January 4, 2026

Jan 2, 2026 – Jungto Society New Year’s Ceremony, Friday Dharma Q&A

Hello. After completing the 9-night, 10-day 1000-Day Practice closing home retreat, we resume the serialization of “A Day in the Life of Sunim” today.

In the meantime, 2025 has come to an end, and the new year 2026, the Year of the Fire Horse, has dawned. Jungto Society officially begins its 2026 operations today. Today, the Jungto Society executive team and members gathered together for a New Year’s ceremony to renew their minds and share their resolutions for the new year.

After completing morning practice and meditation, Sunim headed to the Jungto Social and Cultural Center for the New Year’s ceremony. With about 300 members of the Sangha gathered in the Dharma Hall on the third floor, the 2026 Jungto Society New Year’s ceremony began at exactly 10 AM.

Following opening remarks by Dharma Teacher Seonju, the head of the Dharma Teacher Group, everyone watched New Year’s greetings prepared on video by various domestic and international divisions. The Daejeon-Chungcheong Division, Gwangju-Jeolla Division, Daegu-Gyeongbuk Division, Busan-Ulsan Division, and Gyeongnam Division, along with overseas divisions, the international division, and the Happiness Movement Headquarters, all sent video messages from around the world expressing their determination to start the new year with vigor.

Next came New Year’s greetings from each division present at the venue. The Seoul-Jeju Division, Gangwon-Eastern Gyeonggi Division, Incheon-Western Gyeonggi Division, Special Youth Division, Community Division, and the Jungto Social and Cultural Center Special Practice Division each prepared and presented various performances showcasing their unique characteristics.

“Build ourselves through practice, brighten the world through spreading the Dharma!”

“Practice with a smile! Spread the Dharma joyfully! 2026, Year of the Horse, let’s run, run, run!”

“In 2026, let’s all stay healthy and keep volunteering.”

“Be happy through practice! Be energetic through dedication! Be vibrant through activities! Let’s run powerfully in 2026!”

The doors to the new year were thrown wide open amid vibrant laughter. Through the New Year’s greetings combining videos and performances from each division, everyone welcomed the beginning of the year with energy and vitality.

When the assembly requested a Dharma talk with three prostrations, Sunim gave a teaching on what mindset to adopt in welcoming the new year.

In an Era of Wealth Disparity and Climate Crisis, the Path We Must Choose Now

Service Without Diligent Practice Cannot Last Long

Next, author Kim Hong-shin, who has always been with Jungto Society for major events, shared warm New Year’s greetings.

“The natural enemy of life is time. However, time is not the only natural enemy. Illness and aging, worries and concerns, anger and fury, irritation and conflict, quarrels and boredom, and sometimes even wives and husbands all become natural enemies of life. Humans in the beginning were beings surrounded by countless natural enemies. However, to survive, they united, helped each other, invented, and evolved, and as a result, have become the masters of Earth today. The Buddha also had many natural enemies. The same is true for Venerable Pomnyun Sunim. When traveling together not only in Korea but also in countries like the Philippines and India, it truly feels like being surrounded by natural enemies.

Through Venerable Pomnyun Sunim’s teachings, we are cultivating a Jungto of the mind, facing life’s natural enemies, and walking the path of free practitioners, liberated from suffering. Even at this very moment, just by living as practitioners, you are already free people and are certainly creating miracles. I hope you will live spiritedly as the protagonists of miracles throughout 2026. And I sincerely pray that you will all attain enlightenment and that we can meet again in good health on the day of the 10,000-Day Practice completion ceremony in 2052.”

Everyone then sang “I Have No Problem” together, meaningfully concluding the 2026 New Year’s ceremony program.

After the live broadcast ended, Jungto Society members who attended in person offered New Year’s bows to Sunim.

Volunteers gathered in groups to share their reflections and New Year’s resolutions, while Sunim left the broadcasting room and moved to the basement dining hall for lunch.

Rice cake soup was specially prepared for the New Year. Sunim enjoyed the rice cake soup and conversation with author Kim Hong-shin.

At 2 PM, former Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun visited The Peace Foundation to have tea with Sunim. They exchanged views on how to alleviate the increasingly severe conflicts between ruling and opposition parties and achieve national unity in the New Year. They also had an in-depth conversation about future directions for inter-Korean relations and North Korea-Japan relations, including improvements in North Korea-U.S. relations, before concluding their tea meeting.

From 4 PM, a discussion on personnel assignments for the 2-2nd 1000-Day Practice was held in the 6th floor international conference room with most lay Sangha division members present. Members dispatched to India, the Philippines, and Bhutan participated in the meeting online to share their opinions.

First, Sunim explained the purpose of today’s meeting.

Next, Dharma Teacher Seonju, the head of the Dharma Teacher group, announced the initial draft of personnel assignments for each department including the Education and Training Center, Practice Team, Haengja Institute, main temples, Distribution Team, Farming Team, JTS, Good Friends, Eco Buddha, The Peace Foundation, Property Management Division, Multimedia Center, Construction Team, and International Cooperation Team.

Each department needed many personnel, but the number of people was limited. After comprehensively reviewing the situation, Sunim continued the meeting and proceeded with the discussion.

Various members shared their opinions on the initial personnel assignment draft and asked Sunim questions. After continuing the discussion for about two hours, Sunim concluded the meeting.

The lay Sangha division personnel assignment meeting concluded at 6 PM as the sun set.

From 7:30 PM, the Friday Dharma Q&A live broadcast was held from the Seoul Jungto Center broadcasting room. With about 4,000 people connected to the live stream, Sunim greeted the viewers and then took questions. Four people had pre-registered questions and took turns having conversations with Sunim.

One person shared their deep suffering from still hating their father who destroyed the family through alcohol and gambling, yet being unable to turn away from him.

My Father Destroyed Our Family with Alcohol and Gambling. Must I Forgive Him?


“I hate my father so much. When I was young, my mother said she couldn’t live with my father anymore and ran away, leaving her young children behind. My older brother and I were raised by our paternal grandmother. Looking back, I really loved my father. But whenever he came home drunk, he would fight with my grandmother over money, curse at her to borrow money, and my grandmother would somehow try to fix things by borrowing money and cleaning up after his messes. As I gradually became aware of these things I didn’t understand when I was young, I began to hate and resent my father more and more, thinking ‘How could he do that to the grandmother who is raising his children with such devotion?’ My grandmother always told me not to hate my father no matter what. But when I became an adult, my father constantly asked me to lend him money. If I didn’t lend it to him, he would ask my brother-in-law or sister-in-law for money day and night. I found out that my father spent all the money on alcohol and gambling. Later, when I discovered that my father had even taken out loans in my name, I basically cut him off. Now, even my grandmother who lived with my father has passed away, and my father has had a stroke. Seeing him old, sick, and alone with no one to care for him, I feel so sorry for him on one hand, and angry on the other, wondering why he lived his life that way. I want to cut ties forever and live comfortably, but on the other hand, I think, as my late grandmother said, no matter how much I hate him, he’s still my father. But because of my hatred, I don’t want to approach my father carelessly. So when I think of my father, it weighs on my heart and causes me much suffering. What should I do with these feelings?”

“Actually, that’s what I wanted to hear.”

“Is that really okay? I feel like I’m becoming a bad person, and it weighs on my heart.”

“It always weighed on my heart, but hearing Sunim’s words, I feel much more at ease.”

“It always weighed on my heart, but when you said to do whatever I want, I felt much lighter. Since my father can’t speak due to his stroke, I sometimes think he’s receiving karma for cursing at my grandmother when he was young, but then I worry if I’ll be punished later for having such thoughts about my father. I’ve been living with all kinds of thoughts. Actually, to ease my own mind, I’ve been sending money to my father monthly, like donating to an NGO. I felt guilty because I wasn’t doing it for my father but to make myself feel better.”

“Yes. Thank you, Sunim.”

Questions continued to follow.

 My husband strongly opposes my going to the temple, causing conflicts every time I go, and anger is building up in the process. How should I view and respond to this situation?

 I’m experiencing deep loss and pain from the death of my older brother, whom I depended on greatly emotionally and financially. How can I endure this unbearable time of grief?

 I’m concerned about the impact of population decline and concentration in the metropolitan area on individuals and society as regions shrink. What perspective should individuals living in the ‘era of regional contraction’ have?

Today, all the questioners quickly understood Sunim’s words, so the conversations were relatively short. Thanks to this, the live broadcast ended earlier than usual at 8:10 PM.

Starting tomorrow, Sunim will be on a two-day, one-night business trip to China.

The year 2026 has dawned. We wish all subscribers of A Day in the Life of Sunim a happy day every day in the new year.