Every source,
in one place.
The Divine Principle, the full speech corpus, William Haines’ complete catalogue, and the longer arc of providential history — read from the primary sources, not summaries of them.
- Books
- 321
- Speeches
- 19,245
- William Haines
- 266
- Glossary terms
- 36
Find any passage in the corpus.
Books, chapters, speeches, glossary entries, topics — all indexed in one keystroke. Looking for someone’s story? Search the testimonies.
Start with the text itself.
Books & Speeches
The Divine Principle, Cheon Seong Gyeong, Chambumo Gyeong and more — 321 books plus the full 19,245-speech corpus, readable in full.
The Principle workshop
The Divine Principle taught as a sequence — the full lecture series, in order, from Creation to the Second Advent.
Scripture for kids
Plain-English retellings of the Divine Principle, Cheon Seong Gyeong and Chambumo Gyeong, written for children and families.
Unification glossary
36 core terms defined — the vocabulary you need to read anything else here.
The questions you came with, taken seriously.
~30 questions, honestly answered
Grace, atonement, the Trinity, the resurrection, hell — answered from scripture, without dodging the hard parts.
New Expressions of Truth
Judaism, Christianity and the Divine Principle across 15 topics — what each tradition says, in its own words.
The Christian library
Longer-form essays for readers thinking through mainstream Christianity and the Divine Principle together.
What people get wrong
The claims that circulate about the movement, checked against the primary record.
The long arc, and the man who mapped it.
The complete catalogue
266 lectures, papers and workshops — decades of deep research, indexed and readable end to end.
The restoration arc
Biblical and post-biblical history read as a single restoration arc — fall, foundation, completion.
The Moon family timeline
Side-by-side lives of Rev. Sun Myung Moon (1920-2012) and Dr. Hak Ja Han Moon (1943- ), straight from the two autobiographies.
The movement, nation by nation
How the movement took root country by country — the UK, Europe, Canada, Poland, and the earliest years.
Theology is what they believed. This is who they were.
Every doctrine on this wiki was lived by someone. Their testimonies and memorials live on the main site — first-hand, in their own words.