Lao Tzu.-Meanwhile, other
influences had been helping to divert the attention
of the Chinese people from the simple worship of God
and of the powers of nature. The philosophy associated
with the name of Lao Tzu, who lived nobody knows when,-probably
about B.C. 600-which is popularly known
as Taoism, from Tao, the omnipresent, omnipotent, and
unthinkable principle on which it is based, operated
with Confucianism, though in an opposite direction,
in dislimning the old faith while putting nothing
satisfactory in its place. Confucianism, with
its shadowy monotheistic background, was at any rate
a practical system for everyday use, and it may be
said to contain all the great ethical truths to be
found in the teachings of Christ. Lao Tzu harped
upon a doctrine of Inaction, by virtue of which all
things were to be accomplished,-a perpetual
accommodation of self to one’s surroundings,
with the minimum of effort, all progress being spontaneous
and in the line of least resistance. Such a system
was naturally far better fitted for the study, where
in fact it has always remained, than for use in ordinary
life.
In one of the few genuine utterances
of Lao Tzu which have survived the wreck of time,
we find an allusion to a spiritual world. Unfortunately,
it is impossible to say exactly what the passage means.
According to Han Fei (died B.C. 233), who wrote several
chapters to elucidate the sayings of Lao Tzu, the
following is the correct interpretation:-
“Govern a great nation as you
would cook a small fish (i.e. do not overdo it).
“If the empire is governed according
to Tao, evil spirits will not be worshipped as good
ones.
“If evil spirits are not worshipped
as good ones, good ones will do no injury. Neither
will the Sages injure the people. Each will not
injure the other. And if neither injures the
other, then there will be mutual profit.”
The latter portion is explained by
another commentator as follows:-
“Spirits do not hurt the natural.
If people are natural, spirits have no means of manifesting
themselves; and if spirits do not manifest themselves,
we are not conscious of their existence as such.
Likewise, if we are not conscious of the existence
of spirits as such, we must be equally unconscious
of the existence of inspired teachers as such; and
to be unconscious of the existence of spirits and of
inspired teachers is the very essence of Tao.”
Adumbrations of Heracleitus.-In
the hands of Lao Tzu’s more immediate followers,
Tao became the Absolute, the First Cause, and finally
One in whose obliterating unity all seemingly opposed
conditions of time and space were indistinguishably
blended. This One, the source of human life,
was placed beyond the limits of our visible universe;
and in order for human life to return thither at death
and to enjoy immortality, it was only necessary to
refine away corporeal grossness according to the doctrines
of Lao Tzu. Later on, this One came to be regarded
as a fixed point of dazzling luminosity, in remote
ether, around which circled for ever and ever, in
the supremest glory of motion, the souls of those who
had successfully passed through the ordeal of life,
and who had left the slough of humanity behind them.
The final state is best described
by a poet of the ninth century A.D.:-
Like a whirling water-wheel,
Like rolling pearls,-
Yet how are these worthy
to be named?
They are but illustrations
for fools.
There is the mighty
axis of Earth,
The never-resting pole
of Heaven;
Let us grasp their clue,
And with them be blended
in One,
Beyond the bounds of
thought,
Circling for ever in
the great Void,
An orbit of a thousand
years,-
Yes, this is the key
to my theme.
Debased Taoism.-This view
naturally suggested the prolongation of earthly life
by artificial means; hence the search for an elixir,
carried on through many centuries by degenerate disciples
of Taoism. But here we must pass on to consider
some of the speculations on God, life, death, and
immortality, indulged in by Taoist philosophers and
others, who were not fettered, as the Confucianists
were, by traditional reticence on the subject of spirits
and an unseen universe.
Spirits must exist.-Mo
Tzu, a philosopher of the fourth and fifth centuries
B.C., was arguing one day for the existence of spirits
with a disbelieving opponent. “All you
have to do,” he said, “is to go into any
village and make enquiries. From of old until
now the people have constantly seen and heard spiritual
beings; how then can you say they do not exist?
If they had never seen nor heard them, could people
say that they existed?” “Of course,”
replied the disbeliever, “many people have seen
and heard spirits; but is there any instance of a properly
verified appearance?” Mo Tzu then told a long
story of how King Hsuan, B.C. 827-781, unjustly put
to death a Minister, and how the latter had said to
the King, “If there is no consciousness after
death, this matter will be at an end; but if there
is, then within three years you will hear from me.”
Three years later, at a grand durbar, the Minister
descended from heaven on a white horse, and shot the
King dead before the eyes of all.
Traces of Mysticism.-Chuang
Tzu, the famous philosopher of the third and fourth
centuries B.C., and exponent of the Tao of Lao Tzu,
has the following allusions to God, of course as seen
through Taoist glasses:-
“God is a principle which exists
by virtue of its own intrinsicality, and operates
spontaneously without self-manifestation.
“He who knows what God is, and
what Man is, has attained. Knowing what God is,
he knows that he himself proceeded therefrom.
Knowing what Man is, he rests in the knowledge of
the known, waiting for the knowledge of the unknown.
“The ultimate end is God.
He is manifested in the laws of nature. He is
the hidden spring. At the beginning of all things,
He was.”
Taoism, however, does not seem to
have succeeded altogether, any more than Confucianism,
in altogether estranging the Chinese people from their
traditions of a God, more or less personal, whose power
was the real determining factor in human events.
The great general Hsiang Yu, B.C. 233-202, said to
his charioteer at the battle which proved fatal to
his fortunes, “I have fought no fewer than seventy
fights, and have gained dominion over the empire.
That I am now brought to this pass is because God
has deserted me.”