordering the relationship of the children within the context of parents. The parents attend the grandparents, the children attend the parents. Everything moves upward, in terms of age, even as biologically it moves downward. Everything moves backwards in time, even as time moves forward. As Reverend Moon once put it, little children love nothing more than hearing tales of the past from their grandparents. This is the heavenly order of things, through which God can work and create an ideal society.

Unfortunately, we live in a fallen world. The approximations of parentism practiced historically west, east, south and north failed. Here I am thinking of the expansion of fallen world tribalism embodied in monarchism, fascism and communism, all ideologies which placed authority into the hands of the few who assumed veritable parental authority, without the consent of and true love for the people. Breaking from this bad tradition, the west moved to the transitional stage of brotherism by establishing democratic government. The other regions of the world are following.

Reverend and Mrs. Moon are now reconstructing or restoring ideal parentism. Of course, they are not everyone's parents literally, and the blood line bonds which relate all humanity are pretty worthless. Therefore, this re-constitution of the human race is a difficult process, involving restitution, or indemnity. Part of the indemnity involves us practicing, or trying to practice, parentism conditionally, or symbolically. Ultimately this system will be completely decentralized and localized, because everyone has parents, and all parents have parental rights. But since Reverend and Mrs. Moon are the first to have established the right of parentship under God, we are in the position to inherit this divine right from or through them.

Within the Unification Church life of restoration, one's Abel figure stands as an elder sibling representing one's parents. Through unity with this person, which we call the foundation of substance, the real parents can come, which we call receiving the Messiah. Even then, the Messiah/True Parents, are not my physical parents, but are standing in a conditional position. The important point, however, is that they are physical and historical, not spiritual. God, Jesus, Buddha, all religious figures throughout history have stood in spiritual relationship with us, which left no guard against physical hanky- panky.

For the time being, this may not be a practical or "successful" way to live in the short or medium run, or even in one's entire life on earth. But I believe, ideologically, that it is the right thing to do for the sake of God's providence, even rejecting more reasonable or apparently rewarding possibilities. What the Unification Church is trying to develop in the west is the vertical instinct of filial piety for parents as the ruling paradigm for society. Perhaps we are overdoing it, allowing the pendulum to swing too far in the vertical direction. That may well be the case; so be it. I don't expect we will be able to strike the perfect balance of brotherism and parentism, but we'd rather err on the side of parentism.

I believe in this ineffable ideal: that God works in the mind through the parental love/parental position, and that in the ideal the child will naturally be object to the parent in perfect freedom. As far as practical results go, I think this will work out fine. When the parent directs A, the child will become one with A. He will simply invest effort in the accomplishment of A, and not immediately examine B, C, D and E as the context to evaluate A. If B happens to be a better way, then through acting upon A, B will appear, naturally. How? The parents, or those in position to advise them, will recognize it to be so. Or, through the give and take of parent and child centering on A, both will recognize the preferability of B.

The difference between brotherism and parentism is that one brother does not know what is best for another brother. Hence the appeal: "you decide," and at best I will help to learn how to decide. This is the premise of therapy: I will assist you in opening up your mind to find your self, your value, your true potential, etc. The parents do know what is best for the child, because the parents are what is best for the child. Now, the parents may not tell the child what is best when the child asks; hence, the parents too may say, "you decide." But the parents know what the right decision is; the brother does not. This is because parental love is the greatest, true love, and true love grants the right of participation, ownership and living together. Brotherly love is secondary; it is the spin-off, the reflection, of parental love. Brothers participate, share and live together only through the love of the parents.

Home Schooling

After writing this, I was inspired to read an article on home schooling which concluded with a point expressing this same wisdom from a different perspective. (Leon Podles, "No Place Like Home", Touchstone 7:4, Fall 1994, pp. 8-13. The reference is to David Guterson, Family Matters: Why Home Schooling Makes Sense. ) After explaining how parents can teach the religious traditions to their children at home, the author, Leon Podles, continues:

"But the chief religious role of home schooling is not in imparting instruction. The family is the social structure that cultivates pietas, and that binds, religare, generation to generation. We desire to spend time with those we love, so that we can get to know them and help them in an intelligent fashion. Teaching, as David Guterson says, `is an act of love before it is anything else.' . . . He insists that it is not a sacrifice to spend your time with your children, with those to whom you have given existence and whom you love more than anyone in the world. . . .

"Much may be made of a child if, like Johnson's Scot, he is caught early enough. But what will catch him? A parent's love, which created him and called him into being from nothingness, and that surrounds him every hour of the day, that studies his needs and desires, and tries to help him grow into a being that expresses a unique idea, an idea which Christians know exists in the mind of God . . .

"Both socialism and capitalism tend to view human beings as ciphers who can be manipulated in the service of economic efficiency. Capitalism is better at creating wealth, but at what cost? First fathers were taken away from their children, more than primitive societies ever had done. Now mothers are being taken away from their children, and the children turned over to strangers. A child must learn that he is loved if he is to have a chance to know, by analogy, what God's love is, attentive and ever present yet giving us freedom to grow, confident in us, easily pleased, never really satisfied, until we grow up to the full stature of his sons."

Podles has realized and expressed the essential genius of home schooling, that it bonds parents and children, naturally passing on the invisible "vertical" heart of tradition, and the heart of the grandfather of us all, God. With this strong vertical tradition established, horizontal (social) stability and peace will not be far behind. Home schooling is not just an educational movement; it is a peace movement.

On Founding the Family Federation

By W. Farley Jones-Albany, NY

This is a transcription of the speech given at the inauguration of the Family Federation for Unification and World Peace.

Thank you for your warm welcome and for coming tonight. I know you all have very busy lives and many responsibilities but on this cool night your came here to honor the founding of the Family Federation for Unification and World Peace in the United States and also to honor my wife and me; so I give my gratitude to you. I of course am deeply honored that True Parents would appoint me to this mission and also deeply puzzled over why I would be chosen, over what it means to me, what my task will be and what I will do. I'm also puzzled over what to say tonight. What I have settled on is actually a rather personal reflection.

I know some of you quite well, but many of you I don't know and you don't know me, so part of what I'm going to say in the next few minutes is a report on my life and a reflection on that. Mrs. Spurgin said I joined our movement in the late '60s-specifically 1967-and was blessed in 1970. From 1967 I spent 13 years really working full-time for the church. During part of that time I was the president of the church. I was able to work closely with Father, I had the opportunity to be deeply touched by Father a great deal, and I found a healing in my life which I had never found. Those 13 years were a very profound experience of God's love and True Parents' love.

However, in the late '70s and early '80s, we had four children at that time in tow and no visible way to provide for a family. Facing all the conflicts for which I needed to find some solution, I decided to go back to law school. I had been in law school in Albany for a year and a half before meeting the church. I decided to go back and finish it up and try to find some way to provide for my family. That was part of the picture. That's what I did, but what I want to say is that in doing that, I went back up to the Albany area, which is my hometown, but I really stepped outside of the structure of the church and outside of a direct relationship with True Parents. I really put myself-to use the analogy of Jacob's course-I transported myself into Haran. That's the way it felt. The children moved up there with us; we lived in a place called Defreestville, New York, a suburb of Albany, and really we felt out of it, very separated from what had been so central, so profoundly a part of our lives. At one point my wife, commenting on the place where we were living, Defreestville, said, "This is not Defreestville, this is Deep Freeze-ville."

So I went back to law school in the beginning of 1981, and I finished up law school in a year and a half. Then somewhere in the late '80s Father said, "Everyone go back to your hometown." So although we had been in Deep Freeze-ville and feeling very isolated, very unclear how to maintain our connection to True Parents, now all of a sudden everyone was being sent to their hometown. I said on another occasion that during those first years we felt as if we were very much at the back of the line, if not at the very end of the line, but if you're at the back of the line and the line turns around, you're in the front. Lo and behold, that happened! Really the Providence somewhat expanded to embrace our situation, and from there really it was very helpful to be there. We were somehow no longer in the position of the black sheep but we were in an accepted posture.

Over those years, the '80s, we maintained our spiritual activity and tried to develop with greater and lesser success. If I think of my course in the church, I grew up in the Albany area and came to New York City and I studied the Principle. This was where I was really touched by members. Although I joined in Washington, D.C., this was my entree to True Parents and Divine Principle, this is where God touched people here in New York City.

When we went into Haran, that was also from New York City. My mission at that time was related to the preparation and publication of the Home Study Course. It was after that that I went back to Albany from the headquarters here in New York City. So I feel it is a circular process going on here, and if I reflect on the time periods, I spent 13 years full-time in the church from 1967 to the end of 1980; I went to law school in 1981-till now that's a 13-year period. So if you put three 13-year periods together you get 39 years, which is very close to 40 years. I hope I can continue to serve God the next thirteen years, whatever course I'm on.

My point though is when I first came from Albany to New York I came as an individual, a searching individual at that. I feel now here in 1994, 26 or 27 years later, coming back from Albany to New York, I am not coming as an individual, but very much coming as a family. My wife, of course, is a great lady and wonderful wife and a wonderful mother, and we also through God's grace and blessing have our children whom we love very much of course, who themselves have been touched by True Parents' children, by Hyo Jin Hyung Nim, and In Jin Nunim, and Kwon Jin Hyung Nim, Un Jin Nunim, Sun Jin Nunim. Our children have been raised more by the True Children than by us, that's the real source of their commitment and spirituality. So it's the great wisdom of having a Messianic family, that the second generation can connect to the second generation of the Messiah's family. Really, our children have the same feeling towards True Children that we have towards True Parents. So it's a great honor.

I do feel that we come to this mission as a family, for it is the Family Federation. And again I use the analogy of Haran. Being in Haran has its own purpose and significance; I'm told my mission here is as a part-time volunteer. I anticipate staying in Albany, I have a law practice up there, and I think that it is important that I stay in Albany, in my hometown area, in my tribal messiahship area. That is the area in which I have to do my work. It's to Haran that God's word has to be brought. So then perhaps one part of myself is in Haran and one part of myself is in Canaan. Maybe that's the way we should be, because through that we can touch people in the larger world who need to be brought into the topics that God is developing so brilliantly and powerfully through our True Parents.

I also want to say this: as Mrs. Spurgin mentioned, I come from a family of lawyers, and it is a family of distinctive accomplishment in the legal field. My father is still alive and no longer practicing, but he was a highly regarded trial attorney in his time. I have an older brother who follows in that tradition, very highly regarded for what he does as a lawyer. So in reflecting on my life, I see that they represent a certain type of excellence in their secular vocation. True Parents represent the highest excellence in their spiritual vocation. So I want to inherit that tradition.

As I said at the beginning of my talk I'm kind of puzzled at what this all means, and what I'm going to do, and it's not just I, but what my wife and I will do, but whatever that is, I want to bring a quality of excellence to it. That's my pledge to you, and that's what I'll be striving for. And so let's gather, let's go forward toward the wonderful vision that True Parents set for us, and the new world that they are holding before us.

We know through the founding of the Family Federation that the new world the True Parents are beginning, the new global society that they have initiated, has at its center the family, and specifically our family of the new history. So let us listen to God in our hearts and respond to that goal. Thank you very much.

National BFD Active in NY

by Betsy Jones

The National Blessed Family Department under the guidance of Reverend Joong Hyun Pak is now making plans and strategies for the success of the upcoming blessing in August, 1995.

To accomplish America's goal of 40,000 couples, it will take each of our investment. At a recent leader's conference, Father spoke about accomplishing his goal of educating 160,000 Japanese women. He said when he gave himself completely to the task, the numbers began to gradually increase. He also said if we only take care of our own family, it is like a branch not connected to the root. If we practice going beyond our family at this providential time in preparing individuals and couples for this historical event, it will only bring life nourishment and deeper connection between our family and True Family.

Our regional Blessed Family Department representatives are available for education and guidance. In addition, we have set up some subcommittees to provide information and support on a number of specific areas, such as Second Generation, Seung Hwa ceremonies, infertility/adoption, and more.

I can be contacted at National Headquarters on Mondays and Tuesdays, (212) 997-0050, ext. 209. When I'm not available, Lynn Mathers, Assistant Director, can be reached Monday through Friday at ext. 700 to help you.

Betsy Jones is the Director of the National Blessed Family Department

Military Ethics Conference in Moscow

by Franco Famularo-Moscow, CIS

From Oct. 4 to 7, 1994 the First International Leadership Conference on Military Ethics was held outside Moscow. The conference, jointly sponsored by the International Educational Foundation and the Higher Humanities Academy of the Russian Armed Forces, had as its focus the production of a text for the moral education of the armed forces in Russia. In attendance were 12 academicians from the Higher Humanities Academy and 11 representatives of the Unification movement from Korea, the United States of America, Great Britain, Canada, Poland and Austria.

The International Educational Foundation, founded by True Parents and under the guidance of Dr. Joon Ho Seuk, produced a curriculum in 1993 for the moral education of high school pupils entitled "My World & I," which is currently used in school throughout the CIS and Baltic states. It is a multi-religious approach to moral education based on the Unification Principle.

The Higher Humanities Academy of the Russian Armed Forces is the most prestigious institution in Russia for educating military officers. In Soviet times it was responsible for teaching Marxist ideology to officers and cadets. When a representative of the academy came across the "My World & I" text, he concluded that something similar would aid the education of military officers and soldiers. At the request of Gen. Nikita Chaldimov and Capt. Yuri Noskov, who in March 1994 attended the Summit Council for World Peace in Seoul, the conference was held at a retreat site formerly used by members of the Soviet Central Committee.

In his welcoming remarks Dr. Seuk, president of IEF, shared his vision that such a curriculum eventually could be used for armed forces not only in Russia but also in other countries.

Gen. Chaldimov, vice rector of the academy, listed the major goals of the conference: 1) to discuss universal values; 2) to discuss the spiritual renewal of the armed forces; 3) to publish a book dedicated to developing the spirituality of the serviceman. He explained that since the fall of communism there had been no texts published on the spiritual development of the soldier. Previously Marxist ideology was the basis for such texts, but with the collapse of communism an ideological vacuum came to exist.

Presentations were divided among the military representatives and Unificationists. One Russian academician explained that after encountering the material provided by the Unification movement, he had stayed up all night to revise his presentation.

Jack Corley, executive director of IEF, spoke on True Father's life and Unification movement projects. William Haines, Unification Theological Seminary graduate and co-author of "My World & I," explained the "Spiritual and Moral Development of a Human Being." Dr. Anna Brzyska, a Russian co-author of "My World & I," spoke about the development of the high school curriculum project.

International Religious Foundation executive director Dr. Thomas Walsh explained the Unification Theory of Education and "Military Service and Family Life." Maj. Marcus Paine, who was in the U.S. armed forces for 17 years, spoke on "Spiritual and Moral Problems in the U.S. Military." Recent UTS graduates Franco Famularo and Andrzej Wadas presented aspects of Divine Principle.

Discussion topics included the meaning of global values, general social values and the values that govern military activity and duty. It was concluded that the target audience of the military curriculum text should be officers and soldiers. It was further agreed that representatives of the Unification movement would provide the book's general view of spirituality, while the Russian scholars would deal with specifics and how such values relate to the soldier. A tentative title for the book was agreed upon: "The Internal World of a Soldier."

Make 1995 a Landmark Year

by Deanna Cooper-Tasmania, Australia

In going the course of Tribal Messiah, we find ourselves with many large goals given to us by True Parents. At first glance, those goals seem rather daunting, and it is easy to feel that we can't meet them, even before we try.

As most of us are no longer single members, along with True Parents' main goals, we have the task of raising up our children, meeting our financial needs, and the small day-to-day tasks we would rather not have, such as doing the washing-up, and keeping our lawns mowed so the neighbors won't get upset.

With all the things our lives hold, it is easy to feel that bringing 12 members to the Blessing is fine for everyone else, but not me, or that our larger goal of forming our tribe is something so far beyond my reach that I put it out of my mind.

So, I pose the question, how can you and I put these goals into perspective and take the necessary steps towards accomplishing them without feeling defeated before we start? I have been praying and thinking about this for a while now, and would like to share some insights.

Something I have experienced deeply in this year of '94 is that we are not alone. Pledge #5 says that we pledge to advance positive development daily in order to unify the subject spiritual world with the object physical world. As children of True Parents, a natural fruit of our spiritual growth is that in time, according to each individual, the veil will be lifted that separates us from the spiritual world, and we will be more aware of their work in our lives.

Each one of us has a myriad of friends, angels, saints, relatives, and guides who accompany us on our spiritual journey. They work with us on a very internal and intimate level, and know us better than we know ourselves. Their viewpoint is broader than ours; they can see the whole picture, while we see only the part that concerns us. The key word here is "with". They work with us. We're a team. They cannot force us to go out witnessing, but when we go out with a serious heart, you can know with a surety that these invisible partners go before us to prepare the way.

Father has said many things about the reality of the spiritual world, even pushing us so that we too may have spiritual experiences as he has had. His spiritual growth has taken him to a point where he can commune with the two worlds with ease. He has achieved his rightful position as "ruler of both realms of the cosmos" and "medium of interaction and the center for the harmony of the Creation." He has achieved what we now strive to achieve as was written in Pledge #1 of the former pledge service: "As the center of the cosmos...."

Our growth will surely take us to the place where instead of "seeing through a mirror darkly" we will see face to face these things that our father speaks about. While maintaining the heart of a parent and grasping hold of the Divine Principle, the barriers in our lives will break down, and coupled with our sincerity and determination, nothing will be able to stop us from going forward.

My thoughts about our seemingly hard-to-reach goals encompass these principles which I have just shared. In my understanding, "the subject spiritual world" means that something is first created in the spiritual world before it emerges in the physical world as a reality. For instance, before we experience an illness in our physical bodies, the blockage or discrepancy first appears in our spiritual body, and if not taken care of, eventually manifests in our physical body.

So too, those things which we truly desire in the deepest levels of our being create a "spiritual template" for the thing or event to be manifested in the physical world. This is why fervent prayer helps to create desired results. Prayer is a concentration of our sincerity, a manifestation of our soul's deepest yearning. Thought also falls into this category, and this is why most spiritual disciplines stress purifying your thought-life. What you think about day-to-day is what you will create.

So how shall we bring 12 candidates to the Blessing-how shall we achieve the goal of restoring our tribe? I've come to the confusion that it is through our internal attitude of owning these goals, of becoming one with them, claiming the victory, and then making effort in conjunction with our spiritual helpers. As you walk into your witnessing area, you can speak to them, ask them to lead you to that prepared person. With your own spiritual sensitivity you can discern the direction you are to go in, and if you go with faith and without reservation, one hand holding on to Heaven and your feet on the earth, the way will be made clear, the goal will be achieved.

Introducing Rev. Farley Jones

Mrs. Nora Spurgin
President of the Women's Federation for World Peace

I've known Rev. and Mrs. Jones for many, many years. In fact, at the beginning I was studying Divine Principle here in New York City, and one night while I was hearing a lecture, there was a phone call from Farley Jones, and he was calling to find out when he could come and hear a lecture. I've known him ever since the very beginning. We both joined here in New York City.

After Mr. Jones joined the church, he became a pioneer in Berkeley, California working with Dr. Ang there. That was his first experience in the church, and his first experience witnessing. After that he moved to Washington, D.C., where he became the president of HSA. He was the president when Father began to work here in America. It was Mr. Jones who helped to set things up when Father first came to America. Actually it was a big transition to have Father working here with us.

After that, of course, Farley had many different missions. He was an IOWC commander, both in America and England. Mr. Jones also has a tremendous ability to write. He has a very clear, organized writing. Many of us have, whether we knew it or not, deeply benefited from the work that he offered to the church in the form of writing. He was the author and editor of the Home Study Course. He desired to make a very clear, succinct version of the truth of the Principle that could reach the American people, to give them an overview of the Principle. Certainly the Home Study Course is that and is very well written. He has had some numerous other works. He was very instrumental in helping me do the Insight booklet. Rev. Jones also was a member of the second class at the seminary.

Perhaps the richest experience in terms of preparing him for the Family Federation leadership is his hometown work. He went to his hometown thirteen years ago. Those of us who've gone out more recently know it is not easy and it is not short-term work. It's long-term, laying foundations, digging in the roots, and then bringing those roots to fruition. In the last few years the Joneses have been able to bring very many results there. In fact, I want to mention that last weekend, they had a workshop in their home, with twenty five guests. Here is one couple with a few other couples in Albany who brought twenty-five guests to their home and had a one-day workshop. To me that is what hometown providence - tribal messiahship - is all about, and they are a couple who really do represent a great victory on that level.

As State Leader couple of New York, they did tremendous work to make Mother's and True Childrens' speeches successful in Albany and throughout the state. I do deeply appreciate the work that they have done there spiritually. When Mr. Jones went to Albany, he first finished up law school, and then he took a position with his family's law practice.

Mr. Jones is not alone. I think we all know Mrs. Jones very well. She's been by his side all these years. She too has been very active in the church and has had many missions. For a number of years she was an itinerant worker traveling around the country helping people. That role was certainly not easy, as it required her to leave her children and husband for a period. Then, she worked in the Blessed Family Department for many years. She and I changed hats many times, but one of us was always in the Blessed Family Department.

The Joneses are a 777 Couple, blessed in 1970, and they are the parents of five children. They are the most beautiful kids and wonderful family. I am always so impressed with their children. Their son Matthew is at Williams College and their daughter Cara is at Princeton, and that daughter is now on a temporary leave of absence from school to join the Special Task Force out in Chicago - a wonderful girl. There are two children who are in Korea right now. So they only have one child at home now, the others are scattered around the country in different missions.

I am often impressed with the things the children do. A couple of years ago when they were all home, the two older children would gather all the younger ones every night and have a prayer meeting. It was their own prayer meeting. They just took the initiative to do these spiritual things. I remember Cara, their daughter, when she was ready to graduate from high school, she felt she wanted to share the Principle with her friends. She invited eight friends to come to their house, and she taught the Divine Principle to them. So these are the kind of children they've raised. I feel they have the real capacity to raise us as part of their family as well.

The things that I've been telling you are part of their tribal messiahship. Further, they have been the State Leaders in upstate New York. The key to that position was their having established tribal messiahship, and becoming really solid in their community, and from that they could come back and offer leadership to the church. I feel that that is really a model for all of us. Sometimes when we go out to do tribal messiahship and we have to put a lot of energy into just getting established out there it seems as if we've almost left the church. It's not true, but we do have to focus on establishing ourselves. Then once we get established, we come and offer leadership for the church. I think it's a beautiful model. That leads them right into the Family Federation. I feel that with Mr. and Mrs. Jones working in the Family Federation and Mrs. Jones responsible for the Blessed Family Department, there is a solid couple at the helm of this church. And I am deeply grateful for their faithfulness throughout the years, for their love for True Parents, and for their willingness to take responsibility. I'd like to introduce now Mr. and Mrs. Jones. Thank you very much.

Inaugural Ceremony for the Family Federation for Unification and World Peace - America Held in New York City

On the evening of November 22, 1994 the Family Federation for Unification and World Peace had its inaugural service in the main chapel at the Unification Church National Headquarters building in New York.

The emcee was Rev. Daryl Clarke, who serves as pastor for the Unification Church in Manhattan and Harlem. Mr. Robert Hall led singing, and a beautiful banner made by Terry MacMahon graced the chapel from above the stage. Dr. Frank Kaufmann, Executive Director of the Inter Religious Federation for World Peace, gave the opening prayer. As the leader of a sister organization to the Family Federation, Dr. Kaufmann's prayer signified the collegiality of the several Federations which Reverend and Mrs. Moon have established at the outset of the Completed Testament Age.

Dr. Tyler Hendricks, Vice-President of the Unification Church in America, then gave an opening address, introducing some points about the providential meaning of the Family Federation. This talk is excerpted in this Unification News, along with Reverend Moon's much more substantial explanation of the Family Federation.

Mrs. Nora Spurgin, President of the Women's Federation for World Peace, then introduced the presidential couple of the Family Federation, Reverend Farley Jones and Mrs. Betsy Jones. Her remarks are also reprinted in this issue.

Reverend Jones then took the podium and delivered his opening address as our new Family Federation President. His talk was in large part autobiographical, because his exact mandate as leader of this newly- founded organization is not precisely defined. Nonetheless, his attitude of faith and desire to serve the country is the true foundation for victory in the new responsibility accepted by his couple. His address is also excerpted in this issue.

Reverend Clarke then introduced Mr. Bill Lay and Mrs. Lisa Lay, who are the directing couple for the Family Federation of New York Region. As is Reverend Jones, Mr. Lay is a practicing lawyer; Rev. Jones working in Albany, New York and Mr. Lay on Wall Street. Mr. Lay's remarks drew a good bit of laughter from the audience, as he traced his family's repetition of the Jones's course over the past few years (see excerpt).

Mrs. Spurgin gave the closing prayer, and after the singing of the holy song, "Song of the Banquet," Rev. Jones led a rousing mansai to close the service. A lively reception followed in the 4 West 43rd Street lobby.

Holy Song Competition

by Dr Tyler O. Hendricks-NYC

Our church has a tradition of beautiful holy songs. These songs are unique, representing some deep insights into the heart of God and the way of restoration through tears of True Love. Also they uphold the highest ideals and boldest vision of God's kingdom coming through our hard work.

"Marching on heavenly soldiers/ Marching on with His love/ Uniting in life eternal/ With our God in Heaven and earth"

To fulfill the ideal of God's creation

Some of our holy songs are derived from the Christian tradition. One of the most well-known is "Song of the Garden", a hymn sung by the Scotch-Irish Presbyterians of the Appalachian mountains. "Spring of Life" also has a distinctly western flavor. Others, such as "The Father's Dwelling Place", are Korean traditional melodies with new words. Most, however, are original songs written by our church members, with several by Reverend Moon himself.

The melodies of these songs are unique, as far as my limited knowledge extends. They are not simple, but cascade through surprising shifts and turns. I told my wife, who is Korean, that these melodies are very unusual to western ears, and are they typically Korean? She said no, they sound unusual to Korean ears also!

We have a collection of 40 songs in the American holy song book. The Japanese holy song book and the Korean holy song book many more. These song books include Christian hymns and other songs which came from members and never crossed the Pacific Ocean.

We now want to increase the number and variety of American and western holy songs. To accomplish this in 1995, Reverend Joong Hyun Pak is calling for a holy song competition here in America--and to include of course the international readership of Unification News. Here are the ground rules:

(a) Send us a tape and lyrics of your song. The tape should not be overly orchestrated, but should allow us to hear the basic song as members would sing it.

(b) It must be either 1. an original song, written to the glory of God and True Parents work on the earth; 2. any song, especially a hymn, for which HSA can obtain copyright.

(c) A panel of judges will evaluate all submissions.

(d) The best songs will be published in a new holy song book in 1996.

(e) The top three songs will receive cash prizes in December, 1995.

(f) Deadline for submissions is May 1st, 1995

(g) Mail to: Dr. Hendricks, HSA Song Contest, 4 West 43rd, NY NY 10036.