Daoism and Evangelism
Daoism and Evangelism
Daoism and Evangelism
__________________
A Paper
Presented to
__________________
In Partial Fulfillment
__________________
by
Wes Terry
December 6, 2007
DAOISM
Christ every chance he gets. During a mission trip to China, Vernon faced some
difficulties when sharing with others about Jesus and the truths of the Bible. How can a
Christian use the Daoist influence in China to share the Gospel? That is a dangerous
question to ask. Christianity and Daoism are two distinct religions with irrefutable
differences. Some would say that these differences exclude the possibility of
philosophical Daoism, understands the Daoist teaching of aligning oneself with the Dao,
he will be better able to communicate the Biblical concepts of sin, the solution to sin, and
the hope of heaven. The following will not argue that Christianity and Daoism are similar
to one another but that there are areas of unique sameness which can be used to
communicate the absolute truths of the Bible and the salvation found in Christ.
Before delving into the particulars of Daoism, a brief analysis of its history and
somewhat misleading because it does not share the attributes that most religions have in
common. For example, in Daoism, there is no creator or judge to open and close the
reality known as “life.” This is especially true of classical Daoism. Catherine Despeux
explains classical Taoism (Daoism) with these words, “…classical Taoism never existed
as a social entity nor as a coherent unit of ideas of values.” 1 These misconceived notions
1
Catherine Despeux, "Taoism: the enduring tradition," Journal of Chinese
Religions, no. 33 (2005): 178.
2
3
are most common in westerners who ignorantly dismiss the complexity of Daoism and
instead simplify (or pick and choose certain parts of) Daoism so that it fits into their mold
religious. It is the opinion of this author that “philosophical” Daoism is the form that is
most influential in Chinese culture today and is thus most significant to this discussion.
Much of the content and nature of philosophical Daoism are derived from the Tao Te
Ching. According to Jonathan Herman, when handling the Tao Te Ching, is it best that
one “situate appropriately and dissect responsibly the multifarious, sometimes chaotic
harmony.”2 In other words, a person should read and interpret the texts of Daoism with
Ni. “All cultural inspiration starts very simply, but after editing and reediting, the original
simplicity is lost. It is the same once a great conception, philosophy or system of thought
is turned into a religion, the original thought dies off.”3 This author would argue that
many in China (if not consciously then subconsciously) feel the same way. It is the
original simplicity of Daoism that affects day to day life in China. It is the philosophical
So, in saying that, one must realize that Daoism, in and of itself, is not a
religion. Admittedly, throughout the evolution of Daoism, it has taken on various skins
2
Jonathan R. Herman, "Dao Unto Others," review of The Tao of the West:
Western Transformations of Taoist Thought, by J.J. Clarke, Religious Studies Review 28,
no. 4 (October 2002): 321.
3
Hua-Ching Ni, trans., The Complete Works of Lao Tzu: Tao Teh Ching and
Hua Hu Ching, by Lao Tzu (Santa Monica: Seven Star Communications, 1995), 4.
4
that look like religion; but it would be better defined as a philosophical system that
addresses the ills of life through a unique form of passivity. The main goal of the Daoist
is to become at one with nature without trying to manipulate one’s condition. This is
everything that most Americans hold essential for their social functionality. Despite that,
communicate the Gospel, he must understand and appreciate philosophical Daoism and
be conversant with its teachings. With that premise in place it is now appropriate to
explain what it means for a Daoist to align himself with the Dao and what impact that has
Before one can understand what it means for a Daoist to align himself with the
Dao he or she must know exactly what the Dao represents. How can one define the Dao?
That question would be a pointless one to ask the Daoist because, in essence, the Dao is
unknowable. The Dao can be best explained as the “integral truth of the universe” or
“The Way.”5 The Dao is described in chapter one of the Tao Te Ching with these words,
“Tao, the subtle reality of the universe cannot be described. That which can be described
in words is merely a conception of the mind. Although names and descriptions have been
4
Winfried Corduan, Neighboring Faiths: A Christian Introduction to World
Religions (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press Academic, 1998), 287.
5
Hua-Ching Ni, trans., The Complete Works of Lao Tzu: Tao Teh Ching and
Hua Hu Ching, by Lao Tzu (Santa Monica: Seven Star Communications, 1995), 5.
6
Ibid., p. 7
5
That statement is just one of the many in the Tao Te Ching which describe the
Dao as something that exceeds definable conclusions and logical constraints. In addition,
with those being the first words of the Tao Te Ching, the initial reader should be altered to
Dao. Robert Ellwood describes the Dao quite beautifully by explaining the limitlessness
of its character. “Behind it all lay a vision of the Tao so great that it exceeded not only
what reason and society could comprehend, but even the widest limits of imagination.”7
Even though the Dao is unknowable there have been aims at describing it.
These are the words of Dr. De Groot, a past professor of Sinology in the University of
Berlin, “…Road or Way, that is to say, the Road or Way in which the Universe moves, its
methods and its processes, its conduct and operation, the complex of phenomena
regularly recurring in it, in short, the Order of the World, Nature, or Natural Order.” As
one can see, the Dao is an all pervasive fundamental reality. It can be experienced much
more readily than it can be defined. With those words, it would be easy for one to think
What does the Daoist believe about creation? Despite what one may think, the
Dao, though it is the sustainer of everything, was not active in creation. Yin (the dark side
of things) formed the earth and Yang (the light side of things) formed the heavens. The
Dao “nurtures all forms of life, empowers the workings of nature, and restores cosmic
balance. The Dao harmonizes pairs of opposites in the world like light and darkness, love
7
Robert S. Ellwood Jr, Heaven, Earth, and The Way: Religious Traditions of
China, in Words of the World's Religions, (New Jersey: Prentice-Hall Inc, 1977), 168.
8
H. Wayne House, Charts of World Religions (Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
2006), 75.
6
This is a helpful illustration of what part the Dao played after creation and how
it functions in the universe now, but leaves the Dao absent in the actual process of
creation. As mentioned earlier, there is no way to label or define the Dao. It is beyond the
limits of being just a creator. However, there are at least some areas in which the activity
The most obvious area of contact that a Christian can share with the Daoist is
seen in the religious term sin. The Christian would define sin as rebellion against God.
The Daosit, though not using the term sin, sees the source of all human problems flowing
from man not acting in harmony with the Tao (Dao). The key difference is that Christian
doctrine allows no room for the concepts of yin and yang. In Daoism, when one strives
against the Dao, the equilibrium between the yin and yang are disrupted and thus cause
turmoil and confusion. Further, if this imbalance is carried on long enough, it is possible
Christians believe that sin is the cause of suffering in this world. The sin of
Adam has consequences for everyone on earth: past, present, and future.10 It is important
to make the distinction between the Christian concept of sin and the Daoist concept of
disrupting the equilibrium between the yin and yang. Sin, in the Christian sense, is
rebellion against a holy and just Creator-Sustainer which has instituted that such action
will result in death. Striving against the Dao and disrupting the equilibrium between yin
With that distinction made, there are similarities between the two. The Chinese
person, most assuredly influenced by Daoism, has in his mind a concept of sin. Instead of
9
Ibid.,
10
Romans 5:12-14 illustrates this principle well. All sin entered the world
through Adam and the death that sin brings with it was imparted to all. This is the
common teaching of sin throughout Scripture.
7
rebellion against God, the Daoist sees sin as one’s decision to be poorly aligned with the
Dao and thus consequently upsets the natural order of the world. By taking that idea, a
Christian missionary can explore the one thing that they both have in common: the
realization of what effect sin (or disharmony) has on the world. This assumption allows
for the possibility that Christianity and Daoism share truths in common and requires
Consider this quote from W.R. Matthews in his work Religion and Religions.
“It is no longer denied that gleams of revealed truth may be found in the higher religions
and the aim of the more enlightened missionary is to show that in the gospel of Christ the
partial truth enshrined in the ancestral faith finds its completion.”11 Though many
disagree with Matthew’s conclusions at the end of his work (this author included), it is
Jesus Christ, the Messiah, has a very unique ability to embody the truth.
Everything that is said, done, or represented in Christ is absolute truth. Jesus even makes
this claim of himself.12 So, it would not be out of place to say that all truth is God’s
truth.13 In saying this it is necessary to point out that one should not use this interpretation
of truth as a license to become inclusive in their Soteriology. Doing so would cheapen the
sacrifice of Christ and ignore Scripture’s clear teaching that it is only though Jesus that
men are saved and reconciled to God.14 However, this does open the possibility for bits
11
W.R. Matthews, "Religion and Religions," in Religion in the Modern World,
(London: Unwin Brothers Limited, 1952), 64.
12
John 14:6 Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one
comes to the Father except through me." (NIV)
13
This excludes subjective truth or man's attempt to categorize truth into
humanity's felt need at the moment. Only "absolute, objective, and Christ-centered" truth
can be God's truth.
14
Wayne Grudem, Bible Doctrine, ed. Jeff Purswell (Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
1999), 224.
8
and pieces of truth to be found between world religions: as far in as they are rooted in
With those boundaries in place, how does a Christian missionary use the
Daoist teaching of aligning oneself with the Dao as a means of communicating the
problem and solution to sin in the world? This will be answered by borrowing the ideas
of author Dean Halverson. The Daoist, in order to refrain from the consequences of
imbalance in nature, relies on his ability to become aware of the way in which the Dao
and to ‘go with the flow’ of the Tao”15 Quite oppositely, the Christian relies on what God
has accomplished on our behalf through Jesus Christ. Transformation comes as we repent
of our sins, trust in the forgiving and reconciling work of Jesus Christ, and allow the Holy
The result for the Taoist is that he has order and harmony in society and peace
within himself. The result for the Christian is much more significant. Upon the
repentance of sins and the placing of one’s trust in Christ alone, he will have peace with
God, peace with himself, meaning in life, and society with be more ordered.16
existence of a Creator and punishment for one’s own spiritual depravity. The Augustinian
definition of man’s sinful condition states that, “all persons possess an inherent,
15
Kent Kedl and Dean C. Halverson, "Taoism," in The Compact Guide to
World Religions, ed. Dean C. Halverson (Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1996),
224.
16
Ibid.,
9
hereditary depravity, which involves both guilt and corruption. We are offensive to God’s
holiness because of deliberate acts of transgression and the absence of right affections.”17
Despite that difference, the Daoist does see the effect that “sin” has on the
world. Further, that person is already striving to alleviate that effect of “imbalance” (sin)
by aligning himself with the Dao. These two similarities are a great conversation starter
for the missionary who is wishing to share the solution to sin, Jesus Christ, to an
The first step has been established. One must understand that Daoism is not a
religion in the same way that Christianity is. Step two is just as significant. A missionary
must be conversant with philosophical Daoism to the point that he can see how it
influences Chinese culture. Step three is to find themes in Daoism that parallel with
Christianity. One example of that, as mentioned earlier, is the burden that both Christians
and Daoists share in regard to the effects that sin has on the world. Using that point of
reference, the missionary can then utilize the manifestation of that problem in the world
to show that it is beyond human control and demands divine intervention. The Daoist will
agree! In order to remain in harmony with nature, the Daoist is constantly striving to stay
What is problematic for the Daoist is that he cannot call sin what it is because
there are no absolutes in Daoism. This moral relativity is caused by two things. One is the
teaching of yin and yang. This blurs morality by teaching that the absence of evil allows
for good and that the absence of good allows for evil. Further, there is always a little bit
of good in the bad and a little bit of bad in the good. Good and evil exist because they are
17
H. Wayne House, "52. Theories on the Nature of Sin," in Charts of Christian
Theology and Doctrine, (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1992), 90.
10
mutually dependant on one another. Two, the Dao is incapable of declaring good from
evil because it cannot be limited to the point of making moral distinctions. The Dao is
above everything.18
In Daoism sin is not sin: it is disharmony. The hardest thing for a Christian
problem of sin through his own effort. Regardless how good he becomes at “wu-wei” or
“purposeful inactivity” he will never meet the standards of what it means to live in
harmony with the Dao. The Christian must explain to the Daoist that he needs a “radical
work of inner transformation” and that “transformation” is the only solution to one being
If one explains that well, the Daoist is faced with the same dilemma that the
Christian is (and every other living creature in the world). Sin is a problem that cannot be
solved without divine intervention. Further, the Dao, who was once impersonal and above
the point of defining morality, could now be one that initiates judgment on “disharmony”
(sin). The disharmony that was evident to the Daoist has been given a whole new level of
significance. Even more troubling, once the Daoist has realized his own spiritual
depravity, he is faced with the penalty that such disharmony (sin) brings.
Now comes the glorious opportunity for the Christian to share with his Daoist
friend the solution to sin in the world. This will be broken down into two levels: the
solution to sin in one’s own life (individual) and the solution to sin for the world and
creation (community). The Daoist already has instilled in him the effect of disharmony in
18
Dean C. Halverson, "Taoism," in The Compact Guide to World Religions, ed.
Kent Kedl and Dean C. Halverson (Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1996), 227.
19
Ibid., p. 228.
11
himself and likewise knows that such disharmony, when ignored, will bring disharmony
passage, becoming as water resembles well what it means to be aligned with the Dao.
“Everyone knows that the soft overcomes the hard, and the weak the strong, but no one is
able to carry it out.”20 So, even in Daoist literature, achieving harmony with the Dao
However, just a few lines later, an assertion is made that could present the
solution to sin in the person of Jesus Christ wonderfully. “He who can take the trouble of
the people of the world is qualified to rule the world. He who can tend to calamities for
the sake of all beings is the right person to be the sovereign of the world.”21 This paints a
This would be a great chapter in the Tao Te Ching to show the sovereignty that
Jesus deserves and has; both in this world and in Heaven. The Christian might point to
Colossians 1:15-22 to explain how, in Christ, man is reconciled (aligned) to God and
lives in peace (harmony) by the blood of the cross. This scripture will be given in its
“He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For by
him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible,
whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things were created by him
and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is
the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the first born from among
the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy. For God was pleased to
have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things,
whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood,
shed on the cross. Once you were alienated from God and were enemies in your
20
Lao-Tse, Tao Teh Ching, trans. James Legge (Stepney: Axiom Publishers and
Distributers, 2001), 122.
21
Lao Tzu, The Complete Works of Lao Tzu: Tao Teh Ching and Hua Hu Ching,
trans. Hua-Ching Ni (Santa Monica: Seven Star Communications, 1995), 99.
12
minds because of your evil behavior. But now he has reconciled you by Christ’s
physical body through death to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and
free from accusation”
Praise be to God the “LORD OF HOSTS” who has sent his son as a sacrifice to pay
for the sins of the world and become the “KING OF KINGS!” This single passage
life.
In Daoism, “the Dao” (God) is unknowable and beyond human imagination. In this
passage the “image of the invisible God” is made visible in Jesus. In Daoism there is no
true creator. With this passage it is by Christ that “all things were created: things in
heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, … all things were created by him and for
him.” In Daoism, the Dao that nurtures all forms of life and harmonizes the opposites of
the world. In this passage Christ is not only active in creation but it is “in him that all
Most importantly, “God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and
through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in
heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.” Herein lays the solution
to sin not only for the individual but for all creation. The single stipulation is that this
peace is only made possible through Jesus’ blood, shed on the cross. It is not made
possible by the human effort of aligning oneself with the Dao. It is not made possible by
virtue or harmony. It is only made possible though reconciliation to God by the blood of
Christ.
So, the Christian missionary can tell the “good news” of Jesus Christ in the context
with the themes pertaining to Daoism. Secondly, he must use that knowledge to bridge
13
biblical concepts, namely sin and the consequences thereof, to the idea of that concept in
the Daoist philosophical system. He must then expose that problem or concept for what it
really is in the world. If it is sin, show sin for what it really is: separation from God and
the cause of death. Lastly, he must offer the good news of salvation found in the person of
Jesus Christ and show how “in Him” all is made complete.
The creation is accounted for. Peace with God is made possible. Harmony is brought
about by “internal transformation” and not “effortless action.” The struggles of sin in
one’s individual life are defeated by the blood of the cross and the hope of eternal life is
given. The Daoist is given hope that someday the sin-stricken world he lives in will be
renewed and that the powers of “sin” or “disharmony” will be defeated forever. The
greatest thing is that none of this comes through human effort, achievement, or
enlightenment. Rather, all is given as a gift by the grace of God and the blood of the
cross.
So, yes, the Christian missionary can communicate the Gospel of Christ using
Daoist themes without sacrificing the truth of the Bible. All truth is God truth as long as it
finds fulfillment in the embodiment of truth: Jesus Christ. So, maybe the Christian
missionary who is unfamiliar with philosophical Daoism will find time to study it. Know
it. Become conversant with its content. In doing so, he will be better equipped to share
the Gospel of Jesus with all of those whose culture is so heavily influenced by it. A
conversation about the Daoist pursuit to align himself with the Dao is an open door to
share the good news of Jesus with intelligence, passion, and commitment to the truth.
14
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Despeux, Catherine. "Taoism: the enduring tradition." Journal of Chinese Religions, no.
33 (2005): 178-180.
Ellwood, Robert S. Jr. Heaven, Earth, and The Way: Religious Traditions of China. In
Words of the World's Religions. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall Inc, 1977.
Grudem, Wayne. Bible Doctrine. Edited by Jeff Purswell. Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
1999.
Halverson, Dean C. "Taoism." In The Compact Guide to World Religions, ed. Kent Kedl
and Dean C. Halverson, 216-234. Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1996.
Herman, Jonathan R. "Dao Unto Others." Review of The Tao of the West: Western
Transformations of Taoist Thought, by J.J. Clarke. Religious Studies Review 28, no.
4 (October 2002): 319-321.
House, H. Wayne. "52. Theories on the Nature of Sin." In Charts of Christian Theology
and Doctrine. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1992.
Kedl, Kent and Dean C. Halverson. "Taoism." In The Compact Guide to World Religions,
ed. Dean C. Halverson, 216-234. Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1996.
Matthews, W.R. "Religion and Religions." In Religion in the Modern World. London:
Unwin Brothers Limited, 1952.
Tse, Lao -. Tao Teh Ching. Translated by James Legge. Stepney: Axiom Publishers and
Distributers, 2001.
Tzu, Lao. The Complete Works of Lao Tzu: Tao Teh Ching and Hua Hu Ching. Translated
by Hua-Ching Ni. Santa Monica: Seven Star Communications, 1995.