• KOREAN
  • P-ISSN2799-3949
  • E-ISSN2799-4252

Article Detail

Home > Article Detail
  • P-ISSN 2799-3949
  • E-ISSN 2799-4252

The Journal of Daesoon Thought and the Religions of East Asia / The Journal of Daesoon Thought and the Religions of East Asia, (P)2799-3949; (E)2799-4252
2021, v.1 no.1, pp.17-37
https://doi.org/10.25050/jdtrea.2021.1.1.17
INTROVIGNE, Massimo

Abstract

Scholars of new religious movements have emphasized the role of "second founders," such as Judge J.F. Rutherford for the Jehovah's Witnesses, Brigham Young for the Mormons, or Deguchi Onisaburo for Oomoto. They systematize and structure movements often created by the "first founders" with a minimal organization only. The paper argues that the model for the sequence first founder/second founder described by these scholars is the relationship between Jesus and Paul of Tarsus at the origins of Christianity. It proposes a comparison between Jesus of Nazareth and Kang Jeungsan, who established the tradition leading to present-day Daesoon Jinrihoe. It then summarizes the biography of Jo Jeongsan, recognized by Daesoon Jinrihoe as its "second founder" within the same tradition, and discusses the analogies between his connection to the "first founder," Kang Jeungsan, and the connection Paul of Tarsus established with Jesus Christ. The paper considers recent scholarship about Paul, often described as the "New Perspective on Pauline Scholarship." Paul never personally met Jesus Christ, except after the latter's death through a spiritual revelation, just as Jo Jeongsan never met Kang Jeungsan, except after his death, when he manifested himself to him in spirit. Nonetheless, Paul was able to decisively shape the largest branch among the followers of Jesus Christ, just as Jo Jeongsan originated the lineage leading to Daesoon Jinrihoe, currently the largest religious order among those recognizing Kang Jeungsan as the incarnated Supreme God.

keywords
Jeungsanism, Daesoon Jinrihoe, Kang Jeungsan, Jo Jeongsan, "Second Founders" of Religions, Paul of Tarsus, New Perspective on Pauline Scholarship

  • Downloaded
  • Viewed
  • 0KCI Citations
  • 0WOS Citations

Other articles from this issue

Recommanded Articles

상단으로 이동

The Journal of Daesoon Thought and the Religions of East Asia