• Cha Gyung-suk’s Greed and Hidden Intentions
  • By 1916 and 1917, when the organization was thriving,
  • Cha Gyung-suk had become greedy for control over it.
  • When Tae-mo-nim instructed Gyung-suk and other senior followers on what they should teach and how they should manage the organization,
  • and when She gave instruction on morality, conduct, and meditation,
  • Gyung-suk feigned compliance, always hiding his true intentions.
  • First, he alienated Sahng-jeh-nim’s disciples from the other followers;
  • then, pretending to be a devout disciple of Tae-mo-nim, he hung a blind made of beads in Her doorway as a sign of honor, when, in fact, he was trying to estrange Her from the followers.
  • Some disciples, who saw through Gyung-suk’s intentions, left the center in outrage, met with followers in other areas, and founded separate organizations.
  • Others campaigned to move Tae-mo-nim’s center to a different location to get Her away from Gyung-suk.

  • (JSD Dojeon 11,31)




    No Records.