Page 11 - My FlipBook
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This and the other tales about how the Jade Emperor came
              to be were manufactured by various dynastic Chinese rulers who
              sought to provide him with a mythology of his own. That helped
              cement his place as the chief god. By picturing him as an em-
              peror with a heavenly court of divine offi cials, mirroring the earthly
              courts of human emperors, those rulers legitimized and solidifi ed
              their own system of rule.


              A Unique Blended Religious System
              Whether perpetuating old myths or inventing new ones, rulers and
              government offi cials had to work within the religious system that
              existed in ancient China. That system of beliefs and rituals grew
              more complex and mature over time. It began, back before the
              Shang era, as a fairly simple folk religion, which modern experts
              often call ancient China’s “popular” faith. The system of worship it
              featured consisted of praying to various gods, as well as notewor-
              thy human ancestors, and making offerings of food to them either
              at grave sites or at small shrines set up in most homes. On the
              community level, meanwhile, people held annual festivals honor-
              ing the gods.
                 Yet that situation changed, because over time three new belief
              systems entered China—Taoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism.
              Each had a profound effect on the way the gods were perceived
              and on the formation of the myths associated with them. Interest-
              ingly, rather than compete against one another, these systems ac-
              tually complemented one another, as well as the older folk religion.
              All four systems blended and produced a unique outlook on life and
              faith in which the gods became less important as objects of worship
              and more important as examples of how people should live their
              lives. The blended system strongly emphasized proper, productive
              behavior, honesty, and caring for one’s fellow human beings. That
              new outlook altered people’s views of the gods and their mythology,
              so some older myths changed or were replaced by newer ones.
                 This process is well illustrated by the effects of Taoism in the
              years following its appearance in China in the 500s and 400s BCE.



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