Shanrendao
Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue Shànréndào | |
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Type | Confucian-Taoism Church |
Classification | Chinese salvationist religion |
Founder | Jiang Shoufeng |
Origin | 28 September 1921 Tai'an, Shandong |
Members | 1930s: 8 million (25% of Northeast China's population)[1] |
Other name(s) | World Morality Society / Ethical Society |
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Chinese folk religion |
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Shanrendao (Chinese:
It is one of the most prominent religions of redemption of China,[3] and was formally established as the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue in Shandong in 1921 by Jiang Shoufeng (1875–1926), a member of the Confucian Church (
A great contribution came from Jiang Shoufeng's son, Jiang Xizhang (1907–2004), an intellectual prodigy who composed commentaries on the Confucian classics before the age of ten.[9] Father and son composed vernacular versions of the classics in order to disseminate Confucianism among the Chinese masses.[9] After the World War I, Xizhang wrote a leaflet, the Xizhanlun with anti-war teachings inspired by the content of the world religions.[9]
The strongest impetus in the social importance of the movement, however, came from Wang Fengyi (
Doctrine and practice[edit]
Wang Fengyi elaborated a doctrine and practice based on self-knowledge, self-realisation, and self-reliance, based on traditional Chinese theology and cosmology, especially the five elements (
Shanrendao is deeply influenced by the Taizhou school of Wang Yangming's Neo-Confucianism, but the tradition synthesises the entirety of Chinese religion. Its goal is to find the roots of one's life; return to the principles of the bond between Heaven, Earth and humanity according to one's own experience.[2]
All kinds of human emotions are thought to arise from social interaction, from the family to the larger community. Wang Fengyi's teachings emphasise the role of emotion in healing. Reconciliation, gathering for ritual and storytelling (parables are taken from the Chinese tradition and the life of Master Wang) able to "turn the heart of the participants", are the primary practice of the movement. These methods are called "talking the disease away by appealing to one's higher nature".[6]: 10–11
Three natures and Dao[edit]
Wang Fengyi's doctrine holds that the human being tends to the five virtues of empathy (
The state of virtue is 1. tiānxìng (
Social doctrine[edit]
The Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue inherited Wang's teachings on the importance of the family, seen as the basis of citizenship and social regeneration. According to Wang's teachings the family institution has to be frugal and morally pure.[14]
Wang protested the inadequacy of historical religions, protesting that they neglected or demeaned women. Wang emphasised the importance of the woman in the institution of the family, and the necessity of women's education and independence in the Way.[14] Wang Fengyi promoted an indigenous mass female learning movement which competed with the missionary schools of the Catholic Church in Manchuria.[15]
Foundation and spread[edit]
The Jiangs and Kang Youwei[edit]
Jiang Shoufeng and his son Jiang Xizhang began to organise the movement in 1916.[16] Jiang Shoufeng was originally a member of Confucian Church of Kang Youwei, but was turned away by hard-line Confucian trends within the church.[16] The Jiangs theorised that a moral foundation was needed for the Chinese in order to contrast with Western imperialism, which they perceived as resting on a policy of eradication of the morality of conquered populations.[16] The Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue was officially founded on 28 September 1921, the birthday of Confucius, in Tai'an, Shandong.[16]
The church attracted members from various backgrounds and government officials. Even the American Christian missionary Gilbert Reid became a member of the church, and Kong Decheng (1920–2008), then Confucius' first descendant in direct line, became the honorary chairman.[16][17] Kang Youwei, the "Martin Luther of Confucianism", founder of the Confucian Church,[18] was the president of the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue in 1926–27, the last year of his life.[19]
The Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue underwent a significant reform in 1926–28 when Jiang Shoufeng died, Kang Youwei was ill and dying, and Jiang Xizhang went abroad. The leadership was taken by a capitalist from Heilongjiang, Du Yannian (1878–1957), who recruited the charismatic healer and preacher Wang Fengyi.[16]
Wang Fengyi's leadership[edit]
Wang Fengyi was born on 1 November 1864 to a peasant family of Wangjiayinzi village, Chaoyang, Rehe (nowadays Liaoning). His parents were Mongolian, and he was primarily a self-taught ox herder.[16] He had an older brother, Wang Shutian (
By the time of his contact with Du Yannian, Wang had already founded the Voluntary Schooling movement for girls, which by 1925 had established 250 schools throughout Manchuria.[16] Wang's schools merged with the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue, and by 1933 the church had 500 branches, 400 schools and 200.000 students in northeast China.[21]
Wang Fengyi gave a great impetus to the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue, which in the 1930s had 8 million members in northeast China (25% of the population).[1] Nowadays he continues to be celebrated as a peasant saint throughout the region, a shànrén (
Contemporary developments[edit]
In mainland People's Republic of China the Universal Church of the Way and its Virtue ceased to exist as a social organisation recognised by political authorities since the Communist Revolution of 1949 until recent decades. Shanrendao persisted as an "underground" movement across the Maoist period and the Cultural Revolution.[7][8]
Since the relaxation of antireligion policies in the 1980s the movement has resurfaced and it has grown back especially in its heartland, northeast China (Manchuria),[7] where the members preach filiality and Wang Fengyi's healing methods, mostly organised in the form of house churches.[8] Lineages of local healers are organised in "farms", and successfully employ storytelling, lectures on virtue, personal confessions, and a set of five chanted affirmations modeled on the five elements.[6]: 10–13 [22]
Headquarters of the "Church of the Way and its Virtue" have been established again in Beijing in the 2010s. Wang Fengyi's teachings have also been adopted by the contemporary Beijing Confucian group Yīdān xuétáng (
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Citations[edit]
- ^ a b Ownby (2008). § 23: «the Daodehui eight million in Manchukuo alone (a quarter of the total population) in 1936–1937.»
- ^ a b c d e Duara (2014), p. 182.
- ^ Billioud & Thoraval (2015), p. 27, 79.
- ^ a b c Billioud & Thoraval (2015), p. 130.
- ^ Kiely, Goossaert & Lagerwey (2015), p. 688.
- ^ a b c Heiner Fruehauf, Ph.D. All Disease Comes from the Heart: The Pivotal Role of the Emotions in Classical Chinese Medicine. § "The Power of Ritual and the Emotional Therapy System of the Confucian Educator Wang Fengyi (1864–1937)" (7–13). chineseclassicalmedicine.org. Archived on 31 December 2017.
- ^ a b c Billioud & Thoraval (2015), p. 298.
- ^ a b c Kiely, Goossaert & Lagerwey (2015), p. 45, 786.
- ^ a b c Kiely, Goossaert & Lagerwey (2015), p. 696.
- ^ Kiely, Goossaert & Lagerwey (2015), p. 697.
- ^ a b Billioud & Thoraval (2015), p. 79.
- ^ Luo (2013), p. 45.
- ^ Luo (2013), pp. 47–48.
- ^ a b Yeh (2000), p. 352.
- ^ Li Ji. God's Little Daughters: Catholic Women in Nineteenth-Century Manchuria. University of Washington Press, 2015. ISBN 0295806036. p. 17
- ^ a b c d e f g h Goossaert & Palmer (2011), p. 96.
- ^ a b Billioud & Thoraval (2015), p. 182.
- ^ 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. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 December 2017.
- ^ Goossaert & Palmer (2011), p. 95.
- ^ Luo (2013), p. 39.
- ^ Goossaert & Palmer (2011), p. 97.
- ^ Liu Yousheng's
劉 有生 lectures: Let the Radiant Yang Shine Forth: Lectures on Virtue.
Sources[edit]
- Billioud, Sebastien; Thoraval, Joel (2015). The Sage and the People: The Confucian Revival in China. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190258146.
- Duara, Prasenjit (2014). The Crisis of Global Modernity. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107082250.
- Goossaert, Vincent; Palmer, David (2011). The Religious Question in Modern China. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226304168.
- Hausen, Johan; Akers, Jonas (2017), Discourse on Transforming Inner Nature. Purple Cloud Press. ISBN 1974550613
- Kiely, Jon; Goossaert, Vincent; Lagerwey, John (2015). Modern Chinese Religion II: 1850 - 2015. Brill. ISBN 978-9004304642.
- Ownby, David (2008). "Sect and Secularism in Reading the Modern Chinese Religious Experience". Archives de sciences sociales des religions. 144. doi:10.4000/assr.17633.
- Luo, Wenli (2013). Emotional Healing in China: A Research Based on a Taling Healer, Wang Fengyi (Bachelor in Psychotherapy Science). Vienna: Sigmund Freud University.
- Yeh, Wen-Hsin (2000). Becoming Chinese: Passages to Modernity and Beyond. University of California Press. ISBN 0520222180.