TAO
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Beliefs About
Death
Taoism places great
value on life. It does not focus on life after death, but emphasizes
health and longevity by living a life of simplicity and inner peace.
Taoism teaches the devotee to lead a long and tranquil life through
the elimination of one's desires and aggressive impulses. The Tao beliefs
about the after life have never received much focus, so there are several
different views. The early church had an idea of a special post-mortem
fate for church members that involved "passing through Grand Darkness
to have their images reborn"
Other Taoists believed
a utopia would soon be realized - the Great Peace. Much like the Christian
Kingdom of God, there is a sense in the early documents that this world
transcended life and death so that the living and dead would be reunited
there, so long as they had been saved while alive.
Funeral Practices
A Taoist priest
officiates at the simple funeral, consisting of a brief eulogy, three
prostrations by the attendees, and a farewell message. Traditionally
in China, after a three day visitation and funeral service, a Chinese
Taoist is buried in a family graveyard. The deceased ancestor then becomes
an object of worship by his surviving family members. After being interred
for four years, the ancestor's bones are disinterred, cleaned, placed
in a ceramec jar, and re-buried in front of his tombstone.
References:
www.taorestore.org
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