Son’s Death Shakes Up Sect

Young Jin (Phillip) Moon, son of Unification Church leader Sun Myung Moon, fell to his death from the seventeenth floor of a Reno, Nevada, hotel October 27.

Young Jin's death, ruled a suicide in preliminary police reports, has created a new round of turmoil for church members. The church experienced intense media attention last year after the release of Nan sook Hong's In the Shadow of the Moons, an exposé of her former marriage to Moon's oldest son, Hyo Jin Moon (CT, Nov. 16, 1998, p. 20).

Young Jin, born in 1978, was in Nevada to pursue a career in hotel management.

Sun Myung Moon, who founded the Unification Church in 1954, told church members in a sermon November 14 that his son's death was a "providential" accident and not a suicide.

Moon dispatched three top aides to Nevada to investigate his son's death and prepare the body for burial in Reno. After Moon concluded that his son did not commit suicide, the casket was exhumed and a formal Unification funeral was held in Seoul on November 10.

Rumors have circulated among Unificationists that evil spirits pushed Young Jin off the balcony. Church members also have spoken of supernatural events during Young Jin's Nevada burial. And some church critics suggest that his death is creating a schism.

But church official Phillip Schanker, who has been with the church since 1972, says there are no signs of internal revolt, and allegations about a demonic murder or miracles at the graveside are "absolute speculation." Schanker confirms reports that Young Jin's two-year marriage was in trouble, but he says Young Jin showed no signs of depression.

Moon says God allowed his son to die as a "sacrifice" so that Satan could not make a direct attack on the True Parents [the Unification term for Moon and his wife, Hak Ja Han].

Donna Collins, a prominent ex-member, told CT that "it is impossible to reconcile" Unification ideals about Moon and his wife "with the neglect of their own children." She says that "the Unification path is rife with bodies" and that "the majority of the kids I grew up with in the movement were suicidal."

J. Gordon Melton, one of America's leading scholars of new religions, says that "the tragic death of Young Jin, in light of other recent revelations about the less than ideal conditions in Rev. Moon's own family, challenges the seriousness of the Unification Church's call for a family-oriented program to reform society."

Copyright © 2000 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

How God Won When Politics Failed

Tim Stafford

Cover Story

The Forgiveness Factor

Gary Thomas

Things We Ought to Know

reviewed by Harold O. J. Brown

Letters to the Editor: January 10, 2000

It Takes a Village to Fight Divorce

Why We Like Harry Potter

A Christianity Today Editorial

Forgive and Remember

Author Wendy Shalit Is Proud to Be Modest

A conversation between Lauren F. Winner and Wendy Shalit

In the Word: On the Receiving End

Cornelius Plantinga Jr.

Take, Eat—But How Often?

Craig S. Keener

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from January 10, 2000

Popular Culture: The Film Dogma Is Anti-Dogma

Douglas LeBlanc

Time for a Change

In Print: Beyond Do-Goodism

New & Noteworthy: Christian Living

Beating the Odds

Setting Captives Free

Jody Veenker

Chasing Amy

Taming the Reformation

Douglas A. Sweeney

Out of the Ashes

John W. Kennedy in Riobamba

Paying for Free Speech

Gordon Govier in Madison, Wisconsin

New Bibles Carry Hefty Price Tags

Wire Story

Sudan: CSI Loses U.N. Status

Religion News Service

Wire Story

Methodists: Creech stripped of clergy credentials

Religion News Service

Presbyterians Support Same-Sex Unions

Top Ten Religion Stories of the Decade

Selected by CT Editors and Writers

Updates: January 10, 2000

Children's Literature: Parents Push for Wizard-free Reading

David Keim

People: North America

Wire Story

Baptist Foundation of America Lands in Bankruptcy Court

Herb Hollinger, Baptist Press

Higher Education: Crumbling Family Values

Douglas LeBlanc

Nigeria: Islamic Law Raises Tensions

Obed Minchakpu in Jos, Nigeria, with Compas Direct

Costa Rica: Coffee Sales Perk Up Ministry Support

Deann Alford

Briefs: The World

Northern Ireland: Peace at Last?

Mary Cagney

Smorgasbord Spirituality

James A. Beverley in Cape Town

India: Loving the Lepers

By Anto Ankara in New Delhi, Ecumenical News International

View issue

Our Latest

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Anquan Boldin: From the Muck to the Movement

What it means to move from the field to the fight and to pursue justice when it becomes personal.

Jonathan McReynolds Fuses Gospel Music with ’80s Pop in ‘Closer’

A conversation with the Grammy-winning artist about fame, intimacy with God, and the music of the neon decade.

Review

Martin Scorsese Presents ‘Mary’ for a Secular Age

The renowned filmmaker’s new episode of his Fox Nation series, The Saints, is timed for Easter and focuses on the mother of Jesus.

Every Head Bowed, Every Eye Closed

Is the way we talk to God for our comfort or for his glory?

Public Theology Project

Stop Being Anxious About Your Anxiety

Jesus meets our worries with reassurance, not rebuke.

Low-Tech Parenting Must Be a Big Tent

If we want to parent wisely in a digital age, we must pair courage with grace—not judgmentalism.

Friction-Maxxing Higher Ed

Kristin VanEyk and Elisabeth E. Lefebvre

Christian colleges can offer complexity and real challenges instead of pat answers and easy degrees.

A Sign, Not a Weathervane

CT sought to point people to the Bible through the personal and public crises of 1978.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastprintRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube