image for article on blessing ceremony

Unification Church launches mass wedding ceremonies across racial and national lines

In 1961 C.E., a small gathering of 36 couples stood before Sun Myung Moon and his wife Hak Ja Han in Seoul, South Korea, and took part in something that would grow into one of the most visually striking — and theologically ambitious — marriage rituals of the modern era. The Unification Church’s Holy Marriage Blessing Ceremony was born, rooted in the belief that love across borders could heal what centuries of division had broken.

What the evidence shows

  • Blessing ceremony: The first Holy Marriage Blessing was held in Seoul in 1961 C.E. for 36 couples, all members of the Unification Church, matched by founder Sun Myung Moon.
  • Interracial marriage ritual: The ceremonies were explicitly designed to pair couples across racial, national, and religious lines — a direct theological statement about peace through family.
  • Mass wedding scale: By the 1990s C.E., the Blessing had expanded beyond church members to include couples of other faiths, with some ceremonies involving tens of thousands of participants worldwide.

A theology of family as peace

The Unification Church, officially founded in 1954 C.E. in South Korea, built its entire worldview around the family as the fundamental unit of peace. Where most religious traditions hold marriage as sacred, the Unification Church went further: it framed the marriage bond between people of different nationalities and races as a direct act of reconciliation.

Sun Myung Moon taught that human suffering — war, poverty, family breakdown — traced back to “original sin” corrupting the first family. The Blessing ceremony was designed to reverse that lineage, spiritually reconnecting couples and their children to what the church called “God’s sinless lineage.”

Whether or not one shares the theology, the sociological reality was striking. In 1988 C.E., Moon matched 2,500 Korean members with Japanese members — two nations whose 20th-century history was defined by colonialism and wartime atrocity. The pairing was deliberate. The ceremony was a bid, however imperfect, to write a different kind of history through the most intimate of human bonds.

From Seoul to Madison Square Garden

The 1961 C.E. ceremony was modest by later standards. But the idea scaled rapidly. By 1982 C.E., the first large Blessing ceremony outside Korea took place at Madison Square Garden in New York City — a global audience watching couples from dozens of countries exchange vows together.

The image became iconic and controversial in equal measure. Western media often focused on the spectacle: strangers matched by a religious leader, marrying people they had sometimes never met. Critics raised legitimate questions about consent and autonomy, and those concerns deserve to be taken seriously.

But scholars studying the ceremonies noted something else alongside the controversy. For many participants, the Blessing represented a genuine expression of faith that transcended nationalist identity at a time when the Cold War was drawing hard lines between peoples. The ceremonies drew co-officiators from Jewish, Muslim, and Christian traditions — an unusual form of interfaith cooperation organized around the act of marriage.

Lasting impact

The Blessing ceremony reshaped how at least one significant religious movement understood the relationship between marriage, peacebuilding, and global community. By the 1990s C.E., the church had extended the Blessing beyond its own membership, allowing couples of any faith — or no faith — to participate in what it framed as a universal human ritual.

The model also influenced how some scholars and religious thinkers approached the question of interreligious and interracial marriage as a social good. The idea that marriage could be a form of diplomacy — that love across former boundaries was a political act — found echoes in broader conversations about family as a foundation for global peace at institutions including the United Nations.

By the time of the largest ceremonies in the 1990s C.E. and 2000s C.E., hundreds of thousands of couples from across the world had participated. The Unification Church built a rare infrastructure for what it called “international families” — households where the Cold War’s national divisions were literally sleeping under one roof.

The practice also left a documentary record. Coverage in major international newspapers meant that the ceremonies became one of the most-photographed religious marriage rituals in history, a strange kind of archive of human beings choosing across lines that history had drawn between them.

Blindspots and limits

The Blessing ceremony was not without serious problems. Reports of members being matched without meaningful choice over their partner, and concerns about high-pressure recruitment into the church, shadowed the ceremonies throughout their history. The Unification Church faced significant legal and political scrutiny in multiple countries, particularly Japan, where family members of members filed large-scale civil suits over financial exploitation.

The theological claim that children born into Blessed families were free from original sin created its own pressures on those children — a generation raised with expectations they did not choose. The gap between the ceremony’s vision of peace through family and the lived reality of some of those families is real, and it matters.

No account of this ritual is complete without acknowledging that the organization generated lasting controversy in several of the very nations where its cross-cultural marriages were celebrated as acts of reconciliation.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Blessing ceremony of the Unification Church

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