Showing posts with label Taoism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taoism. Show all posts

Friday, 2 March 2018

De Jiao : a religious movement in contemporary China and overseas



The plaques of 10 Virtues and the 8 Precepts of DEJIAO have officially been opened by the leaders and followers of the following faiths; Buddhism, Confucianism, Catholicism, Latter Day of Saints, Anglican Uniting, Hinduism, Judaism, Sikhism and Sufi Movement, Zee Cheng Khor Moral Uplifting Society Inc is wavering the flag for DEJIAO in Australia!


Church of Virtue
Moral Uplifting Society
De Teaching

·       Bernard FormosoA Wishful Thinking Claim to Global Expansion? The Case of De Jiao (德教) . Asia Research Institute Working Paper No. 96, Université Paris X Nanterre, Sept. 2007, 27 pp.
·       Kazuo Yoshihara. Dejiao: A Chinese Religion in Southeast AsiaJapanese Journal of Religious Studies, Vol. 15, No. 2/3, Folk Religion and Religious Organizations in Asia (Jun. - Sep., 1988), pp. 199–221. Published by: Nanzan University
·       Chee Beng Tan. The Development and Distribution of Dejiao Associations in Malaysia and Singapore, A Study on a Religious Organization. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Occasional Paper n. 79. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1985. ISBN 978-9971-988-14-2



Thursday, 17 August 2017

Taoism and Environmentalism - The Way and Nature

This article is by Denise Hruby from the journal, Sixth Tone - Fresh voices from to-day's China.


SHAANXI, Northwest China — 

On a chilly winter morning, rays of sunlight warmed the wrinkled face of Ren Farong, the former president of the Chinese Taoist Association. His long white beard bobbed up and down as he spoke.

“In the past, people were pure and honest, and they protected the environment,” Ren said from his wicker chair in the courtyard of Louguantai Temple. It was here in the fourth century that Lao-tzu wrote the Tao Te Ching, the text that serves as the foundation of Taoism.



Under the emerald roofs of Louguantai, monks with long hair tied into buns saunter past pine trees and firs, paying their respects to the sage and their gods in golden shrines, interrupted only by the occasional ringing of bells.

Just 70 kilometers from this tranquil enclave lies Shaanxi’s capital, Xi’an, a city of about 9 million people. There, luxury cars zip past high-end shopping malls, coal plants belch toxic fumes into the air, and factories dump waste into waterways.

and there are some beautiful pictures too.
This post is merely to help you to start
your own exploration of Taoism.