The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (2707 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
5.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Wu-shan
(federation of Ch'an/Zen monasteries):
see
GOSAN
.
Wu-shih Ch'i-hou
(Chin., ‘five periods, seven stages’).
Taoist
analysis of progress to the goal. First:
(i) the mind is always on the move;
(ii) the mind calms down;
(iii) calm and movement are in balance;
(iv) calm predominates by concentration on an object of meditation;
(v) the mind rests and is not
‘kept going’
by external inputs. Next:
(i) anxiety then subsides;
(ii) the appearance reverts to that of a child at rest, but supernatural powers develop;
(iii) the condition of immortal (
hsien
) is attained;
(iv) 
ch'i
is perfected, and the perfect being (
chen-jen
) emerges;
(v) shen-jen is attained;
(vi) harmony with all forms is attained;
(vii) perfect harmony with
Tao
is realized in the practice of life.
W
tai
(mountain):
Wu-t'ai-shan
(‘Five Terrace Mountain’)
.
Place of pilgrimage for Chinese Buddhists who venerate
Mañju
ri
(Chin., Wen-shu). It is in Shansi province. Nearly sixty of the monasteries survive from the more than 200 of its heyday (6th cent. CE).
Wu-te
(five virtues):
Wu-tou-mi Tao
(‘five pecks of rice Taoism’)
.
School of religious
Taoism
(
tao-chiao
), founded by
Chang Tao-ling
(2nd cent. CE) and his grandson,
Chang Lu
. Those wishing to join paid five pecks of rice to the functionaries (
tao-shih
), hence the name. The leaders were called tien-shih, celestial masters, and this is another name for the school, the Celestial Master, or Heavenly Master, School. It has continued to the present day, more respectfully known as
cheng-yi
,
‘the Orthodox way’
.

Other books

The Black Dog Mystery by Ellery Queen Jr.
The Six-Gun Tarot by R. S. Belcher
Star Trek and History by Reagin, Nancy
Yarn by Jon Armstrong
La mujer del viajero en el tiempo by Audrey Niffenegger
Lady, Here's Your Wreath by James Hadley Chase
Fall of a Philanderer by Carola Dunn