About Jeung San Do

At the Turning Point of Civilization

Something is shifting at the foundations of the world. Not merely in politics or economics, but in the deeper patterns that shape how civilizations rise, transform, and begin again. Jeung San Do offers a framework for understanding this moment—not as a crisis without context, but as a turning point written into the very structure of time.

At the heart of Jeung San Do’s teachings is the concept of the Cosmic Year—a vast cycle of universal change, analogous to the four seasons, through which heaven, earth, and humanity pass together. We are now approaching the close of the Seoncheon (Early Heaven), an era defined by growth, conflict, and division, and the opening of the Hucheon (Later Heaven)—a new civilization rooted in harmony, maturity, and restored humanity. This transition is called Gaebyeok: not destruction, but a fundamental renewal of the human world.

This teaching did not emerge solely from abstract philosophy. It was revealed through the life and work of Jeung-san Sangjenim (1871–1909), who reigns over heaven and earth and carried out the Cheonjigongsa—a great renewal of the cosmic order—to lay the foundation for the age to come. His teachings form the living core of Jeung San Do—a tradition that is at once ancient in its roots and urgently relevant to the world unfolding before us.

Jeung San Do draws from the deep currents of Eastern thought—its understanding of heaven, earth, and the human being as an integrated whole—while offering something distinct: a coherent vision of where history is going and what is asked of us in this time. It is neither a philosophy to be merely studied nor a belief to be passively held, but a path of active cultivation and inner transformation.

Central to this path is the Taeeulju Mantra, a meditative practice whose origins reach back through thousands of years of Eastern spiritual culture. More than a technique, the Taeeulju is understood as a means of reconnecting with the fundamental life-force of the cosmos—restoring inner balance, dissolving what has become blocked or broken, and awakening a clarity that allows one to live with greater presence and purpose.

Jeung San Do does not ask you to abandon your own tradition or perspective. It asks only that you look honestly at the age we are entering—and consider whether the wisdom gathered across millennia might offer light for the path ahead.

This is an invitation to inquire, to practice, and to see for yourself.

The teachings of Jeung San Do are offered to all who seek understanding—regardless of background, culture, or belief.

hwanguk-eng