Wu (Chinese religion)
Part of a series on |
Chinese folk religion |
---|
Institutions and temples |
Internal traditions Major cultural forms
Main philosophical traditions: Ritual traditions: Devotional traditions: Confucian churches and sects: |
Chinese folk religion's portal |
Wu (Chinese: 悟) is a concept of awareness, consciousness, or spiritual enlightenment in the Chinese folk religion.[1] According to scholarly studies, many practitioners recently "reverted" to the Chinese traditional religion speak of a "new awareness" (kai wu 开悟 or jue wu 觉悟) of the interconnectedness of reality in terms of the cosmic-moral harmony—ming yun, bao ying, yuan fen.[2] This spiritual awareness works as an engine that moves these themes from being mere ideas to be motivating forces in one's life:[3] awareness of ming yun ignites responsibility towards life; awareness of yuan fen stirs to respond to events rather than resigning.[4] Awareness is a dynamic factor and appears in two guises: a realisation that arrives as a gift, often unbidden; then it evolves into a practice that the person intentionally follows.[5]
In Latin alphabetical transliteration of the Chinese, it's a homograph of the wu-shaman.
See also
References
Sources
- Fan Lizhu, Chen Na. The Revival of Indigenous Religion in China. Fudan University, 2013.