Unification Church Woos A Second Generation

Josh Schanker, 20, and Marina Shimoyama, 19, were “matched” by their parents. - Although Josh Schanker, 20, and Marina Shimoyama, 19, were "matched" by their parents, they were allowed to help make the selection. They were married at the mass blessing ceremony in Korea on Wednesday. (Barbara Bradley Hagerty / NPR)
The Rev. Sun Myung Moon carried out one of the signature events of his church on Wednesday: He blessed about 7,000 couples in Seoul, South Korea — most of whom never saw each other before they were matched.
Some members believe this might be one of the last mass weddings conducted by the nonagenarian founder of the controversial Unification Church, whose membership has dwindled in recent years. Now the church is focusing on keeping its young believers in the fold.
New Ways Of Matching
On a bitterly cold Friday night in January, more than 100 members of the Unification Church crowd into a classroom in the church seminary in upstate New York. The heat is turned on low, but the air is electric as the believers, ranging from late teens to early 20s, gather for the first of many workshops on Unification marriage.
Men are on one side of the room, women on the other. Matched or engaged couples sit at the back. They open with songs from the '60s — "Eight Days a Week" and "If I Had a Hammer" — anthems from their parents' generation. These are "blessed children" — according to church doctrine, they were born without original sin because their parents were married by Moon, whom they consider the Messiah.
One of those children is Roderick Miller, a senior at the University of Pennsylvania who will attend Harvard Law School next year. He's not dating anyone — his church doesn't allow it — and he believes that is the key to a successful marriage.
"I'm not really interested in random flings with different girls," he says. "Ultimately, what I want is a happy and successful family, and a loving relationship with someone with whom I can share my life."
Moon matched Roderick's father, Wayne, in 1979 to a French graduate student in a mass ceremony. Wayne says he "won the lottery."
"We've had our arguments over the years, like all married couples," Wayne says. "But in some 30 years of engagement and married life, we've never argued about anything important."
Roderick will not be married by Moon. Recently, the church began allowing parents to match their children, and Roderick will have a strong influence in the person they select. But Roderick says the church's emphasis on commitment is the same.
"And I think that commitment to commitment — the idea of commitment in relationships and to creating really strong, ideal families — has certainly benefited me enormously, tremendously, beyond words," Roderick says.
He says having a marriage like his parents' is "the end game." And the church wants to help him get there.
The History Of The Movement
During the pre-marriage workshop in January, family department director Phillip Schanker laid out the road map to a happy Unification marriage: no sex (or dating) before marriage, selflessness, service and the strength to weather all relationship storms.
That road map was first drawn by Moon, who says that Jesus appeared to him when he was a poor teenager, and told him to finish Jesus' mission. According to Moon, Jesus said that his crucifixion and early death were not supposed to occur; rather, Jesus had been meant to marry and raise a family. Moon says he was charged with completing that mission by raising the perfect family as a model for the world.
Moon's message of family and world peace arrived on American shores in the 1960s. It inspired an army of young people to drop out of college, live in vans and raise funds for the church. In its heyday, the church drew national headlines for conducting mass weddings and dabbling in conservative politics.
The young believers at the marriage workshop wear this history as a badge of honor. Sure, they know some people view their church as a cult, and they bristle at the term "Moonie." They know their parents were ostracized — and some deprogrammed — for following their Korean Messiah. But 19-year-old Renee Martinez says they had to.
"When the movement was first starting, Rev. Moon was a revolutionary," she says. "It was so different in the hippie era. People were talking about free love, and our church comes around, and we're talking about abstinence. So, of course, our parents had to be radical."
Going Mainstream
But the church has a different plan for the second generation, says Carrie Pimental, 18.
"Our parents built the foundation, and after that, we're, like, building the walls and finishing it up," she says. "So basically, our goal is to be successful, have families, and have an impact on the world by doing great things and being good people."
Today, the church wants college valedictorians, not dropouts, says Schanker's son Josh, who plans to be a consultant once he's graduated from Boston College. The church wants the second generation to fit into society — not fight it.
"I mean, I want to be very wealthy and very successful and have a good education," Josh says. He and his parents have similar dreams, he says: "To create a beautiful, beautiful family, and to raise children with good character and good relationships with their family."
Struggling With Membership
No one knows how many Unificationists there are worldwide. In the U.S., estimates range from 15,000 to 25,000. But the numbers have dropped since the 1970s, in part because many "blessed" children have left the fold. Jason Agress left when he was 14, after he began dating a girl over his parents' objections.
"Everything was a system of control," he says. "That's what it seemed to me like. They were kind of breeding us to be a certain way. And if you weren't that way, there was something wrong with you."
D.F. Spratt agrees. She asked that her full name not be used because she worries the stigma of being once associated with the church could hurt her career. Spratt says she used to have nightmares about being married in a mass blessing to someone she didn't know. The pressure of being blessed, and so different from her peers, drove her away — though with some trepidation.
"Back then, if you left the church, you fell off the face of the earth," she says. "It's the worst thing you could do. One person told us at Sunday school once that blessed children who fall out of the church go to a box underneath of hell."
Winning Members Back
Now the church wants to win these people back, since it is easier to reignite the faith of people familiar with the unusual doctrine than to win converts outside of the faith. James Beverley, a professor at Tyndale Seminary in Canada and associate director of the Institute for the Study of American Religion in Santa Barbara, says converting non-Unificationists is a "hard sell."
"When you tell the average Christian in North America that Rev. Moon is the fulfillment of the second coming, and that Jesus failed [in his mission to have a family and bring world peace]," Beverley says, "that message doesn't help you go very far."
So, how does the church go about wooing back those who have wandered from the faith? Phillip Schanker says the first step is acknowledging the excesses of the past.
"Although we talk universal love and the value of the family, we sacrificed our families to the extreme," he says. "And that was Rev. Moon's emphasis. He saw himself as a person who would sacrifice to create a family and gather followers, and then he asked them to sacrifice. He put his kids through hell — like Gandhi. Gandhi did the same thing in order to move India. Rev. Moon is trying to move the world."
Schanker and his generation felt an "apocalyptic" urgency to heed Moon's call, by going on missions for years at a time, fundraising for the church, and forgoing their education. But the church has turned 180 degrees, he says.
"My oldest son is in Harvard Medical School. He was valedictorian at Boston University," Schanker says. "My daughters are doing great things. I've got two other sons on full scholarships. That's definitely what we've encouraged them to do, and we hope they can not only make Unificationism great, but contribute to the world."
In this, the church is taking a page from another new religious movement: the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or Mormons, who are growing by leaps and bounds in part because of their economic success. As to style of worship, the Unification Church is looking to yet another model: the evangelical megachurch.
New Leadership
On a recent Sunday morning, 1,200 Unificationists fill the cavernous ballroom at the Manhattan Center in New York City. They leap to their feet and wave their arms as a rock band plays a mix of Fleetwood Mac and worship music with a thumping beat. They fall silent as the lights dim, and burst into applause when, theatrically, a single light comes up to reveal a woman behind a podium.
"How are you this morning?" asks In Jin Moon. "I bring you greetings from True Parents," she says, referring to Sun Myung Moon and his wife, Hak Ja Han.
She speaks without notes for 40 minutes, weaving personal anecdotes with references to the Bible, Aristotle and Christian leaders. She is the 44-year-old daughter of Sun Myung Moon, and a graduate of Harvard Divinity School. When her father appointed her to head the U.S. church 18 months ago, she focused on one simple goal: to win back young people.
"Well," she says laughing, "it's been quite challenging."
In her first interview with a reporter since taking over the church, she tells NPR that a major challenge came from the Asian church elders, who were upset that a woman was selected to run the American church. Then, they balked at her vision: a national church, which she calls Lovin' Life Ministries, based in New York City, with smaller satellite churches.
In Jin Moon replaced the old holy songs with rock 'n' roll, and fluorescent lighting with concert lighting and a giant video screen.
"I think a lot of the leaders wanted to put an end to Lovin' Life after the first couple of weeks, but we just kept at it," she says.
She did so because she faced a problem that plagues even established churches: How do you transmit the passion of a convert to a child who merely inherits the faith?
"The first generation made a conscious decision to join, in that they had a conversion experience," she says. "They had some kind of spiritual experience that made them feel, 'This is what I want to do, this is where I want to be.' Whereas for those of us — myself included — who were born into this movement or born into this family, we had no choice in the matter."
Strategies To Bring People Back
So In Jin Moon did what the evangelicals do: She used music and technology to spark spiritual experiences. She says it is working.
"Some have called it 'electricity running through my body, feeling of warmth — just feeling as if they're engulfed in love,'" she says. "For those kids who come and have that conversion experience, then their belief system becomes theirs."
Since In Jin took over, weekly attendance has nearly doubled. The question is: Can these bells and whistles woo back former members? For her part, D.F. Spratt, who is happily married to a non-Unification member, sees no reason to return.
"I don't believe in the theology," she says. "And I don't think there's necessarily anything missing or wrong in my present life. So if I felt there was a void and I needed to fill it, maybe that would help. But I don't."
But the church hopes that as it adopts an American style — in finding one's mate and worshipping in church — the second generation will carry the Unification Church into the mainstream.
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MELISSA BLOCK, host:
This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Melissa Block.
Today, Reverend Sun Myung Moon held one of the signature events of his controversial Unification Church. He married some 14,000 people in Seoul, South Korea and another 43,000 worldwide by satellite. But the mass wedding comes at a difficult time for the church. Reverend Moon is now 90 years old, and membership in the U.S. has dwindled.
As NPR's Barbara Bradley Hagerty reports, that has church leaders trying to connect with a new generation.
BARBARA BRADLEY HAGERTY: It's after 9:00 on a Friday night at the Unification Church seminary in upstate New York. The air is electric as more than 100 church members in their late teens and early 20s, opened the first of many workshops on Unification marriage.
(Soundbite of music)
Unidentified Man #1: Here we go, eight days a week.
(Singing) Ooh I need your love, babe, guess you know it's true.
HAGERTY: Men are on one side of the room, women on the other. Matched or engaged couples sit at the back. According to church doctrine, these are blessed children. That is, born without original sin because their parents were married by Reverend Moon, whom they consider the Messiah.
One of them is Roderick Miller, a senior at the University of Pennsylvania who's going to Harvard Law School next year. He's not dating anyone, his church doesn't allow it, which he believes is the key to a successful marriage.
Mr. RODERICK MILLER: I'm not really interested in random flings with, you know, different girls. Ultimately, what I want is a happy and successful family and a loving relationship with somebody, you know, with whom I can share my life.
HAGERTY: He says it worked for his parents. They were matched by Reverend Moon in a mass blessing ceremony in 1979, and they adore each other.
Roderick won't be married by Reverend Moon. Recently, the church began allowing parents to match their children. But he says the church's emphasis on commitment, no matter what, is the same.
Mr. MILLER: And I think that commitment to commitment the idea of commitment in relationships into creating really strong, ideal families has certainly benefited me enormously, tremendously beyond words.
HAGERTY: So you'd like a marriage like theirs.
Mr. MILLER: Absolutely. That's the end game.
Mr. PHILLIP SCHANKER (Director, Blessed Family Department, Unification Church): We're not here this weekend to talk about a whole bunch of church rules. We're here to talk about what's meaningful.
HAGERTY: During the marriage workshop, Family Department Director Phillip Schanker lays out the road map to a happy Unification marriage. The roadmap was drawn by Sun Myung Moon who says that Jesus appeared to him when Moon was a poor Korean teenager and told him to finish Jesus' mission: To raise a perfect family as a model for the world.
Moon brought his message to the U.S. in the 1960s, inspiring an army of young people to drop out of college, live in vans and fundraise for the church. In its heyday, the church drew national headlines for conducting mass weddings and dabbling in conservative politics.
Over breakfast, young believers wear this history as a badge of honor. Sure, they know their church is viewed as a cult and loath the term Moonie. They know their parents were ostracized and some deprogrammed for following their Korean Messiah. But Renee Martinez says they had to.
Ms. RENEE MARTINEZ: Basically, I mean, when the movement was first starting, Reverend Moon was, you know, he's a revolutionary. It was just so different in the hippie era, you know, when people were talking about free love and our church comes around and we talk about abstinence. It was so different. So, of course, our parents had so many different oppositions. They had to be radical.
BLOCK: But the church has a different plan for the second generation. Josh Schanker - Phillip's son - says today the church wants college valedictorians, not dropouts and wants his generation to fit into society, not fight it.
Mr. JOSH SCHANKER: I mean, I want to be very wealthy and be very successful and, you know, have a good education. I think the thing that's so similar to me and my parents' dreams, like, is to create a beautiful, beautiful family and to raise children with good character and with good relationships with their family.
HAGERTY: Now, no one knows how many Unificationists there are worldwide. Here in the U.S., estimates range from 15,000 to 25,000. But the numbers have dropped since the 1970s, in part because many blessed children have left the fold - people such as D.F. Spratt, a graduate student in Maryland, who asked that her full name not be used.
She worries that the stigma of being once associated with the church could affect her career. Spratt says the pressure of being blessed and so different from her peers, drove her away, though with trepidation.
Ms. D.F. SPRATT: Back then, it was like, if you left the church, you fell off the face of the earth. It's the worst thing in the world you can do. One person even told us at Sunday school once, blessed children who fall out of the church go to a box underneath of hell.
HAGERTY: Now the church wants to win these people back. How to do that? Well, Phillip Schanker says the first step is to acknowledge the excesses of the past.
Mr. P. SCHANKER: Although we talk universal love and the value of the family, we sacrificed our families to the extreme.
HAGERTY: By going on missions for years at a time, fundraising for the church, foregoing their education, Schanker says the church has turned 180 degrees.
Mr. P. SCHANKER: My oldest son is in Harvard Med School. I've got two other sons on full scholarships. That's definitely what we've encouraged them to do. And we hope that they can not only make Unificationism great, but contribute to the world.
HAGERTY: In this, the church is taking a page from another new religious movement - the Mormons who are growing by leaps and bounds - in part because of their economic success. And for its style, the church seems to be looking to yet another model: the megachurch.
(Soundbite of music)
Unidentified Man #2: Good morning, brothers and sisters. Welcome to Lovin' Life Ministries.
HAGERTY: Twelve hundred people leap to their feet. They fill the huge ballroom of the Manhattan Center in New York City on this Sunday morning.
Unidentified Man #3: (Singing) I tell you right now, all I want you to know...
HAGERTY: They wave their arms and cheer the band, then hush as the lights fall. Slowly, a single light comes up to reveal a woman behind a podium.
(Soundbite of applause)
Dr. IN JIN MOON (Unification Church): How is everybody this Sunday morning? Good. So happy to see you once again.
HAGERTY: In Jin Moon speaks without notes for 40 minutes. She's the 44-year-old daughter of Sun Myung Moon and a graduate of Harvard Divinity School. When her father appointed her to head the U.S. church 18 months ago, she focused on one simple goal: To win back the young people.
Dr. MOON: Well...
(Soundbite of laughter)
Dr. MOON: ...it's been quite challenging.
HAGERTY: In her first interview with a reporter since taking over the church, she tells NPR that the Asian church leaders were upset that a woman was selected to run the American church. Then they balked at her vision: A national church, which she calls Lovin' Life, based in New York City. She replaced the old holy songs with rock and roll, fluorescent lighting with concert lighting and a giant video screen.
Dr. MOON: I think a lot of the leaders wanted to put an end to Lovin' Life after the first couple weeks, but we just kept at it.
HAGERTY: In Jin Moon did so because she faces a problem that plagues even established churches: How to transmit the passion of a convert to a child who merely inherits the faith?
Dr. MOON: We never had a conversion experience. We never made that decision.
HAGERTY: So she did what the evangelicals do. She used music and technology to spark spiritual experiences in young people. She says it's working.
Dr. MOON: Some have called it electricity running through my body, feeling of warmth, just feeling as if they're engulfed in total love. For those kids who come and have that conversion experience, then their movement and their belief system becomes theirs.
HAGERTY: Since In Jin Moon took over, weekly attendance has nearly doubled. The question is: Can these bells and whistles woo back former members? For her part, D.F. Spratt says no, there's nothing missing in her present life.
Ms. SPRATT: So if I felt like there was a void and I needed to fill it, maybe that would help, but I don't.
HAGERTY: But the church hopes that as it adopts an American style in finding your mate and worshipping in church, the second generation will carry the Unification Church into the mainstream.
(Soundbite of song, "Don't Stop")
Unidentified People: (Singing) Don't stop thinking about tomorrow.
HAGERTY: Barbara Bradley Hagerty, NPR News.
(Soundbite of song, "Don't Stop")
Unidentified People: (Singing) We'll be here better than before. Yesterday's gone. Yesterday's gone. Don't stop thinking about tomorrow. Don't stop. It'll soon be here. Will be here better than before. Yesterday's gone. Yesterday's gone. Don't you look back.
Unidentified Man #4: Here we go.
Unidentified People: (Singing) Ooh, don't you look back. Ooh... Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright National Public Radio.









