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CHINA - CHINESE BELIEFS: THREE TEACHINGS FLOW INTO ONE
 
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The visitor to modern China will find few obvious indications of the traditional beliefs which underpinned the country's civilization for three thousand years. Certainly, the remains of religious buildings litter the cities and the countryside, yet they appear sadly incongruous amid the furious pace of change all around them. The restored temples - now "cultural relics" with photo booths, concession stands, special foreign tourist shops and cheerful throngs of young Chinese on outings - are garish and evoke few mysteries. This apparent lack of religion is hardly surprising, however: for decades, the old beliefs have been derided by the authorities as superstition, and the oldest and most firmly rooted of them all, Confucianism, has been criticized and repudiated for nearly a century. For any student of Chinese culture one of the most striking aspects of modern China is the degree to which, on the surface at least, the ancient ("feudal") beliefs have been eradicated.

Although this may sound disappointing for travellers seeking the Tao ("Way") in China, it should be pointed out that the neglect of the outward forms of religion is by no means a sure indicator of the state of mind of the Chinese people. The resilience of old ideas in China, and the ability of the Chinese people to absorb new streams of thought and eventually to dominate them, has been demonstrated again and again over the centuries. The philosophies which unified China and defined the very idea of what it is to be Chinese for millennia are not likely to be forgotten in a mere half century of communism.

The product of the oldest continuous civilization on earth, Chinese religion actually comprises a number of disparate and sometimes contradictory elements. But at the heart of it all, three basic philosophies lie intermingled: Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism. The way in which a harmonious balance has been created among these three is expressed in the often quoted maxim San Jiao Fa Yi - "Three Teachings Flow into One".

Both Confucianism and Taoism are belief systems rooted in the Chinese soil, and they form as much a part of the Chinese collective unconscious as Platonic and Aristotelian thought does in the West. Buddhism , though, was a foreign import, brought to China from India along the Silk Road by itinerant monks and missionaries from about the first century AD onwards. As such, it was the first organized religion to penetrate China and enjoyed a glorious, if brief, period of ascendancy under the Tang in the eighth century. Just as the mutual contradictions of Confucianism and Taoism had been accommodated by the Chinese, however, so Buddhism did not long eclipse other beliefs - as it established itself, its tenets were gradually integrated into the existing structure of thought and in turn transformed by them, into something very different from what had originally come out of India. Buddhism may have been the only foreign religion to have left a substantial mark on China, though it was not, incidentally, the only religion to enter China via the Silk Road. Both Islam and Christianity also trickled into the country this way, and to this day a significant minority of Chinese, numbering possibly in the tens of millions, are Muslims. Unlike most of the rest of Asia, however, China did not yield wholesale to the tide of Islam - the rigid, all-embracing doctrines of the Koran never stood much of a chance with the choosy, flexible Chinese.

Similarly, China may have been periodically dominated by foreign powers, but her belief systems have never been overwhelmed. Instead, conquering invaders such as the Mongolians in the thirteenth and the Manchus in the seventeenth centuries, have found themselves inexorably sinicized. On this strength rests the understandable Chinese confidence in the ultimate superiority of their beliefs , a confidence that survived through the lowest periods in Chinese history.

Confucianism
China's oldest and greatest philosopher, Kong Zi, known in the West by his Latinized name Confucius , was an obscure and unsuccessful scholar. Born in 551 BC, during the so-called Warring States Period, he lived in an age of petty kingdoms...
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Taoism
The second of the three major teachings which form the roots of Chinese beliefs is Taoism . The Tao translates literally as the "Way" and, in its purest form, Taoism is the study and pursuit of this ineffable Way, as...
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Buddhism
The Tang dynasty (618-906 AD) was a period of unprecedented openness and prosperity for the Chinese court and it was then that Buddhism , originally imported from India through Central Asia around the first century AD, gained acceptance and...
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Popular religion

When Jesuit missionaries first arrived in China in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries they were astounded and dismayed by the Chinese flexibility of belief . One frustrated Jesuit put it: "In China, the educated believe nothing and the uneducated believe everything." For those versed in the classics of Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism, the normal belief was a healthy and tolerant scepticism . For the great majority of illiterate peasants, however, popular religion offered a plethora of ghosts, spirits, gods and ancestors who ruled over a capricious nature and protected humanity. If Christian missionaries handed out rice, perhaps Christ too deserved a place alongside them. In popular Buddhism the hope was to reach the "Pure Land", a kind of heaven for believers ruled over by a female deity known as the Mother Ruler. Popular Taoism shared this feminine deity, but its concerns were rather with the sorcerers, alchemists and martial arts aficionados who sought solutions to the riddle of immortality.


Modern China

One of the reasons why modern China appears to lack the outward manifestations of her ancient beliefs is that they are not really essential. You will see the traditions more clearly expressed in how the Chinese think and act than in the symbols and rituals of overt worship.

During the twentieth century, confronted by the superior military and technical power of the West, the Chinese have striven to break free from the shackles of superstition. The imperial examinations were abolished at the turn of the century and since then Chinese intellectuals have been searching for a modern yet essentially Chinese philosophy. The Cultural Revolution can be seen as the culmination of these efforts to repudiate the past. Hundreds of thousands of temples, ancestral halls and religious objects were defaced and destroyed. Monasteries which had preserved their seclusion for centuries were burnt to the ground and their monks imprisoned. The classics of literature and philosophy - the "residue of the reactionary feudal past" - were burned in huge celebratory bonfires. In 1974, towards the end of the Cultural Revolution, a campaign was launched to "criticize Lin Biao and Confucius", pairing the general with the sage to imply that both were equally reactionary in their opposition to the government.

Yet the very fact that Confucius could still be held up as an object for derision in 1974 reveals the tenacity of traditional beliefs . With the Cultural Revolution now long gone, they are once again being accepted as an essential part of the cultural tradition which binds the Chinese people together. The older generation, despite a lifetime of commitment to the Marxist revolution, are comforted and strengthened by their knowledge of the national heritage. The young are rediscovering the classics, the forbidden fruit of their school days. The welcome result is that Chinese temples of all descriptions are prosperous, busy places again, teeming with people who have come to ask for grandchildren or simply for money. The atmosphere may not seem devout or religious, but then perhaps it never did.

 

 

 

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