Ancestor Worship In China
In China, the practice of ancestor worship has existed since ancient times, and it
emphasized continuity of family lines. Filial piety, advocated by the Confucian
teachings of the sixth and fifth centuries B.C.E., emphasized respect for senior
family members (Granet 1975). The practice of ancestor worship, therefore, can
be seen as an extension of this reverence. Additionally, the family was viewed as a
closely united group of living and dead relatives. Unity of the entire kin group
was also reinforced through religious acts at temples that honored all ancestral
spirits.
Rites of reverence were also held at home and gravesites. Ancestral shrines
containing tablets bearing the names of recently deceased ancestors were
maintained in homes, and rites were observed before them. The ancestral tablets,
which are the locus of worship for the deceased, operate in two ways within the
practice of ancestor worship. In one way they are like the ancestral hall, showing
outsiders the public face of the lineage. In another way, they represent the lineage
as a body of individual members. Ancestor festivals occur around the fifteenth of
July, during which items such as fruit, preserves, candies, two or more bowls
containing fragrant wood, some lotus or other flowers in the vase, and a number
of dishes or bowls of cooked food are placed in front of the shrine. If the family
can afford it, one or more priests are invited to read scriptures and perform
certain rituals before the shrine during this period (Hsu 1948).
Emily Ahern (1973) emphasizes that the reciprocal obligation between the living
and the dead is an important element in Chinese family life. For example, in a
Chinese village that Ahern studied, the living are expected to care for the dead in
payment of the debts they owe them, and, in turn, the living hope to obtain the
good life as they perceive it: wealth, rich harvests, and offspring who will ensure
undying memory and sustenance in the afterlife.
The state of ancestor worship in modern China is unclear, but it was reported to
be disappearing (Welch 1969) under the Communist regime. Rennselaer Lee
(1964) argues that the Chinese Communists have been fundamentally hostile
towards religion, but the government solicited the cooperation of religious
leaders in an attempt to create the new China. Others, however, are more cynical
of these governmental efforts (Levenson 1965) and report that religious
repression has been severe (Welch 1969).