fbpx
Wikipedia

Chinese theology

Chinese theology, which comes in different interpretations according to the classic texts and the common religion, and specifically Confucian, Taoist, and other philosophical formulations,[8] is fundamentally monistic,[9] that is to say it sees the world and the gods of its phenomena as an organic whole, or cosmos, which continuously emerges from a simple principle.[10] This is expressed by the concept that "all things have one and the same principle" (wànwù yīlǐ 萬物一理).[11] This principle is commonly referred to as Tiān , a concept generally translated as "Heaven", referring to the northern culmen and starry vault of the skies and its natural laws which regulate earthly phenomena and generate beings as their progenitors.[4] Ancestors are therefore regarded as the equivalent of Heaven within human society,[12] and therefore as the means connecting back to Heaven which is the "utmost ancestral father" (曾祖父 zēngzǔfù).[13] Chinese theology may be also called Tiānxué 天學 ("study of Heaven"), a term already in use in the 17th and 18th centuries.[14]

Like other symbols such as the swastika,[1] wàn ("myriad things") in Chinese, the Mesopotamian 𒀭 Dingir/An ("Heaven"),[2] and also the Chinese ("shaman"; in Shang script represented by the cross potent ☩),[3] Tiān refers to the northern celestial pole (北極 Běijí), the pivot and the vault of the sky with its spinning constellations.[4] Here is an approximate representation of the Tiānmén 天門 ("Gate of Heaven")[5] or Tiānshū 天樞 ("Pivot of Heaven")[6] as the precessional north celestial pole, with α Ursae Minoris as the pole star, with the spinning Chariot constellations in the four phases of time. According to Reza Assasi's theories, the wan may not only be centred in the current precessional pole at α Ursae Minoris, but also very near to the north ecliptic pole if Draco (Tiānlóng 天龙) is conceived as one of its two beams.[7][note 1]

[In contrast to the God of Western religions who is above the space and time] the God of Fuxi, Xuanyuan, and Wang Yangming is under in our space and time. ... To Chinese thought, ancestor is creator.[15]

— Leo Koguan, The Yellow Emperor Hypothesis

The universal principle that gives origin to the world is conceived as transcendent and immanent to creation, at the same time.[16] The Chinese idea of the universal God is expressed in different ways; there are many names of God from the different sources of Chinese tradition, reflecting a "hierarchic, multiperspective" observation of the supreme God.[17]

Chinese scholars emphasise that the Chinese tradition contains two facets of the idea of God: one is the personified God of popular devotion, and the other one is the impersonal God of philosophical inquiry.[18] Together they express an "integrated definition of the monistic world".[19]

Interest in traditional Chinese theology has waxed and waned over the various periods of the history of China. For instance, the Great Leap Forward enacted in the mid-20th century involved the outright destruction of traditional temples in accordance with Maoist ideology. From the 1980s onward, public revivals have taken place. The Chinese believe that deities or stars, are arranged in a "celestial bureaucracy" which influences earthly activities and is reflected by the hierarchy of the Chinese state itself. These beliefs have similarities with broader Asian shamanism. The alignment of earthly and heavenly forces is upheld through the practice of rites and rituals (Li), for instance the jiao festivals in which sacrificial offerings of incense and other products are set up by local temples, with participants hoping to renew the perceived alliance between community leaders and the gods.[20][21]

Creation as ordering of primordial potentiality edit

 
The north ecliptic pole (Běijí 北极, represented by a red dot which does not correspond to any astral body since the north ecliptic pole is starless, 無極 Wújí, "without pole") coiled by Draco, which slithers between the Little Dipper and the Big Dipper (Great Chariot), respectively representing yin and yang, death and life.[22][23] As the symbol of the "protean" primordial power which contains yin and yang as one,[24] the dragon is the curved line in-between yin and yang in the "diagram of the Supreme Pole" (太极图 Tàijítú, of 太极 Tàijí) →  .
 
Small seal script form, from the Shuowen Jiezi, of k: (pneuma, "breath", "matter–energy", "power" of Heaven). Because all beings are considered coalescences of it, some scholars have employed the term "(poly)pneumatism", first coined by Walter Medhurst (1796–1857), to describe Chinese spirituality.[25] The many gods are often defined as "traces" ( ) of coalescence of the qi.[26]
 
玄武 Xuánwǔ, the motif of the snake winding the turtle. While the snake, as the dragon, represents qi, the primordial power of the universe and the constellation Draco at the north ecliptic pole; the turtle represents the cosmos, with "the round carapace representing the dome of the skies and the squarish plastron the squared earth".[27] At the same time they represent two of the four constellations which perfectly enclose, in a square, the north ecliptic pole centred in Draco: Snake (drawn in Corona Borealis + northern stars of Herculs + northern stars of Boötes), Turtle (Cassiopeia), Sword (central stars of Cygnus) and the Big Dipper.[28]

As explained by the scholar Stephan Feuchtwang, in Chinese cosmology "the universe creates itself out of a primary chaos of material energy" (hundun 混沌 and qi ), organising as the polarity of yin and yang which characterises any thing and life. Creation is therefore a continuous ordering; it is not a creation ex nihilo. Yin and yang are the invisible and the visible, the receptive and the active, the unshaped and the shaped; they characterise the yearly cycle (winter and summer), the landscape (shady and bright), the sexes (female and male), and even sociopolitical history (disorder and order).[29] The gods themselves are divided into yin forces of contraction, guǐ ("demons" or "ghosts") and yang forces of expansion shén ("gods" or "spirits"); in the human being they are the hun and po (where hun () is yang and po () is yin; respectively, the rational and emotional soul, or the ethereal and the corporeal soul). Together, 鬼神 guishen is another way to define the twofold operation of the God of Heaven, its resulting dynamism being called itself shen, spirit.

By the words of the Neo-Confucian thinker Cheng Yi:[30]

[Heaven] is called ... the gǔi-shén with respect to its operation, the shén with respect to its wonderful functioning.

Another Neo-Confucian, Zhu Xi, says:[31]

The shén is expansion and the gǔi is contraction. As long as it is blowing wind, raining, thundering, or flashing, [we call it] shén, while it stops, [we call it] gǔi.

The dragon, associated with the constellation Draco winding the north ecliptic pole and slithering between the Little and Big Dipper (or Great Chariot), represents the "protean" primordial power, which embodies both yin and yang in unity,[24][failed verification] and therefore the awesome unlimited power (qi) of divinity.[32] In Han-dynasty traditions, Draco is described as the spear of the supreme God.[33]

Heaven continuously begets—according to its own manifest model which is the starry vault revolving around the northern culmen (北極 Běijí)—and reabsorbs, the temporal things and worlds. As explained in modern Confucian theology:[34]

... the historical Heaven, namely the generated Heaven, [is] one particular form or modification (marked by the emergence of celestial bodies) of the eternal Heaven. This eternal Heaven was embodied in pure before its historical form had been realized.

Rather than "creation" ( zào), which has a long Western connotation of creation ex nihilo, modern Chinese theologians prefer to speak of "evolution" ( huà) to describe the begetting of the cosmos; even in modern Chinese language the two concepts are frequently held together, zàohuà ("creation-evolution").[35] Such ordering power, which belongs to deities but also to humans, expresses itself in rites ( ). They are the means by which alignment between the forces of the starry sky, of earthly phenomena, and the acts of human beings (the three realms of Heaven-Earth-humanity, 天地人 Tiāndìrén), is established. Such harmonisation is referred to as "centring" ( yāng or zhōng). Rituals may be performed by government officials, family elders, popular ritual masters, and Taoists, the latter cultivating local gods to centre the forces of the universe upon a particular locality. Since humans are capable of centering natural forces, by the means of rites, they are themselves "central" to creation.[29]

Shang-dynasty graphemes signifying the power of ordering
 
 
 
 
k:巫 — "shaman", "man who knows", the cross potent ☩ being a symbol of the magi and magic/craft also in Western cultures;[36]
k:方 fāng — "square", "phase", "direction", "power" and other meanings of ordering, which was used interchangeably with the grapheme wu;
k:矩 — "carpenter's square";
k:央 yāng — "centering".
All of them contain the rod element signifying the square tool, used to make right angles. According to David W. Pankenier, the same staff is the horizontal line in the grapheme 帝 , "deity" or "emperor".[37]

So, human beings participate in the ongoing creation-evolution of the God of Heaven, acting as ancestors who may produce and influence other beings:[38]

The involvement of an evolution in the divine creation hints that, although the Creator functions everywhere and all the time, every little creation is also participated by one particular thing which was previously created by the Creator. That is to say, each creature plays both the roles of creature and creator, and consequently is not only a fixed constituent of, but also a promoter and author of, the diversity or richness of the world.

 
The metaphor of the moon.

The relationship between oneness and multiplicity, between the supreme principle and the myriad things, is notably explained by Zhu Xi through the "metaphor of the moon":[39]

Fundamentally there is only one Great Pole (Tàijí), yet each of the myriad things has been endowed with it and each in itself possesses the Great Ultimate in its entirety. This is similar to the fact that there is only one moon in the sky, but when its light is scattered upon rivers and lakes, it can be seen everywhere. It cannot be said that the moon has been split.

In his terminology, the myriad things are generated as effects or actualities ( yòng) of the supreme principle, which, before in potence ( ), sets in motion qi. The effects are different, forming the "myriad species" (萬殊 wànshū), each relying upon their myriad modifications of the principle, depending on the varying contexts and engagements. Difference exists not only between the various categories of beings, but among individuals belonging to the same category as well, so that each creature is a unique coalescence of the cosmic principle.[39] The qi of kindred beings accord and communicate with one another, and the same happens for the qi of worshippers and the god receiving sacrifice, and for the qi of an ancestor and his descendants.[40] All beings are, at different levels, "in" the God of Heaven, not in the sense of addition but in the sense of belonging.[41]

In the Confucian tradition, the perfect government is that which emulates the ordering of the starry vault of Heaven:

To conduct government by virtue may be compared to the North Star: it occupied its place, while the myriad stars revolve around it.

— Confucius, Analects 2:1

Names and attributes of the God of Heaven in the tradition edit

 
The squared northern culmen of the skies, which is Tian, as a liubo board. The Luoshu square, the Hetu, liubo boards, sundials, Han diviner's boards (shì ) and luopan for fengshui, and the derived compass, as well as TLV mirrors, are all representations of the supreme God as the squared north celestial pole.[42]
 
How was drawn according to the scholar Pankenier, by connecting the stars γ, β, and 5 of the Ursa Minor (of which the former two are part of the scoop of the Little Dipper) and ζ, ε, and δ of the Ursa Major (and Big Dipper). Amongst the graphemes containing there are ("appropriately conjoined" and verbally "to do", "to form"), ("careful", "attentive", or verbally "to look into", "to examine"), and ("calyx", or the "footstalk" that holds a fruit or an inflorescence, which falls and produces other life).[43][44] The scholar Didier, otherwise, says that by connecting stars within the same cluster ancient priests-astronomers drew 口 Dīng, the original form of the word itself, which would represent the supreme God as a square.[45]
 
The Shang grapheme 帝 Dì, "Deity", outlined by connecting the stars γ, β, and 5 of the Little Bear (of which the former two are part of the scoop of the Little Dipper) and ζ, ε, and δ of the Big Dipper/Great Chariot, to locate the north pole (北极 Běijí, "northern culmen"). Source: Pankenier, David W. (2004). "A Brief History of Beiji 北极 (Northern Culmen), with an Excursus on the Origin of the Character di ". Journal of the American Oriental Society, 124 (2): 211–236. DOI 10.2307/4132212. See pp. 226–236. According to John C. Didier the same drawing was originally called 口 Dīng (older form of 丁, the "carpenter's square", symbol of cosmic power, from which the same Dì would derive), and represented the supreme godhead as a square. Source: Didier, John C. (2009). "In and Outside the Square: The Sky and the Power of Belief in Ancient China and the World, c. 4500 BC – AD 200". Sino-Platonic Papers. Victor H. Mair (192). Volume I: The Ancient Eurasian World and the Celestial Pivot, p. 216.

Tian is dian ("top"), the highest and unexceeded. It derives from the characters yi , "one", and da , "big".[46]

Since the Shang (1600–1046 BCE) and Zhou dynasty 1046–256 BCE), the radical Chinese terms for the supreme God are Tiān and Shàngdì 上帝 (the "Highest Deity") or simply ("Deity").[47][48][note 2] Another concept is Tàidì 太帝 (the "Great Deity"). These names are combined in different ways in Chinese theological literature, often interchanged in the same paragraph if not in the same sentence.[50] One of the combinations is the name of God used at the Temple of Heaven in Beijing, which is the "Highest Deity the Heavenly King" (皇天上帝 Huángtiān Shàngdì);[51] others are "Great Deity the Heavenly King" (天皇大帝 Tiānhuáng Dàdì) and "Supreme Deity of the Vast Heaven" (昊天上帝 Hàotiān Shàngdì).[52]

God is considered manifest in this world as the northern culmen and starry vault of the skies which regulate nature.[4] As its see, the circumpolar stars (the Little and Big Dipper, or broader Ursa Minor and Ursa Major) are known, among various names, as Tiānmén 天門 ("Gate of Heaven")[5] and Tiānshū 天樞 ("Pivot of Heaven"), or the "celestial clock" regulating the four seasons of time.[6] The Chinese supreme God is compared to the conception of the supreme God identified as the north celestial pole in other cultures, including the Mesopotamian An ("Heaven" itself), and Enlil and Enki/Marduk, the Vedic Indra and Mitra–Varuna, the Zoroastrian Ahura Mazda,[53] as well as the Dyeus of common Proto-Indo-European religion.[54]

Throughout the Chinese theological literary tradition, the Dipper constellations, and especially the Big Dipper (北斗星 Běidǒuxīng, "Northern Dipper"), also known as Great Chariot, within Ursa Major, are portrayed as the potent symbols of spirit, divinity, or of the activity of the supreme God regulating nature. Examples include:

The Dipper is the Deity’s carriage. It revolves about the centre, visiting and regulating each of the four regions. It divides yin from yang, establishes the four seasons, equalises the five elemental phases, deploys the seasonal junctures and angular measures, and determines the various periodicities: all these are tied to the Dipper.

— Sima Qian, Treatise on the Celestial Officers[55]

When the handle of the Dipper points to the east at dawn, it is spring to all the world. When the handle of the Dipper points to the south it is summer to all the world. When the handle of the Dipper points to the west, it is autumn to all the world. When the handle of the Dipper points to the north, it is winter to all the world. As the handle of the Dipper rotates above, so affairs are set below.

— Heguanzi, 5:21/1-4[56]

is literally a title expressing dominance over the all-under-Heaven, that is all created things.[57] It is etymologically and figuratively analogous to the concept of di as the base of a fruit, which falls and produces other fruits. This analogy is attested in the Shuowen Jiezi explaining "deity" as "what faces the base of a melon fruit".[58] Tiān is usually translated as "Heaven", but by graphical etymology it means "Great One" and scholars relate it to the same through phonetic etymology and trace their common root, through their archaic forms respectively *Teeŋ and *Tees, to the symbols of the celestial pole and its spinning stars.[4] Other words, such as dǐng ("on top", "apex") would share the same etymology, all connected to a conceptualisation—according to the scholar John C. Didier—of the north celestial pole godhead as cosmic square (Dīng 口).[59] Zhou (2005) even connects , through Old Chinese *Tees and by phonetic etymology, to the Proto-Indo-European Dyeus.[60] Medhurst (1847) also shows affinities in the usage of "deity", Chinese di, Greek theos and Latin deus, for incarnate powers resembling the supreme godhead.[61]

Shang and Zhou graphemes for Di and Tian
 
 
 
 
 
 
❶ One version of the Shang grapheme for the nominal k:帝 ("Deity", "deities", "divinity"), which according to David W. Pankenier was drawn by connecting the stars of the "handle" of Ursa Major and the "scoop" of Ursa Minor determining the northern culmen (北极 Běijí).[62] Otherwise, according to John C. Didier this and all the other graphemes ultimately represent Dīng 口 (archaic of k:丁, which also signifies the square tool), the north celestial pole godhead as a square.[63] The bar on top, which is either present or not and one or two in Shang script, is the k:上 shàng to signify "highest".[64] The crossbar element in the middle represents a carpenter's square, and is present in other graphemes including 方 fāng, itself meaning "square", "direction", "phase", "way" and "power", which in Shang versions was alternately represented as a cross potent ☩, homographically to 巫 ("shaman").[37] is equivalent to symbols like wàn 卍 ("all things")[1] and Mesopotamian 𒀭 Dingir/An ("Heaven").[2]
❷ Another version of the Shang grapheme for the nominal .[65]
❸ One version of the Shang grapheme for the verbal k:禘, "to divine, to sacrifice (by fire)". The modern standard version is distinguished by the prefixion of the signifier for "cult" (礻shì) to the nominal .[66][67] It may represent a fish entering the square of the north celestial pole (Dīng 口),[68] or rather k:定 dìng, i.e. the Square of Pegasus or Celestial Temple, when aligning with and thus framing true north.[69] Also dǐng k:鼎 ("cauldron", "thurible") may have derived from the verbal .[70]
❹ Shang grapheme for Shàngjiǎ k:上甲, "Supreme Ancestor", an alternate name of Shangdi.[71]
❺ The most common Zhou version of the grapheme Tiān ("Heaven") k:天, represented as a man with a squared (dīng 口) head.[72]
❻ Another Zhou version of the grapheme for Tiān.[72]

Shang–Zhou theology edit

Ulrich Libbrecht distinguishes two layers in the development of early Chinese theology, traditions derived respectively from the Shang and subsequent Zhou dynasties. The religion of the Shang was based on the worship of ancestors and god-kings, who survived as unseen divine forces after death. They were not transcendent entities, since the cosmos was "by itself so", not created by a force outside of it but generated by internal rhythms and cosmic powers. The royal ancestors were called (; 'deities'), and the utmost progenitor was Shangdi, identified with the dragon.[32] Already in Shang theology, the multiplicity of gods of nature and ancestors were viewed as parts of Shangdi, and the four fāng (; 'directions') and their fēng (; 'winds') as his cosmic will.[73]

The Zhou dynasty, which overthrew the Shang, emphasised a more universal idea of Tian ( "Heaven").[32] The Shang dynasty's identification of Shangdi as their ancestor-god had asserted their claim to power by divine right; the Zhou transformed this claim into a legitimacy based on moral power, the Mandate of Heaven. In Zhou theology, Tian had no singular earthly progeny, but bestowed divine favour on virtuous rulers. Zhou kings declared that their victory over the Shang was because they were virtuous and loved their people, while the Shang were tyrants and thus were deprived of power by Tian.[74]

 
Temple of All-Heaven (都天庙 dōutiānmiào) in Longgang, Cangnan, Wenzhou, Zhejiang.

Tian edit

Tian is both transcendent and immanent as the starry vault, manifesting in the three forms of dominance, destiny, and nature. There are many compounds of the name Tian, and many of these clearly distinguish a "Heaven of dominance", a "Heaven of destiny", and a "Heaven of nature" as attributes of the supreme cosmic God.[75]

In the Wujing yiyi (五經異義, "Different Meanings in the Five Classics"), Xu Shen explains that the designation of Heaven is quintuple:[75]

  • Huáng Tiān 皇天 —"August Heaven", "Yellow Heaven", or "Shining Heaven", when it is venerated as the lord of creation;
  • Hào Tiān 昊天—"Vast Heaven", with regard to the vastness of its vital breath (qi);
  • Mín Tiān 旻天—"Compassionate Heaven", for it hears and corresponds to justice to the all-under-Heaven;
  • Shàng Tiān 上天—"Highest Heaven" or "First Heaven", for it is the primordial being supervising all-under-Heaven;
  • Cāng Tiān 苍天—"Deep-Green Heaven", for it being unfathomably deep.

Other names of the God of Heaven include:

  • Tiāndì 天帝—the "Deity of Heaven" or "Emperor of Heaven":[76] "On Rectification" (Zheng lun) of the Xunzi uses this term to refer to the active God of Heaven setting in motion creation;[57]
  • Tiānzhǔ 天主—the "Lord of Heaven": In "The Document of Offering Sacrifices to Heaven and Earth on the Mountain Tai" (Fengshan shu) of the Records of the Grand Historian it is used as the title of the first God from whom all the other gods derive.[75]
  • Tiānhuáng 天皇—the "August Personage of Heaven": In the "Poem of Fathoming Profundity" (Si'xuan fu), transcribed in "The History of the Later Han Dynasty" (Hou Han shu), Zhang Heng ornately writes: «I ask the superintendent of the Heavenly Gate to open the door and let me visit the King of Heaven at the Jade Palace»;[76]
  • Tiānwáng 天王—the "King of Heaven" or "Monarch of Heaven".
  • Tiāngōng 天公—the "Duke of Heaven" or "General of Heaven";[77]
  • Tiānjūn 天君—the "Prince of Heaven" or "Lord of Heaven";[77]
  • Tiānzūn 天尊—the "Heavenly Venerable", also a title for high gods in Taoist theologies;[76]
  • Tiānshén 天神—the "God of Heaven", interpreted in the Shuowen Jiezi as "the being that gives birth to all things";[57]
  • Shénhuáng 神皇—"God the August", attested in Taihong ("The Origin of Vital Breath");[57]
  • Lǎotiānyé (老天爷)—the "Olden Heavenly Father".[76]

Attributes of the supreme God of Heaven include:[78]

  • Tiāndào 天道—"Way of Heaven"; it is the God's will of power, which decides the development of things: The Book of Historical Documents says that «the Way of Heaven is to bless the good, and make the bad miserable». It is also the name of some religious traditions;
  • Tiānmìng 天命—"Mandate of Heaven", defining the destiny of things;
  • Tiānyì 天意—"Decree of Heaven", the same concept of destiny but implying an active decision;
  • Tiānxià 天下—"Under Heaven"; means creation, an ongoing process generated by the supreme God.

Shangdi edit

Shang graphemes for stars–gods–ancestors
 
 
 
 
 
Images 1 to 4 are all Shang script variants for k:星 xīng, "star(s)", "god(s)", "ancestor(s)", composed by three to five grouped 口 dīng. It continues in modern k: jīng ("crystal", "shining").[79] Image 5 is a variant of Shàngjiǎ k:上甲, "Supreme Ancestor", i.e. Shangdi.[80]

Shàngdì (上帝 "Highest Deity"), sometimes shortened simply to ( "Deity"), is another name of the supreme God inherited from Shang and Zhou times. The Classic of Poetry recites: «How vast is the Highest Deity, the ruler of men below!».[57] is also applied to the name of cosmic gods besides the supreme godhead, and is used to compose titles of divinity; for instance Dìjūn 帝君 ("Divine Ruler", Latin: Dominus Deus), used in Taoism for high deities in the celestial hierarchy.[57]

In the Shang dynasty, as discussed by John C. Didier, Shangdi was the same as Dīng (, modern ), the "square" as the north celestial pole, and Shàngjiǎ (上甲 "Supreme Ancestor") was an alternative name.[81] Shangdi was conceived as the utmost ancestor of the Shang royal lineage, the Zi () lineage, also called Ku (or Kui) or Diku ("Divus Ku"), attested in the Shiji and other texts.[82]

The other gods associated with the circumpolar stars were all embraced by Shangdi, and they were conceived as the ancestors of side noble lineages of the Shang and even non-Shang peripheral peoples who benefited from the identification of their ancestor-gods as part of Di. Together they were called 下帝 xiàdì, "lower deities" part of the "Highest Deity" of the Shang. With the supreme God identified as the pivot of the skies, all the lesser gods were its stars xīng, a word which in Shang script was illustrated by a few grouped dīng (cf. jīng , "perfect [celestial, i.e., star] light", and pǐn, originally "starlight"); up to the Han dynasty it was still common to represent the stars as small squares.[81] The Shang conducted magnificent sacrifices to these ancestor-gods, whose altar mimicked the stars of the north celestial pole. Through this sympathetic magic, which consisted of reproducing the celestial centre on earth, the Shang established and monopolised the centralising political power.[81]

Qin-Han theology edit

Olden versions of the grapheme 黄 huáng, "yellow"
 
 
 
 
Shang oracle bone script;
Western Zhou bronzeware script;
Han Shuowen Jiezi;
Yuan Liushutong.
According to Qiu Xigui, the character "yellow" signifies the power of the ("shaman").[83]: 12, note 33  The Yellow God is the north celestial pole, or the pole star, and it is "the spirit father and astral double of the Yellow Emperor".[83]: 42, note 25 
 
Wǔfāng Shàngdì (五方上帝 "Five Forms of the Highest Deity") — The order of Heaven inscribing worlds as tán , "altar", the Chinese concept equivalent to the Indian mandala. The supreme God conceptualised as the Yellow Deity, and Xuanyuan as its human form, is the heart of the universe and the other Four Deities are his emanations. The diagram is based on the Huainanzi.[84]

The emperors of the Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE) are credited with an effort to unify the cults of the Wǔfāng Shàngdì (五方上帝 "Five Forms of the Highest Deity"), which were previously held at different locations, into single temple complexes.[85] The Five Deities are a cosmological conception of the fivefold manifestation of the supreme God, or his five changing faces,[86] that goes back to the Neolithic and continues in the classic texts. They "reflect the cosmic structure of the world" in which yin, yang, and all forces are held in balance, and are associated with the four directions of space and the centre, the five sacred mountains, the five phases of creation, and the five constellations rotating around the celestial pole and five planets.[87]

During the Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE), the theology of the state religion developed side by side with the Huang–Lao religious movement which in turn influenced the early Taoist Church,[88] and focused on a conceptualisation of the supreme God of the culmen of the sky as the Yellow God of the centre, and its human incarnation, the Yellow Emperor or Yellow Deity. Unlike previous Shang concepts of human incarnations of the supreme godhead, considered exclusively as the progenitors of the royal lineage, the Yellow Emperor was a more universal archetype of the human being. The competing factions of the Confucians and the fāngshì (方士 "masters of directions"), regarded as representatives of the ancient religious tradition inherited from previous dynasties, concurred in the formulation of the Han state religion.[89]

Taiyi edit

Tàiyī (太一; also spelled 太乙 Tàiyǐ or 泰一 Tàiyī;[90] "Great Oneness" or "Great Unity"), also known as "Supreme Oneness of the Central Yellow" (中黄太乙 Zhōnghuáng Tàiyǐ), or the "Yellow God of the Northern Dipper" (黄神北斗 Huángshén Běidǒu[note 3]), or "Heavenly Venerable Supreme Unity" (太一天尊 Tàiyī Tiānzūn), is a name of the supreme God of Heaven that had become prominent besides the older ones during the Han dynasty in relation to the figure of the Yellow Emperor. It harkens back to the Warring States period, as attested in the poem The Supreme Oneness Gives Birth to Water, and possibly to the Shang dynasty as Dàyī (大一 "Big Oneness"), an alternative name for the Shangs' (and universe's) foremost ancestor.[91]

Taiyi was worshipped by the social elites in the Warring States, and is also the first god described in the Nine Songs, shamanic hymns collected in the Chuci ("Songs of Chu").[92] Throughout the Qin and the Han dynasties, a distinction became evident between Taiyi as the supreme godhead identified with the northern culmen of the sky and its spinning stars, and a more abstract concept of (一 "One"), which begets the polar godhead bringing into existence the principles of Yin and Yang, the pivot san bao then the myriad of beings and the ten thousand things; the more abstract Yi was an "interiorisation" of the supreme God which was influenced by the Confucian discourse.[93]

During the Han dynasty, Taiyi became part of the imperial sect, and at the same time it was the central concept of Huang–Lao, which influenced the early Taoist Church; in early Taoism, Taiyi was identified as the Dào . The "Inscription for Laozi" (Laozi ming), a Han stela, describes the Taiyi as the source of inspiration and immortality for Laozi. In Huang-Lao the philosopher-god Laozi was identified as the same as the Yellow Emperor, and received imperial sacrifices, for instance by Emperor Huan (146–168).[94] In Han apocryphal texts, the Big Dipper is described as the instrument of Taiyi, the ladle from which he pours out the primordial breath (yuanqi), and as his heavenly chariot.[92]

A part of the Shiji by Sima Qian identifies Taiyi with the simple name Di (Deity) and tells:[92]

The Dipper is the Thearch's carriage. It revolves around the central point and majestically regulates the four realms. The distribution of yin and yang, the fixing of the four seasons, the coordination of the five phases, the progression of rotational measurements, and the determining of all celestial markers—all of these are linked to the Dipper.

In 113 BCE, Emperor Wu of Han, under the influence of prominent fangshi—Miu Ji and later Gongsun Qing—, officially integrated the Huang–Lao theology of Taiyi with the Confucian state religion and theology of the Five Forms of the Highest Deity inherited from the erstwhile dynasties.[95]

Huangdi edit

 
Temple of the Yellow Deity in Jinyun, Lishui, Zhejiang.
 
Wooden sculpture of the eagle-faced Thunder God (雷神 Léishén), punisher of those who go against the order of Heaven, at the Temple of the Eastern Peak of Baishan in Pu, Linfen, Shanxi. In the oldest accounts, he is one and the same with the Yellow Emperor.

Huángdì (黄帝 "Yellow Emperor" or "Yellow Deity") is another name of the God of Heaven, associated with the celestial pole and with the power of the wu (shamans).[83]: 12, note 33  In the older cosmological tradition of the Wufang Shangdi, the Yellow Deity is the main one, associated with the centre of the cosmos. He is also called Huángshén 黄神 ("Yellow God"), Xuānyuán (轩辕 "Chariot Shaft"[96]), which is said to have been his personal name as a human incarnation, Xuānyuánshì (轩辕氏 "Master of the Chariot Shaft"), or Xuanyuan Huangdi ("Yellow Deity of the Chariot Shaft").

In Chinese religion he is the deity who shapes the material world ( ), the creator of the Huaxia civilisation, of marriage and morality, language and lineage, and is the progenitor of all Chinese.[97] In the cosmology of the Wufang Shangdi his astral body is Saturn, but he is also identified as the Sun God, and with the star Regulus (α Leonis) and constellations Leo and Lynx, of which the latter is said to represent the body of the Yellow Dragon, his serpentine form.[98] The character huáng, for "yellow", also means, by homophony and shared etymology, huáng, "august", "creator" and "radiant", attributes of the supreme God.[99]

As a progenitor, Huangdi is portrayed as the historical incarnation of the Yellow God of the Northern Dipper.[100] According to a definition given by apocryphal texts related to the Hétú 河圖, the Yellow Emperor "proceeds from the essence of the Yellow God of the Northern Dipper", is born to "a daughter of a chthonic deity", and as such he is "a cosmic product of the conflation of Heaven and Earth".[88]

As a human being, the Yellow Emperor was conceived by a virgin mother, Fubao, who was impregnated by Taiyi's radiance (yuanqi, "primordial pneuma"), a lightning, which she saw encircling the Northern Dipper (Great Chariot, or broader Ursa Major), or the celestial pole, while walking in the countryside. She delivered her son after twenty-four months on the mount of Shou (Longevity) or mount Xuanyuan, after which he was named.[101] Through his human side, he was a descendant of 有熊氏 Yǒuxióng, the lineage of the Bear—another reference to the Ursa Major. Didier has studied the parallels that the Yellow Emperor's mythology has in other cultures, deducing a plausible ancient origin of the myth in Siberia or in north Asia.[102]

In older accounts, the Yellow Emperor is identified as a deity of light (and his name is explained in the Shuowen Jiezi to derive from guāng , "light") and thunder, and as one and the same with the "Thunder God" (雷神 Léishén),[103][104] who in turn, as a later mythological character, is distinguished as the Yellow Emperor's foremost pupil, such as in the Huangdi Neijing.

As the deity of the centre, the Yellow Emperor is the Zhongyuedadi (中岳大帝 "Great Deity of the Central Peak") and he represents the essence of earth and the Yellow Dragon.[105] He represents the hub of creation, the axis mundi (Kunlun) that is the manifestation of the divine order in physical reality, opening the way to immortality.[105] As the centre of the four directions, in the Shizi he is described as "Yellow Emperor with Four Faces" (黄帝四面 Huángdì Sìmiàn).[106] The "Four-Faced God" or "Ubiquitous God" (四面神 Sìmiànshén) is also the Chinese name of Brahma.

Huangdi is the model of those who merge their self with the self of the supreme God, of the ascetics who reach enlightenment or immortality.[107] He is the god of nobility, the patron of Taoism and medicine. In the Shiji, as well as in the Taoist book Zhuangzi, he is also described as the perfect king. There are records of dialogues in which Huangdi took the advice of wise counselors, contained in the Huangdi Neijing ("Inner Scripture of the Yellow Emperor") as well as in the Shiwen ("Ten Questions"). In the Huang–Lao tradition he is the model of a king turned immortal, and is associated with the transmission of various mantic and medical techniques.[108] Besides the Inner Scripture of the Yellow Emperor, Huangdi is also associated with other textual bodies of knowledge including the Huangdi Sijing ("Four Scriptures of the Yellow Emperor") and the Huangdi zhaijing ("Scripture of the Dwellings of the Yellow Emperor").[109]

In the cosmology of the Wufang Shangdi, besides the Yellow Deity, the Black Deity (黑帝 Hēidì) of the north, winter and Mercury, is portrayed by Sima Qian as Huangdi's grandson, and is himself associated with the north pole stars.[110] The "Green Deity" or "Blue Deity" (蒼帝 Cāngdì or 青帝 Qīngdì), of the east, spring, and identified with Jupiter,[111] is frequently worshipped as the supreme God and its main temple at Mount Tai (the cult centre of all Eastern Peak Temples) is attested as a site for fire sacrifices to the supreme God since prehistoric times.[112]

Yudi edit

 
Temple of the Jade Deity in Tianjin.

Yùdì (玉帝 "Jade Deity" or "Jade Emperor"), or Yùhuáng (玉皇 "Jade King"), is a personification of the supreme God of Heaven in popular religion.[113] More elaborate names for the Jade Deity include Yùhuáng Shàngdì (玉皇上帝 "Highest Deity the Jade King") and Yùhuángdàdì (玉皇大帝 "Great Deity the Jade King"), while among the common people he is intimately referred to as the "Lord of Heaven" (天公 Tiāngōng).[113]

He is also present in Taoist theology, where, however, he is not regarded as the supreme principle though he has a high position in the pantheon. In Taoism his formal title is the "Most Honourable Great Deity the Jade King in the Golden Tower of the Clear Heaven" (Hàotiān Jīnquē Zhìzūn Yùhuángdàdì 昊天金阙至尊玉皇大帝), and he is one of the Four Sovereigns, the four deities proceeding directly from the Three Pure Ones, which in Taoism are the representation of the supreme principle.[113]

The eminence of the Jade Deity is relatively recent, emerging in popular religion during the Tang dynasty (618–907) and becoming established during the Song dynasty (960–1279), especially under Emperor Zhenzong and Emperor Huizong of Song.[113] By the Tang dynasty the name of "Jade King" had been widely adopted by the common people to refer to the God of Heaven, and this got the attention of the Taoists who integrated the deity in their pantheon.[113] The cult of the Jade Deity became so widespread that during the Song dynasty it was proclaimed by imperial decree that this popular conception of God was the same supreme God of Heaven whom the elites had the privilege to worship at the Temple of Heaven.[114]

There are a great number of temples in China dedicated to the Jade Deity (玉皇庙 yùhuángmiào or 玉皇阁 yùhuánggé, et al.), and his birthday on the 9th day of the first month of the Chinese calendar is one of the biggest festivals.[114] He is also celebrated on the 25th day of the 12th month, when he is believed to turn to the human world to inspect all goods and evils to determine awards or punishments.[114] In everyday language the Jade Deity is also called the Olden Heavenly Father (Lǎotiānyé 老天爷) and simply Heaven.[114]

Taidi edit

Tàidì (太帝 "Utmost Deity" or "Great Deity"), is another name that has been used to describe the supreme God in some contexts. It appears in the mystical narratives of the Huainanzi where the supreme God is associated with Mount Kunlun, the axis mundi.[115]

Shen edit

Shén is a general concept meaning "spirit", and usually defines the plurality of gods in the world, however, in certain contexts it has been used as singular denoting the supreme God, the "being that gives birth to all things".[17]

Concepts including shen expressing the idea of the supreme God include:[17]

  • Tiānshén 天神, the "God of Heaven", interpreted in the Shuowen Jiezi (說文解字) as "the being that gives birth to all things";
  • Shénhuáng 神皇, "God the King", attested in Taihong ("The Origin of Vital Breath").

Shéndào (神道 "Way of the God[s]"), in the Yijing, is the path or way of manifestation of the supreme God and the gods of nature.

It is too delicate to be grasped. It cannot be perceived through reason. It cannot be seen through the eyes. It does without knowing how it can do. This is what we call the Way of the God[s].[17]

Since the Qin and Han dynasty, "Shendao" became a descriptor for the "Chinese religion" as the shèjiào 社教, "social religion" of the nation.[116] The phrase Shéndào shèjiào (神道設教) literally means "established religion of the way of the gods".[117]

Zi edit

 
A temple of popular religion in Nanbaixiang, Ouhai, Wenzhou, Zhejiang. The facade of the left side building features the modern stylisation of the / zi symbol →  .

Zi , literally meaning "son", "(male) offspring", is another concept associated with the supreme God of Heaven as the north celestial pole and its spinning stars. , meaning "word" and "symbol", is one of its near homophonous and graphic cognates. It was the surname used by the royal lineage of the Shang dynasty.[118] It is a component of concepts including 天子 Tiānzǐ ("Son of Heaven") and 君子 jūnzǐ ("son of a lord", which in Confucianism became the concept of morally perfected person). According to Didier, in Shang and Zhou forms, the grapheme zi itself depicts someone linked to the godhead of the squared north celestial pole ( Dīng), and is related to zhōng, the concept of spiritual, and thus political, centrality.[119]

Olden versions of the graphemes for zi and zhong
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Images ❶ to ❹ are Shang versions of the grapheme k:子 zi. Images ❺ to ❽ are olden versions of the grapheme k:中 zhōng, "centrality", "middle", "inside", "within". Respectively, from left to right, the latter are in Shang bronzeware script, Qin bamboo and wooden slips script, one of the versions recorded in the Han Shuowen Jiezi, and Han small seal script.
According to John C. Didier, both zi and zhong graphemes express spiritual filiation and alignment with the supreme godhead of the north celestial pole. They share the graphic element representing the celestial square itself ( Dīng) and the ritual vessel and ritual space used to mimic it on earth, and thus commune with it, establishing spiritual and political centrality.[119]
Image ❾ is a Shang version of k:字 , "word" and "symbol", representing a "son" enshrined under a "roof".

In modern Chinese popular religion, zi is a synonym of ("prosperity", "furthering", "welfare"). Lùxīng (禄星 "Star of Prosperity") is Mizar, a star of the Big Dipper (Great Chariot) constellation which rotates around the north celestial pole; it is the second star of the "handle" of the Dipper. Luxing is conceived as a member of two clusters of gods, the Sānxīng (三星 "Three Stars") and the Jiǔhuángshén (九皇神 "Nine God-Kings"). The latter are the seven stars of the Big Dipper with the addition of two less visible ones thwartwise the "handle", and they are conceived as the ninefold manifestation of the supreme God of Heaven, which in this tradition is called Jiǔhuángdàdì (九皇大帝, "Great Deity of the Nine Kings"),[22] Xuántiān Shàngdì (玄天上帝 "Highest Deity of the Dark Heaven"),[23] or Dòufù (斗父 "Father of the Chariot"). The number nine is for this reason associated with the yang masculine power of the dragon, and celebrated in the Double Ninth Festival and Nine God-Kings Festival.[23] The Big Dipper is the expansion of the supreme principle, governing waxing and life (yang), while the Little Dipper is its reabsorption, governing waning and death (yin).[22][23] The mother of the Jiuhuangshen is Dǒumǔ (斗母 "Mother of the Chariot"), the female aspect of the supreme.[22][23]

The stars are consistent regardless of the name in different languages, cultures, or viewpoint on Earth's Northern/Southern hemisphere with the same sky, sun, stars, and moon

Theology of the schools edit

As explained by Stephan Feuchtwang, the fundamental difference between Confucianism and Taoism lies in the fact that the former focuses on the realisation of the starry order of Heaven in human society, while the latter on the contemplation of the Dao which spontaneously arises in nature.[120] Taoism also focuses on the cultivation of local gods, to centre the order of Heaven upon a particular locality.[29]

Confucian theology edit

 
Worship at the Great Temple of Lord Zhang Hui (张挥公大殿 Zhāng Huī gōng dàdiàn), the cathedral ancestral shrine of the Zhang lineage corporation, at their ancestral home in Qinghe, Hebei.
Olden versions of the grapheme , meaning "scholar", "refined one", "Confucian". It is composed of rén ("man") and ("to await"), itself composed of ("rain", "instruction") and ér ("sky"), graphically a "man under the rain". Its full meaning is "man receiving instruction from Heaven". According to Kang Youwei, Hu Shih, and Yao Xinzhong, they were the official shaman-priests ( ) experts in rites and astronomy of the Shang, and later Zhou, dynasty.[121]

Confucius (551–479 BCE) emerged in the critical Warring States period as a reformer of the religious tradition inherited from the Shang and Zhou dynasties. His elaboration of ancient theology gives centrality to self-cultivation and human agency,[74] and to the educational power of the self-established individual in assisting others to establish themselves (the principle of 愛人 àirén, "loving others").[122]

Philosophers in the Warring States compiled the Analects and formulated the classic metaphysics which became the lash of Confucianism. In accordance with the Master, they identified mental tranquility as the state of Tian, or the One (一 ), which in each individual is the Heaven-bestowed divine power to rule one's own life and the world. Going beyond the Master, they theorised the oneness of production and reabsorption into the cosmic source, and the possibility to understand and therefore re-attain it through meditation. This line of thought would have influenced all Chinese individual and collective-political mystical theories and practices thereafter.[123]

Fu Pei-Jun characterises the Heaven of ancient Confucianism, before the Qin dynasty, as "dominator", "creator", "sustainer", "revealer" and "judge".[124] The Han-dynasty Confucian scholar Dong Zhongshu (179–104 BCE) described Heaven as "the supreme God possessing a will".[125] In the Song dynasty, Neo-Confucianism, especially the major exponent Zhu Xi (1130–1200), generally rationalised the theology, cosmology, and ontology inherited from the foregoing tradition.[126] Neo-Confucian thinkers reaffirmed the unity of the "heavenly city" and the earthly "divine city"; the city that the God of Heaven morally organises in the natural world through humanity is not ontologically separate from Heaven itself,[127] so that the compound "Heaven-Earth" (天地 Tiāndì) is another name of the God of Heaven itself in Neo-Confucian texts.[128] Heaven contains Earth as part of its nature, and the myriad things are begotten (生 shēng) by Heaven and raised up ( yǎng) by Earth.[129] Neo-Confucians also discussed Heaven under the term 太极 Tàijí ("Great Pole").[130]

Stephan Feuchtwang says that Confucianism consists of the search for "middle ways" between yin and yang in each new configuration of the world, to align reality with Heaven through rites. The order of Heaven is emphasised; it is a moral power and fully realises in patriarchy, that is to say, the worship of progenitors, in the Han tradition in the male line, who are considered to have embodied Heaven. This conception is put into practice as the religious worship of progenitors in the system of ancestral shrines, dedicated to the deified progenitors of lineages (groups of families sharing the same surname).[120] The philosopher Promise Hsu identifies Tian as the foundation of a civil theology of China.[131]

Three models edit

Huang Yong (2007) has discerned three models of theology in the Confucian tradition:[132]

  • (i) Theology of Heaven as discussed in the Confucian canonical texts, the Classic of History, the Classic of Poetry, and the Analects of Confucius, as a transcendent concept of God similar to the conception of God in the Hellenistic and Abrahamic traditions;
  • (ii) Theology of Heaven in contemporary New Confucianism, represented especially by Xiong Shili, Mou Zongsan, and Tu Weiming, as an "immanently transcendent" God, the ultimate reality immanent in the world to transcend the world;
  • (iii) Theology of Heaven in Neo-Confucianism, particularly the Cheng brothers in the Song dynasty, as the wonderful life-giving activity transcending the world within the world.
Canonical theology edit

The supreme power in Confucianism is Tian, Shangdi, or Di in the early or classic Confucian tradition, later also discussed in its activity as 天理 Tiānlǐ or 天道 Tiāndào, the "Order of Heaven" or "Way of Heaven" by Neo-Confucians.[133][134] A number of scholars support the theistic reading of early Confucian texts.[135] In the Analects, Heaven is treated as a conscious and providential being concerned not only with the human order in general, but with Confucius' own mission in particular.[133] Confucius claimed to be a transmitter of an ancient knowledge rather than a renovator.[136]

In Confucianism, God has not created man in order to neglect him, but is always with man, and sustains the order of nature and human society, by teaching rulers how to be good to secure the peace of the countries.[137] The theistic idea of early Confucianism gave later way to a depersonalisation of Heaven, identifying it as the pattern discernible in the unfolding of nature and his will (Tianming) as peoples' consensus, culminating in the Mencius and the Xunzi.[138]

Immanent transcendence edit

Contemporary New Confucian theologians have resolved the ancient dispute between the theistic and nontheistic, immanent and transcendent interpretations of Tian, elaborating the concept of "immanent transcendence" (内在超越 nèizài chāoyuè), contrasting it with the "external transcendence" (外在超越 wàizài chāoyuè) of the God of Christianity. While the God of the Christians is outside the world that he creates, the God of the Confucians is immanent in the world to call for the transcendence of the given situation, thus promoting an ongoing transformation.[139]

The first theologian to discuss immanent transcendence was Xiong Shili. According to him, noumenon ( ) and phenomenon ( yòng) are not separate, but the noumenon is right within the phenomenon. At the same time, the noumenon is also transcendent, not in the sense that it has independent existence, separated from the "ten thousand things", but in the sense that it is the substance of all things. As the substance, it is transcendent because it is not transformed by the ten thousand things but is rather their master: it "transcends the surface of things".[140] By transcending the surface, one realises the self-nature (自性神 zì xìng shén) of himself and of all things; to the extent that a thing has not fully realised its own self-nature, God is also that on which any particular thing or human being depends (依他神 yī tā shén).[141]

According to the further explanations of Xiong's student Mou Zongsan, Heaven is not merely the sky, and just like the God of the Judaic and Hellenistic-Christian tradition, it is not one of the beings in the world. However, unlike the God of Western religions, the God of Confucianism is not outside the world either, but is within humans—who are the primary concern of Confucianism—and within other beings in the world.[142] Tian is the ontological substance of reality, it is immanent in every human being as the human nature (ren); however, the human being on the phenomenal level is not identical with its metaphysical essence.[142] Mencius stated that «the one who can fully realise one's heart–mind can understand one's nature, and the one who can understand one's own nature can know Tian». This means that Tian is within the human being, but before this last comes to realise his true heart–mind, or know his true nature, Heaven still appears transcendent to him. Mou cites Max Muller saying that «a human being itself is potentially a God, a God one presently ought to become», to explain the idea of the relationship of God and humanity in Confucianism and other Eastern religions. What is crucial is to transcend the phenomenon to reach Tian.[142]

Mou makes an important distinction between Confucianism and Christianity: the latter does not ask one to become a Christ, because the nature of Christ is unreachable for ordinary humans, who are not conceived as having a divine essence; by contrast, in Confucianism, sages who have realised Tian teach to others how to become sages and worthy themselves, since Heaven is present in everyone and may be cultivated.[142] Mou defines Confucianism as a "religion of morality", a religion of the "fulfillment of virtues", whose meaning lies in seeking the infinite and the complete in the finitude of earthly life.[142]

Tu Weiming, a student of Mou, furtherly develops the theology of "immanent transcendence". By his own words:[143]

A person is in this world and yet does not belong to this world. He regards this secular world as divine only because he realizes the divine value in this secular world. Here the secular world in which the divinity is manifested is not a world separate from the divinity, and the divinity manifested in the secular is not some Ideal externally transcendent of the secular world.

According to Tu, the more man may penetrate his own inner source, the more he may transcend himself. By the metaphorical words of Mencius (7a29), this process is like "digging a well to reach the source of water".[143] It is for this emphasis on transcending the phenomena to reach the true self, which is the divine, that Tu defines Confucian religiosity as the "ultimate self-transformation as a communal act and as a faithful dialogical response to the transcendent"; Confucianism is about developing the nature of humanity in the right, harmonious way.[143] Tu further explains this as a prognosis and diagnosis of humanity: "we are not what we ought to be but what we ought to be is inherent in the structure of what we are".[143]

Heaven bids and impels humans to realise their true self.[144] Humans have the inborn ability to respond to Heaven.[144] One may obtain knowledge of divinity through his inner experience (tizhi), and knowledge, developing his heavenly virtue. This is a central concern of Tu's theology, at the same time intellectual and affectional—a question of mind and heart at the same time.[144]

Theology of activity edit

Huang Yong has named a third approach to Confucian theology, interpreting the Neo-Confucianism of the brothers Cheng Hao (1032–1085) and Cheng Yi (1033–1107). Instead of regarding the divinity of Tian as a substance, this theology emphasises its creative "life-giving activity" (生 shēng) that is within the world in order to transcend the world itself.[145] Also in the works of Zhou Xi, Heaven is discussed as always operating within beings in conjunction with their singular 心 xīn ("heart–mind").[41]

Neo-Confucians incorporated in Confucianism the discussion about the traditional concept of , variously translated as "form", "law", "reason", "order", "pattern", "organism", and most commonly "principle", regarding it as the supreme principle of the cosmos.[145] The Chengs use Li interchangeably with other terms. For instance, discussing the supreme principle, Cheng Hao says that it "is called change ( ) with respect to its reality; is called dào with respect to its li; is called divinity ( shén) with respect to its function; and is called nature ( xìng) with respect to it as the destiny in a person". Cheng Yi also states that the supreme principle "with respect to li it is called Heaven ( Tiān); with respect to endowment, it is called nature, and with respect to its being in a person, it is called heart–mind". As it appears from these analogies, the Li is considered by the Chengs as identical with Heaven.[145]

By the words of the Chengs, Huang clarifies the immanent transcendence of the Li, since it comes ontologically before things but it does not exist outside of things, or outside qi, the energy–matter of which things are made. In Chengs' theology the Li is not some entity but the "activity" of things, sheng. Explaining it through an analogy, according to the Shuowen Jiezi, Li is originally a verb meaning to work on jade.[146] The Chengs further identify this activity as the true human nature.[147] Sages, who have realised the true nature, are identical with the Li and their actions are identical to the creativity of the Li.[148]

Generally, in Confucian texts, gōng ("work", "work of merit" or "beneficial work") and ("virtue") are frequently used to refer to the ways of becoming an honourable man of Heaven, and thus they may be regarded as attributes of Heaven itself. Zhu Xi himself characterises Heaven as extremely "active" or "vital" (jiàn ), while the Earth is responsive ( shùn).[149]

Humanity as the incarnation of Heaven edit

The relationship "between Heaven and mankind" (tiānrénzhījì 天人之際), that is to say how Heaven generates men and how they should behave to follow its order, is a common theme discussed in the Confucian theology of Heaven.[134] Generally, Confucianism sees humanity, or the form-quality of the human being, rén (translatable as "benevolence", "love", "humanity"), as a quality of the God of Heaven itself, and therefore it sees humanity as an incarnation of Heaven.[150] This theory is not at odds with the classical non-Confucian theology which views Huangdi as the incarnated God of Heaven, since Huangdi is a representation of nobility and the pursuit of Confucianism is to make all humans noble (jūnzǐ 君子) or sages and holy men (圣人 shèngrén).

According to Benjamin I. Schwartz, in the Xunzi it is explained that:[151]

[Dissonances] between man and Heaven [are] only provisional ... the human intellect which brings order to chaos is itself an incarnation of the powers of Heaven. Heaven's working in the non-human sphere is described in a language which can almost be described as mystical. Once the normative human culture is realized, man is aligned with the harmonies of the universe.

In the "Interactions Between Heaven and Mankind" (天人感应 Tiānrén Gǎnyìng) written by the Han-dynasty scholar Dong Zhongshu, humanity is discussed as the incarnation of Heaven. Human physiological structure, thought, emotions, and moral character are all modelled after Heaven. In the Confucian discourse, ancestors who accomplished great actions are regarded as the incarnation of Heaven, and they last as a form shaping their descendants.[152] Rén is the virtue endowed by Heaven and at the same time the means by which man may comprehend his divine nature and achieve oneness with Heaven.[153]

Discourse about evil, suffering, and world renewal edit

In Confucian theology, there is no original sin, and rather humanity, as the incarnate image of Heaven's virtue, is born good (良心 liángxín, "good heart–mind").[154] In Confucian theodicy, the rise of evil in a given cosmic configuration is attributed to failings in the moral organisation of qi, which depends on mankind's (or the "practising subject", shíjiàn zhǔtǐ 實踐主體, in Zhu Xi) free will, that is to say the ability to choose whether to harmonise or not with the order of Heaven, which is part of the creature's ability to co-create with the creator.[155]

Paraphrasing Zhu Xi:[156]

... each human activity, found in either the mind, the body, or in both of them simultaneously, either follows principles of the just Heaven, or is corrupted by selfish appetites.

Human qi, the primordial potential substance, organises according to the yin and yang polarity in the two facets of xíng ("body") and shén ("soul").[157] Qi is open to both disorder (yin) and order (yang), bodily and heavenly appetites.[158] While other creatures have a limited perfection, the human being alone has an "unlimited nature", that is to say the ability to cultivate its qi in amounts and directions of its own choice, either yin or yang.[159] While Confucians prescribe to be moderate in pursuing appetites, since even the bodily ones are necessary for life,[160] when the "proprietorship of corporeality" (xíngqì zhīsī 形氣之私) prevails, selfishness and therefore immorality ensue.[161]

When evil dominates, the world falls into disaster, society shatters up, and individuals are hit by diseases, giving the way for a new heavenly configuration to emerge. By the words of Zhu Xi:[162]

Once [Heaven] sees that human beings' immorality comes to its apex, it will crush everything up. What will be left is only a chaos, wherein all humans and things lose their being. Subsequently, a new world will emerge.

Sufferings, however, are also regarded by Confucians as a way of Heaven to refine a person preparing him for a future role. According to Mencius:[163]

When Heaven is about to confer a great office on any man, it first exercises his mind with suffering, and his sinews and bones with toil. It exposes his body to hunger, and subjects him to extreme poverty. It confounds his undertakings. By all these methods it stimulates his mind, hardens his nature, and supplies his incompetencies.

Likewise, Zhu Xi says:[155]

Helplessness, poverty, adversity, and obstacles can strengthen one's will, and cultivate his humanity (ren).

Taoist theology edit

 
Hall of the Three Purities at the Temple of Guandi (关帝庙) of Qiqihar, Heilongjiang.
 
Altar to Shangdi and Doumu (斗母 "Mother of the Chariot"), representing the originating principle of the universe in masculine and feminine form, in the Chengxu Temple of Zhouzhuang, Jiangxi.

Religious traditions under the label of "Taoism" have their own theologies which, characterised by henotheism, are meant to accommodate local deities in the Taoist celestial hierarchy.[51] According to Stephan Feuchtwang, Taoism is concerned with the cultivation of local deities, bringing them in alignment with the broader cosmology, in order to "centre" through the power of rite each locality with its peculiarities.[29] It has hermetic and lay liturgical traditions, the most practised at the popular level being those for healing and exorcism, codified into a textual corpus commissioned and approved by emperors throughout the dynasties, the Taoist Canon.[120]

The core of Taoist theology is the concept of Dào , the "Way", which is both the order of nature and the source of it. Differently from common religion or even Confucianism, Taoism espouses a negative theology declaring the impossibility to define the Dao. The core text of Taoism, the Daodejing, opens with the verses: «The Dao that can be said is not the eternal Dao, the name that can be said is not the eternal name». Feuchtwang explains the Dao as equivalent to the ancient Greek conception of physis, that is "nature" as the generation and regeneration of beings.[120] Taoists seek "perfection", which is immortality, achieved by becoming one with the Dao, or the rhythms of nature.[120]

Through time, Taoist Theology created its own deities. Certain sects modeled their temples to dedicate to certain deities.[164] Deities who take part in the Dao are arranged in a hierarchy. The supreme powers are three, the Three Pure Ones, and represent the centre of the cosmos and its two modalities of manifestation (yin and yang).[165] The hierarchy of the highest powers of the cosmos is arranged as follows:[51]

Yuánshǐ Tiānzūn (元始天尊) — "Heavenly Honourable of the First Beginning"
Língbǎo Tiānzūn (灵宝天尊) — "Heavenly Honourable of the Numinous Treasure"
Dàodé Tiānzūn (道德天尊) — "Heavenly Honourable of the Way and its Virtue", incarnated historically as Laozi
  • Sìyù (四御) — "Four Sovereigns":

Trends in modern Chinese political and civil theology edit

 
Statues of the Yellow Deity and the Red Deity carved in the rock at a ceremonial complex in Zhengzhou, Henan.

Interest in traditional Chinese theology has waxed and waned throughout the dynasties of the history of China. For instance, the Great Leap Forward enacted in the mid-20th century involved the outright destruction of traditional temples in accordance with Maoist ideology. From the 1980s onwards a revival has taken place, with public sacrifices held at temples meant to renew the perceived alliance between community leaders and the gods.[20] In the 2010s, "the great majority of China's population of 1.3+ billion" takes part in Chinese cosmological religion, its rituals, and festivals of the lunar calendar.[166] The cult of the Yellow Emperor is celebrated officially by the contemporary Chinese government.[167]

Even Chinese Buddhism, a religion which originally came from abroad, adapted to common Chinese cosmology by paralleling its concept of a triune supreme with Shakyamuni, Amithaba, and Maitreya, representing respectively enlightenment, salvation, and post-apocalyptic paradise.[165] The Tathātā (真如 zhēnrú, "suchness") is generally identified as the supreme being itself.[51]

In the wake of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, many scholars understand Confucian theology as a natural theology.[126] The Chinese theological conception of the God of Heaven's ongoing self-creation/evolution in the "divine city" and the broader cosmos is contrasted with that of God as a craftsman external to his creation which is the type of theism of Christianity.[168] Contemporary scholars also compare Confucianism and Christianity on the matters of humanity's good nature and of pneumatology, that is to say the respective doctrines of the shen dynamism produced by God's activity (guishen) and of the Holy Spirit, finding that the Confucian doctrine is truly humanistic since the spirit is the creative dynamism always present in humanity, while in the Christian doctrine, the Holy Spirit ultimately belongs to God alone.[169] According to the philosopher Promise Hsu, in the wake of Eric Voegelin, while Christianity fails to provide a public, civil theology, Confucianism with its idea of Tian, within broader Chinese cosmological religion, is particularly apt to fill the void left by the failing of Christianity.[131] Paraphrasing Varro, Hsu says:[131]

A society exists concretely, with regard to space, time, and human beings. Their organizational form and its symbols are sacred in their concreteness, regardless of ... speculations about their meaning.

Quoting from Ellis Sandoz's works, Hsu says:[131]

Civil theology consists of propositionally stated true scientific knowledge of the divine order. It is the theology discerned and validated through reason by the philosopher, on the one hand, and through common sense and the logique du Coeur evoked by the persuasive beauty of mythic narrative and imitative representations, on the other hand.

Also, Joël Thoraval characterises the common Chinese religion, or what he calls a "popular Confucianism", which has powerfully revived since the 1980s, consisting of the widespread belief and worship of five cosmological entities—Heaven and Earth (Di ), the sovereign or the government (jūn ), ancestors (qīn ), and masters (shī )—, as China's civil religion.[170]

See also edit

Related cultures edit

Abrahamic syncretism edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Whether centred in the changeful precessional north celestial pole or in the fixed north ecliptic pole, the spinning constellations draw the wàn symbol around the centre.
  2. ^ is sometimes translated as "thearch", from the Greek theos ("deity"), with arche ("principle", "origin"), thus meaning "divine principle", "divine origin". In sinology it has been used to designate the incarnated gods who, according to Chinese tradition, sustain the world order and originated China.[49]
  3. ^ A dǒu in Chinese is an entire semantic field meaning the shape of a "dipper", as the Big Dipper (北斗 Běidǒu), or a "cup", signifying a "whirl", and also has martial connotations meaning "fight", "struggle", "battle".

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Didier (2009), p. 256, Vol. III.
  2. ^ a b Mair, Victor H. (2011). "Religious Formations and Intercultural Contacts in Early China". In Krech, Volkhard; Steinicke, Marion (eds.). Dynamics in the History of Religions between Asia and Europe: Encounters, Notions, and Comparative Perspectives. Leiden: Brill. pp. 85–110. ISBN 978-9004225350. pp. 97–98, note 26.
  3. ^ Didier (2009), p. 257, Vol. I.
  4. ^ a b c d Didier (2009), passim.
  5. ^ a b Reiter, Florian C. (2007). Purposes, Means and Convictions in Daoism: A Berlin Symposium. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3447055130. p. 190.
  6. ^ a b Milburn, Olivia (2016). The Spring and Autumn Annals of Master Yan. Sinica Leidensia. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004309661. p. 343, note 17.
  7. ^ Assasi, Reza (2013). "Swastika: The Forgotten Constellation Representing the Chariot of Mithras". Anthropological Notebooks (Supplement: Šprajc, Ivan; Pehani, Peter, eds. Ancient Cosmologies and Modern Prophets: Proceedings of the 20th Conference of the European Society for Astronomy in Culture). Ljubljana: Slovene Anthropological Society. XIX (2). ISSN 1408-032X.
  8. ^ Adler (2011), pp. 4–5.
  9. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 98 ff.
  10. ^ Cai (2004), p. 314.
  11. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 182.
  12. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 76–77.
  13. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 84, note 282.
  14. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 15–16.
  15. ^ Leo Koguan (13 September 2014). "The Yellow Emperor Hypothesis" (PDF). The Yellow Emperor's Thought versus the Hundred Schools of Thought in Pre-Qin Period. Yellow Emperor City, Zhuolu, Hebei. The conference is also dated 4711 X.Y. instead of 2014, according to the year count starting from the birth of Xuanyuan (the Yellow Emperor). Leo Koguan is a teacher of Rule of Law and Principle at Tsinghua University, Beijing University and KoGuan Law School, scholar of Yellow Emperor Thought and Xuanyuandao, who explains Chinese religion in the language of a scientific cosmology.
  16. ^ Adler (2011), p. 5.
  17. ^ a b c d Lü & Gong (2014), p. 63.
  18. ^ Lü & Gong (2014), pp. 71–72.
  19. ^ Lü & Gong (2014), p. 73.
  20. ^ a b Stafford, Charles, ed. (2013). Ordinary Ethics in China. A & C Black. ISBN 978-0857854605. pp. 198–199.
  21. ^ McLeod, Alexus (2016). Astronomy in the Ancient World: Early and Modern Views on Celestial Events. Springer. ISBN 978-3319236001. pp. 89–90: "According to the Chinese view, the circumpolar stars represent the palace surrounding the emperor, who is the pole star, and the various members of the celestial bureaucracy. Indeed, the Chinese saw the night sky as a mirror of the empire, and saw the empire as a mirror of the sky, on earth. The sky was ... tian ..., and the empire had the authority of tian".
  22. ^ a b c d Cheu, Hock Tong (1988). The Nine Emperor Gods: A Study of Chinese Spirit-medium Cults. Time Books International. ISBN 9971653850. p. 19.
  23. ^ a b c d e DeBernardi, Jean (2007). "Commodifying Blessings: Celebrating the Double-Yang Festival in Penang, Malaysia and Wudang Mountain, China". In Kitiarsa, Pattana (ed.). Religious Commodifications in Asia: Marketing Gods. Routledge. ISBN 978-1134074457.
  24. ^ a b Pankenier (2013), p. 55.
  25. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 196, 202.
  26. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 222.
  27. ^ Didier (2009), p. 128.
  28. ^ Maeder, Stefan (2011), "The Big Dipper, Sword, Snake and Turtle: Four Constellations as Indicators of the Ecliptic Pole in Ancient China?", in Nakamura, Tsuko; Orchiston, Wayne; Sôma, Mitsuru; Strom, Richard (eds.), Mapping the Oriental Sky. Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Oriental Astronomy, Tokyo: National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, pp. 57–63.
  29. ^ a b c d Feuchtwang (2016), p. 150.
  30. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 223.
  31. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 215.
  32. ^ a b c Libbrecht (2007), p. 43.
  33. ^ Didier (2009), pp. 170–171, Vol. I.
  34. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 118.
  35. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 125–127.
  36. ^ Mair, Victor (2012). "The Earliest Identifiable Written Chinese Character". In Huld, Martin E.; Jones-Bley, Karlene; Miller, Dean A. (eds.). Archaeology and Language: Indo-European Studies Presented to James P. Mallory. Institute for the Study of Man. pp. 265–279. ISBN 978-0984538355. ISSN 0895-7258. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  37. ^ a b Pankenier (2013), pp. 112–113.
  38. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 131–132.
  39. ^ a b Zhong (2014), pp. 188–190.
  40. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 200.
  41. ^ a b Zhong (2014), p. 212.
  42. ^ Didier (2009), p. 137 ff, Vol. III.
  43. ^ Pankenier (2004), pp. 226–236.
  44. ^ Didier (2009), p. 111, Vol. II.
  45. ^ Didier (2009), p. 216, Vol. I.
  46. ^ Didier (2009), p. 1, Vol. III.
  47. ^ Chang (2000).
  48. ^ Lü & Gong (2014), pp. 63–67.
  49. ^ Pregadio (2013), p. 504: "Each sector of heaven (the four points of the compass and the center) was personified by a di (a term which indicates not only an emperor but also an ancestral "thearch" and "god")".
  50. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 66, note 224.
  51. ^ a b c d Lü & Gong (2014), p. 71.
  52. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 70.
  53. ^ Didier (2009), p. 228, Vol. II; passim Vol. I.
  54. ^ Didier (2009), p. 82, Vol. I.
  55. ^ Pankenier (2013), p. 9.
  56. ^ Pankenier (2004), p. 220.
  57. ^ a b c d e f Lü & Gong (2014), p. 64.
  58. ^ Zhao (2012), p. 51.
  59. ^ Didier (2009), p. 4, Vol. III.
  60. ^ Zhou (2005).
  61. ^ Medhurst (1847), p. 260.
  62. ^ Pankenier (2013), pp. 103–105.
  63. ^ Didier (2009), p. 118, Vol. II and passim.
  64. ^ Didier (2009), p. 133, Vol. II.
  65. ^ Didier (2009), p. 100, Vol. II.
  66. ^ Didier (2009), p. 107 ff, Vol. II.
  67. ^ Pankenier (2013), p. 103.
  68. ^ Didier (2009), p. 6, Vol. III.
  69. ^ Pankenier (2013), pp. 138–148, "Chapter 4: Bringing Heaven Down to Earth".
  70. ^ Pankenier (2013), pp. 136–142.
  71. ^ Didier (2009), pp. 227–228, Vol. II.
  72. ^ a b Didier (2009), pp. 3–4, Vol. III.
  73. ^ Didier (2009), pp. 143–144, Vol. II.
  74. ^ a b Fung (2008), p. 163.
  75. ^ a b c Lü & Gong (2014), p. 65.
  76. ^ a b c d Lü & Gong (2014), p. 66.
  77. ^ a b Lagerwey & Kalinowski (2008), p. 981.
  78. ^ Lü & Gong (2014), pp. 65–66.
  79. ^ Didier (2009), p. 217.
  80. ^ Didier (2009), p. 210, 227–228.
  81. ^ a b c Didier (2009), pp. 213–219, Vol. II, comprising the sections ", Di, the Ancestors, Shangdi, and Xiadi" and " as the Central Stellar Home of the High Ancestors and Conduit of Communication from the Center of Earth with the Center of the Sky".
  82. ^ Eno (2008), p. 72.
  83. ^ a b c Wells, Marnix (2014). The Pheasant Cap Master and the End of History: Linking Religion to Philosophy in Early China. Three Pines Press. ISBN 978-1931483261.
  84. ^ Sun & Kistemaker (1997), p. 121.
  85. ^ Lagerwey & Kalinowski (2008), p. 784, chapter: Bujard, Marianne. "State and Local Cults in Han Religion".
  86. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 71–72.
  87. ^ Little & Eichman (2000), p. 250. It describes a Ming dynasty painting representing (among other figures) the Wudi: "In the foreground are the gods of the Five Directions, dressed as emperors of high antiquity, holding tablets of rank in front of them. [...] These gods are significant because they reflect the cosmic structure of the world, in which yin, yang and the Five Phases (Elements) are in balance. They predate religious Taoism, and may have originated as chthonic gods of the Neolithic period. Governing all directions (east, south, west, north and center), they correspond not only to the Five Elements, but to the seasons, the Five Sacred Peaks, the Five Planets, and zodiac symbols as well. [...]".
  88. ^ a b Espesset (2008), pp. 22–28.
  89. ^ Lagerwey & Kalinowski (2008), pp. 778–779, chapter: Bujard, Marianne. "State and Local Cults in Han Religion".
  90. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 69.
  91. ^ Didier (2009), passim Vol. III, esp. "Chapter 6: Great Ancestor Dayi 大乙; Polar God Taiyi 太乙; Yi , "One"; and the Development of Early Imperial Chinese Cosmology".
  92. ^ a b c Little & Eichman (2000), p. 75.
  93. ^ Didier (2009), pp. 86–90, Vol. III.
  94. ^ Espesset (2008), p. 19.
  95. ^ Lagerwey & Kalinowski (2008), p. 785.
  96. ^ An Liu; John S. Major (2010). The Huainanzi: A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Government in Early Han China. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231142045. p. 117, note 11.
  97. ^ Chamberlain (2009), p. 222.
  98. ^ Sun & Kistemaker (1997), pp. 120–123.
  99. ^ Pregadio (2013), pp. 504–505.
  100. ^ Lagerwey & Kalinowski (2008), p. 1080.
  101. ^ Bonnefoy, Yves (1993). Asian Mythologies. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226064565. pp. 241, 246.
  102. ^ Didier (2009), pp. 153–156, Vol. I.
  103. ^ Song, Yaoliang (2015). The Deified Human Face Petroglyphs of Prehistoric China. World Scientific. ISBN 978-1938368332. p. 239: in the Hetudijitong and the Chunqiuhechengtu the Yellow Emperor is identified as the Thunder God.
  104. ^ Yang, Lihui; An, Deming (2005). Handbook of Chinese Mythology. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 157607806X. p. 138.
  105. ^ a b Fowler (2005), pp. 200–201.
  106. ^ Sun & Kistemaker (1997), p. 120.
  107. ^ Lagerwey & Kalinowski (2008), p. 674.
  108. ^ Pregadio (2013), p. 505.
  109. ^ Pregadio (2013), p. 1229.
  110. ^ Didier (2009), p. 156, Vol. I.
  111. ^ Zhou (2005), passim.
  112. ^ Zhou (2005), p. 1.
  113. ^ a b c d e Pregadio (2013), p. 1197.
  114. ^ a b c d Yao & Zhao (2010), p. 155.
  115. ^ Pregadio (2013), p. 603.
  116. ^ Zhao (2012), p. 47.
  117. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 124.
  118. ^ Didier (2009), p. 226, Vol. II.
  119. ^ a b Didier (2009), pp. 190–191, Vol. II.
  120. ^ a b c d e Feuchtwang (2016), p. 146.
  121. ^ Yao, Xinzhong (2000). An Introduction to Confucianism. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521643120. p. 19.
  122. ^ Zhou (2012), p. 2.
  123. ^ Didier (2009), pp. xxxviii–xxxix, Vol. I.
  124. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 102, relying upon Fu, Pei-jun (1984). The Concept of 'T'ien' in Ancient China: With Special Emphasis on Confucianism (Ph.D. dissertation). Yale University..
  125. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 3.
  126. ^ a b Zhong (2014), passim.
  127. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 98–99.
  128. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 107.
  129. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 109–111.
  130. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 121.
  131. ^ a b c d Hsu (2014).
  132. ^ Huang (2007), p. 455.
  133. ^ a b Huang (2007), p. 457.
  134. ^ a b Zhong (2014), p. 24.
  135. ^ Huang (2007), pp. 457–462.
  136. ^ Huang (2007), p. 458.
  137. ^ Huang (2007), p. 459.
  138. ^ Huang (2007), p. 460.
  139. ^ Huang (2007), p. 461.
  140. ^ Huang (2007), p. 462.
  141. ^ Huang (2007), p. 463.
  142. ^ a b c d e Huang (2007), p. 464.
  143. ^ a b c d Huang (2007), p. 465.
  144. ^ a b c Huang (2007), p. 466.
  145. ^ a b c Huang (2007), p. 469.
  146. ^ Huang (2007), p. 470.
  147. ^ Huang (2007), p. 472.
  148. ^ Huang (2007), p. 473.
  149. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 113–115.
  150. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 136–137.
  151. ^ Machle, Edward J. (1993). Nature and Heaven in the Xunzi: A Study of the Tian Lun. SUNY Press. ISBN 0791415538. p. 209. Cites: Schwartz, Benjamin I. (December 1973). "On the absence of reductionism in Chinese thought". Journal of Chinese Philosophy. 1 (1): 27–43. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6253.1973.tb00639.x.
  152. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 80.
  153. ^ Tay (2010), p. 102.
  154. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 150.
  155. ^ a b Zhong (2014), p. 143.
  156. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 149–150.
  157. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 144.
  158. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 145.
  159. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 146.
  160. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 151.
  161. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 147.
  162. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 141.
  163. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 142.
  164. ^ "The Taoist Deities". www.chebucto.ns.ca. Retrieved 2019-11-06.
  165. ^ a b Feuchtwang (2016), p. 151.
  166. ^ Feuchtwang (2016), p. 144.
  167. ^ Feuchtwang (2016), p. 164.
  168. ^ Zhong (2014), pp. 129–130.
  169. ^ Zhong (2014), p. 236.
  170. ^ Thoraval, Joël (2016). . Occasional Papers. No. 5. Paris, France: Centre for Studies on China, Korea and Japan. Archived from the original on 16 January 2018.

Sources edit

  • Adler, Joseph A. (2011). The Heritage of Non-Theistic Belief in China (PDF). (Conference paper) Toward a Reasonable World: The Heritage of Western Humanism, Skepticism, and Freethought. San Diego, CA.
  • Berthrong, John H. (2011), "Chinese (Confucian) Philosophical Theology", in Flint, Thomas P.; Rea, Michael C. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophical Theology, OUP Oxford, pp. 574–596, doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199596539.001.0001, ISBN 978-0199289202.
  • Cai, Zongqi (2004). Chinese Aesthetics: Ordering of Literature, the Arts, and the Universe in the Six Dynasties. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0824827910.
  • Chamberlain, Jonathan (2009). Chinese Gods : An Introduction to Chinese Folk Religion. Hong Kong: Blacksmith Books. ISBN 9789881774217.
  • Chang, Ruth H. (2000). "Understanding Di and Tian: Deity and Heaven from Shang to Tang Dynasties" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers. Victor H. Mair (108). ISSN 2157-9679.
  • Didier, John C. (2009). "In and Outside the Square: The Sky and the Power of Belief in Ancient China and the World, c. 4500 BC – AD 200". Sino-Platonic Papers. Victor H. Mair (192). Volume I: The Ancient Eurasian World and the Celestial Pivot, Volume II: Representations and Identities of High Powers in Neolithic and Bronze China, Volume III: Terrestrial and Celestial Transformations in Zhou and Early-Imperial China.
  • Feuchtwang, Stephan (2016), "Chinese religions", in Woodhead, Linda; Kawanami, Hiroko; Partridge, Christopher H. (eds.), Religions in the Modern World: Traditions and Transformations (3nd ed.), London: Routledge, pp. 143–172, ISBN 978-1317439608
  • Fung, Yiu-ming (2008), "Problematizing Contemporary Confucianism in East Asia", in Richey, Jeffrey (ed.), Teaching Confucianism, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0198042563.
  • Libbrecht, Ulrich (2007). Within the Four Seas...: Introduction to Comparative Philosophy. Peeters Publishers. ISBN 978-9042918122.
  • Fowler, Jeanine D. (2005). An Introduction to the Philosophy and Religion of Taoism: Pathways to Immortality. Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 1845190866.[permanent dead link]
  • Huang, Yong (2007). "Confucian Theology: Three Models". Religion Compass. Blackwell. 1 (4): 455–478. doi:10.1111/j.1749-8171.2007.00032.x. ISSN 2157-9679.
  • Lagerwey, John; Kalinowski, Marc (2008). Early Chinese Religion: Part One: Shang Through Han (1250 BC-220 AD). Brill. ISBN 978-9004168350.
    • Eno, Robert (2008), "Shang State Religion and the Pantheon of the Oracle Texts", in Lagerwey, John; Kalinowski, Marc (eds.), Early Chinese Religion: Part One: Shang Through Han (1250 BC-220 AD), Brill, pp. 41–102, ISBN 978-9004168350.
    • Espesset, Grégoire (2008), "Latter Han Mass Religious Movements and the Early Daoist Church", in Lagerwey, John; Kalinowski, Marc (eds.), Early Chinese Religion: Part One: Shang Through Han (1250 BC-220 AD), Leiden: Brill, pp. 1117–1158, ISBN 978-9004168350. Consulted HAL-SHS version, pages 1–56.
  • Little, Stephen; Eichman, Shawn (2000). Taoism and the Arts of China. University of California Press. ISBN 0520227859.
  • Lü, Daji; Gong, Xuezeng (2014). Marxism and Religion. Religious Studies in Contemporary China. Brill. ISBN 978-9047428022.
  • Medhurst, Walter H. (1847). A Dissertation on the Theology of the Chinese, with a View to the Elucidation of the Most Appropriate Term for Expressing the Deity, in the Chinese Language. Mission Press. Original preserved at The British Library. Digitalised in 2014.
  • Pankenier, David W. (2004). "A Brief History of Beiji 北极 (Northern Culmen), with an Excursus on the Origin of the Character di 帝". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 124 (2). doi:10.2307/4132212. JSTOR 4132212.
  • Pankenier, David W. (2013). Astrology and Cosmology in Early China. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107006720.
  • Pregadio, Fabrizio (2013). The Encyclopedia of Taoism. Routledge. ISBN 978-1135796341. Two volumes: 1) A-L; 2) L-Z.
  • Sun, Xiaochun; Kistemaker, Jacob (1997). The Chinese Sky During the Han: Constellating Stars and Society. Brill. ISBN 9004107371.
  • Tay, Wei Leong (2010). "Kang Youwei: The Martin Luther of Confucianism and His Vision of Confucian Modernity and Nation" (PDF). Secularization, Religion and the State. University of Tokyo Center of Philosophy.
  • Yao, Xinzhong; Zhao, Yanxia (2010). Chinese Religion: A Contextual Approach. London: A&C Black. ISBN 9781847064752.
  • Zhao, Dunhua (2012), "The Chinese Path to Polytheism", in Wang, Robin R. (ed.), Chinese Philosophy in an Era of Globalization, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-0791485507
  • Zhong, Xinzi (2014). (Thesis). Open Access Theses and Dissertations. Hong Kong Baptist University Institutional Repository. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 February 2018.
  • Zhou, Jixu (2005). "Old Chinese "*tees" and Proto-Indo-European "*deus": Similarity in Religious Ideas and a Common Source in Linguistics" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers. Victor H. Mair (167).
  • Zhou, Youguang (2012). "To Inherit the Ancient Teachings of Confucius and Mencius and Establish Modern Confucianism" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers. Victor H. Mair (226).


Articles
  • Hsu, Promise (16 November 2014). "The Civil Theology of Confucius' "Tian" Symbol". Voegelin View.

chinese, theology, this, article, about, chinese, general, conception, supreme, godhead, heaven, scholastic, theology, popular, deities, chinese, gods, immortals, this, article, contain, excessive, irrelevant, examples, please, help, improve, article, adding, . This article is about the Chinese general conception of the supreme godhead of Heaven and scholastic theology For popular deities see Chinese gods and immortals This article may contain excessive or irrelevant examples Please help improve the article by adding descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples November 2023 Chinese theology which comes in different interpretations according to the classic texts and the common religion and specifically Confucian Taoist and other philosophical formulations 8 is fundamentally monistic 9 that is to say it sees the world and the gods of its phenomena as an organic whole or cosmos which continuously emerges from a simple principle 10 This is expressed by the concept that all things have one and the same principle wanwu yilǐ 萬物一理 11 This principle is commonly referred to as Tian 天 a concept generally translated as Heaven referring to the northern culmen and starry vault of the skies and its natural laws which regulate earthly phenomena and generate beings as their progenitors 4 Ancestors are therefore regarded as the equivalent of Heaven within human society 12 and therefore as the means connecting back to Heaven which is the utmost ancestral father 曾祖父 zengzǔfu 13 Chinese theology may be also called Tianxue 天學 study of Heaven a term already in use in the 17th and 18th centuries 14 Like other symbols such as the swastika 1 wan 卍 myriad things in Chinese the Mesopotamian 𒀭 Dingir An Heaven 2 and also the Chinese 巫 wu shaman in Shang script represented by the cross potent 3 Tian refers to the northern celestial pole 北極 Beiji the pivot and the vault of the sky with its spinning constellations 4 Here is an approximate representation of the Tianmen 天門 Gate of Heaven 5 or Tianshu 天樞 Pivot of Heaven 6 as the precessional north celestial pole with a Ursae Minoris as the pole star with the spinning Chariot constellations in the four phases of time According to Reza Assasi s theories the wan may not only be centred in the current precessional pole at a Ursae Minoris but also very near to the north ecliptic pole if Draco Tianlong 天龙 is conceived as one of its two beams 7 note 1 In contrast to the God of Western religions who is above the space and time the God of Fuxi Xuanyuan and Wang Yangming is under in our space and time To Chinese thought ancestor is creator 15 Leo Koguan The Yellow Emperor Hypothesis The universal principle that gives origin to the world is conceived as transcendent and immanent to creation at the same time 16 The Chinese idea of the universal God is expressed in different ways there are many names of God from the different sources of Chinese tradition reflecting a hierarchic multiperspective observation of the supreme God 17 Chinese scholars emphasise that the Chinese tradition contains two facets of the idea of God one is the personified God of popular devotion and the other one is the impersonal God of philosophical inquiry 18 Together they express an integrated definition of the monistic world 19 Interest in traditional Chinese theology has waxed and waned over the various periods of the history of China For instance the Great Leap Forward enacted in the mid 20th century involved the outright destruction of traditional temples in accordance with Maoist ideology From the 1980s onward public revivals have taken place The Chinese believe that deities or stars are arranged in a celestial bureaucracy which influences earthly activities and is reflected by the hierarchy of the Chinese state itself These beliefs have similarities with broader Asian shamanism The alignment of earthly and heavenly forces is upheld through the practice of rites and rituals Li for instance the jiao festivals in which sacrificial offerings of incense and other products are set up by local temples with participants hoping to renew the perceived alliance between community leaders and the gods 20 21 Contents 1 Creation as ordering of primordial potentiality 2 Names and attributes of the God of Heaven in the tradition 2 1 Shang Zhou theology 2 1 1 Tian 2 1 2 Shangdi 2 2 Qin Han theology 2 2 1 Taiyi 2 2 2 Huangdi 2 3 Yudi 2 4 Taidi 2 5 Shen 2 6 Zi 3 Theology of the schools 3 1 Confucian theology 3 1 1 Three models 3 1 1 1 Canonical theology 3 1 1 2 Immanent transcendence 3 1 1 3 Theology of activity 3 1 2 Humanity as the incarnation of Heaven 3 1 3 Discourse about evil suffering and world renewal 3 2 Taoist theology 4 Trends in modern Chinese political and civil theology 5 See also 5 1 Related cultures 5 2 Abrahamic syncretism 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 SourcesCreation as ordering of primordial potentiality editSee also Religion of the Shang dynasty nbsp The north ecliptic pole Beiji 北极 represented by a red dot which does not correspond to any astral body since the north ecliptic pole is starless 無極 Wuji without pole coiled by Draco which slithers between the Little Dipper and the Big Dipper Great Chariot respectively representing yin and yang death and life 22 23 As the symbol of the protean primordial power which contains yin and yang as one 24 the dragon is the curved line in between yin and yang in the diagram of the Supreme Pole 太极图 Taijitu of 太极 Taiji nbsp nbsp Small seal script form from the Shuowen Jiezi of k 氣 qi pneuma breath matter energy power of Heaven Because all beings are considered coalescences of it some scholars have employed the term poly pneumatism first coined by Walter Medhurst 1796 1857 to describe Chinese spirituality 25 The many gods are often defined as traces 跡 ji of coalescence of the qi 26 nbsp 玄武 Xuanwǔ the motif of the snake winding the turtle While the snake as the dragon represents qi the primordial power of the universe and the constellation Draco at the north ecliptic pole the turtle represents the cosmos with the round carapace representing the dome of the skies and the squarish plastron the squared earth 27 At the same time they represent two of the four constellations which perfectly enclose in a square the north ecliptic pole centred in Draco Snake drawn in Corona Borealis northern stars of Herculs northern stars of Bootes Turtle Cassiopeia Sword central stars of Cygnus and the Big Dipper 28 Further information Hundun and Qi This section s factual accuracy is disputed talk Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message As explained by the scholar Stephan Feuchtwang in Chinese cosmology the universe creates itself out of a primary chaos of material energy hundun 混沌 and qi 氣 organising as the polarity of yin and yang which characterises any thing and life Creation is therefore a continuous ordering it is not a creation ex nihilo Yin and yang are the invisible and the visible the receptive and the active the unshaped and the shaped they characterise the yearly cycle winter and summer the landscape shady and bright the sexes female and male and even sociopolitical history disorder and order 29 The gods themselves are divided into yin forces of contraction 鬼 guǐ demons or ghosts and yang forces of expansion 神 shen gods or spirits in the human being they are the hun and po where hun 魂 is yang and po 魄 is yin respectively the rational and emotional soul or the ethereal and the corporeal soul Together 鬼神 guishen is another way to define the twofold operation of the God of Heaven its resulting dynamism being called itself shen spirit By the words of the Neo Confucian thinker Cheng Yi 30 Heaven is called the gǔi shen with respect to its operation the shen with respect to its wonderful functioning Another Neo Confucian Zhu Xi says 31 The shen is expansion and the gǔi is contraction As long as it is blowing wind raining thundering or flashing we call it shen while it stops we call it gǔi The dragon associated with the constellation Draco winding the north ecliptic pole and slithering between the Little and Big Dipper or Great Chariot represents the protean primordial power which embodies both yin and yang in unity 24 failed verification and therefore the awesome unlimited power qi of divinity 32 In Han dynasty traditions Draco is described as the spear of the supreme God 33 Heaven continuously begets according to its own manifest model which is the starry vault revolving around the northern culmen 北極 Beiji and reabsorbs the temporal things and worlds As explained in modern Confucian theology 34 the historical Heaven namely the generated Heaven is one particular form or modification marked by the emergence of celestial bodies of the eternal Heaven This eternal Heaven was embodied in pure qi before its historical form had been realized Rather than creation 造 zao which has a long Western connotation of creation ex nihilo modern Chinese theologians prefer to speak of evolution 化 hua to describe the begetting of the cosmos even in modern Chinese language the two concepts are frequently held together zaohua creation evolution 35 Such ordering power which belongs to deities but also to humans expresses itself in rites 礼 lǐ They are the means by which alignment between the forces of the starry sky of earthly phenomena and the acts of human beings the three realms of Heaven Earth humanity 天地人 Tiandiren is established Such harmonisation is referred to as centring 央 yang or 中 zhōng Rituals may be performed by government officials family elders popular ritual masters and Taoists the latter cultivating local gods to centre the forces of the universe upon a particular locality Since humans are capable of centering natural forces by the means of rites they are themselves central to creation 29 Shang dynasty graphemes signifying the power of ordering nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp k 巫 wu shaman man who knows the cross potent being a symbol of the magi and magic craft also in Western cultures 36 k 方 fang square phase direction power and other meanings of ordering which was used interchangeably with the grapheme wu k 矩 jǔ carpenter s square k 央 yang centering All of them contain the rod element signifying the square tool used to make right angles According to David W Pankenier the same staff is the horizontal line in the grapheme 帝 di deity or emperor 37 So human beings participate in the ongoing creation evolution of the God of Heaven acting as ancestors who may produce and influence other beings 38 The involvement of an evolution in the divine creation hints that although the Creator functions everywhere and all the time every little creation is also participated by one particular thing which was previously created by the Creator That is to say each creature plays both the roles of creature and creator and consequently is not only a fixed constituent of but also a promoter and author of the diversity or richness of the world nbsp The metaphor of the moon The relationship between oneness and multiplicity between the supreme principle and the myriad things is notably explained by Zhu Xi through the metaphor of the moon 39 Fundamentally there is only one Great Pole Taiji yet each of the myriad things has been endowed with it and each in itself possesses the Great Ultimate in its entirety This is similar to the fact that there is only one moon in the sky but when its light is scattered upon rivers and lakes it can be seen everywhere It cannot be said that the moon has been split In his terminology the myriad things are generated as effects or actualities 用 yong of the supreme principle which before in potence 體 tǐ sets in motion qi The effects are different forming the myriad species 萬殊 wanshu each relying upon their myriad modifications of the principle depending on the varying contexts and engagements Difference exists not only between the various categories of beings but among individuals belonging to the same category as well so that each creature is a unique coalescence of the cosmic principle 39 The qi of kindred beings accord and communicate with one another and the same happens for the qi of worshippers and the god receiving sacrifice and for the qi of an ancestor and his descendants 40 All beings are at different levels in the God of Heaven not in the sense of addition but in the sense of belonging 41 In the Confucian tradition the perfect government is that which emulates the ordering of the starry vault of Heaven To conduct government by virtue may be compared to the North Star it occupied its place while the myriad stars revolve around it Confucius Analects 2 1Names and attributes of the God of Heaven in the tradition edit nbsp The squared northern culmen of the skies which is Tian as a liubo board The Luoshu square the Hetu liubo boards sundials Han diviner s boards shi 式 and luopan for fengshui and the derived compass as well as TLV mirrors are all representations of the supreme God as the squared north celestial pole 42 nbsp How Di 帝 was drawn according to the scholar Pankenier by connecting the stars g b and 5 of the Ursa Minor of which the former two are part of the scoop of the Little Dipper and z e and d of the Ursa Major and Big Dipper Amongst the graphemes containing Di there are 締 di appropriately conjoined and verbally to do to form 諦 di careful attentive or verbally to look into to examine and 蒂 di calyx or the footstalk that holds a fruit or an inflorescence which falls and produces other life 43 44 The scholar Didier otherwise says that by connecting stars within the same cluster ancient priests astronomers drew 口 Ding the original form of the word Di itself which would represent the supreme God as a square 45 nbsp The Shang grapheme 帝 Di Deity outlined by connecting the stars g b and 5 of the Little Bear of which the former two are part of the scoop of the Little Dipper and z e and d of the Big Dipper Great Chariot to locate the north pole 北极 Beiji northern culmen Source Pankenier David W 2004 A Brief History of Beiji 北极 Northern Culmen with an Excursus on the Origin of the Character di 帝 Journal of the American Oriental Society 124 2 211 236 DOI 10 2307 4132212 See pp 226 236 According to John C Didier the same drawing was originally called 口 Ding older form of 丁 the carpenter s square symbol of cosmic power from which the same Di would derive and represented the supreme godhead as a square Source Didier John C 2009 In and Outside the Square The Sky and the Power of Belief in Ancient China and the World c 4500 BC AD 200 Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 192 Volume I The Ancient Eurasian World and the Celestial Pivot p 216 Tian is dian 顛 top the highest and unexceeded It derives from the characters yi 一 one and da 大 big 46 Since the Shang 1600 1046 BCE and Zhou dynasty 1046 256 BCE the radical Chinese terms for the supreme God are Tian 天 and Shangdi 上帝 the Highest Deity or simply Di 帝 Deity 47 48 note 2 Another concept is Taidi 太帝 the Great Deity These names are combined in different ways in Chinese theological literature often interchanged in the same paragraph if not in the same sentence 50 One of the combinations is the name of God used at the Temple of Heaven in Beijing which is the Highest Deity the Heavenly King 皇天上帝 Huangtian Shangdi 51 others are Great Deity the Heavenly King 天皇大帝 Tianhuang Dadi and Supreme Deity of the Vast Heaven 昊天上帝 Haotian Shangdi 52 God is considered manifest in this world as the northern culmen and starry vault of the skies which regulate nature 4 As its see the circumpolar stars the Little and Big Dipper or broader Ursa Minor and Ursa Major are known among various names as Tianmen 天門 Gate of Heaven 5 and Tianshu 天樞 Pivot of Heaven or the celestial clock regulating the four seasons of time 6 The Chinese supreme God is compared to the conception of the supreme God identified as the north celestial pole in other cultures including the Mesopotamian An Heaven itself and Enlil and Enki Marduk the Vedic Indra and Mitra Varuna the Zoroastrian Ahura Mazda 53 as well as the Dyeus of common Proto Indo European religion 54 Throughout the Chinese theological literary tradition the Dipper constellations and especially the Big Dipper 北斗星 Beidǒuxing Northern Dipper also known as Great Chariot within Ursa Major are portrayed as the potent symbols of spirit divinity or of the activity of the supreme God regulating nature Examples include The Dipper is the Deity s carriage It revolves about the centre visiting and regulating each of the four regions It divides yin from yang establishes the four seasons equalises the five elemental phases deploys the seasonal junctures and angular measures and determines the various periodicities all these are tied to the Dipper Sima Qian Treatise on the Celestial Officers 55 When the handle of the Dipper points to the east at dawn it is spring to all the world When the handle of the Dipper points to the south it is summer to all the world When the handle of the Dipper points to the west it is autumn to all the world When the handle of the Dipper points to the north it is winter to all the world As the handle of the Dipper rotates above so affairs are set below Heguanzi 5 21 1 4 56 Di is literally a title expressing dominance over the all under Heaven that is all created things 57 It is etymologically and figuratively analogous to the concept of di as the base of a fruit which falls and produces other fruits This analogy is attested in the Shuowen Jiezi explaining deity as what faces the base of a melon fruit 58 Tian is usually translated as Heaven but by graphical etymology it means Great One and scholars relate it to the same Di through phonetic etymology and trace their common root through their archaic forms respectively Teeŋ and Tees to the symbols of the celestial pole and its spinning stars 4 Other words such as 顶 dǐng on top apex would share the same etymology all connected to a conceptualisation according to the scholar John C Didier of the north celestial pole godhead as cosmic square Ding 口 59 Zhou 2005 even connects Di through Old Chinese Tees and by phonetic etymology to the Proto Indo European Dyeus 60 Medhurst 1847 also shows affinities in the usage of deity Chinese di Greek theos and Latin deus for incarnate powers resembling the supreme godhead 61 Shang and Zhou graphemes for Di and Tian nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp One version of the Shang grapheme for the nominal Di k 帝 Deity deities divinity which according to David W Pankenier was drawn by connecting the stars of the handle of Ursa Major and the scoop of Ursa Minor determining the northern culmen 北极 Beiji 62 Otherwise according to John C Didier this and all the other graphemes ultimately represent Ding 口 archaic of k 丁 which also signifies the square tool the north celestial pole godhead as a square 63 The bar on top which is either present or not and one or two in Shang script is the k 上 shang to signify highest 64 The crossbar element in the middle represents a carpenter s square and is present in other graphemes including 方 fang itself meaning square direction phase way and power which in Shang versions was alternately represented as a cross potent homographically to 巫 wu shaman 37 Di is equivalent to symbols like wan 卍 all things 1 and Mesopotamian 𒀭 Dingir An Heaven 2 Another version of the Shang grapheme for the nominal Di 65 One version of the Shang grapheme for the verbal di k 禘 to divine to sacrifice by fire The modern standard version is distinguished by the prefixion of the signifier for cult 礻shi to the nominal Di 66 67 It may represent a fish entering the square of the north celestial pole Ding 口 68 or rather k 定 ding i e the Square of Pegasus or Celestial Temple when aligning with Di and thus framing true north 69 Also dǐng k 鼎 cauldron thurible may have derived from the verbal di 70 Shang grapheme for Shangjiǎ k 上甲 Supreme Ancestor an alternate name of Shangdi 71 The most common Zhou version of the grapheme Tian Heaven k 天 represented as a man with a squared ding 口 head 72 Another Zhou version of the grapheme for Tian 72 Shang Zhou theology edit Ulrich Libbrecht distinguishes two layers in the development of early Chinese theology traditions derived respectively from the Shang and subsequent Zhou dynasties The religion of the Shang was based on the worship of ancestors and god kings who survived as unseen divine forces after death They were not transcendent entities since the cosmos was by itself so not created by a force outside of it but generated by internal rhythms and cosmic powers The royal ancestors were called di 帝 deities and the utmost progenitor was Shangdi identified with the dragon 32 Already in Shang theology the multiplicity of gods of nature and ancestors were viewed as parts of Shangdi and the four fang 方 directions and their feng 風 winds as his cosmic will 73 The Zhou dynasty which overthrew the Shang emphasised a more universal idea of Tian 天 Heaven 32 The Shang dynasty s identification of Shangdi as their ancestor god had asserted their claim to power by divine right the Zhou transformed this claim into a legitimacy based on moral power the Mandate of Heaven In Zhou theology Tian had no singular earthly progeny but bestowed divine favour on virtuous rulers Zhou kings declared that their victory over the Shang was because they were virtuous and loved their people while the Shang were tyrants and thus were deprived of power by Tian 74 nbsp Temple of All Heaven 都天庙 dōutianmiao in Longgang Cangnan Wenzhou Zhejiang Tian edit Main article Tian Tian is both transcendent and immanent as the starry vault manifesting in the three forms of dominance destiny and nature There are many compounds of the name Tian and many of these clearly distinguish a Heaven of dominance a Heaven of destiny and a Heaven of nature as attributes of the supreme cosmic God 75 In the Wujing yiyi 五經異義 Different Meanings in the Five Classics Xu Shen explains that the designation of Heaven is quintuple 75 Huang Tian 皇天 August Heaven Yellow Heaven or Shining Heaven when it is venerated as the lord of creation Hao Tian 昊天 Vast Heaven with regard to the vastness of its vital breath qi Min Tian 旻天 Compassionate Heaven for it hears and corresponds to justice to the all under Heaven Shang Tian 上天 Highest Heaven or First Heaven for it is the primordial being supervising all under Heaven Cang Tian 苍天 Deep Green Heaven for it being unfathomably deep Other names of the God of Heaven include Tiandi 天帝 the Deity of Heaven or Emperor of Heaven 76 On Rectification Zheng lun of the Xunzi uses this term to refer to the active God of Heaven setting in motion creation 57 Tianzhǔ 天主 the Lord of Heaven In The Document of Offering Sacrifices to Heaven and Earth on the Mountain Tai Fengshan shu of the Records of the Grand Historian it is used as the title of the first God from whom all the other gods derive 75 Tianhuang 天皇 the August Personage of Heaven In the Poem of Fathoming Profundity Si xuan fu transcribed in The History of the Later Han Dynasty Hou Han shu Zhang Heng ornately writes I ask the superintendent of the Heavenly Gate to open the door and let me visit the King of Heaven at the Jade Palace 76 Tianwang 天王 the King of Heaven or Monarch of Heaven Tiangōng 天公 the Duke of Heaven or General of Heaven 77 Tianjun 天君 the Prince of Heaven or Lord of Heaven 77 Tianzun 天尊 the Heavenly Venerable also a title for high gods in Taoist theologies 76 Tianshen 天神 the God of Heaven interpreted in the Shuowen Jiezi as the being that gives birth to all things 57 Shenhuang 神皇 God the August attested in Taihong The Origin of Vital Breath 57 Lǎotianye 老天爷 the Olden Heavenly Father 76 Attributes of the supreme God of Heaven include 78 Tiandao 天道 Way of Heaven it is the God s will of power which decides the development of things The Book of Historical Documents says that the Way of Heaven is to bless the good and make the bad miserable It is also the name of some religious traditions Tianming 天命 Mandate of Heaven defining the destiny of things Tianyi 天意 Decree of Heaven the same concept of destiny but implying an active decision Tianxia 天下 Under Heaven means creation an ongoing process generated by the supreme God Shangdi edit Main article Shangdi Shang graphemes for stars gods ancestors nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Images 1 to 4 are all Shang script variants for k 星 xing star s god s ancestor s composed by three to five grouped 口 ding It continues in modern k 晶 jing crystal shining 79 Image 5 is a variant of Shangjiǎ k 上甲 Supreme Ancestor i e Shangdi 80 Shangdi 上帝 Highest Deity sometimes shortened simply to Di 帝 Deity is another name of the supreme God inherited from Shang and Zhou times The Classic of Poetry recites How vast is the Highest Deity the ruler of men below 57 Di is also applied to the name of cosmic gods besides the supreme godhead and is used to compose titles of divinity for instance Dijun 帝君 Divine Ruler Latin Dominus Deus used in Taoism for high deities in the celestial hierarchy 57 In the Shang dynasty as discussed by John C Didier Shangdi was the same as Ding 口 modern 丁 the square as the north celestial pole and Shangjiǎ 上甲 Supreme Ancestor was an alternative name 81 Shangdi was conceived as the utmost ancestor of the Shang royal lineage the Zi 子 lineage also called Ku or Kui or Diku Divus Ku attested in the Shiji and other texts 82 The other gods associated with the circumpolar stars were all embraced by Shangdi and they were conceived as the ancestors of side noble lineages of the Shang and even non Shang peripheral peoples who benefited from the identification of their ancestor gods as part of Di Together they were called 下帝 xiadi lower deities part of the Highest Deity of the Shang With the supreme God identified as the pivot of the skies all the lesser gods were its stars 星 xing a word which in Shang script was illustrated by a few grouped 口 ding cf jing 晶 perfect celestial i e star light and 品 pǐn originally starlight up to the Han dynasty it was still common to represent the stars as small squares 81 The Shang conducted magnificent sacrifices to these ancestor gods whose altar mimicked the stars of the north celestial pole Through this sympathetic magic which consisted of reproducing the celestial centre on earth the Shang established and monopolised the centralising political power 81 Qin Han theology edit Further information Wufang Shangdi and Huang Lao Olden versions of the grapheme 黄 huang yellow nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Shang oracle bone script Western Zhou bronzeware script Han Shuowen Jiezi Yuan Liushutong According to Qiu Xigui the character yellow signifies the power of the 巫 wu shaman 83 12 note 33 The Yellow God is the north celestial pole or the pole star and it is the spirit father and astral double of the Yellow Emperor 83 42 note 25 nbsp Wǔfang Shangdi 五方上帝 Five Forms of the Highest Deity The order of Heaven inscribing worlds as tan 壇 altar the Chinese concept equivalent to the Indian mandala The supreme God conceptualised as the Yellow Deity and Xuanyuan as its human form is the heart of the universe and the other Four Deities are his emanations The diagram is based on the Huainanzi 84 The emperors of the Qin dynasty 221 206 BCE are credited with an effort to unify the cults of the Wǔfang Shangdi 五方上帝 Five Forms of the Highest Deity which were previously held at different locations into single temple complexes 85 The Five Deities are a cosmological conception of the fivefold manifestation of the supreme God or his five changing faces 86 that goes back to the Neolithic and continues in the classic texts They reflect the cosmic structure of the world in which yin yang and all forces are held in balance and are associated with the four directions of space and the centre the five sacred mountains the five phases of creation and the five constellations rotating around the celestial pole and five planets 87 During the Han dynasty 206 BCE 220 CE the theology of the state religion developed side by side with the Huang Lao religious movement which in turn influenced the early Taoist Church 88 and focused on a conceptualisation of the supreme God of the culmen of the sky as the Yellow God of the centre and its human incarnation the Yellow Emperor or Yellow Deity Unlike previous Shang concepts of human incarnations of the supreme godhead considered exclusively as the progenitors of the royal lineage the Yellow Emperor was a more universal archetype of the human being The competing factions of the Confucians and the fangshi 方士 masters of directions regarded as representatives of the ancient religious tradition inherited from previous dynasties concurred in the formulation of the Han state religion 89 Taiyi edit See also Taiyi Shengshui Taiyi 太一 also spelled 太乙 Taiyǐ or 泰一 Taiyi 90 Great Oneness or Great Unity also known as Supreme Oneness of the Central Yellow 中黄太乙 Zhōnghuang Taiyǐ or the Yellow God of the Northern Dipper 黄神北斗 Huangshen Beidǒu note 3 or Heavenly Venerable Supreme Unity 太一天尊 Taiyi Tianzun is a name of the supreme God of Heaven that had become prominent besides the older ones during the Han dynasty in relation to the figure of the Yellow Emperor It harkens back to the Warring States period as attested in the poem The Supreme Oneness Gives Birth to Water and possibly to the Shang dynasty as Dayi 大一 Big Oneness an alternative name for the Shangs and universe s foremost ancestor 91 Taiyi was worshipped by the social elites in the Warring States and is also the first god described in the Nine Songs shamanic hymns collected in the Chuci Songs of Chu 92 Throughout the Qin and the Han dynasties a distinction became evident between Taiyi as the supreme godhead identified with the northern culmen of the sky and its spinning stars and a more abstract concept of Yi 一 One which begets the polar godhead bringing into existence the principles of Yin and Yang the pivot san bao then the myriad of beings and the ten thousand things the more abstract Yi was an interiorisation of the supreme God which was influenced by the Confucian discourse 93 During the Han dynasty Taiyi became part of the imperial sect and at the same time it was the central concept of Huang Lao which influenced the early Taoist Church in early Taoism Taiyi was identified as the Dao 道 The Inscription for Laozi Laozi ming a Han stela describes the Taiyi as the source of inspiration and immortality for Laozi In Huang Lao the philosopher god Laozi was identified as the same as the Yellow Emperor and received imperial sacrifices for instance by Emperor Huan 146 168 94 In Han apocryphal texts the Big Dipper is described as the instrument of Taiyi the ladle from which he pours out the primordial breath yuanqi and as his heavenly chariot 92 A part of the Shiji by Sima Qian identifies Taiyi with the simple name Di Deity and tells 92 The Dipper is the Thearch s carriage It revolves around the central point and majestically regulates the four realms The distribution of yin and yang the fixing of the four seasons the coordination of the five phases the progression of rotational measurements and the determining of all celestial markers all of these are linked to the Dipper In 113 BCE Emperor Wu of Han under the influence of prominent fangshi Miu Ji and later Gongsun Qing officially integrated the Huang Lao theology of Taiyi with the Confucian state religion and theology of the Five Forms of the Highest Deity inherited from the erstwhile dynasties 95 Huangdi edit Main article Yellow Emperor nbsp Temple of the Yellow Deity in Jinyun Lishui Zhejiang nbsp Wooden sculpture of the eagle faced Thunder God 雷神 Leishen punisher of those who go against the order of Heaven at the Temple of the Eastern Peak of Baishan in Pu Linfen Shanxi In the oldest accounts he is one and the same with the Yellow Emperor Huangdi 黄帝 Yellow Emperor or Yellow Deity is another name of the God of Heaven associated with the celestial pole and with the power of the wu shamans 83 12 note 33 In the older cosmological tradition of the Wufang Shangdi the Yellow Deity is the main one associated with the centre of the cosmos He is also called Huangshen 黄神 Yellow God Xuanyuan 轩辕 Chariot Shaft 96 which is said to have been his personal name as a human incarnation Xuanyuanshi 轩辕氏 Master of the Chariot Shaft or Xuanyuan Huangdi Yellow Deity of the Chariot Shaft In Chinese religion he is the deity who shapes the material world 地 Di the creator of the Huaxia civilisation of marriage and morality language and lineage and is the progenitor of all Chinese 97 In the cosmology of the Wufang Shangdi his astral body is Saturn but he is also identified as the Sun God and with the star Regulus a Leonis and constellations Leo and Lynx of which the latter is said to represent the body of the Yellow Dragon his serpentine form 98 The character 黄 huang for yellow also means by homophony and shared etymology 皇 huang august creator and radiant attributes of the supreme God 99 As a progenitor Huangdi is portrayed as the historical incarnation of the Yellow God of the Northern Dipper 100 According to a definition given by apocryphal texts related to the Hetu 河圖 the Yellow Emperor proceeds from the essence of the Yellow God of the Northern Dipper is born to a daughter of a chthonic deity and as such he is a cosmic product of the conflation of Heaven and Earth 88 As a human being the Yellow Emperor was conceived by a virgin mother Fubao who was impregnated by Taiyi s radiance yuanqi primordial pneuma a lightning which she saw encircling the Northern Dipper Great Chariot or broader Ursa Major or the celestial pole while walking in the countryside She delivered her son after twenty four months on the mount of Shou Longevity or mount Xuanyuan after which he was named 101 Through his human side he was a descendant of 有熊氏 Yǒuxiong the lineage of the Bear another reference to the Ursa Major Didier has studied the parallels that the Yellow Emperor s mythology has in other cultures deducing a plausible ancient origin of the myth in Siberia or in north Asia 102 In older accounts the Yellow Emperor is identified as a deity of light and his name is explained in the Shuowen Jiezi to derive from guang 光 light and thunder and as one and the same with the Thunder God 雷神 Leishen 103 104 who in turn as a later mythological character is distinguished as the Yellow Emperor s foremost pupil such as in the Huangdi Neijing As the deity of the centre the Yellow Emperor is the Zhongyuedadi 中岳大帝 Great Deity of the Central Peak and he represents the essence of earth and the Yellow Dragon 105 He represents the hub of creation the axis mundi Kunlun that is the manifestation of the divine order in physical reality opening the way to immortality 105 As the centre of the four directions in the Shizi he is described as Yellow Emperor with Four Faces 黄帝四面 Huangdi Simian 106 The Four Faced God or Ubiquitous God 四面神 Simianshen is also the Chinese name of Brahma Huangdi is the model of those who merge their self with the self of the supreme God of the ascetics who reach enlightenment or immortality 107 He is the god of nobility the patron of Taoism and medicine In the Shiji as well as in the Taoist book Zhuangzi he is also described as the perfect king There are records of dialogues in which Huangdi took the advice of wise counselors contained in the Huangdi Neijing Inner Scripture of the Yellow Emperor as well as in the Shiwen Ten Questions In the Huang Lao tradition he is the model of a king turned immortal and is associated with the transmission of various mantic and medical techniques 108 Besides the Inner Scripture of the Yellow Emperor Huangdi is also associated with other textual bodies of knowledge including the Huangdi Sijing Four Scriptures of the Yellow Emperor and the Huangdi zhaijing Scripture of the Dwellings of the Yellow Emperor 109 In the cosmology of the Wufang Shangdi besides the Yellow Deity the Black Deity 黑帝 Heidi of the north winter and Mercury is portrayed by Sima Qian as Huangdi s grandson and is himself associated with the north pole stars 110 The Green Deity or Blue Deity 蒼帝 Cangdi or 青帝 Qingdi of the east spring and identified with Jupiter 111 is frequently worshipped as the supreme God and its main temple at Mount Tai the cult centre of all Eastern Peak Temples is attested as a site for fire sacrifices to the supreme God since prehistoric times 112 Yudi edit nbsp Temple of the Jade Deity in Tianjin Main article Jade Emperor Yudi 玉帝 Jade Deity or Jade Emperor or Yuhuang 玉皇 Jade King is a personification of the supreme God of Heaven in popular religion 113 More elaborate names for the Jade Deity include Yuhuang Shangdi 玉皇上帝 Highest Deity the Jade King and Yuhuangdadi 玉皇大帝 Great Deity the Jade King while among the common people he is intimately referred to as the Lord of Heaven 天公 Tiangōng 113 He is also present in Taoist theology where however he is not regarded as the supreme principle though he has a high position in the pantheon In Taoism his formal title is the Most Honourable Great Deity the Jade King in the Golden Tower of the Clear Heaven Haotian Jinque Zhizun Yuhuangdadi 昊天金阙至尊玉皇大帝 and he is one of the Four Sovereigns the four deities proceeding directly from the Three Pure Ones which in Taoism are the representation of the supreme principle 113 The eminence of the Jade Deity is relatively recent emerging in popular religion during the Tang dynasty 618 907 and becoming established during the Song dynasty 960 1279 especially under Emperor Zhenzong and Emperor Huizong of Song 113 By the Tang dynasty the name of Jade King had been widely adopted by the common people to refer to the God of Heaven and this got the attention of the Taoists who integrated the deity in their pantheon 113 The cult of the Jade Deity became so widespread that during the Song dynasty it was proclaimed by imperial decree that this popular conception of God was the same supreme God of Heaven whom the elites had the privilege to worship at the Temple of Heaven 114 There are a great number of temples in China dedicated to the Jade Deity 玉皇庙 yuhuangmiao or 玉皇阁 yuhuangge et al and his birthday on the 9th day of the first month of the Chinese calendar is one of the biggest festivals 114 He is also celebrated on the 25th day of the 12th month when he is believed to turn to the human world to inspect all goods and evils to determine awards or punishments 114 In everyday language the Jade Deity is also called the Olden Heavenly Father Lǎotianye 老天爷 and simply Heaven 114 Taidi edit Taidi 太帝 Utmost Deity or Great Deity is another name that has been used to describe the supreme God in some contexts It appears in the mystical narratives of the Huainanzi where the supreme God is associated with Mount Kunlun the axis mundi 115 Shen edit Main article Shen Chinese religion 神 Shen is a general concept meaning spirit and usually defines the plurality of gods in the world however in certain contexts it has been used as singular denoting the supreme God the being that gives birth to all things 17 Concepts including shen expressing the idea of the supreme God include 17 Tianshen 天神 the God of Heaven interpreted in the Shuowen Jiezi 說文解字 as the being that gives birth to all things Shenhuang 神皇 God the King attested in Taihong The Origin of Vital Breath Shendao 神道 Way of the God s in the Yijing is the path or way of manifestation of the supreme God and the gods of nature It is too delicate to be grasped It cannot be perceived through reason It cannot be seen through the eyes It does without knowing how it can do This is what we call the Way of the God s 17 Since the Qin and Han dynasty Shendao became a descriptor for the Chinese religion as the shejiao 社教 social religion of the nation 116 The phrase Shendao shejiao 神道設教 literally means established religion of the way of the gods 117 Zi edit nbsp A temple of popular religion in Nanbaixiang Ouhai Wenzhou Zhejiang The facade of the left side building features the modern stylisation of the 禄 lu 子 zi symbol nbsp Zi 子 literally meaning son male offspring is another concept associated with the supreme God of Heaven as the north celestial pole and its spinning stars Zi 字 meaning word and symbol is one of its near homophonous and graphic cognates It was the surname used by the royal lineage of the Shang dynasty 118 It is a component of concepts including 天子 Tianzǐ Son of Heaven and 君子 junzǐ son of a lord which in Confucianism became the concept of morally perfected person According to Didier in Shang and Zhou forms the grapheme zi itself depicts someone linked to the godhead of the squared north celestial pole 口 Ding and is related to 中 zhōng the concept of spiritual and thus political centrality 119 Olden versions of the graphemes for zi and zhong nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Images to are Shang versions of the grapheme k 子 zi Images to are olden versions of the grapheme k 中 zhōng centrality middle inside within Respectively from left to right the latter are in Shang bronzeware script Qin bamboo and wooden slips script one of the versions recorded in the Han Shuowen Jiezi and Han small seal script According to John C Didier both zi and zhong graphemes express spiritual filiation and alignment with the supreme godhead of the north celestial pole They share the graphic element representing the celestial square itself 口 Ding and the ritual vessel and ritual space used to mimic it on earth and thus commune with it establishing spiritual and political centrality 119 Image is a Shang version of k 字 zi word and symbol representing a son enshrined under a roof In modern Chinese popular religion zi is a synonym of 禄 lu prosperity furthering welfare Luxing 禄星 Star of Prosperity is Mizar a star of the Big Dipper Great Chariot constellation which rotates around the north celestial pole it is the second star of the handle of the Dipper Luxing is conceived as a member of two clusters of gods the Sanxing 三星 Three Stars and the Jiǔhuangshen 九皇神 Nine God Kings The latter are the seven stars of the Big Dipper with the addition of two less visible ones thwartwise the handle and they are conceived as the ninefold manifestation of the supreme God of Heaven which in this tradition is called Jiǔhuangdadi 九皇大帝 Great Deity of the Nine Kings 22 Xuantian Shangdi 玄天上帝 Highest Deity of the Dark Heaven 23 or Doufu 斗父 Father of the Chariot The number nine is for this reason associated with the yang masculine power of the dragon and celebrated in the Double Ninth Festival and Nine God Kings Festival 23 The Big Dipper is the expansion of the supreme principle governing waxing and life yang while the Little Dipper is its reabsorption governing waning and death yin 22 23 The mother of the Jiuhuangshen is Dǒumǔ 斗母 Mother of the Chariot the female aspect of the supreme 22 23 The stars are consistent regardless of the name in different languages cultures or viewpoint on Earth s Northern Southern hemisphere with the same sky sun stars and moonTheology of the schools editAs explained by Stephan Feuchtwang the fundamental difference between Confucianism and Taoism lies in the fact that the former focuses on the realisation of the starry order of Heaven in human society while the latter on the contemplation of the Dao which spontaneously arises in nature 120 Taoism also focuses on the cultivation of local gods to centre the order of Heaven upon a particular locality 29 Confucian theology edit nbsp Worship at the Great Temple of Lord Zhang Hui 张挥公大殿 Zhang Hui gōng dadian the cathedral ancestral shrine of the Zhang lineage corporation at their ancestral home in Qinghe Hebei Further information Religious Confucianism nbsp Large seal nbsp Small sealOlden versions of the grapheme 儒 ru meaning scholar refined one Confucian It is composed of 人 ren man and 需 xu to await itself composed of 雨 yǔ rain instruction and 而 er sky graphically a man under the rain Its full meaning is man receiving instruction from Heaven According to Kang Youwei Hu Shih and Yao Xinzhong they were the official shaman priests 巫 wu experts in rites and astronomy of the Shang and later Zhou dynasty 121 Confucius 551 479 BCE emerged in the critical Warring States period as a reformer of the religious tradition inherited from the Shang and Zhou dynasties His elaboration of ancient theology gives centrality to self cultivation and human agency 74 and to the educational power of the self established individual in assisting others to establish themselves the principle of 愛人 airen loving others 122 Philosophers in the Warring States compiled the Analects and formulated the classic metaphysics which became the lash of Confucianism In accordance with the Master they identified mental tranquility as the state of Tian or the One 一 Yi which in each individual is the Heaven bestowed divine power to rule one s own life and the world Going beyond the Master they theorised the oneness of production and reabsorption into the cosmic source and the possibility to understand and therefore re attain it through meditation This line of thought would have influenced all Chinese individual and collective political mystical theories and practices thereafter 123 Fu Pei Jun characterises the Heaven of ancient Confucianism before the Qin dynasty as dominator creator sustainer revealer and judge 124 The Han dynasty Confucian scholar Dong Zhongshu 179 104 BCE described Heaven as the supreme God possessing a will 125 In the Song dynasty Neo Confucianism especially the major exponent Zhu Xi 1130 1200 generally rationalised the theology cosmology and ontology inherited from the foregoing tradition 126 Neo Confucian thinkers reaffirmed the unity of the heavenly city and the earthly divine city the city that the God of Heaven morally organises in the natural world through humanity is not ontologically separate from Heaven itself 127 so that the compound Heaven Earth 天地 Tiandi is another name of the God of Heaven itself in Neo Confucian texts 128 Heaven contains Earth as part of its nature and the myriad things are begotten 生 sheng by Heaven and raised up 養 yǎng by Earth 129 Neo Confucians also discussed Heaven under the term 太极 Taiji Great Pole 130 Stephan Feuchtwang says that Confucianism consists of the search for middle ways between yin and yang in each new configuration of the world to align reality with Heaven through rites The order of Heaven is emphasised it is a moral power and fully realises in patriarchy that is to say the worship of progenitors in the Han tradition in the male line who are considered to have embodied Heaven This conception is put into practice as the religious worship of progenitors in the system of ancestral shrines dedicated to the deified progenitors of lineages groups of families sharing the same surname 120 The philosopher Promise Hsu identifies Tian as the foundation of a civil theology of China 131 Three models edit Huang Yong 2007 has discerned three models of theology in the Confucian tradition 132 i Theology of Heaven as discussed in the Confucian canonical texts the Classic of History the Classic of Poetry and the Analects of Confucius as a transcendent concept of God similar to the conception of God in the Hellenistic and Abrahamic traditions ii Theology of Heaven in contemporary New Confucianism represented especially by Xiong Shili Mou Zongsan and Tu Weiming as an immanently transcendent God the ultimate reality immanent in the world to transcend the world iii Theology of Heaven in Neo Confucianism particularly the Cheng brothers in the Song dynasty as the wonderful life giving activity transcending the world within the world Canonical theology edit This section is written like a research paper or scientific journal Please help improve the section by rewriting it in encyclopedic style and simplify overly technical phrases December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chinese theology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The supreme power in Confucianism is Tian Shangdi or Di in the early or classic Confucian tradition later also discussed in its activity as 天理 Tianlǐ or 天道 Tiandao the Order of Heaven or Way of Heaven by Neo Confucians 133 134 A number of scholars support the theistic reading of early Confucian texts 135 In the Analects Heaven is treated as a conscious and providential being concerned not only with the human order in general but with Confucius own mission in particular 133 Confucius claimed to be a transmitter of an ancient knowledge rather than a renovator 136 In Confucianism God has not created man in order to neglect him but is always with man and sustains the order of nature and human society by teaching rulers how to be good to secure the peace of the countries 137 The theistic idea of early Confucianism gave later way to a depersonalisation of Heaven identifying it as the pattern discernible in the unfolding of nature and his will Tianming as peoples consensus culminating in the Mencius and the Xunzi 138 Immanent transcendence edit This section is written like a research paper or scientific journal Please help improve the section by rewriting it in encyclopedic style and simplify overly technical phrases December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chinese theology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Contemporary New Confucian theologians have resolved the ancient dispute between the theistic and nontheistic immanent and transcendent interpretations of Tian elaborating the concept of immanent transcendence 内在超越 neizai chaoyue contrasting it with the external transcendence 外在超越 waizai chaoyue of the God of Christianity While the God of the Christians is outside the world that he creates the God of the Confucians is immanent in the world to call for the transcendence of the given situation thus promoting an ongoing transformation 139 The first theologian to discuss immanent transcendence was Xiong Shili According to him noumenon 体 tǐ and phenomenon 用 yong are not separate but the noumenon is right within the phenomenon At the same time the noumenon is also transcendent not in the sense that it has independent existence separated from the ten thousand things but in the sense that it is the substance of all things As the substance it is transcendent because it is not transformed by the ten thousand things but is rather their master it transcends the surface of things 140 By transcending the surface one realises the self nature 自性神 zi xing shen of himself and of all things to the extent that a thing has not fully realised its own self nature God is also that on which any particular thing or human being depends 依他神 yi ta shen 141 According to the further explanations of Xiong s student Mou Zongsan Heaven is not merely the sky and just like the God of the Judaic and Hellenistic Christian tradition it is not one of the beings in the world However unlike the God of Western religions the God of Confucianism is not outside the world either but is within humans who are the primary concern of Confucianism and within other beings in the world 142 Tian is the ontological substance of reality it is immanent in every human being as the human nature ren however the human being on the phenomenal level is not identical with its metaphysical essence 142 Mencius stated that the one who can fully realise one s heart mind can understand one s nature and the one who can understand one s own nature can know Tian This means that Tian is within the human being but before this last comes to realise his true heart mind or know his true nature Heaven still appears transcendent to him Mou cites Max Muller saying that a human being itself is potentially a God a God one presently ought to become to explain the idea of the relationship of God and humanity in Confucianism and other Eastern religions What is crucial is to transcend the phenomenon to reach Tian 142 Mou makes an important distinction between Confucianism and Christianity the latter does not ask one to become a Christ because the nature of Christ is unreachable for ordinary humans who are not conceived as having a divine essence by contrast in Confucianism sages who have realised Tian teach to others how to become sages and worthy themselves since Heaven is present in everyone and may be cultivated 142 Mou defines Confucianism as a religion of morality a religion of the fulfillment of virtues whose meaning lies in seeking the infinite and the complete in the finitude of earthly life 142 Tu Weiming a student of Mou furtherly develops the theology of immanent transcendence By his own words 143 A person is in this world and yet does not belong to this world He regards this secular world as divine only because he realizes the divine value in this secular world Here the secular world in which the divinity is manifested is not a world separate from the divinity and the divinity manifested in the secular is not some Ideal externally transcendent of the secular world According to Tu the more man may penetrate his own inner source the more he may transcend himself By the metaphorical words of Mencius 7a29 this process is like digging a well to reach the source of water 143 It is for this emphasis on transcending the phenomena to reach the true self which is the divine that Tu defines Confucian religiosity as the ultimate self transformation as a communal act and as a faithful dialogical response to the transcendent Confucianism is about developing the nature of humanity in the right harmonious way 143 Tu further explains this as a prognosis and diagnosis of humanity we are not what we ought to be but what we ought to be is inherent in the structure of what we are 143 Heaven bids and impels humans to realise their true self 144 Humans have the inborn ability to respond to Heaven 144 One may obtain knowledge of divinity through his inner experience tizhi and knowledge developing his heavenly virtue This is a central concern of Tu s theology at the same time intellectual and affectional a question of mind and heart at the same time 144 Theology of activity edit This section is written like a research paper or scientific journal Please help improve the section by rewriting it in encyclopedic style and simplify overly technical phrases December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chinese theology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Further information Li Neo Confucianism Huang Yong has named a third approach to Confucian theology interpreting the Neo Confucianism of the brothers Cheng Hao 1032 1085 and Cheng Yi 1033 1107 Instead of regarding the divinity of Tian as a substance this theology emphasises its creative life giving activity 生 sheng that is within the world in order to transcend the world itself 145 Also in the works of Zhou Xi Heaven is discussed as always operating within beings in conjunction with their singular 心 xin heart mind 41 Neo Confucians incorporated in Confucianism the discussion about the traditional concept of 理 Lǐ variously translated as form law reason order pattern organism and most commonly principle regarding it as the supreme principle of the cosmos 145 The Chengs use Li interchangeably with other terms For instance discussing the supreme principle Cheng Hao says that it is called change 易 yi with respect to its reality is called 道 dao with respect to its li is called divinity 神 shen with respect to its function and is called nature 性 xing with respect to it as the destiny in a person Cheng Yi also states that the supreme principle with respect to li it is called Heaven 天 Tian with respect to endowment it is called nature and with respect to its being in a person it is called heart mind As it appears from these analogies the Li is considered by the Chengs as identical with Heaven 145 By the words of the Chengs Huang clarifies the immanent transcendence of the Li since it comes ontologically before things but it does not exist outside of things or outside qi the energy matter of which things are made In Chengs theology the Li is not some entity but the activity of things sheng Explaining it through an analogy according to the Shuowen Jiezi Li is originally a verb meaning to work on jade 146 The Chengs further identify this activity as the true human nature 147 Sages who have realised the true nature are identical with the Li and their actions are identical to the creativity of the Li 148 Generally in Confucian texts 功 gōng work work of merit or beneficial work and 德 de virtue are frequently used to refer to the ways of becoming an honourable man of Heaven and thus they may be regarded as attributes of Heaven itself Zhu Xi himself characterises Heaven as extremely active or vital jian 健 while the Earth is responsive 顺 shun 149 Humanity as the incarnation of Heaven edit Main article Ren Confucianism The relationship between Heaven and mankind tianrenzhiji 天人之際 that is to say how Heaven generates men and how they should behave to follow its order is a common theme discussed in the Confucian theology of Heaven 134 Generally Confucianism sees humanity or the form quality of the human being 仁 ren translatable as benevolence love humanity as a quality of the God of Heaven itself and therefore it sees humanity as an incarnation of Heaven 150 This theory is not at odds with the classical non Confucian theology which views Huangdi as the incarnated God of Heaven since Huangdi is a representation of nobility and the pursuit of Confucianism is to make all humans noble junzǐ 君子 or sages and holy men 圣人 shengren According to Benjamin I Schwartz in the Xunzi it is explained that 151 Dissonances between man and Heaven are only provisional the human intellect which brings order to chaos is itself an incarnation of the powers of Heaven Heaven s working in the non human sphere is described in a language which can almost be described as mystical Once the normative human culture is realized man is aligned with the harmonies of the universe In the Interactions Between Heaven and Mankind 天人感应 Tianren Gǎnying written by the Han dynasty scholar Dong Zhongshu humanity is discussed as the incarnation of Heaven Human physiological structure thought emotions and moral character are all modelled after Heaven In the Confucian discourse ancestors who accomplished great actions are regarded as the incarnation of Heaven and they last as a form shaping their descendants 152 Ren is the virtue endowed by Heaven and at the same time the means by which man may comprehend his divine nature and achieve oneness with Heaven 153 Discourse about evil suffering and world renewal edit Further information Hun and po This section is written like a research paper or scientific journal Please help improve the section by rewriting it in encyclopedic style and simplify overly technical phrases December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chinese theology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Confucian theology there is no original sin and rather humanity as the incarnate image of Heaven s virtue is born good 良心 liangxin good heart mind 154 In Confucian theodicy the rise of evil in a given cosmic configuration is attributed to failings in the moral organisation of qi which depends on mankind s or the practising subject shijian zhǔtǐ 實踐主體 in Zhu Xi free will that is to say the ability to choose whether to harmonise or not with the order of Heaven which is part of the creature s ability to co create with the creator 155 Paraphrasing Zhu Xi 156 each human activity found in either the mind the body or in both of them simultaneously either follows principles of the just Heaven or is corrupted by selfish appetites Human qi the primordial potential substance organises according to the yin and yang polarity in the two facets of 形 xing body and 神 shen soul 157 Qi is open to both disorder yin and order yang bodily and heavenly appetites 158 While other creatures have a limited perfection the human being alone has an unlimited nature that is to say the ability to cultivate its qi in amounts and directions of its own choice either yin or yang 159 While Confucians prescribe to be moderate in pursuing appetites since even the bodily ones are necessary for life 160 when the proprietorship of corporeality xingqi zhisi 形氣之私 prevails selfishness and therefore immorality ensue 161 When evil dominates the world falls into disaster society shatters up and individuals are hit by diseases giving the way for a new heavenly configuration to emerge By the words of Zhu Xi 162 Once Heaven sees that human beings immorality comes to its apex it will crush everything up What will be left is only a chaos wherein all humans and things lose their being Subsequently a new world will emerge Sufferings however are also regarded by Confucians as a way of Heaven to refine a person preparing him for a future role According to Mencius 163 When Heaven is about to confer a great office on any man it first exercises his mind with suffering and his sinews and bones with toil It exposes his body to hunger and subjects him to extreme poverty It confounds his undertakings By all these methods it stimulates his mind hardens his nature and supplies his incompetencies Likewise Zhu Xi says 155 Helplessness poverty adversity and obstacles can strengthen one s will and cultivate his humanity ren Taoist theology edit nbsp Hall of the Three Purities at the Temple of Guandi 关帝庙 of Qiqihar Heilongjiang nbsp Altar to Shangdi and Doumu 斗母 Mother of the Chariot representing the originating principle of the universe in masculine and feminine form in the Chengxu Temple of Zhouzhuang Jiangxi Religious traditions under the label of Taoism have their own theologies which characterised by henotheism are meant to accommodate local deities in the Taoist celestial hierarchy 51 According to Stephan Feuchtwang Taoism is concerned with the cultivation of local deities bringing them in alignment with the broader cosmology in order to centre through the power of rite each locality with its peculiarities 29 It has hermetic and lay liturgical traditions the most practised at the popular level being those for healing and exorcism codified into a textual corpus commissioned and approved by emperors throughout the dynasties the Taoist Canon 120 The core of Taoist theology is the concept of Dao 道 the Way which is both the order of nature and the source of it Differently from common religion or even Confucianism Taoism espouses a negative theology declaring the impossibility to define the Dao The core text of Taoism the Daodejing opens with the verses The Dao that can be said is not the eternal Dao the name that can be said is not the eternal name Feuchtwang explains the Dao as equivalent to the ancient Greek conception of physis that is nature as the generation and regeneration of beings 120 Taoists seek perfection which is immortality achieved by becoming one with the Dao or the rhythms of nature 120 Through time Taoist Theology created its own deities Certain sects modeled their temples to dedicate to certain deities 164 Deities who take part in the Dao are arranged in a hierarchy The supreme powers are three the Three Pure Ones and represent the centre of the cosmos and its two modalities of manifestation yin and yang 165 The hierarchy of the highest powers of the cosmos is arranged as follows 51 Sanqing 三清 Three Pure Ones Yuqing 玉清 Jade Purity Yuanshǐ Tianzun 元始天尊 Heavenly Honourable of the First Beginning Shangqing 上清 High Purity Lingbǎo Tianzun 灵宝天尊 Heavenly Honourable of the Numinous Treasure Taiqing 太清 Supreme Purity Daode Tianzun 道德天尊 Heavenly Honourable of the Way and its Virtue incarnated historically as Laozi dd Siyu 四御 Four Sovereigns Haotian Jinque Zhizun Yuhuang Dadi 昊天金阙至尊玉皇大帝 Most Honourable Great Deity the Jade Emperor in the Golden Tower of the Clear Heaven Zhōngtian Zǐwei Beiji Dadi 中天紫微北极大帝 Great Deity of the Purple Subtlety of the North Star at the center of Heaven Gōuchen Shanggōng Tianhuang Dadi 勾陈上宫天皇大帝 Great Deity the Heavenly King in the High Palace at the Old Hook Chengtian Xiaofǎ Tǔhuang Deqi 承天效法土皇地祇 Land Appeasing Soil Ruler who Imitates the Law which Sustains Heaven who is the goddess HoutǔTrends in modern Chinese political and civil theology edit nbsp Statues of the Yellow Deity and the Red Deity carved in the rock at a ceremonial complex in Zhengzhou Henan See also Confucian ritual religion Interest in traditional Chinese theology has waxed and waned throughout the dynasties of the history of China For instance the Great Leap Forward enacted in the mid 20th century involved the outright destruction of traditional temples in accordance with Maoist ideology From the 1980s onwards a revival has taken place with public sacrifices held at temples meant to renew the perceived alliance between community leaders and the gods 20 In the 2010s the great majority of China s population of 1 3 billion takes part in Chinese cosmological religion its rituals and festivals of the lunar calendar 166 The cult of the Yellow Emperor is celebrated officially by the contemporary Chinese government 167 Even Chinese Buddhism a religion which originally came from abroad adapted to common Chinese cosmology by paralleling its concept of a triune supreme with Shakyamuni Amithaba and Maitreya representing respectively enlightenment salvation and post apocalyptic paradise 165 The Tathata 真如 zhenru suchness is generally identified as the supreme being itself 51 In the wake of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz many scholars understand Confucian theology as a natural theology 126 The Chinese theological conception of the God of Heaven s ongoing self creation evolution in the divine city and the broader cosmos is contrasted with that of God as a craftsman external to his creation which is the type of theism of Christianity 168 Contemporary scholars also compare Confucianism and Christianity on the matters of humanity s good nature and of pneumatology that is to say the respective doctrines of the shen dynamism produced by God s activity guishen and of the Holy Spirit finding that the Confucian doctrine is truly humanistic since the spirit is the creative dynamism always present in humanity while in the Christian doctrine the Holy Spirit ultimately belongs to God alone 169 According to the philosopher Promise Hsu in the wake of Eric Voegelin while Christianity fails to provide a public civil theology Confucianism with its idea of Tian within broader Chinese cosmological religion is particularly apt to fill the void left by the failing of Christianity 131 Paraphrasing Varro Hsu says 131 A society exists concretely with regard to space time and human beings Their organizational form and its symbols are sacred in their concreteness regardless of speculations about their meaning Quoting from Ellis Sandoz s works Hsu says 131 Civil theology consists of propositionally stated true scientific knowledge of the divine order It is the theology discerned and validated through reason by the philosopher on the one hand and through common sense and the logique du Coeur evoked by the persuasive beauty of mythic narrative and imitative representations on the other hand Also Joel Thoraval characterises the common Chinese religion or what he calls a popular Confucianism which has powerfully revived since the 1980s consisting of the widespread belief and worship of five cosmological entities Heaven and Earth Di 地 the sovereign or the government jun 君 ancestors qin 親 and masters shi 師 as China s civil religion 170 See also edit nbsp China portalChinese folk religion Huang Lao Taoism San Jiao Chinese spiritual world conceptsRelated cultures edit Anu Enlil Enki Amenominakanushi Deus Haneullim TengriAbrahamic syncretism edit Sino Christian theology Han KitabNotes edit Whether centred in the changeful precessional north celestial pole or in the fixed north ecliptic pole the spinning constellations draw the wan 卍 symbol around the centre 帝 Di is sometimes translated as thearch from the Greek theos deity with arche principle origin thus meaning divine principle divine origin In sinology it has been used to designate the incarnated gods who according to Chinese tradition sustain the world order and originated China 49 A 斗 dǒu in Chinese is an entire semantic field meaning the shape of a dipper as the Big Dipper 北斗 Beidǒu or a cup signifying a whirl and also has martial connotations meaning fight struggle battle References editCitations edit a b Didier 2009 p 256 Vol III a b Mair Victor H 2011 Religious Formations and Intercultural Contacts in Early China In Krech Volkhard Steinicke Marion eds Dynamics in the History of Religions between Asia and Europe Encounters Notions and Comparative Perspectives Leiden Brill pp 85 110 ISBN 978 9004225350 pp 97 98 note 26 Didier 2009 p 257 Vol I a b c d Didier 2009 passim a b Reiter Florian C 2007 Purposes Means and Convictions in Daoism A Berlin Symposium Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3447055130 p 190 a b Milburn Olivia 2016 The Spring and Autumn Annals of Master Yan Sinica Leidensia BRILL ISBN 978 9004309661 p 343 note 17 Assasi Reza 2013 Swastika The Forgotten Constellation Representing the Chariot of Mithras Anthropological Notebooks Supplement Sprajc Ivan Pehani Peter eds Ancient Cosmologies and Modern Prophets Proceedings of the 20th Conference of the European Society for Astronomy in Culture Ljubljana Slovene Anthropological Society XIX 2 ISSN 1408 032X Adler 2011 pp 4 5 Zhong 2014 p 98 ff Cai 2004 p 314 Zhong 2014 p 182 Zhong 2014 pp 76 77 Zhong 2014 p 84 note 282 Zhong 2014 pp 15 16 Leo Koguan 13 September 2014 The Yellow Emperor Hypothesis PDF The Yellow Emperor s Thought versus the Hundred Schools of Thought in Pre Qin Period Yellow Emperor City Zhuolu Hebei The conference is also dated 4711 X Y instead of 2014 according to the year count starting from the birth of Xuanyuan the Yellow Emperor Leo Koguan is a teacher of Rule of Law and Principle at Tsinghua University Beijing University and KoGuan Law School scholar of Yellow Emperor Thought and Xuanyuandao who explains Chinese religion in the language of a scientific cosmology Adler 2011 p 5 a b c d Lu amp Gong 2014 p 63 Lu amp Gong 2014 pp 71 72 Lu amp Gong 2014 p 73 a b Stafford Charles ed 2013 Ordinary Ethics in China A amp C Black ISBN 978 0857854605 pp 198 199 McLeod Alexus 2016 Astronomy in the Ancient World Early and Modern Views on Celestial Events Springer ISBN 978 3319236001 pp 89 90 According to the Chinese view the circumpolar stars represent the palace surrounding the emperor who is the pole star and the various members of the celestial bureaucracy Indeed the Chinese saw the night sky as a mirror of the empire and saw the empire as a mirror of the sky on earth The sky was tian and the empire had the authority of tian a b c d Cheu Hock Tong 1988 The Nine Emperor Gods A Study of Chinese Spirit medium Cults Time Books International ISBN 9971653850 p 19 a b c d e DeBernardi Jean 2007 Commodifying Blessings Celebrating the Double Yang Festival in Penang Malaysia and Wudang Mountain China In Kitiarsa Pattana ed Religious Commodifications in Asia Marketing Gods Routledge ISBN 978 1134074457 a b Pankenier 2013 p 55 Zhong 2014 pp 196 202 Zhong 2014 p 222 Didier 2009 p 128 Maeder Stefan 2011 The Big Dipper Sword Snake and Turtle Four Constellations as Indicators of the Ecliptic Pole in Ancient China in Nakamura Tsuko Orchiston Wayne Soma Mitsuru Strom Richard eds Mapping the Oriental Sky Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Oriental Astronomy Tokyo National Astronomical Observatory of Japan pp 57 63 a b c d Feuchtwang 2016 p 150 Zhong 2014 p 223 Zhong 2014 p 215 a b c Libbrecht 2007 p 43 Didier 2009 pp 170 171 Vol I Zhong 2014 p 118 Zhong 2014 pp 125 127 Mair Victor 2012 The Earliest Identifiable Written Chinese Character In Huld Martin E Jones Bley Karlene Miller Dean A eds Archaeology and Language Indo European Studies Presented to James P Mallory Institute for the Study of Man pp 265 279 ISBN 978 0984538355 ISSN 0895 7258 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help a b Pankenier 2013 pp 112 113 Zhong 2014 pp 131 132 a b Zhong 2014 pp 188 190 Zhong 2014 p 200 a b Zhong 2014 p 212 Didier 2009 p 137 ff Vol III Pankenier 2004 pp 226 236 Didier 2009 p 111 Vol II Didier 2009 p 216 Vol I Didier 2009 p 1 Vol III Chang 2000 Lu amp Gong 2014 pp 63 67 Pregadio 2013 p 504 Each sector of heaven the four points of the compass and the center was personified by a di 帝 a term which indicates not only an emperor but also an ancestral thearch and god Zhong 2014 p 66 note 224 a b c d Lu amp Gong 2014 p 71 Zhong 2014 p 70 Didier 2009 p 228 Vol II passim Vol I Didier 2009 p 82 Vol I Pankenier 2013 p 9 Pankenier 2004 p 220 a b c d e f Lu amp Gong 2014 p 64 Zhao 2012 p 51 Didier 2009 p 4 Vol III Zhou 2005 Medhurst 1847 p 260 Pankenier 2013 pp 103 105 Didier 2009 p 118 Vol II and passim Didier 2009 p 133 Vol II Didier 2009 p 100 Vol II Didier 2009 p 107 ff Vol II Pankenier 2013 p 103 Didier 2009 p 6 Vol III Pankenier 2013 pp 138 148 Chapter 4 Bringing Heaven Down to Earth Pankenier 2013 pp 136 142 Didier 2009 pp 227 228 Vol II a b Didier 2009 pp 3 4 Vol III Didier 2009 pp 143 144 Vol II a b Fung 2008 p 163 a b c Lu amp Gong 2014 p 65 a b c d Lu amp Gong 2014 p 66 a b Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 981 Lu amp Gong 2014 pp 65 66 Didier 2009 p 217 Didier 2009 p 210 227 228 a b c Didier 2009 pp 213 219 Vol II comprising the sections 口 Di the Ancestors Shangdi and Xiadi and 口 as the Central Stellar Home of the High Ancestors and Conduit of Communication from the Center of Earth with the Center of the Sky Eno 2008 p 72 a b c Wells Marnix 2014 The Pheasant Cap Master and the End of History Linking Religion to Philosophy in Early China Three Pines Press ISBN 978 1931483261 Sun amp Kistemaker 1997 p 121 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 784 chapter Bujard Marianne State and Local Cults in Han Religion Zhong 2014 pp 71 72 Little amp Eichman 2000 p 250 It describes a Ming dynasty painting representing among other figures the Wudi In the foreground are the gods of the Five Directions dressed as emperors of high antiquity holding tablets of rank in front of them These gods are significant because they reflect the cosmic structure of the world in which yin yang and the Five Phases Elements are in balance They predate religious Taoism and may have originated as chthonic gods of the Neolithic period Governing all directions east south west north and center they correspond not only to the Five Elements but to the seasons the Five Sacred Peaks the Five Planets and zodiac symbols as well a b Espesset 2008 pp 22 28 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 pp 778 779 chapter Bujard Marianne State and Local Cults in Han Religion Zhong 2014 p 69 Didier 2009 passim Vol III esp Chapter 6 Great Ancestor Dayi 大乙 Polar God Taiyi 太乙 Yi 一 One and the Development of Early Imperial Chinese Cosmology a b c Little amp Eichman 2000 p 75 Didier 2009 pp 86 90 Vol III Espesset 2008 p 19 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 785 An Liu John S Major 2010 The Huainanzi A Guide to the Theory and Practice of Government in Early Han China Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231142045 p 117 note 11 Chamberlain 2009 p 222 Sun amp Kistemaker 1997 pp 120 123 Pregadio 2013 pp 504 505 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 1080 Bonnefoy Yves 1993 Asian Mythologies University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226064565 pp 241 246 Didier 2009 pp 153 156 Vol I Song Yaoliang 2015 The Deified Human Face Petroglyphs of Prehistoric China World Scientific ISBN 978 1938368332 p 239 in the Hetudijitong and the Chunqiuhechengtu the Yellow Emperor is identified as the Thunder God Yang Lihui An Deming 2005 Handbook of Chinese Mythology ABC CLIO ISBN 157607806X p 138 a b Fowler 2005 pp 200 201 Sun amp Kistemaker 1997 p 120 Lagerwey amp Kalinowski 2008 p 674 Pregadio 2013 p 505 Pregadio 2013 p 1229 Didier 2009 p 156 Vol I Zhou 2005 passim Zhou 2005 p 1 a b c d e Pregadio 2013 p 1197 a b c d Yao amp Zhao 2010 p 155 Pregadio 2013 p 603 Zhao 2012 p 47 Zhong 2014 p 124 Didier 2009 p 226 Vol II a b Didier 2009 pp 190 191 Vol II a b c d e Feuchtwang 2016 p 146 Yao Xinzhong 2000 An Introduction to Confucianism Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521643120 p 19 Zhou 2012 p 2 Didier 2009 pp xxxviii xxxix Vol I Zhong 2014 p 102 relying upon Fu Pei jun 1984 The Concept of T ien in Ancient China With Special Emphasis on Confucianism Ph D dissertation Yale University Zhong 2014 p 3 a b Zhong 2014 passim Zhong 2014 pp 98 99 Zhong 2014 p 107 Zhong 2014 pp 109 111 Zhong 2014 p 121 a b c d Hsu 2014 Huang 2007 p 455 a b Huang 2007 p 457 a b Zhong 2014 p 24 Huang 2007 pp 457 462 Huang 2007 p 458 Huang 2007 p 459 Huang 2007 p 460 Huang 2007 p 461 Huang 2007 p 462 Huang 2007 p 463 a b c d e Huang 2007 p 464 a b c d Huang 2007 p 465 a b c Huang 2007 p 466 a b c Huang 2007 p 469 Huang 2007 p 470 Huang 2007 p 472 Huang 2007 p 473 Zhong 2014 pp 113 115 Zhong 2014 pp 136 137 Machle Edward J 1993 Nature and Heaven in the Xunzi A Study of the Tian Lun SUNY Press ISBN 0791415538 p 209 Cites Schwartz Benjamin I December 1973 On the absence of reductionism in Chinese thought Journal of Chinese Philosophy 1 1 27 43 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6253 1973 tb00639 x Zhong 2014 pp 80 Tay 2010 p 102 Zhong 2014 p 150 a b Zhong 2014 p 143 Zhong 2014 pp 149 150 Zhong 2014 p 144 Zhong 2014 p 145 Zhong 2014 p 146 Zhong 2014 p 151 Zhong 2014 p 147 Zhong 2014 p 141 Zhong 2014 p 142 The Taoist Deities www chebucto ns ca Retrieved 2019 11 06 a b Feuchtwang 2016 p 151 Feuchtwang 2016 p 144 Feuchtwang 2016 p 164 Zhong 2014 pp 129 130 Zhong 2014 p 236 Thoraval Joel 2016 Heaven Earth Sovereign Ancestors Masters Some Remarks on the Politico Religious in China Today Occasional Papers No 5 Paris France Centre for Studies on China Korea and Japan Archived from the original on 16 January 2018 Sources edit Adler Joseph A 2011 The Heritage of Non Theistic Belief in China PDF Conference paper Toward a Reasonable World The Heritage of Western Humanism Skepticism and Freethought San Diego CA Berthrong John H 2011 Chinese Confucian Philosophical Theology in Flint Thomas P Rea Michael C eds The Oxford Handbook of Philosophical Theology OUP Oxford pp 574 596 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199596539 001 0001 ISBN 978 0199289202 Cai Zongqi 2004 Chinese Aesthetics Ordering of Literature the Arts and the Universe in the Six Dynasties University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0824827910 Chamberlain Jonathan 2009 Chinese Gods An Introduction to Chinese Folk Religion Hong Kong Blacksmith Books ISBN 9789881774217 Chang Ruth H 2000 Understanding Di and Tian Deity and Heaven from Shang to Tang Dynasties PDF Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 108 ISSN 2157 9679 Didier John C 2009 In and Outside the Square The Sky and the Power of Belief in Ancient China and the World c 4500 BC AD 200 Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 192 Volume I The Ancient Eurasian World and the Celestial Pivot Volume II Representations and Identities of High Powers in Neolithic and Bronze China Volume III Terrestrial and Celestial Transformations in Zhou and Early Imperial China Feuchtwang Stephan 2016 Chinese religions in Woodhead Linda Kawanami Hiroko Partridge Christopher H eds Religions in the Modern World Traditions and Transformations 3nd ed London Routledge pp 143 172 ISBN 978 1317439608 Fung Yiu ming 2008 Problematizing Contemporary Confucianism in East Asia in Richey Jeffrey ed Teaching Confucianism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198042563 Libbrecht Ulrich 2007 Within the Four Seas Introduction to Comparative Philosophy Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 9042918122 Fowler Jeanine D 2005 An Introduction to the Philosophy and Religion of Taoism Pathways to Immortality Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1845190866 permanent dead link Huang Yong 2007 Confucian Theology Three Models Religion Compass Blackwell 1 4 455 478 doi 10 1111 j 1749 8171 2007 00032 x ISSN 2157 9679 Lagerwey John Kalinowski Marc 2008 Early Chinese Religion Part One Shang Through Han 1250 BC 220 AD Brill ISBN 978 9004168350 Eno Robert 2008 Shang State Religion and the Pantheon of the Oracle Texts in Lagerwey John Kalinowski Marc eds Early Chinese Religion Part One Shang Through Han 1250 BC 220 AD Brill pp 41 102 ISBN 978 9004168350 Espesset Gregoire 2008 Latter Han Mass Religious Movements and the Early Daoist Church in Lagerwey John Kalinowski Marc eds Early Chinese Religion Part One Shang Through Han 1250 BC 220 AD Leiden Brill pp 1117 1158 ISBN 978 9004168350 Consulted HAL SHS version pages 1 56 Little Stephen Eichman Shawn 2000 Taoism and the Arts of China University of California Press ISBN 0520227859 Lu Daji Gong Xuezeng 2014 Marxism and Religion Religious Studies in Contemporary China Brill ISBN 978 9047428022 Medhurst Walter H 1847 A Dissertation on the Theology of the Chinese with a View to the Elucidation of the Most Appropriate Term for Expressing the Deity in the Chinese Language Mission Press Original preserved at The British Library Digitalised in 2014 Pankenier David W 2004 A Brief History of Beiji 北极 Northern Culmen with an Excursus on the Origin of the Character di 帝 Journal of the American Oriental Society 124 2 doi 10 2307 4132212 JSTOR 4132212 Pankenier David W 2013 Astrology and Cosmology in Early China Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107006720 Pregadio Fabrizio 2013 The Encyclopedia of Taoism Routledge ISBN 978 1135796341 Two volumes 1 A L 2 L Z Sun Xiaochun Kistemaker Jacob 1997 The Chinese Sky During the Han Constellating Stars and Society Brill ISBN 9004107371 Tay Wei Leong 2010 Kang Youwei The Martin Luther of Confucianism and His Vision of Confucian Modernity and Nation PDF Secularization Religion and the State University of Tokyo Center of Philosophy Yao Xinzhong Zhao Yanxia 2010 Chinese Religion A Contextual Approach London A amp C Black ISBN 9781847064752 Zhao Dunhua 2012 The Chinese Path to Polytheism in Wang Robin R ed Chinese Philosophy in an Era of Globalization SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791485507 Zhong Xinzi 2014 A Reconstruction of Zhu Xi s Religious Philosophy Inspired by Leibniz The Natural Theology of Heaven Thesis Open Access Theses and Dissertations Hong Kong Baptist University Institutional Repository Archived from the original PDF on 28 February 2018 Zhou Jixu 2005 Old Chinese tees and Proto Indo European deus Similarity in Religious Ideas and a Common Source in Linguistics PDF Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 167 Zhou Youguang 2012 To Inherit the Ancient Teachings of Confucius and Mencius and Establish Modern Confucianism PDF Sino Platonic Papers Victor H Mair 226 ArticlesHsu Promise 16 November 2014 The Civil Theology of Confucius Tian Symbol Voegelin View Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese theology amp oldid 1188178242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.