Quick Facts
Formed | c. 500 B.C.E. |
Origin | China |
Followers | 5,000,000 |
Deity | None / various gods and ancestors |
Sacred Texts | Analects (Lunyu), the Five Classics (Wujing), the Four Books (Sishu) |
Headquarters | None |
Some say Confucianism is not a religion, since there are no
Confucian deities and no teachings about the afterlife. Confucius
himself was a staunch supporter of ritual, however, and for many
centuries there were state rituals associated with Confucianism. Most
importantly, the Confucian tradition was instrumental in shaping Chinese
social relationships and moral thought. Thus even without deities and a
vision of salvation, Confucianism plays much the same role as religion
does in other cultural contexts. The founder of Confucianism was Kong
Qiu (K'ung Ch'iu), who was born around 552 B.C.E. in the small state of
Lu and died in 479 B.C.E. The Latinized name Confucius, based on the
honorific title Kong Fuzi (K'ung Fu-tzu), was created by 16th-century
Jesuit missionaries in China. Confucius was a teacher to sons of the
nobility at a time when formal education was just beginning in China. He
traveled from region to region with a small group of disciples, a
number of whom would become important government officials. Confucius
was not particularly famous during his lifetime, and even considered
himself to be a failure. He longed to be the advisor to a powerful
ruler, and he believed that such a ruler, with the right advice, could
bring about an ideal world. Confucius said heaven and the afterlife were
beyond human capacity to understand, and one should therefore
concentrate instead on doing the right thing in this life. The earliest
records from his students indicate that he did not provide many moral
precepts; rather he taught an attitude toward one's fellow humans of
respect, particularly respect for one's parents, teachers, and elders.
He also encouraged his students to learn from everyone they encountered
and to honor others' cultural norms. Later, his teachings would be
translated by authoritarian political philosophers into strict
guidelines, and for much of Chinese history Confucianism would be
associated with an immutable hierarchy of authority and unquestioning
obedience.