Short description: Catholic Chinese translation for God
| Tianzhu |
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Tianzhu (Chinese: 天主; Wade–Giles: Tʻien-chu), meaning "Heavenly Master" or "Lord of Heaven", was the Chinese word used by the Jesuit China missions to designate God.[1]
History
The word first appeared in Michele Ruggieri's Chinese translation of the Decalogo, or Ten Commandments.[1] In 1584, Ruggieri and Matteo Ricci published their first catechism, Tiānzhǔ shílù (天主實錄, The Veritable Record of the Lord of Heaven).[2]
Matteo Ricci later wrote a catechism entitled Tiānzhŭ Shíyì (天主實義, The True Meaning of the Lord of Heaven).[1][2]
Following the Chinese rites controversy, the term Tiānzhŭ was officially adopted by the Pope in 1715, who rejected alternative terms such as Tiān (天, "Heaven") and Shàngdì (上帝, "Supreme Emperor").[3]
"Catholicism" is most commonly rendered as Tiānzhǔjiào (天主教, "Religion of the Lord of Heaven"). An individual Catholic is Tiānzhŭjiào tú;[4] tú includes the meanings "disciple" and "believer."[5] The same hanja characters are used in the Korean words for Catholicism and Catholic believer.
See also
- Chinese rites controversy
- Names of God
- Names of God in China
- Shangdi
- Shen (Chinese religion)
- Tian
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Manufacturing Confucianism: Chinese traditions & universal civilization by Lionel M. Jensen p.73
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 The Jesuits: cultures, sciences, and the arts, 1540-1773, Volume 1 by John W. O'Malley p.365
- ↑ Chinese Christians in America: conversion, assimilation, and adhesive identities by Fenggang Yang p.52
- ↑ "Catholic", in Collins Chinese Concise Dictionary (2006), New York: HarperCollins.
- ↑ "tú" in Collins Chinese Concise Dictionary (2006), New York: HarperCollins.
Further reading
- Vincent Cronin (1955), The Wise Man from the West: Matteo Ricci and His Mission to China, New York: Dutton.
- 天主 (中國)
Names of God |
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- in Baháʼísm
- In Chinese religions (1)
- In Chinese religions (2)
- In Christianity
- In Hinduism
- In Islam
- In Jainism
- In Judaism
- In Rastafarianism
- In Santeria
- In Sikhism
- In Zoroastrianism
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- Acintya
- Adonai
- Ahura Mazda
- The All
- Allah
- Aten
- Bathala
- Bhagavan
- Brahma
- Brahman
- Cao Đài
- The Creator
- Dakini
- Deus
- Deva
- Devi
- Durga
- Ein Sof
- El
- Elohim
- El Elyon
- El Shaddai
- God
- Great Spirit
- Hiranyagarbha
- Haneullim
- Hu
- Hyang
- I Am that I Am
- Ik Onkar
- Ishvara
- Jah
- Jahbulon
- Kami
- Khuda
- Krishna
- Mahadeva
- Manitou
- Melek Taus
- Ngai
- Olodumare
- Om
- The One of Neoplatonism
- The One (Tad Ekam) of Rigveda
- Parvardigar
- Purusha
- Rama
- Shakti
- Shangdi
- Shen
- Shiva
- Svayam Bhagavan
- Tenri-Ō-no-Mikoto
- Tetragrammaton
- Tian
- Tianzhu
- Trimurti
- Trinity
- Vishnu
- Waheguru
- Wakan Tanka
- Xwedê
- YHWH
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