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A sacred text of Jeungism, the original Dojeon was published in Korean on October 25, 1992. The Dojeon has been translated into eight languages, including
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and
Chinese Chinese can refer to: * Something related to China * Chinese people, people of Chinese nationality, citizenship, and/or ethnicity **''Zhonghua minzu'', the supra-ethnic concept of the Chinese nation ** List of ethnic groups in China, people of va ...
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Background

Over one hundred years ago, Sangjenim (God the Father) was the first in all of Eastern and Western history to proclaim and fully describe the Later Heaven
Gaebyeok Gaebyeok ( ko, 開闢, the "great opening", literally "opening dawn") is a sudden change in nature, society and people in the Korean religion of Jeungism or Jeung San Do.Robert Pearson Flaherty. 2021. "Jeungsando." In James Crossley and Alastair ...
. The precept of Gaebyeok applies to heaven and earth and to the realms of humanity and spirits, and it answers the mysteries of nature, explains the secrets of civilization, and resolves the limitations of Eastern and Western religions and philosophies. After Sangjenim's ascension to heaven, the truth of gaebyeok was widely disseminated by the successor of His Dao lineage and authority, Taemonim (God the Mother). The original Dojeon was published in Korean on October 25, 1992, for the 122nd commemoration of Sangjenim's birth, and it entailed twenty years of extensive research and fieldwork by Jeung San Do practitioners as they compiled the written and oral testimonies of Sangjenim's and Taemonim's disciples, the disciples’ descendants, and the disciples’ students. The publication of the 2003 revised edition took an additional eleven years of effort involving further research and extensive review of old and new testimonials to verify and discover dates, sites, events, and people related to Sangjenim's and Taemonim's works of renewing heaven and earth. The foreign-language translations of the Dojeon are based mostly on the 1992 Korean edition. Thus, the Dojeon represents thirty years of dedication by many people; it is the culmination of Jeung San Do's culture.


Content

Arranged in eleven chapters, the Dojeon spans Sangjenim's and Taemonim's lives, their work, their disciples, the principle upon which the universe evolves, the ultimate destiny of humanity, the existence of spirits, meditation, the times we live in, the coming civilization, and much more. Through the Dojeon, the reader can begin the process of understanding Jeung San Do's Eight Teachings: * Sangjenim (The supreme God) * Cosmology (the way of universe, Cosmic year) * Humanity * Spirits and Meditation ( Tae Eul Ju meditation) * The work of renewing heaven and earth (Human history) 天地公事 * Autumn
Gaebyeok Gaebyeok ( ko, 開闢, the "great opening", literally "opening dawn") is a sudden change in nature, society and people in the Korean religion of Jeungism or Jeung San Do.Robert Pearson Flaherty. 2021. "Jeungsando." In James Crossley and Alastair ...
and Salvation * The Subu (
Tao ''Tao'' or ''Dao'' is the natural order of the universe, whose character one's intuition must discern to realize the potential for individual wisdom, as conceived in the context of East Asian philosophy, East Asian religions, or any other phil ...
Lineage and Authority) * The Ilggun (Workers) of work under heaven The Dojeon records the true path that will allow the people of the world to survive the Later Heaven
Gaebyeok Gaebyeok ( ko, 開闢, the "great opening", literally "opening dawn") is a sudden change in nature, society and people in the Korean religion of Jeungism or Jeung San Do.Robert Pearson Flaherty. 2021. "Jeungsando." In James Crossley and Alastair ...
and enter the new civilization of immortality. This makes the Dojeon history's greatest gift-a sacred text of life, not filled with words of despair and tears, but with a radiant and vivid vision of joy and hope for a future that transcends the limitations of modern civilization. But to appreciate the Dojeon's sacred truth, one must first understand Sangjenim and Taemonim.


See also

*
Boeun Boeun County (''Boeun-gun'') is a county in North Chungcheong Province, South Korea. History Boeun ( literally "offering gratitude" or "thanksgiving"), was a South Korean town named in 1406 by a remorseful King Taejong, who felt relieved that he ...
(Offering Gratitude and Repayment) 報恩 * Cosmic Year **
Shao Yung Shao (; Cantonese Romanisation: Shiu; Gwoyeu Romatzyh: Shaw) is a common Chinese family name. It is the 86th most populous family name in China. It corresponds to last name So in Korean; "Thiệu" or "Thiều" in Vietnamese; “Zau” in Wu Chinese ...
*
Dojang ''Dojang'' is a term used in Korean martial arts, such as Taekwondo, Tang Soo Do, Kuk Sool Won, and hapkido, that refers to a formal training hall. It is typically considered the formal gathering place for students of a martial art to conduc ...
Dao center 道場 *
Gaebyeok Gaebyeok ( ko, 開闢, the "great opening", literally "opening dawn") is a sudden change in nature, society and people in the Korean religion of Jeungism or Jeung San Do.Robert Pearson Flaherty. 2021. "Jeungsando." In James Crossley and Alastair ...
* Haewon (Resolution of Bitterness and Grief) 解怨 *
Jeung San Do Jeung San Do (), occasionally called Jeungsanism ( ''Jeungsangyo''), meaning "The Dao/Tao of Jeung-san", although this term is better reserved for a larger family of movements, is a new religious movement founded in South Korea in 1974. It is one ...
* Sangjenim 上帝 * Sangsaeng (Mutual life-giving) 相生 * Tae Eul Ju mantra 太乙呪 * Taemonim 太母 * Wonsibanbon (Returning to the Origin) 原始反本


External links


Dojeon Online (Korean original)

Dojeon Online (English translation)
Jeung San Do Religious texts