Tang Soo Do’s Ten Articles of Faith: Moral Pillars for a Divided and Turbulent World

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by MASTERSEGARRA

In every era of instability, societies search for principles strong enough to withstand chaos. Tang Soo Do offers such principles through its Ten Articles of Faith—a moral framework designed not merely to shape martial artists, but to help rebuild individuals, families, and communities.

These articles are not ceremonial recitations. They are behavioral commitments, meant to guide how practitioners live, relate, and respond when pressure is real. In today’s divided, reactive, and often disconnected world, their relevance is not symbolic—it is essential.


Ancient Roots: The Hwa Rang Code

The ethical foundation of Tang Soo Do traces back to the Hwa Rang, the elite warrior-scholars of Korea’s Silla Dynasty. These young leaders were selected not only for their physical ability, but for their character, intellect, and devotion to society.

The Hwa Rang followed Five Codes of Conduct, traditionally attributed to the Buddhist monk Won Gwang:

  1. Loyalty to one’s country
  2. Obedience and respect toward parents
  3. Trust and faith among companions
  4. Courage—never retreat in battle
  5. Moral restraint—use force only when justified

These principles forged warriors who were disciplined protectors rather than reckless fighters—men trained to serve stability, not personal glory.


Why Grandmaster Hwang Kee Expanded the Code

Grandmaster Hwang Kee deeply respected the Hwa Rang tradition—but he also understood history as something lived, not idealized.

Hwang Kee came of age during some of the most traumatic chapters in Korean history. He witnessed the Japanese occupation, followed by the devastation and displacement caused by the Korean War. When the fighting ended, the damage was not only physical. Families were fractured. Trust was weakened. Cultural identity had been suppressed. Moral clarity had eroded.

Hwang Kee recognized something critical:
martial strength alone cannot heal a society.

The original Five Codes were powerful, but in a wounded, modern nation they were no longer sufficient by themselves. Courage without ethics becomes aggression. Loyalty without compassion becomes nationalism. Discipline without humanity becomes control.

What Korea needed—and what Tang Soo Do needed—was a broader moral structure, one that addressed daily life, relationships, responsibility, and restraint.

From this realization, Hwang Kee expanded the ethical framework into the Ten Articles of Faith. These were not abstract ideals. They were pillars for rebuilding a peaceful and functional society, meant to guide practitioners as citizens, family members, teachers, and leaders.


The Ten Articles of Faith of Tang Soo Do

The Ten Articles form a complete moral ecosystem, addressing every layer of human interaction:

  1. Be loyal to your country
  2. Be obedient to your parents
  3. Be loving between spouses
  4. Be cooperative and caring between siblings
  5. Be respectful to your elders
  6. Be faithful and loyal between friends
  7. Be faithful and loyal to your teacher
  8. Face conflict with justice and honor
  9. Never retreat in battle
  10. Always finish what you start

Together, these articles define Tang Soo Do not simply as a martial art, but as a system of moral cultivation.


Why These Articles Matter Now

The conditions that led Hwang Kee to expand the Hwa Rang code are strikingly familiar today.

We live in a time marked by:

  • Social fragmentation
  • Erosion of respect for elders and teachers
  • Breakdown of family cohesion
  • Reaction replacing reflection
  • Commitment giving way to convenience

The Ten Articles of Faith stand in direct opposition to these trends.

They teach:

  • Loyalty, in an age of rootlessness
  • Family responsibility, in a time of disconnection
  • Faithfulness, where trust is fragile
  • Honor in conflict, when outrage is rewarded
  • Perseverance, in a culture that quits early

These are not old-fashioned values. They are stabilizing forces.


Courage Without Chaos

Two articles are often misunderstood:

“Never retreat in battle”
“Always finish what you start”

These are not calls for recklessness or blind aggression.

“Never retreat” speaks to moral courage—standing firm in principles, integrity, and responsibility, even when it is uncomfortable.
“Finish what you start” demands ownership, follow-through, and accountability.

In a world that encourages avoidance and shortcuts, these principles build reliable, resilient human beings.


Tang Soo Do as Character Training

Tang Soo Do does not separate physical skill from ethical development.

Every Hyung/Kata, every Il Soo Sik, every challenge is an opportunity to practice:

  • Respect under pressure
  • Control in conflict
  • Perseverance through difficulty
  • Honor without ego

Without the Ten Articles of Faith, martial training becomes hollow technique.
With them, it becomes life training.


Teaching Stability to the Next Generation

For children growing up in an anxious and unpredictable world, the Ten Articles of Faith offer clarity:

  • How to treat family
  • How to resolve conflict
  • How to commit and follow through
  • How to respect authority without fear
  • How to develop courage without aggression

Parents often observe these lessons carrying into school, friendships, and decision-making. That is not accidental. It is the design Hwang Kee intended.


Our Responsibility as Modern Practitioners

Tang Soo Do practitioners today are not merely students of a tradition—we are caretakers of it.

The future of the art does not rest on organizations, rank, or titles, but on how faithfully we live these principles in an increasingly chaotic world.

Strong enough to stand firm.
Disciplined enough to restrain force.
Committed enough to finish the path we choose.

That was Hwang Kee’s response to societal breakdown then.
It remains our responsibility now.


Final Reflection

The Ten Articles of Faith are not relics of the past.
They are instructions for the present.

We recite them EVERY class. Consider ding that at the end of your class too, the world needs it.

In a divided world, martial artists should not add to the chaos—but help restore balance through discipline, honor, and responsibility.

That is the true purpose of Tang Soo Do.

For deeper study into Tang Soo Do history, philosophy, and leadership principles, continue your journey at: http://tangsoodoresource.com/