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The Supreme Deity

               Shang-ti, more often called the Jade Emperor, was the supreme deity of
               Chinese worship and mythology. (He went by many other names as well,
               including Yu-di and Yu Huang Shang-ti.) In early Chinese history, well
               before he took on his emperor-like image and status, he was a powerful
               sky god who bore different names in different parts of the country. Over
               time, he assumed an increasing number of important duties, including
               overseer of law and order, justice, and in some places even creation. He
               was also credited with controlling the weather, regulating the passage of
               the seasons, and teaching humans the fundamentals of architecture. At
               some point, new myths were assigned to him, including the major one
               that claimed he had started out as a human hero and had been dei ed,
               thereby becoming a divine entity.
                   Rituals of worship naturally developed around the Jade Emperor. One
               observed his birthday on the ninth day of the year’s  rst lunar month,
               when Taoist temples held special rituals appropriately called “heaven
               worship.” It included people prostrating themselves (lying facedown
               on the  oor or ground), burning incense, and making offerings. These
               consisted of several types of food, among them fruits and vegetables,
               noodles, cake, and wine.





                   Other times, however, a deifi ed person rose to high status in
               the heavenly realm. This was the case with the Shang-ti, better
               known as the Jade Emperor. Several myths, some of them with
               confl icting content, tell of his human origins, the most common of
               which pictures him as an ordinary mortal who lived thousands of
               years before the emergence of the fi rst dynasty. Very well mean-
               ing, the story went, he desired to aid his fellow humans and did
               many good deeds. But over time he became sad that he could
               not stop everyone’s suffering. So he retreated to a remote cave in
               the mountains and there underwent hundreds of personal moral
               trials. Eventually, aided by some unnamed gods, he emerged
               from the mountains as a powerful divine being. In fact, thereafter
               known as the Jade Emperor, he long remained the leader of the
               Chinese gods.



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